Lungs by Duncan Macmillan
Lungs by Duncan Macmillan
Lungs by Duncan Macmillan
W: A baby?
M: Breathe.
W: A baby?
W: Okay.
W: No.
M: The one to say it. To say ‘Yes, yes okay, I’m ready, let’s do it.’
W: That’s-
W: Trying.
M: Yes.
W: In IKEA.
M: You’re hyperventilating.
W: Don’t exaggerate.
M: If it’s too much.
M: If it’s too much we can put it back in the box, just put a lid on it, then
later when you’re feeling less freaked out / we can-
W: I’m not freaked out, I’m just… surprised. I’m surprised. I’m fucking
shocked actually. I’m thrown is what I am. Thrown like I’m from the top of
a skyscraper, I’m –
M: Freaked out.
W: I’m not.
M: You are.
W: I’m completely freaked out, yes, because why don’t you ever, how
can you, why didn’t you, why would you not talk to me about this? / I
wish you’d let me in to your head. Into your fucking impenetrable
fucking-
M: I’m talking to you now. I’m telling you now. We’re talking, we’re talking
now, we’re having a conversation, when should I have-
M: Okay.
W: It just isn’t.
M: Okay.
W: I don’t know what it is but I know for fucking certain it’s not a-
M: There’s no rush.
W: Just to-
M: There’s no hurry.
W: Catch my breath.
M: It’s a conversation.
W: Have a bit of a walk or something. Ten minutes. Meet you back at the
car.
M: Okay.
W: What’s wrong?
W: I needed to think.
M: It’s pitch dark. You stink of cigarettes.
M: Coldest winter ever they’ve just said. Hottest summer, coldest winter.
W: I’m okay.
W: No need.
M: Good.
W: Shit.
M: Yeah.
W: A baby?
M: Yeah, me too.
W: Can I drive?
M: Course.
W: You can play your tape. Let me hear your new songs.
W: Okay, well, let’s just sit and not say anything then okay? Just be
silent, just not have to deal with this right away because-
M: Good.
W: No, okay, of course, good, but not now. I don’t have anything to say
about it right now because it’s such a shock, it’s such an enormous- You
can’t just say something like that to someone. You can’t just say that to
me and expect me to just be fine and rational and clear-headed / and
not-
W: I don’t know. I don’t have the answers, I just know that- that wasn’t it.
I’m sorry.
M: I’m sorry too.
M: Yes.
W: Something we should-
M: We should.
M: Good.
M: I know.
W: Any younger.
M: With what?
W: With, what you were saying, with, you know. What you were saying?
W: I think so.
W: Yes.
M: Of course.
W: Of course, yes.
M: It’s a two-way.
W: I know.
W: But.
M: Go on.
W: Alright. It’s this- it’s- I have no idea. I don’t know. Opinion? I don’t
have- it’s like you’ve punched me in the face then asked me a maths
question / while I’m still on the-
M: Like I punched you in the face?
M: No.
M: I’m not.
W: Aren’t you?
M: No.
W: Well it’s started and now it’s happening and I’m saying yes.
M: Right.
M: Yes.
M: Look, let’s get home and drink some gin and see if you want to talk
about it.
W: And the planet.
W: The planet. Because you worry about the same things I do, you care
about the same-
M: Right, yes.
W: And they say, don’t they, that if you really care about the planet, if
you really care about the future of mankind, then don’t have children.
M: Do they?
W: I mean, they actually say if you really care about the planet then kill
yourself but, I mean, I’m not going to do that. So, because there’s, what,
7 billion people or so, there’s too many people and there’s not enough of
everything so really the ethical thing to do is to not contribute to that,
particularly people like us.
M: People like..?
W: Exactly. We are, we are good people, yes we are. Good. Are we?
M: Edwin?
W: What if she or he was the person to work it all out, save everything,
everyone, the world, polar bears, Bangladesh, everything, we don’t know
so-
M: No, but-
W: Exactly.
M: The world is going to need good people in it. With everything that’s
happening. We can’t just leave it to the people who don’t think, the
people who just have child after child without ever properly examining
their, their capacity for love. I mean, that’s what’s wrong with everything
isn’t it?
W: Yes. I know. Exactly. Hang on, what? Are you saying some people
are too stupid to have children?
M: No. No, of course not. But yes. Some people, lots of people, aren’t
thinking it through, not fully, and maybe the smartest, most caring, most
informed people aren’t having children.
W: Right.
M: So it’s their genes that aren’t surviving. So things are getting less
caring and less informed and more savage.
M: No, no.
W: Sterilise? Exterminate?
W: Camps? Enforced?
M: No, of course not, I’m not- I don’t have the answers. Yes, some
people are saying that maybe that will happen, but we’ll be long dead by
the time, I mean, you know more about this stuff than I do. You’re the
one doing the PhD. But, yes, if we’re being honest, teen mothers in
tracksuits with fags in their mouths, pushing their prams in the road,
smacking their kids in supermarkets, being a gran by 30, multiplying like
rats-
W: Rats?
M: Meanwhile the people who read books, the people who think and try
to help, I know I’m being a bit fascist here, I’m just playing Devil’s
advocate, but there are some thoughtful people who are waiting for the
perfect circumstances and it’ll never happen, there’s no such thing as
perfect so the world is overcrowded, and people think ‘Well I don’t want
to bring my child into this world full of crack dealers and pimps and
homeless’. And I know this sounds reactionary, but let’s not be politically
correct about this for a second, there are some people who just
shouldn’t have children. They just shouldn’t. And would it be such a
great loss if those people, you know, couldn’t have children? Or, I mean,
isn’t this what you were saying? I’m only carrying on from what you were
saying.
W: I know that’s what I feel, what I think sometimes, but when you say it
out loud it sounds like the worst, cruellest, sickest, most hateful-
W: Just a cuddle and shut up for a bit, I think would be good actually.
M: Is that okay?
M: Yes, no, I know, you’re right. You’re absolutely right. The best thing to
do, absolutely, with the world as it is would be to-
M: I worry I might be one of those fathers who doesn’t notice his kids
unless they’re winning stuff or getting in trouble.
W: I don’t want to be one of those mothers who only lives through their
children. I want to still read books and do things. I will not use having a
child as an excuse for becoming an idiot.
W: I don’t want to have to host the best birthday parties or make the best
Chewbacca costume for Halloween.
M: And the schools are a mess, we’d have to get on the board of
governors or parents associations.
W: We have to.
M: But when we’ve got a baby in our arms, we’ll look back on what we
said and laugh at how naïve we were.
M: We still do.
W: When?
W: Not tonight.
M: Friday.
M: Wednesday.
W: Okay.