Tag Archives: Parents

A small thought…

Yes, these small thoughts are coming thick and fast…

You can read my first ever published short story here.

Scroll through until you find: The Dress. 

You’ll discover shedloads of other loveliness on the way, and perhaps you might even pause to read my  poem: Red and Green.

Enjoy!

 

 

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…

Waiting for the hands of time

I wrote this after visiting the Sculpture Exhibition in the Botanical Gardens in Leicester. All thanks to Graham Norman and Caroline Cook from The Leicester Stanza of The Poetry Society. I was intrigued by this piece from the outset and I wanted to know the story… Of course I couldn’t find out, so I made up my own…

Waiting

 

John W Mills PPRBS ARCA FRSA

2011 Bronze

 

Waiting for the hands of time.

 

Da? Do you remember that day? The hunt?

I try to penetrate the yawning space, the blunt stare,

unsure whether you are here, or can hear, aware,

or somewhere else, far, far, in a lost place.

*

We heard them in the distance, their wild howls

carried on the wind, across the fields and hills

along with their scent. Toby caught their scent

long before their cries even reached our ears.

*

Quick! Jump! you said. I reached, found your hand

as you hauled me up, crushed me in your giant

fist, limbs flailing round the column of your torso,

a miniature steeplejack desperate to gain purchase.

*

Once secure, arms clasped at your neck, heads

on a level, I could see for miles, the red-coated

army a maelstrom of colour and noise. Toby hid

between your legs, we held our breath, and we waited.

*

Excitement charged the air, but I wasn’t scared,

never, not with you; my Da, my north, my world.

They flew right by us like winged beasts, the froth

of their sweat, the screech and the yelp, the pant and the heat.

*

Once they’d passed you let me drop to my feet, but

wobbly, like an infant, shaky legs failing I fell and yet

again reached and found your hand, so safe, so warm.

In slow, companionable silence, we walked home.

*

I reach, find your hand; digits knobbed like turned spindles,

loose papery stuff where skin and callouses lay,

your bold form reduced to just a rumour, a myth, a wisp,

while the hands of time crush your bones in their cruel list.

Sunday 16th October 2011 [2]

Another incredible sky. Lino cut trees on a sunset wash.

The parents have gone home. The cauliflower/broliflower was very tasty, as was the lamb, as indeed were the warm poached nectarines and Green and Black’s vanilla ice cream.

I felt the need to work off such excesses so decided to walk the dogs in the woods with my boys.The leaves crunched underfoot and everywhere smelled of damp earth and wood smoke.

Came across this lovely rope-branch twisting it’s tangled way through the woods, my boys in the background.

The Sisters Brothers by Patrick de Witt.

I finished my first of the Man Booker Long List yesterday, picked almost randomly.  (I really liked the title and the cover…)

I had high hopes for this book from the opening paragraph and it did not disappoint. It’s a western, set in mid ninetenth century America, but not a western as you would know it. The Sisters brothers are a pair of psychopathic hired killers working for The Commodore who we are never introduced to. Rather, we meet a succession of imaginative and engaging characters from ‘the weeping man’ to an evil young girl who goes about poisoning three-legged dogs, and all [in]humanity in between.

Charles and Eli Sisters’ relationship is central to the narrative and Eli, the novel’s narrator is a sometimes harsh, always thoughtful, complex, sensitive, stoical paradox. I loved him and every last one of his musings on life, love, faith, violence, sex, teeth cleaning, women, his brother and all he meets on their strange journey. It’s dark; jet-black in parts, and it’s also very, very funny. The story ends with our pair caught up in the craziness of the Californian Gold Rush and I will say no more. Read it.

Eldest son taken to station and on his way back to Leeds. Dogs ate remaining lamb leg and bone in my (quite brief) absence. I wondered why they were cowering in their bed when I arrived home, until my stocking-clad foot happened upon a sharp splinter of thigh, camouflaged against the pattern of the hall rug. Long-legged Bruce was the lead-thief for it was left on the draining board and Otto isn’t tall enough to reach. I’m sure he will have egged Bruce on from the side-lines though. Only good thing- he didn’t pull my lovely Sophie Conran platter on to the floor with the meat. (It has been known before!) Small mercies, small mercies…

Off to read my next book. Read all about it here. See you very soon.

