Monday, 1 January 2018

A Mother's Christmas in Tooting.


One Christmas was so very much like another in those Tooting years that I always remember it never snowed for any days, not even when I was thirty, or forty, or even when I was fifty. All the Christmases rolled together as one toward that two-laned High Road like pretty litter skidding down the pavement stopping at the ice-edged freezer section at Lidl, where we plunged our hands in to bring out whatever we could find: chips, peas, fish fingers, you name it... In goes the hand to that edge of the holidays, resting on the rim of the chest freezer as we paused to listen to the carol singing down at Balham tube, and out came Turkey Twizzlers and the memories...

First, the present-purchasing ritual that was, for some reason, always a mother's lot so that the voice she heard before sleep was always father's, saying "Oi! Stop pressing those buttons on your laptop. What's with all this Amazon and their evil tax-evading ways?"

"Ah," mother would say, replying the same every year, "if you are so against Amazon then you can jolly well sally forth on the tube to that hell-hole which is Oxford Street before Christmas with its fast-flow of people and lights and irritating music abuzz to the rooftops."

"You what?" said father, and of course he never did go.

So mother pressed the buttons and presents arrived post-haste at the threshold without so much as leaving the house which was like magic to her, except for in the case of her shiny-faced nieces with their colt-like limbs and flowing locks, for them she did venture to Oxford Street to that cathedral that is the top of all the shops, that is, Top Shop, where she bought them two of the most miniest of skirts - and while she was about it also five dresses for herself, yes, five, because fuck it they are the lowest of prices, she said to herself, and anyway this was the year she could also use her ten per cent off student discount, as she said to the sales assistant behind the counter, "I may not look like a student, but really I am one!" 

And the cheery sales assistant replied: "Never too old! Except for my Gran, who has gone back to college also and loves it but says she is so old she can't remember a thing they teach her." 

And mother said in reply... actually I can't remember what she said in reply...

Also, it was always mother who made the trifle every year with its pink and yellow strata, sponge and custard and fruit and custard and sponge and fruit and cream, lying soft white against cold hard bowl edge. She made it every year even though her three lanky lads cried, as they did every time, "but mother, we can't stand trifle!"

And every year it was the same Christmas quiz except for the year when the salt-and-pepper-haired, long-nosed grandfather asked them all, smiling atop his glasses, a lot of mysterious Beatles-related questions, like: name three Beatles songs which are also questions, and, which Beatles track has the longest title, and, which is the very shortest of all?

And then there were annual trips to the silver screen to watch War of the Stars episode 199 which went on an interminable time and turned out - when at last they got to the end of it and were turned out themselves onto the hard and frost-topped pavement - to have been in retrospect and also at the time an unbearable load of old crap, unlike the very best of British Paddington Bear movie they also attended at the most central of flickering Picture Houses, which delivered nothing but smiles and tears and laughter to every single family member no matter how young or old.



And then the Yuletide season was a wrap again, just like those silver and gold wrapped presents lying briefly beneath the tall and standing tree, which were now unwrapped, that same wrapping stuffed into fifteen black bin liners sitting outside the house for a week. And every trifle bowl was licked clean and washed up with Marigold-hands before being stored again in high cupboards; emptied viridescent children's stockings were folded and crammed back into already full blanket chests. Everyone was older and wiser and a tiny bit fatter and determined to lose that extra weight before long, turning down underfloor heating or raking ruby-red coals in the woodburner before climbing upstairs to bed. No words were said to the darkness and then they slept because Christmas was over and they were all slightly pissed and absolutely knackered.


Love E x

@DOESNOTDOIT




P.S. Not a bit like Dylan Thomas.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hv4-sgFw3Go

Wednesday, 20 December 2017

A Merry Christmas from York, and Tooting.

York - where I come from - has been named most festive city in the UK due to positive tweeting - digitalspy.com/tech/news/a845…


Sadly, I'm not going to York this year but I always think Christmas is a place we mostly go to in our minds anyway, so even though I will be staying in Tooting I am going to be shutting the door, lighting the fire and the candles, and visiting Christmas for a while. See you when I get back. 

Merry Christmas.

Love E x

@DOESNOTDOIT

P.S. Meanwhile, here's a little poem I came across, by Roald Dalh.

Mother Christmas


"Where art thou, Mother Christmas? 
I only wish I knew, 
Why Father should get all the praise, 
And no one mentions you.
I'll bet you buy the presents, 
And wrap them large and small, 
While all the time that rotten swine, 
Pretends he's done it all.
So Hail To Mother Christmas, 
Who shoulders all the work! 
And down with Father Christmas, 
That unmitigated jerk!"

Wednesday, 13 December 2017

I Should Be So Lucky.


Coming to the end of my first term as a student again I thought I might offer a little guide to anyone considering the same. So here are few tips and observations about life on an M.A. as a mature student.

Your comfort zone

Expect to be pushed out of it. If your idea of comfort was a bit of home-working punctuated with the odd foray out into the world - as mine was - then regularly filling a rucksack with books and a laptop, marching to the station, catching a train, sitting in a university seminar or lecture theatre surrounded by people who are mostly much younger and brighter than you are, definitely constitutes being pushed out of it. Surprisingly this turns out to be a good thing, a very good thing.

Ivory towers

It's not just the learning, it's the place. There's a huge library. There's a cinema and a theatre. There's a pub. There's a cafe, where they serve quinoa and couscous with seeds on top, and it's cheap. There are gardens. There's a grand hall with people playing live music in it on a seemingly endless basis. There are people walking around wearing all manner of outlandish clothing: girls who dress like boys, boys who dress like girls, and girl/boy/boy/girls who you aren't certain if they are a girl or a boy and who don't want to be pressed on the matter. Being part of this will make you feel modern, and young.

