I'm taking a break until early January, but I'm hoping you'll all be having such a great Christmas you won't notice. Have a good one, as they say, and this is my present to you. Thank you for all your comments over the year
Lyon.
Check it out.
PS A less welcome present is a temporary return to the dreaded captcha. My in box has been flooded with anonymous spam and its difficult to weed out the one in a hundred genuine 'anon' from the spurious.
Friday, 21 December 2012
Friday, 14 December 2012
A cold banana counts
I visit a friend
who has a terminal illness. The nursing home is airy and modern. Elevators and
doors are password controlled, and there is a faint smell of urine on the
stairs. When not in bed, my friend sits in a communal area staring at the wall,
or at other people coming in and out of his range of vision. There are others
like him, unable to do anything but sit and be looked after, and there are spirits
in each of them, memories that come and go, and a reminder to me that life is
to be lived – every second of it. I’m eating a cold banana – resting it on me
knee to type this - and it tastes wonderful.
In terms of the
sensory, my Damascene moment came in my late twenties. I had just read Riddle
of the Sands by Erskine Childers. The book beautifully evokes London club land of the Edwardian
period. Finances and location (Newport) precluded me from
experiencing any such luxury myself – though it has figured in my writing
since. But in the same book Erskine Childers describes sailing through rain and
storm in the North Sea so brilliantly you
share the same storm-tossed craft with his heroes. Just reading makes you part
of it – more - you want to experience it.
Unfortunately same
problem: finances and location…but not necessarily. One dark November night, Newport was hit by a
violent storm, rain sheeting down in huge, boisterous slabs. This was it. No
dinghy but the wind was doing a pretty good job in tossing me about. I walked
the three miles from my house in Malpas to Newport Town
Center and reached the
'Engineers Arms' wind-swept and sodden. Never had beer tasted so good, a fire so
hot and other drinkers cosily blurred through steamed up glasses. I’ve craved the
sensory ever since.
I love the colour
of autumn; I enjoy coldness, the threat of worse to come, and blazing fires. When I walk to the swimming pool
on winter mornings it is dark, the lane a narrow black ribbon shrouded by trees.
When the cloud breaks it is like walking on moonbeams. The pool, too, is
magical, turquoise and silver, the water occasionally chill, sometimes lukewarm,
other times warm enough to poach eggs, given patience and the cooperation of
other, more competitive swimmers.
But I believe
there is magic in every moment, even towelling yourself briskly, and you know
you’ve had a good day when you go to bed tired and wondering what you’re going
to dream about now. Whatever you do don’t dream about ‘bucket lists’. Treat
every day as a bucket list and then you’ll never run out. Sermon over. A banana in the fridge has my name on it
Friday, 7 December 2012
What do I think? Tell me
I was left with a
degree of uncertainty this morning. It has quite spoiled my day. Normally I’m up
at dawn, sitting in the dark, with tea and radio to hand, and I’m told
what to think for that day. There are some things now I know to be immutable
truths:
The government is both incompetent and heartless.
Wind power is the
future.
Shale gas is bad
Leveson is good.
The Press is bad
The internet needs to be regulated
Independent Schools are bad
The Republicans
are fools.
Obama is God
Starbucks is bad.
The Right Honourable Margaret Hodge, Chairman
of the Public Accounts Committee and the doughty champion of fair taxation is
good. No mention is made of her shares in a family company (Stemcor) It is 'allegedly'
making millions and paying 0.01% in tax. An obvious oversight I’m sure will be remedied, 'explained' or ignored.
So far so good. I'm surrounded by tablets of stone, modern commandments. 'Though I walk in the shadow of death' Wormtongue is there, drip feeding news and telling me how to interpret it. No chance of forgetting. It is persistent, like rain, reminding me what's right day after day.
Until today.
Until today.
Today the guidance faltered. Like a SatNav losing signal, and as a result I feel rudderless.
I've been picking up suggestions
that Presidient Morsi of Egypt
is 'bad'. He is over-riding a large section of public feeling in his attempt to
impose an Islamic Constitution, and a mass of Egyptians are rioting or, if you prefer, protesting.
But what am I to
feel about the Belfast Assembly taking down the UK flag from public buildings? In
doing so they have outraged a large section of public opinion in Northern Ireland, and they are doing much the
same thing as the rioters in Egypt
– making their feelings known. Am I to support one lot of rioters and not the
other? Is one set of rioters morally superior to the other and by whose criteria? No clear guidance has been given yet, though I'm sure it is only a matter of time…as is the next war. There is a steady drumbeat for involvement in Syria, and maybe Iran. It is the sound of a public being ‘prepared,' opinion subtly formed.
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