Child Protection
A poem by Clare Shaw for the 2018 BASPCAN child protection congress
Once, everything felt like threat.
Only my body
could keep yours alive.
We’d get up to check your breathing:
it was shallow and warm
on my cheek.
The whole world swam
in its tide.
I gazed into the dark
where no monsters were;
built fences to keep you
safe;
put the matches
up on the highest shelf.
I took on the wolf
with my own weak teeth
Never
will you not be my child,
would I not hold you,
wrap you in blankets of stars,
sweep stones from your path
so you won’t fall.
I will hold your hand by habit
on the road.
and you ask would I die for you –
a thousand times over
but the fences are growing smaller
and you should climb them.
I am giving you the matches.
Now make fire.
Clare Shaw, Poet in Residence
Clare Shaw is an educationalist and a writer. Her work is explicitly grounded in academic and professional knowledge, and also in her own experiences of self-injury and using mental health services. She is the author of “Otis Doesn’t Scratch (PCCS 2015); co-editor of “Our Encounters with Self-injury” (PCCS 2013); and has published numerous articles and book chapters. Clare is also a Royal Literary Fellow at the University of Huddersfield. She is “one of Britain’s most dynamic and powerful young poets” (Arvon Foundation), and as such creativity and performance are an important element of her work.
Clare writes about her poetry:
“Part of the alchemy of poetry is not knowing what you’re going to write until it is written. I don’t have a road map for the poetry I’ll write over the coming year. Child protection, abuse and harm are huge topics to address; that’s why poetry is a perfect way to approach them. Once I started writing, I knew that I wanted to begin by deconstructing some of the language we’re all familiar with when we work in this field – by bringing it back to the ordinary and extraordinary experience of caring for a child”.
Thinking Outside the Box: BASPCAN Congress, 2018
Click here to find out more about the 2018 BASPCAN Congress