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Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Sick Little Boys, Hong Kong, Christmas 2005

Extract from a letter to my sister dated 22nd December 2005

'It's bright and beautiful here. Every day is sunny but the dry air is ruining my skin and hair.  I went into a department store this week and was immediately approached by an assistant who told me she could do something for my 'dry skin and wrinkles.'  Chinese women have a horror of anything less than pale skin and seem to assume I want to get rid of my freckles.  This is the first time they added wrinkles.  You learn to be thick skinned about such things.  As I type, my face is slathered in Ponds Dry Skin Cream - nice and cheap - and my hair is solid with conditioner.  Just as well the boys are down in the playground otherwise they would have nightmares.

Actually all three are sick at the moment.  Thomas has tonsillitis and the other two have ear and chest infections.  It turned cold here suddenly 'plunging' to 15 degrees.  Not cold for you but bloody chilly for us.  It's been a long term at school and most kids seem to be down with something. 

Thomas is a great patient.  Confined to his bedroom for four days is dull as hell but he rarely complains.  I took them all to the doctor on Tuesday night.   and because they have different illnesses I was told to keep them apart which is impossible in an apartment.  The doctor smiled at Conor and said, "So, no hugging and kissing your brother."  Conor looked at her puzzled and said, "Why would I hug my brother?"

Conor is a rotten patient.  He has a high temperature, along with all his other complaints, but on that Tuesday night he was determined to see the school pantomime the next day.  The Panto is acted by the teachers and it's for the pupils only; it's supposed to be a real hoot.  The doctor told him he could go but only if his temperature dropped below 37.  She didn't believe this would happen.  I didn't either.  Sickness never affects Conor's appetite; he eats three dinners a night but on this night he only had for one.  I made him wear three jumpers over his pyjamas and two quilts and fed him dinner in bed but he had a scowl on his puss.  After running back and forth from the kitchen to fetch his Lordship's medicines, hot Ribena and extra warm things, he said, "This is my worst Christmas ever." When I asked why he said, "Everybody has managed to piss me off."  He gagged when taking the five different medicines and there was a danger of him throwing them all up again but eventually he snuggled under and grumbled himself to sleep. 

While at the doctor's, Tuesday, I asked her to look at my feet.  I've been doing a lot of hill walking and this weird blister appeared on the ball of my left foot and wouldn't shift.  After examining my foot, the doctor told me I had a verruca.  I was horrified.  While the doctor sprayed my foot with jets of freezing stuff from a gun, Conor held up one hand to form the letter 'L' and mouthed, "Loser" at me.  Conor didn't even know what a verruca was but they knew from my reaction it was something horrible.  Instead of sympathy, he went from 'poor me, I'm so sick' to a smirking sewer rat.

I woke up on Wednesday morning with the thermometer practically shoved up my nose.  Conor stood over me demanding I read his temperature.  By some miracle; it read less than 37 degrees. He got to go to the Panto.'

Fat Arse Mile

 
Oh, to be in Cork now that Autumn is here...  The Fat Arse
Mile stretches from Rochestown Inn out to Blackrock Castle and back.
Blue Skies - can't get enough of them.

 Love old walls.

An Abundance of Berries

Tide's Out.
 The Last Rays of Summer
 The Rock! 
(Also a great place to eat)
 Them's the Berries!
 As I turned this bend, I could hear Bagpipes and thought I was imagining it but....
 ..... here he is.  Perfect place to practice.
 A Horse
 Nearly home again. I love this part of the walk; it's just heaving with growth

 Green, Green and more Green!
 I know they're a weed but I do love their manic growth.
What can you say about daisies? Everybody should have them!
Wistful Westie

The early worm - just as I got back home, it started to rain.... 

 

Monday, 29 August 2016

Bugger...

....my son just told me there are more blogs than there are people who read them.

Oh well, I'll make this an on-line diary then.

Joe's first day back at school, yay!!

And my first day back at the Mardyke.  And it was good.  It took less time to work up to my maximum heart beat than usual but despite the five month gap, I still have some fitness. When I come out of the gym feeling good about myself, I drive badly.  I got beeped twice on the way home.

It's another beautiful day in Cork and my garden is looking particularly fantastic.  I love the zingyness of nasturtiums.  They have such a mad splash of colour and are generous with it.  Dead easy to grow but I have to re-plant them every year as mine don't seem capable of re-seeding themselves.

This morning I spotted blue buds among the yellows and oranges.  I thought they were weeds but left them alone as I wasn't sure.  I now think they are hollyhocks I planted in May and they should be the dominant plant.  The nasturtiums are seeds that got mixed up in the compost. You never can have too much colour in your life
 

Sunday, 28 August 2016

There's nothing so boring as someone on a diet.

I've gained 10 lbs since I last weighed myself in March.  When you are only five foot tall, every extra ounce shows.  Aside from looking like a barrel of Guinness, half my wardrobe is off limits.  I'm down to the last pair of jeans that still fit.  Time to act.

