Tag Archives: children

2012: A Year in a Post

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As 2012 draws to a close I look out upon leaden skies, waterlogged lawns, a small but fast flowing muddy stream running off the paddock, over the cobbled drive, gushing into the gutters of our village street and I seem to remember beginning the year with warnings of widespread drought across the British Isles. Oh dear… My heart goes out to those who have been made homeless and suffered misery, discomfort and hardship due to the combative nature of the weather these past twelve months.

I’m looking forward to a new year and as I wonder what it will hold I can’t help but reflect on the surprises that slowly unfolded during 2012 and how different life is now to when the year began.

My  man moved in just before Christmas 2011 and so this year has been one of discovery. I’ve learned more about myself than about him – living on your own for five years (children don’t count here, because however tolerent and liberal you are – and I am quite – you’re still the ‘mum’ and ‘in control’ of your environment…) makes you among other things; anal to an autistic level; bossy; obsessively tidy and extremely intolerant of other people’s irrelevant stuff however neatly stacked although conversely, completely blind to your own orderly piles of highly important detritus; unreasonable; moody; someone who drinks more, both in frequential and quantative terms, than one ought; someone who possibly deserves to live out the remainder of their days as a spinster… He, however, although on the opposite end of the spectrum to the harridan he’s found himself cohabiting with, re moods, tidyness and organisation, is tolerant, kind, patient and willing to change, or at least to try. Mmm. If I were one to make resolutions I’d know where to start.

The year almost got me divorced from my husband of twenty-two years. I wish I could remove the almost, but not quite. Everything has been agreed, in principle, just the i’s to cross and the t’s to dot. Won’t be long now. It was a hard slog and our solicitors are richer than they were, although without them he’d have eaten me for breakfast without even leaving the bones of me to spit out, so I’ll always be grateful… And perhaps that’s as it should be – It is half-a-life-time after all and we’ve three children and the machinations of a business to sort out.

I ceased working in the ^^ business. What a relief! I didn’t realise what a weight I’d been carrying until it was lifted from my shoulders; the struggle to maintain a working relationship with a man you once loved, who’s the father of your children, but whom you no longer know or understand was both more consuming and exhausting than I realised. I am no longer a fashion designer. I am no longer a businesswoman. I am no longer an employer. I am a writer! And not a day goes by that I don’t appreciate how lucky I am to have made that change. Friends often remind me that I worked hard for it, that I sacrificed time with the kids when they were little, that we struggled financially in the early years and often did without, that one makes one’s own destiny… All perhaps true, but I’m still grateful!

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This year also got me back into my home – the one I spent eighteen months gutting and renovating nine years ago. It held me safe whilst I recovered from severe depression. It nurtured me whilst I gathered my wits and accepted that my marriage had disintegrated. It reminded me that I could still create and that I could still discover beauty even where it lay buried. The house has been rented out for the past five years and it was with happy hearts that we returned this summer. We have our library back, where our books can breathe, where my man can leave his piles of highly important stuff undisturbed, (well almost) and write unperturbed, (well almost) where there’s space to set out the weird and wonderful objects we’ve collected on our travels and hang all our paintings and display all the treasures the children have made and space to have friends and family to stay and to feed them and enjoy their company. It’s very lovely.

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My parents died. They were eighty-four and I lost them within two months of each other. It didn’t really hit me until we cremated our mother last week and suddenly it was over. I’m no longer a daughter and I’ll never know ‘that very special love’ again. Life changed in a moment. It wasn’t without it’s own release – no more responsibility, or guilt, and it certainly wasn’t without grief or regret, but it was with an understanding and an acceptance of the order of things. It was their time and we had to let them go. The journey my sisters and I took together throughout their illnesses, hospitalisation and deaths was momentous, unimaginable, shattering and life changing. We learned more about each other and our own relationships in those months than we ever have before and for that we have our parents to thank. We are all closer as a consequence and it’s a closeness we’ll nurture forever. I know I will. I love them more than I ever knew I could.

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Friends were key as always – old muckers served up their customary wit, humour, support and love in bucketloads and I was frequently reminded why they were exactly that, and those few precious newcomers that have found their way into my heart will never be allowed to escape.

