Tag Archives: friends

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…

Coachella! Friday 13.04.12

Friday Running Order:

After a freezing night and the realisation that the sleeping bags we’d brought with us were not as warm as a pair of ten denier tights we woke up to sun and laughter and music and breakfast smells…

Our neighbours, we soon discovered, were a really lovely bunch offering to share their beer, water, food, company and anything else you could think of. I was glad to meet up with some young folks as I secretly harboured a fear that Isaac would regret coming all the way to America for Coachella with his mother and find me a rather boring festival buddy. I also worried that people would think it rather odd that he’d got to put up with me and he’d be embarrassed by me, so I was pleasantly surprised to find that everyone seemed to think it cool and dandy and they all said they wished their Mums would do such a thing with them. They were probably just being nice, but even the receptionists at The Standard were fascinated and wished us have a great time…

I’d found a great tea and coffee stall last night so I headed off there as soon as we woke. We all sat drinking and chatting and smoking in the sun in our PJ’s feeling very chilled. We explored a little and bought towels (yes… Another thing I forgot) and flip flops for Isaac and discovered where the showers were but decided to avoid them for the moment due to the lengthy queue. Baby wipes are great and make you smell nice too! By the time we’d got our act together and were ready to have breakfast it was about 12 pm and we ended up eating a ginormous and delicious sandwich and I started on the warm rosé… Isaac enjoyed some cool beers courtesy of our new friends…

Kiana, Olley, Kerry, Jimmy, Allie, Vicky, Sam, Zak, me, Kevin, Isaac, Alex… and forgive me if I’ve spelled anyone’s name incorrectly…

We headed into the arena around two intending to watch Grouplove at 5. The queues were huge and it took us an age to get in – tight security and bag checks etc and not enough gates open. It was sunny and warm though so we weren’t too bothered. Isaac had to wait in the boys line and me in the girls but we both got chatting to peeps and finally we were in. The site is beautiful… A huge circular lush green plain surrounded by palm trees and behind them 360 degrees of mountains, many snowcapped. We really felt like a drink but discovered extra tight security inside the arena. The drinking age in California is 21, no matter that the vast majority of peeps are off their heads with weed and other chemicals. The bars were all manned by security and you had to take your ID to a check point to receive a wrist band. I waited in another line and got quite shirty when my ID was asked for – I’m 51 for God’s sake – my retort and eventually they agreed to let me have a wrist band without returning all the way back to the camp site for my passport! The Californian air would have been blue with very English sounding expletives If they’d not agreed.

I entered the beer garden, which was very lovely and civilised by the way, and purchased a large white wine spritzer only to find I had to consume it inside the fenced confines. I could see Isaac waiting patiently on the other side of the fence so I downed it and decided we needed a plan… He needed to see this…

Plan was, I went to the loo and painstakingly unstuck my wrist band which took about 15 minutes due to it being feathered so when you unpeeled it you had to individually unstick about 30 tiny triangles. But I managed it and snuck it out to Isaac, who then went to the loo to stick it round his own wrist. I then joined another line and had to go through the same rigmarole – I’m 51 for God’s sake – to get another wrist band… But finally we were in business!

We were so relieved to be there we just sat and people-watched for hours. Ate the best chips ever – duck fat garlic fries with fresh crab and aioli – scrummy and drank several extremely expensive white wines and beers.

Grouplove were amazing. Isaac hadn’t seen them before so it was great for him. I saw them on a tiny stage at Latitude last year and I enjoyed them even more this time in the sun on their home turf. Bought their new CD.

Went for a wander and found the H&M Fashion Against AIDS tent which looks like an orgy, but was in fact just peeps resting on water beds… And had our photo taken in the special booth :)

Caught The Arctic Monkeys after that and had a few more beers and then… It became very dark and grey and cloudy and began to rain. Isaac, sporting only shorts, vest and flip flops was shivering timbers so we returned to the campsite to change into warmer gear. I’d come prepared with cashmere and leggings and boots – I’d heard the desert nights could get chilly – and we met up with our neighbours who were also changing. First time in 14 years it had rained at Coachella. Mmm. Say no more. Once warm we didn’t care and we headed back with the crew. Shorter queues this time and happy times were had by all helped along by Allie’s special happy vibes.