Friends 

One of the main differences with university second time around is it's not accompanied by social angst. New friends would be nice but not essential because you already have some. The thing is, you will make new friends whether you want to or not because suddenly you are exposed to a smorgasboard of fabulous people who all love the same thing you do - in this case, great writing - and who are bright and funny and kind. Also there are celebs. There's a person on my course who's off the telly but I'm not going to tell you who he is because this would be uncool, and it's all about being cool now. All this will restore your faith in humanity. It's worth going back to university for this alone.


Reading, writing, and drinking 

Be prepared to have to think, and write stuff that makes sense. I'm not used to either. Part of the reason I've temporarily given up alcohol is in order to have a clear head so I can do this, unlike my two eldest sons who are also students and who have been thinking for some time, so they tell me, while also drinking masses, apparently, although not at the same time, they insist. On Friday Middle One texts me from his university library to ask me what I'm up to in mine. "I'm writing a critical commentary," I write. "I just mentioned Shakespeare and Chekhov in the same sentence!"

"Sounds wild," he replies.

Inspiration

Universities are inspiring places. You will not so much be exposed to new ideas and challenges as have them chucked at you, this is energising. You will be encouraged by brilliant people to fulfil your intellectual potential, which is amazing. During my first hour-long tutorial I couldn't stop gushing. "This is fantastic! Thank you so much!" Until the wonderful academic I was talking to gently pointed out that I didn't have to thank him, he was only doing his job.

Something's gotta give

Last time I had homework to do Kylie Minogue was in the charts singing I should be so lucky and Maggie Thatcher was having a barney with some miners, unluckily for them. This is swotting on a grand scale, with LOTS of reading. In order to get it done you'll probably need to cut things out. This means not watching so much crap on the telly, chucking that Metro away when they hand it to you at the Tube and cancelling your subscription to Red magazine in favour of finally getting to the end of Moby Dick. On the upside it's the perfect excuse to quietly slip away from domestic tasks at Christmas, like the washing up, with the words "Sorry, I have some, you know, like, proper reading to do."



Love E x

@DOESNOTDOIT

P.S. I reckon returning to education as a mature student might be a great cure for depression. It offers a focus in a creative environment where you're surrounded by lovely people. Perhaps the government should consider funding M.A.s rather than doling out anti-depressants? Okay, so they're expensive, but not as expensive as 64.7 million prescriptions for anti-depressants, which was the number issued last year in England, the most ever.

Wednesday, 6 December 2017

The coincidence.


I'm at a gig in Herne Hill on a Wednesday night, hiding behind a coat stand so the band can't see me. How did I get here? To explain that I must to rewind... 21 years.

My eldest son is in a band with someone he has known since he was six-weeks-old because his mother and I met at postnatal classes. We had the same distinctive pram, when everyone else had plain blue ones, ours were green with white spots, so we started chatting, which is how we discovered our baby boys had the same name and were wearing the same striped outfit from Gap. Of course we had to become friends after that and so we saw a lot of each other when the boys were little, but then she and her family moved to a different part of south London and what with her full-time job and my filming, and now the MA, you know how it is, sometimes you lose touch with people and I haven't seen her for ages.

By another amazing coincidence, despite living miles apart, our boys ended up in the same class at secondary school, which is where they started playing music and writing songs together. I like to think of them as the Lennon and McCartney of Cornwall because now they go to the same university, in Cornwall, which is yet another coincidence, and they are in the same band and that band just made an album, and is in London for one night for a gig in Herne Hill.



So, anyway, back to Wednesday evening in a pub in New Cross Gate, where I'm sober, of course, and proudly showing some of my new student friends pictures of my sons on my phone and telling them this story of serendipity: two mothers meeting, discovering they have boys with the same name, years later those two boys being in the same band, now playing in London...

"That is a lot of coincidences!" Says one of my new student friends. 

"Yes it is," I say. "Life is full of weird coincidences, or fate, perhaps."

"So, you're going tonight, yeah?" Says another of my new student friends. "To see your son and your friend?"

"Oh no." I say. "He doesn't want me to go to the gig, in fact he'd kill me if I turned up, and I don't think my friend will be there anyway; I reckon all parents are banned."

"But you have to go," says another of my new student friends. "Go!"

Yeah! I think. Too right. I gave birth to him. I brought him up. I bought him that first guitar, arranged guitar lessons, played him all that inspiring music. Why shouldn't I go? I have to go. I'm going!



So I text my husband to meet me there and order an Uber from New Cross Gate to Herne Hill.

When I get to Herne Hill my husband is already waiting outside, talking to the friendly bouncer. "They're on at a quarter to ten," the bouncer is telling him, "so if you don't want to be seen you'd better go and sit in a pub nearby or something until then." So we do.

At a quarter to ten we return, and as we're walking across the room we suddenly see our son - with his band - heading in our direction, so we dive behind the aforementioned coat stand until he passes, then hover at the very back of the crowd so we can watch him on stage, singing his heart out and playing his guitar, but he can't see us.

I squeeze my husband's hand. "It's like that time when he was five and he was an elephant at the Royal Festival Hall and we went to watch him dance," I say.

Before the band reaches the end of their last number we sneak away so he won't see us when the lights go up and he gets down from the stage. We bump into the bouncer on the way out. He insists we have a photograph taken, with him. "Proof!" He shouts, squeezing between us and throwing his arms round our shoulders. "Or he won't believe you were here!"

Next morning, I receive a text message. "Sorry you weren't at the gig last night, Liz! I was there and you would have loved it!"

Turns out that by coincidence the friend I haven't seen for ages was also at the gig with her husband, but they were in the mosh pit, jumping up and down.

Love E x