Mutterings by *AMPLE Collective
Mutterings by *AMPLE Collective is one of three pieces of original work commissioned for the Deptford Literature Festival 2024.
About the Disabled Writers Commissions
Spread the Word’s Disabled Writers Commissions aim to showcase new work by three London-based disabled writers. They provide a developmental and profile-raising opportunity. The commissions’ open call, judged by Ayesha Chouglay and Joe Rizzo Naudi, invited disabled writers to put forward their ideas against an open brief.
The commissioned writers – Yaz Nin, Jameisha Prescod and Jacqueline Ennis Cole and Sofia Lyall of *AMPLE Collective – received a commission fee, an activation budget and developmental support including mentoring from Esther Fox, Peter deGraft-Johnson and Jill Abram.
About *AMPLE Collective
*AMPLE Collective are Sofia Lyall and Jacqueline Ennis Cole. They are an intergenerational autistic collective centred around radical ecological care, open dialogue, and collective wellbeing.
Mutterings by *AMPLE Collective includes Sofia Lyall’s zine and Jacqueline Ennis Cole’s scroll in braille. The work was commissioned by Spread the Word and first presented as a live performance at the 2024 Deptford Literature Festival.
*AMPLE present eight micro stories and poems titled Mutterings. The narratives are situated within the local ecology of Lewisham and beyond. Drawing on the strange and familiar, the writings explore the mutterings and speculative imaginings from post industrial breakdown to technological advances through a neuroqueer lens.
Mutterings by *AMPLE Collective
Transcript
Introduction:
Au leaves their home planet on a spaceship and lands on Earth where they become disorientated by the neurotypical way of life. Au journeys through Lewisham, challenged by the noise and the lights and navigates futuristic technologies in a high-tech urban environment. Along the way, Au encounters more-than-human beings residing in Lewisham.
Au climbed the hill to see Lewisham’s lights. A fox sat on the road ahead. The fox was thin and shivering. Au and the fox stared at each other. The fox was not afraid of Au. Au pulled an acorn from their pocket and offered it to the fox. The fox snapped up the acorn and looked at Au hungrily. Au gave the fox another acorn and continued walking. The fox followed close behind. When Au reached the top of the hill, they sat under a chestnut tree. The fox watched them from behind the tree trunk. Below, lights shone from thousands of buildings. They flickered off and on as people left and entered their rooms. The fox scuttled away into the night, nose low. Alone again, Au looked up at the sky. Visible in the northeast was their home planet.
Au’s people were designated crystal intelligence beings from birth. Au was assigned to the floatation transmission programme in the epoch of 3033. There Au engaged in neurological and telepathic communion with ancestral crystals from the quartz mother planet. Lewisham’s training programme was engineered by surviving neurotypical descendants from the 1707 space crew. Au’s people celebrate stimming remembrance nights each and every full moon.
Under the communal canopy of stars
We honour our Ancestral
Redeemers
Replenish, re-charge
free your mind
the floatation transmitter instructs
We dip in
Then lift off
and watch the silver sky night
As stress waves flee
up up and up
anywhere
where Joy lives
Then we pause
rest
and learn how
to turn
our thought patterns
loose
no lucid
into Stargazing
dreams
Au journeyed on the sky-train hovering above buildings. Au had vertigo looking out of the window at the city below. A multi-level network of bridges, skyways, stadiums, and buildings. All manufactured from earthly materials: aluminium; iron and carbon blasted into steel; cement, water and grit mixed into concrete; glass formed from liquid sand. Along the Thames were waste collection barges holding scrapyard mountains of discarded electronics leaching shimmering colours into the water. An announcement issued an extreme weather warning. Rain fell. The river swelled. Torrents hammered the sky-train ceiling and gushed down the window panes. Au had never known rain so potent. The whole city vanished behind a wall of water.