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And my boys… My boys – all now taller than me, all generous, talented, beautiful young men with gorgeous girlfriends and delightful friends, they make me feel very proud. They grow from strength to strength, constant companions, constant joy and constant love. Whatever I have yet to achieve, they will always be my greatest legacy.

The year has dealt a good hand of literary pursuits – The Leicester Stanza groups continue to be the most stimulating way to spend a Saturday afternoon and I look forward to them every month. I really value the considered, intelligent feedback I receive on my poetry and love to read and discuss other’s work. I attended a really good one-day workshop at the Newarke Houses Museum in Leicester, which I thoroughly enjoyed and was sorry to miss the annual visit to the Sculpture in the Botanic Gardens. I am sure I have grown as a poet since attending for I always learn so much, but most of all, these afternoons are brilliant fun and I cherish many burgeoning friendships that are fast forming.

Leicester Writer’s Club is a wonderful weekly event. I joined the committee this year, but due to my parents and other family commitments was unable to seriously fulfill my role as press-officer. I am looking forward to more settled times so I can return with new vigour and make up for my neglect. At the annual awards ceremony this autumn they awarded me the Short Story Prize – one I don’t feel I yet deserve, but do feel the need to honour, so I will strive to do so next year. I shall take a well-sharpened scythe to the twenty odd stories I’ve written this year, hack, hone and wittle them into some kind of decent shape and I intend to start submitting them. I’m prepared for rejection, I’m prepared to learn, I’m prepared for hard work and I’m hoping for some small glimmer of success.

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I spent another fab week in glorious Andalucia this October on a writer’s retreat organised by The Literary Consultancy. My man was the tutor again and it was lovely to return, this time as a couple, and also to have the chance to reaffirm and reinforce some of the unique and precious friendships we made last year.

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Vanguard Readings in London is a newly discovered event and we attended our first in December at a lovely pub in Camberwell on the coldest day of the year (possibly the decade). The man read from his novel, Pynter Bender, to hushed and rapt appreciation. All the readers were excellent and I definitely want to return for more of these events next year.

I have been working on my first poetry collection – DressCode and now have forty-two finished sonnets, all about clothes… The excellent John Gallas (poet, teacher, bard, wit, fellow fag smoker and coffee drinker extra-ordinaire) has been a wise and generous mentor. Crystal Clear Creators were good enough to publish one, Twinset, in Hearing Voices V, their excellent literary magazine. I’ve also enjoyed many of their Shindig! evenings at the Western Pub in Leicester which they run in conjunction with Nine Arches Press – always a quality night, both the featured poets and the open-mikers.

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I’ve read many superb books, some of my favourites being:

So… Aims and ambitions for 2013…  To write, write, write, submit, submit, submit, more poetry, more short stories and get that bloody novel properly started. And be a sweeter, calmer, gentler, more tolerant human being.

Good luck to all of you, friends, writers, poets and followers and I really hope that Two-Fousand-and-Firteen is filled to the brim with ferociously fantabulous frolicksome fun…

A small thought…

is all I’m capable of at the moment…

Spotted this guy in Peterborough, made my day, thank God because something needed to!

And just when we’d written the whole place off as the end of the world as you know it… After three trips there in 24 hours we were entitled to that informed opinion. And isn’t the A 47 the most horrible of roads.. And why are there so many farm vehicles out at this time of year. I thought they all hibernated during the winter months?

Eldest son decided his passport needed a boil wash… And he travels to Japan on 28th of December… Emergency, Emergency, Emergency… Does anyone remember that advert when a glass of red wine gets spilt on a beige carpet and the Mum fishes in her hand bag and pulls out a flashing blue light/siren that she promptly attaches to her head? Well that would have been me if I’d been clever enough to procure such a useful artefact in readiness for such a catastrophe and secrete it about my person. What’s a Mum to do.? Worst was, I turned up at 9am this morning to collect passport we’d dutifully sorted and applied for (in person) yesterday only to be told that because he was an adult now- he had to collect it… in person….

Adult? I shrieked…. I paid for it, I filled in the form, I sorted his counter signatory, I drove him here…

No go…

Back I drove, woke him, got him dressed and breakfasted and returned, along the tractor ridden road, to Peterborough, to collect the blasted thing. I hope he has a wonderful skiing trip, I really do.