Watched M Ward, Rapture, M83 and it was all fab and I can remember bugger all. Missed Pulp, Mazzie Star and The Black Keys, but it was still definitely fab! That I know…

Ended the night drinking tea under shooting stars watching the craziest show in the world.

Lucent Dossier… On the Do laB stage. They are a crazy kind of circus troupe. Dancs. Gymnasts. Musicians. Trapeze artists. Amazing. The bass was so loud it hurt my throat. I have no photos as I forgot to take my camera in, but here’s a couple of photos from the LA times and a video link.

Got back to the car about 2am, warmed up courtesy of the white-beast-of-bling’s seat warmers, kept all our clothes on and slept like babies.

 

Thursday 5th January 2012

I enjoyed fifteen minutes of surreal, psychedelic, crazy, mesmerising beauty yesterday morning, as I smoked my first cigarette of the day and drank my tea outside on the deck, watching the eastern sky bubble up into hell’s own cauldron. Incredible.

Happy New Year to you all!

The last couple of weeks have been somewhat chaotic and jam-packed in the Waller-Wilkinson household, as I’m sure they have for many of you the world over.

On 22nd December I got my man back from Grenada after almost three months, (or just over two months, depending on whether you take his word or mine as the more accurate. It certainly felt like three months to me.)

On 23rd December my middle sister arrived from Sweden with her husband and two divine children and we collected our parents to join us on Christmas morning, so then we were 11. It was fun, noisy, laughter and love filled, utterly exhilarating, and quite exhausting. We demolished a Turkey twice the size of my torso which I had slow cooked in the simmering oven of the aga for 16 hours and it was, although I say it myself, rather tasty, but we missed out on our traditional prawn cocktail starter because I bought all the possible ingredients one could possibly need to add to the best and most luxurious prawn cocktail in the world… Except the prawns! Hey ho- at least I remembered the sprouts :) This years crackers were entertaining in that they provided masks, rather than hats. My Pa looked particularly memorable, catching a sneaky pre-prandial snooze… (See the rest of the family on my facebook page if you’re so inclined.)

On boxing day my youngest sister arrived with her husband and her two divine children and we collected our parents once again (we’d packed them off in a taxi the previous evening) and then we were 15 ! And my house is not big… But we all somehow fitted in and we made music all day. Between us we played three guitars, two ukeleles, two flutes, bongos, a mouth organ, a piano, mixed voices and a truly wonderful time was had by all.

My man survived his baptism by fire, i.e. meeting his woman’s family for the first time, all at once, at Christmas! Well done him… Braveheart, I say!

Needless to say they loved him and he loved them, and why not, for they’re all completely lovely. And no, of course I’m not biased… Not at all.

By 28th December they’d all gone home or away, including my three boys who were whisked off to Japan to ski with their father, lucky lot, and I kind of flopped in a crumpled, sleepy heap for several days, only raising my gaze from my navel to read a little, only moving my arms occasionally to lift a tea cup or a fag to my lips, only moving my legs once a day to walk the dogs. Indeed, if it hadn’t been for the dogs, I may well have melded to the sofa.

Can’t you just hear Bruce’s plaintive howls… ‘Please, please, please, just a little one, round the block, to the bottom of the garden and back… please…?’

It’s been lovely though. Just what we needed- Lots of peace and quiet and time to re-adjust to each other.

We spent a delightful New Year with old (as in length of friendship, not number of years alive…) and very dear friends, eating wonderful food, drinking lots of fizz and playing my favourite board game-Taboo!

