Peter Davis
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Peter
has been HIV positive since he was 19 years old (since 1988). In 2008,
Peter has decided to cease mainstream media. He is launching in March
2008 at radio 3CR in Melbourne a weekly program called ‘Radio for
Kids’, which will present kids speaking about their world as they see
it. Peter lives in a small town in Victoria; a place where he can walk a
few minutes down the road and be in a bit of forest. Peter
Davis has been a freelance writer and radio documentary maker. He won
the Community Broadcasting Association of Australia award in 1995 for
best Information documentary for 'The Joan Golding Story'. In 2006 he
won the Judy Duffy award at RMIT given to one writer each year in the
RMIT writing and editing course. He has produced regularly as a
freelancer for ABC Radio National including Poetica, Radio Eye and
Hindsight. He has written six feature articles for The Age. |
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when
I die let my dog serenade me
thanks for your card from India: a lot of animal activity around Baba's resting place like many I am also somewhere in between drug addiction and a Ph.D perhaps learning how to recognise the jewelled mystery that falls from the neck of self
my son told me he dreamt about a land of small noises and imagined Shiva yawning he also saw how Buddha's shadow continues to meditate with no body under the tree
I spit against the wind, a desire for afterlife, hands at the surface while the table tilts yes I believe in life after death, of course I believe that life will continue without me
we can learn to support the sky with dust, singing of faith like crickets in chorus death is a serenade by a dog licking a busker's watch and leaving three whiskers
a journey for tranquil moments (lines written whilst hitch-hiking)
in my own private Idaho standing or laying beside a sealed or unmade road whilst eternity lays across my homeless soul its thin blanket of dust
my skin slowly turning blue in the predawn when the trees won't speak above a whisper just so the first birds can be clearly heard and the orange glow of the sun beneath the horizon reminds me of a glow from an orchestra pit
then curling-up on the road's edge shivering with my eyes closed and one thumb still out in my other hand a cigarette lighter that hovers like a firefly for the motorists to see
asleep after entering a car before the driver could ask three questions his or her face floating upwards inside my first dream asleep yet listening to the colours inside their voice a yellowed or reddened or brown leaf filled with fresh waste from the tree
I wake and a driver is smoking my joints and talking to my puppy dog a dog that I dressed in a nappy in case he pisses or shits "Just 120 clicks to we arrive at Goulbourn and the big sheep, little mate"
and the dog is ignoring the driver and mumbling in my ear again its winter of meditations a thick snow upon the past