20th August 2011

What a lovely afternoon- Market Harborough. Poetry Stanza. Two hours of bliss. Lovely people. Like minded. Intellectual stimulation. Discussion. Generous constructive criticism. What more could a writer want. I am blessed.

Ma and Pa came round for supper. They were half an hour early and I was consequently tetchy and resentful. Wish it was not so. We ate and drank well but my patience was stretched. Sometimes I hate myself. I wish I was nicer.

Shit…

Blasts from the past. I love. Thank you G.E.

Haven’t really listened to them for years.

I remember I was so obsessed with both The Roches and Roy Harper…

And I remember why… because they are fucking amazing is why.

Enjoy x

12th August 2011

A heavy lid kind of grey day over us today, but I wore a new frock, black and cream, very spotty, very fifties, with high heeled patent shoes and buttons at the ankle socks, so it was OK!

heartbreakingly beautiful… always

Been with my parents since I left work tonight at five…

A couple of days ago Ma asked me if I could get her some hearing aid batteries. I immediately perked up as she’s had the sodding pair, festering, unused, battery acid leaking, ignored, for about six months, in a drawer next to her near her chair in their sitting room. She has shown no interest in them whatsoever since we finally (after six years of nagging) got her to sort out an appointment and subsequent fitting. We (the whole family) have long since given up nagging her to actually use them and have resorted to SHOUTING! and even, at (desperate) times, waving our arms in front of her face in a kind of wild semaphore. I investigated forthwith, managed to prise the little gits out of their casements, popped them in my purse and said I would, dutifully, replace them. So I did. On my way home from work tonight. 3 for 2 in Boots- Bought 18. Enough to dissolve the whole frigging drawer and the hinges on the doors below, no doubt, but one can never let a bargain go by…

Got there this evening to find them in good spirits. Ma passed me her hearing aids (still box fresh in their little plastic casings) informing me that she just can’t hear the telly anymore and, seeing as that all Pa does these days is watch the bloody thing… Ahh… all is now clear…

Anyway. Fitted the batteries. Fitted the hearing aids in Ma’s ears. Foraged for instructions on how to adjust the volume controls, and discovered six (further) boxes of batteries, not the ones I’d just purchased I hasten to add, sitting in the drawer next to her near her chair in their sitting room. Mmm I thought. Interesting. I gently pointed this out to both Ma and Pa and they laughed sheepishly, apolgised profusely and I muttered to myself as I decided it was now 6pm, Friday, the sun way past the yard arm and time for a glass of wine to rosaeate the proceedings, please.

I decided to cook their supper, a suggestion that was met with slight protestations from Ma, (she never, ever does any of the cooking anymore) and gleeful thanks from Pa (the lately appointed chief cook and bottle washer and everythingunderthesuner.) Armed with a glass of (sweet) rose wine I investigated the ingredients in the fridge. After turfing half the contents into the bin due to ‘out-of-date issues,’ I was left with bacon- 27 rashers, sausages-four, slightly wizened, black pudding- 6 slices, tomatoes- eight, large, M&S cheesy potato croquettes- 2 boxes, (eight in total), eighteen eggs, a jelly trifle, a treacle tart, an apple pie, a punnet of (just) OK raspberries, 3 cartons of extra thick cream, and seven assorted kinds of (rather dried up looking) red leicester cheese.

OK- mixed grill, I yelled. Half an hour later, smoke alarm shrieking at intervals, (I’m glad to know they aint gonna burn to death, unless they run out of batteries and the neighbours are all congenitally deaf) two parents, sitting at the table, glasses of wine at the ready, steaming plates of food in front of them. Result. Ma said- oh… two sausages… I don’t know… I interrupted. Just eat what you can Ma. No pressure. Two scraped plates, two empty bowls of trifle and a full dishwasher humming later, I left.

JD.

At least it reduced the time I’ll be spending alone on a Friday night.

Friday nights. What is it with me and them?

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