Anyway, the biker was delightful and thankfully didn’t cave in our windscreen with a crow bar, even though I’m sure he could have, if he so wished.

Saturday 26th November 2011

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Passed another milestone today… 
Took Fergus to buy his first suit. And in typically familial fashion, like Mother like son, we’d left it till the last minute, or to the last afternoon, to be more precise. The suit was required for a Casino Evening, tonight, at school.
And, like Mother like son in more ways than one, son had a vision of said suit, or at least what he would look like wearing it. Son is notoriously, sartorially fussy, and why not!
Top Man had a couple of nicely cut styles, ‘it’s got to be skinny, Mum, and I mean skinny…’ but not in the correct size. The only 36″ chest was a rather shiny, Jimmy Carr affair that we weren’t too keen on. We traipsed the length and breadth of Highcross trying on any slim fitting suit we could see, but Yuk, a badly cut bunch, the lot of them.
‘Let’s try All Saints,’ I suggested.
‘Bit expensive,’ middle son said, (such a responsible boy, that one, and never, ever greedy.)
‘Oh, come on,’ I said, ‘It’s worth a try…’
No suits as such, but nice jackets, lovely trousers and when I told the, very helpful, very lovely, sales assistant what we were after, she said she thought she had matching trousers out the back, to the jackets on display and matching jackets to the trousers. (The mind boggles somewhat, but who am I to question the logic behind their sales technique?)
Anyway, as soon as he tried it on we knew. Perfect. Cool, modern, slightly washed and rumpled looking, low at the crutch, slim at the ankle, neat shoulders and very, very skinny. Just right. A beautiful, soft, white cotton shirt and very slim eighties-style tie later and we were done. I didn’t look at the price before punching in my pin, just the look on my boy’s face. Worth every penny.


Just had a look on their website to see if I could find a pic (no) but found this great link to creative stuff and videos made in conjunction with GQ magazine. Follow the link and enjoy. The video at the top of this post, Ghostpoet aka Obaro Ejimiwe is one of the artists. Lovely track. The GQ session is even better I think, but I couldn’t embed the video. Do check it out. There’s sets by Tricky and Gary Numan among others.

http://www.allsaints.com/basementsessions_x_gq/ghostpoet/

And finally, just to warm the cockles of your heart… DJ Fresh- Gold Dust.
(I don’t remember playground skipping being that clever when I was a young thing but that makes me sound old, so I won’t say it out loud…)

Julius’s team won their first match of the season this afternoon and Isaac and his friends (Isaac doesn’t do ‘solo’) are home, so all in all it’s been a lovely day and it will be a full house for Sunday lunch tomorrow. I smell Yorkshire’s. Life is good.
Night night.

Scars

  

The first scars were born

with scalpels and forceps

and the cut that separated us.

Our stories engraved upon our skin –

at the corner of your eye, a dry tear,

a lunate sliver now faded to silver,

while mine within keened unseen,

felt only by touch

and man’s naked eye.

 

Now you are a man,

fresh scars are born.

Needles and coloured inks

engrave new stories upon your skin –

a swallow, a feather, a name, a quote,

a coptic sign, a Japanese brush stroke,

and the pain,

the invisible yoke that will always remain

means mine still keen, unseen,

untouchable, deep inside.

Saturday 24th September 2011 (part 1)

Busy, busy week…

I’m writing this on my new iPad, which is a challenge… But having invested my life savings and an arm and a leg in it I’m going to crack it if it kills me. My Ma always says, “Where there’s a will there’s a way, and you my dear have one of the strongest wills I’ve ever seen.”
She’s not wrong…

I discovered this afternoon, to my dismay, that you can’t actually blog from an iPad… Which is entirely why I bought the bloody thing… Because the sites like WordPress and Blogspot haven’t married up the touch screen interface with the host domain’s dashboard yet. You can’t upload pics or vids or docs which is obviously what I do a lot of, in fact it’s all I do, other than the actual text of my diaries.
However. Relax. I’ve found an app which is very clever and seems to work really well other than crashing occasionally. It enables you to post vids from Youtube and photos either from your library on your iPad or flickr, or images directly from the web. It involved the setting up of various accounts but that was relatively simple to do. I wanted to find a way of blogging whereby I could be entirely self sufficient with just an iPad so that when I travel it’s all I need to take. This app seems to be the answer.

