I take a
drought-defying shower. Long, hot and luxurious. The jet of water is powerful.
Once I’ve finished washing myself, I stay there. I turn slowly and feel the
water massage my muscles. The heat opens the pores, dilates the capillaries. I
let the stream hammer my face, my scalp. I lean forward to feel the water move
like fingers down my back.
I miss touch. I
realise it now.
I see people. Nurses
come to take my temperature. I miss their smiles behind the masks. My crewmates
are my neighbours but we are forbidden to move beyond our doorframes. No-one touches
me. Not even by accident. On the boat there was touch. Accidental touch and
deliberate. The touch of a steadying hand on a shoulder as someone returned to
the cockpit from the foredeck. Hands on shoulders as someone moved past in the
tight confines of the saloon. These unnoticed touches of daily, unconscious interaction
are gone. I notice them now.
I once read that single
men, particularly the elderly and widowed, suffer most from the lack of touch.
Living alone, with only the occasional male interaction, they live in a desert
of physical contact. And they suffer for it. Because touch is good for our
health.
Women are more
comfortable with touch. They hug and kiss, they touch easily and unselfconsciously.
Touch is ‘normal’. For men though, touch from other men is awkward. It’s even ridiculed.
The new trend of men doing the chest-bump handshake thing should be a sign of
loosening the taboo of male touch. Instead, I’ve heard people making fun of it.
We’ve a way to go.
I hadn’t realised how
much I missed touch until this morning. It took me a while to work out what was
so good about the overlong shower. I’m normally in and out. Finish the
essentials and get on with the day. But not today. Today it was a touch substitute.
How many more people
out there are suffering from the lack of touch? Old people who live alone, who
are visited, touched, only occasionally, are they now completely deprived by
the ‘lockdown’? Those of us separated from lovers, partners, parents, children
by quarantine. Touch deprivation forced on us by social distancing and isolation.
I think about coming
out of quarantine. Going home. Our greeting will be a hug. A kiss. We will,
once again, lounge together, touching absently in front of the television. Her
hand running along my back as she passes me in the kitchen. Feeling our limbs
touching as we fall asleep at night. I’ll hug Mum and Dad, I’ll stroke the dog.
And then, I’ll do it all over again.
So true. Your shower says it all.
ReplyDeleteThis post has brought tears to my eyes, Paul.
ReplyDelete