Then back to reality and work with a snotty nose and a much rounder tummy.

Yes. Work. I’m having to do a lot more days as we lost a key member of my team just before Christmas in very unpleasant circumstances! so I’m having to take on her work load plus my own until we find a replacement. This has meant that I’ve been unable to focus on my writing for a while and it will remain that way for a few months, so I may not be posting quite so many stories or poems for a while. I’ll try to keep up with the diary though as I’m so excited to now have almost a hundred followers and I want to try to keep you all just a little bit interested.

Leicester Writer’s club starts back up tonight, which I’m sure will inspire me and living with a writer has surely got to help, so I shall keep positive that somehow, time will be found for everything. I’m really looking forward to 2012, more than I’ve looked forward to a time in my own life for many years. 2011 ended up being unexpectedly fantastic, incredibly rewarding, challenging, exciting, filled with new love and old, friendship, family and creative fulfilment. Here’s to the future and good luck to all you beautiful bloggers out there.

Talkin Tarn

Another seasonal and previously published offering… I remember both the evenings that inspired this poem quite intensely at this time of year; two very special times separated by almost thirty years.

Talkin Tarn is a small lake in the Cumbrian Fells where I grew up and in the coldest of Winters it would freeze over…

 

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Stumbling forth much cider-addled

swaddling-wrapped in Christmas cheer,

festive tunes beat marching rhythms

sung by luteous fuzz-blurred moon.

Light our tallow-faced meanderings.

Light our way to Talkin Tarn.

 

Hill-top guardians, black-limbed stanchions,

iron giants, arms outstretched,

spitting fizz, bright brittle crackling

arcs electric, purple hiss.

Walk the line of skeletal monsters.

Walk the line to Talkin Tarn.

 

Snow lined hollow, sleepy sheep all

fallow-buff like sugar lumps

fuddle thrown, sweet huddle-muddled

piled in china, white as bone.

Trudge our way in caravan.

Trudge our way to Talkin Tarn.

 

Bristled tines, pine scented arbour

succours snowy lunate shore,

underboot, soft-footed needlings;

seriatim rendered mute.

See the glistery icy vista,

see the mystery. Talkin Tarn.

 

Moon-loon madness overtaking,

dancing arm-linked can-can craic,

thwacking echo, snap-snap bull-whip

ricochet deep down below.

Risk life’s brittle carapace.

Risk the kiss of Talkin Tarn.

Sunday 11th September 2011

I still find it really difficult to actually take in what happened here ten years ago.

I send my love.

On an infinitely more mundane note… my life…

My souvenir of a delightful weekend- a very English posy…

I am home from my travels to Henley on Thames. My man and I have been to the Baha’i/Buddist Wedding of a very good friend of his… and his betrothed… (now his wife!)

This weekend’s adventure began on Friday afternoon. I left Leicester at 2.45pm intending to arrive in St Albans at 5pm in order to meet Jacob en route to our final destination. I brought reading material with me as I presumed I would be early and he late and I may have to wait. I knew it was Friday and cognisant of all that could mean, yet still, I underestimated the traffic. (it was, after all, only 66 miles…) I arrived an hour late, but (thank you) my man was unperturbed. He had a book in his hands and was firmly ensconced in his own head-space when I finally spotted him leaning against the a wall outside the train station looking extremely desirable in charcoal grey and dark denim. All was OK. We travelled on to the Old Bell Inn at Hurley and finally arrived at about 7.30pm. We booked a table in their restaurant for 9pm and made our way to our home for the next two nights. It’s a very pretty place and we had a lovely, spacious room.

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Gorgeous food. J ate smoked mackerel and salad, then chicken cooked with corn and cob nuts and I had chicken liver salad, then (very fresh) grouse and wilted greens. Yum.

Ginormous comfy bed with many good pillows. I know you, like I, care about such details.