It’s called Blogsy.

I may eat my words after I press the publish button and see the results of my endeavours, but fingers, toes legs and eyes are all crossed.

Saturday 17th September

Last Saturday I drove Isaac up to Leeds. The traffic was chaotic. We witnessed the aftermath of about seven accidents and every other car seemed to be piled full of cardboard boxes and duvets- a mass exodus of teens off to uni from every city along the stretch of the M1.
As always we passed the four hour journey (I know- very extended…) with pleasant conversation and an eclectic selection of music. Isaac is never anything but good company, a fact that never ceases to make me feel anything other than joyful.

The top pic is of Isaac’s flats, bang in the centre of Leeds and the bottom is of the architecture building. A wonderful structure, award winning, that looks like it’s made of rusty metal panels like an old ship’s hull.

Negotiating the one way system and ring roads of Leeds was not easy, which considerably added to our journey time and my frazzle-factor, but we finally arrived at The Plaza, Isaac’s home for the next year, a mere hour and a half later than our booked appointment time. No one was bothered however and we were greeted by a smiling rep, shown where to park and register and I breathed a huge sigh of relief.

Isaac’s on the tenth floor in a flat with five others- three girls and one boy. His room is a decent size and he has his own ensuite which is tiny, like an aeroplane loo. It’s all beige moulded plastic, but clean and functional with enough shelf space for a razor, shaving foam and a tooth brush and paste. (Just as well he doesn’t often wear make up or use many hair products…) Ha ha!

We unpacked his stuff, then re-packed half his clothes back in the suitcase for me to bring home again when he realised how much space he doesn’t have. (He must get his clothes collecting gene from someone… Can’t think who?) Made up his bed, found a home for everything, learnt why the Asda coat-hangers we bought were so cheap, discovered the local corner shop- very handy- bought loo rolls and washing powder which we realised we’d forgotten and Isaac made me a cup of tea before I left him pinning up all his pics and gig tickets on his pin board above his bed.

By the time I’d driven round the perimeter of Leeds at least three times and through it’s centre twice in an inept attempt to locate either the M1 or the A1-I wasn’t fussy as long it was heading South- I’d completely swallowed the lump in my throat and forgotten it was ever there. He’ll be fine. I know that. And it’s not like he’s not been away before. And he is a messy bugger. And noisy. But I do miss him.

I’ll publish this and see how it looks before I write up a whole week of drivel in case I find it’s got even drivellier thanks to the inadequacies of modern technology.

If it works all hail Blogsy!!!

15th August 2011

On sunday I drove down to Heathrow to meet the boys off their flight from Hong Kong. How completely fantastic to have them all home, a proper family once again, after almost four months. A few of Isaac’s friends came round, the usual suspects, and we ended up having a delightfully debauched evening, (especially after Craig turned up, well after midnight, in the mood to party,) drinking and smoking far too much, talking until the early hours. Felt a little tender when I awoke the next morning.

Monday dawned sunny and fresh, not that I saw much of it until a little later. After lunch I drove Fergus over to Norfolk to stay with a group of his friends in Burnham Market for Hunstanton Tennis Week. We had a very pleasant journey and I was much entertained by talk of Hong Kong and Borneo. After I’d dropped him off I drove to Brancaster Sands and walked along the beach for a couple of hours.

Very lovely. I needed an infusion of positive ions. I walked for miles, shoes off, sand between my toes, having a paddle at the water’s edge when the fancy took me. The sun was low and the shadows long by the time I strolled back along the dunes. Before I left for home I drank a steaming cup of tea perched on a large flat rock as the sun slid slowly into the clouds banking across the horizon. I love Norfolk’s big skies.

Isaac and friends had decided to take off in the camper armed with food, beer and a portable BBQ so I picked Julius and I up a Chinese take-away as I passed Uppingham. I was on my way to bed when they all trooped back in. They’d been unable to find anywhere to camp so had decided to come home instead. The music went on and their infectious company kept me up late for a second night, but I made sure I had nothing to drink this time, too old to cope with more than alternate nights of self abuse these days. I even managed to get a bit more writing done… I’ve missed them all, that’s a fact!

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