At the gentle glow of the sun
Au lay low
hunted
hiding
grabbing grub
from a lonesome
garden
with bare
humble hands
The slow
swallow of slugs
slipping
and gliding
down
funnel of throat
Always gathered
with care
An elaborate
ritual
of tender caress
and cleansing
at the crack
of dawn’s daunting dew
This ceremony
calmed Au’s
wired wreck
of stomach
Caved in
points of
phenomenal pressure
nervy nerves
tumultuous turmoiled trance
was the bustle of the
Thames city’s hustle
On and on and on
the snake of a river
Hounding
As Au tunnelled
through mountainous terrains
mapped and
tattooed
on a scrolled parchment
of bark skin
Thirsty
After a tap tap tap
Au drank the sap
from the silver birch tree
Rejuvenated
Arms open wide
with wings of a bird
Surrendering
Au flew out
into the warm
open air
Then
As if in a celluloid dream
looped on a film reel
Au reached
Lewisham
Land of the free
The machinery and megastructures had swallowed the greenery marked on Au’s weathered map of South London. Au searched an entire two days for foraging places. As dusk settled, they stumbled across a sliver of woodland along a stream. Using their high-definition night-vision, Au set about gathering mushrooms such as field blewits, hen-of-the-wood and jelly ears; nettle leaves, rich in iron and fortitude; acorns for protein and perseverance; dandelions for making wishes and immunity; young hogweed shoots for allergies, rashes and wounds; and sweet blackberries, glowing with vitality. Au felt gratitude for the sustaining soil of Lewisham and the nutrients, earthworms, and root networks that survived despite the property developers and their encroaching cityscapes.
As calm as a daisy
Neurotypicals were the dominant tribe
Nosey
Regimental
and they made loud cumbersome sounds
Scaring the more-than human creatures further and further away
They had become easy for Au to read
Au scanned their stony aura visible through his third intuitive eye
Au was no longer frightened of them
Au grew and matured into a fine young specimen and protector
Au was handpicked at birth
Au had a fine tuned sensitive ear
Au could hear the distant sounds of crushing waves
Even though Au lived far far away from them
Au had an instinctual nose for pattern recognition
Au had even bypassed their artificial intelligence algorithms
Au sought to find his inner equilibrium with kindness and patience
Au learned how to practise his ancient sensory craft with graceful eloquence
Au waited in the clinician’s room facing a purple robot. The doctor entered wearing a luminous white coat with three different pens in the breast pocket. The doctor pressed the robot’s start button and read out the instruction manual: “SociaLite Pro™ teaches the neurotypical rules of interaction. Using automated video analysis, the robot identifies abnormal behaviour and issues corrective learning.” The SociaLite’s eyes lit up. Au patted the robot’s head which was covered in tiny silicone bumps and made Au’s teeth hurt. The device wriggled and exclaimed: “Hi Au! Pleased to meet you!” The volume rattled Au’s nerves. The robot continued: “Do you wish to greet me, Au? Neurotypical salutations include ‘Hello’, and ‘How are you?’ Let’s try again!” The robot jumped up and down and bellowed: “Alright Au!” Au responded angrily: “No I’m not alright! I don’t understand why I’m here! There’s nothing wrong with me!” The robot BOINGed and spun around uncontrollably: “Wrong, wrong, wrong!” Au smirked. The doctor leapt up and wrestled the robot to locate the off button, saying: “Oh dear. Seems as though we have quite a bit of work to do.”
mini forest revolution
movement gonna spread and spread and spread revolution
labour of love revolution
sun-up to sun-down revolution
no longer tolerate air pollution revolution
trees bring back oxygen revolution
song thrush nesting homewards revolution
biodiversity pulsates with life revolution
sickness gone extinct revolution
hug trees and they hug us back revolution
eat the fruit trees gift us with revolution
walk your talk as trees have ears revolution
primates swing from trees revolution
bees carry nectar gonna make honey revolution
butterflies flap their wings revolution
hurricane sweeps and swirls revolution
humans plant seeds by the moon revolution
gravitational pull revolution
rejuvenation beyond our wildest dreams revolution
(C) Sofia Lyall, 2024 (C) Jacqueline Ennis Cole, 2024