The wedding was scheduled to begin at 4pm so we had a pleasurably leisurely start, a short and easy drive (and a rare case of Ms Sat Nav being unusually friendly and co-operative,) a productive visit to a watchmaker, (aren’t they interesting folk… they mess with time, after all,) a stroll around the very photogenic and pretty Henley, a scrumptious crayfish and rocket sandwich lunch with good tea and lemon drizzle cake for pud in a gorgeous small and friendly cafe, an equally easy drive back to base and a couple of hours to get ready…

When one has spent years as a wife and mother, always with (by their very demanding nature,) children in tow, the luxury of irresponsible leisure is not to be quibbled at. I am only, just now, getting used to it, allowing myself to become accustomed to such riches.

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The Bride was (is) Iranian and a Baha’i and the groom was (is) Scottish and a Buddist. We were enchanted by the soulful wails of the Bagpipes as the bride made her entrance (fashionably late) to the entrancing breathy whispers of a Persian Reed Flute- one of the oldest musical instruments still to be played- accompanied by the delicate rhythms of the Daf. The sound of the Reed Flute took me immediately to heat suffused climes, at once exotic and mesmeric. All the young children fell silent during the recital. Evocative and memorable. As the sun was setting- stunning.

We were delighted by readings of prose and poetry and a little history circe both their religions and their personal history and their place within them, and then the two (beautifully and mercifully) short ceremonies and hey presto, JD and on to the sugar grinding…

Forgive me, as I may be incorrect over the the heritage of this… but I think it was part of the Iranian wedding tradition… We women, (starting with the youthful and single, the nubile, moving through the still active but having lived a little and with baggage in tow- I count myself in this group- through to the aged, the long married, the happily ensconced in coupledom to the simply female,) yes, we were all, inclusively, (although within said pecking order) invited to grind sugar over the happy couple’s heads, albeit suffused through a lace doily of a cloth. Very charming. I think it’s an aid to fertility, though in the case of our happy couple, not actually needed.

Bahá’u’lláh, the latest of these Messengers, brought new spiritual and social teachings for our time. His essential message is of unity. He taught the oneness of God, the oneness of the human family, and the oneness of religion.

Bahá’u'lláh said, “The earth is but one country and mankind its citizens,” and that, as foretold in all the sacred scriptures of the past, now is the time for humanity to live in unity.

Founded more than a century and a half ago, the Bahá’í Faith has spread around the globe. Members of the Bahá’í Faith live in more than 100,000 localities and come from nearly every nation, ethnic group, culture, profession, and social or economic background.

Bahá’ís believe the crucial need facing humanity is to find a unifying vision of the nature and purpose of life and of the future of society. Such a vision unfolds in the writings of Bahá’u'lláh. 

If I was ever going to become religious… I think this is the religion I would join.

The formalities over, we trekked through the orchard carrying blankets, brollies and benches and I changed into my neon orange hunter wellies (which you can spy in the photos if you look carefully, resting against an ancient oak just beyond the proceedings) and we made our way to the field where the rest of the evening was to take place.

The setting sun, Canapes, Champagne, Fentiman’s Rose Lemonade, (of which I am now an addict- just ordered 3 crates through Ocado…) talk, music, led us all delightfully to a supper in a huge wood framed double turreted teepee. Much food (feta and fig salad, slow roasted spiced lamb, vegatables and rice, organic apples from the orchard cake with creme freche and local honey) and more talk and (truly delightful) speeches and dancing much, much later, I drove J and I back to the Old Bell and we slept like logs till 11am. Heaven on a stick.

Another day. Still sunny… just. Brunch. And back to the field. A hog roast and salad and the local Women’s Institute cakes and afternoon tea and an ancient French couple dressed in matching matelot t’s and berets singing Edith Piaf accompanied by an accordian and more talk and friendship. Wonderful.

Home. Uneventful. Children. Lovely.

If I didn’t miss my man so much,

life would be perfect.

And now… I’m going to bed. Can every weekend be this divine please?

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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