I've tried a lot of diets e.g. Weight Watchers, The Atkins Diet, Rosemary Conlon Diet, the Eat Nothing Diet but the one that works best for me is the 5:2 Diet created by Dr Mosley.  There is nothing to count or feel 'naughty' about.  You simply eat normally five days a week and for two non-consecutive days you limit yourself to 500 calories for that day. 

I start today.  It's easiest to do it on your busiest day at work or at your most relaxed at home. 

The 5:2 Fast website has recipes for three meals but I do not have the willpower to limit myself to three tiny meals.  It's easier to wake up in the morning and hold out has long as possible drinking only hot water, coffee and Rooibus tea until 1pm, and then eat half my allowance.  I eat the other half before 6pm.  I go to bed early.

Tip: Do not eat after 6pm; it makes a huge difference. 

Sometimes I go to bed hungry.  Save a tiny milk allowance for the last cup of tea before you go to bed.  Sometimes deep breathing helps.

After every fast day, I lose a lb.  

On 'normal' days I can eat what I like.  You would think that you would be tempted to go berserk eating all around you but that doesn't happen. 

I have Dr Mosley's book on the diet and it easy to follow.  To people who struggle on 500 calories a day, he suggests doing it over 24 hours i.e. have your last big meal at 3pm, survive on 500 calories for the next 24 hours and eat your next normal meal at 3pm the following day.  This is more manageable however, for effective weight loss, limit myself to 500 days per actual day where you have a night's sleep bookending the start and finish of a fast day works better. 

Some days I struggle: limiting your food intake to only 500 calories is daunting and that is why it is important to keep yourself busy.  I remind myself, "It's only for one day.  I can do anything for one day." 

Particularly, as I read last night in Ernest Hemingway's book, A Moveable Feast, he described how on the days he could not afford to eat, the resulting hunger heightened his senses and he believed that this in turn improved his writing.  If it worked for Hemingway......

The Daily Dose

Sunday, 28th August 2016
I set myself the challenge of writing a letter everyday to someone and already I have failed.  I wrote to Jennifer, my pal from Hong Kong days, who has since moved back to Canada, on the 18th of August and wrote nothing since. 

My excuse?  I've loads of them.  I visited my extended family on holiday in Kilkee, the opportunity and motivation to write - zero.  Kilkee drained me even though the weather was fantastic and everyone got on fine.  I returned to Cork after dropping my sister in Mitchelstown on Wednesday (24th August).  I had my job review on Thursday morning which did not go well.  I celebrated my 27th wedding anniversary that afternoon in Kinsale with one glass of wine as I was driving.  Maybe the wine didn't suit me.  Late that afternoon, I fell asleep while reading.  The same happened yesterday.  I can't blame the book.  I slept right through the night and woke up this morning in a good mood which never happens. 

My resolve is strong again and I will resume the challenge today. I also remembered the dream I had - something I have not been able to do for years.  In the dream, I was a nanny again, babysitting 20 children but only responsible for one.  Must get that analysed.

Cloona, literary festivals, workshops, days with close friends like Bridget Daly and Susie, boost my energy and I feel unstoppable. Work, time spent with difficult relatives, acting unnaturally to keep the peace and alcohol drain me.  Maybe I'm just getting old.

The book I was reading and finished was A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway.  Loved it.  He gives a fascinating insight to the lives of authors he hung out with in Paris in the 1920s and went on to become literary giants themselves: Gertrude Stein, James Joyce and Scott Fitzgerald.  Hemingway talks about his life as a struggling writer and describes his writing technique; the importance of writing everyday and the importance of discipline.  Paris, back then, he said was the best place to be for a writer as it provided creative freedom, support and privacy.  He said it was possible to live like a king in Paris despite having almost no money.  Hemingway did his work mostly in cafés; he knew the ones where he would be left alone and despised those people who frequented certain cafés in order to be seen.  Having almost no money but needing to support a wife and his 'blonde and chunky' son - love that description - he frequently went without food and lied to his wife about having a had a wonderful lunch.  He found however, that the abstinence of food sharpened the senses and he felt it made him a better writer. 

Hemingway is known for his sparse writing which keeps the story moving along at a clipping pace.  What I love best are his dialogues.  They are funny, cruel but witty. Envy is one of my lesser qualities and I would give anything to be living in Paris back then and to have Gertrude Stein as one of casual acquaintance and be able to live well in that beautiful city on so little.

Friday, 26 August 2016

Diamond Rocks

 
On the edge of Kildee, are the Diamond Rocks beyond the Pollock Holes.  The weather is fine and calm and yet the ocean was dramatic and beautiful.
 
 
 
You can continue walking up the cliff, all the way to Loop Head.  I met several joggers out for their morning run.
 
Nobody could explain why they were called Diamond Rocks but we think it is because they glitter in sun because of the quartz.
 
I love the colour of coastal grass, it has such a friendly look about it and this green in contrast with the blue sky and the dark blue of the ocean.
 
 
Spot the Moon!
 
Looking north across the bay towards Georges Head and the Cliffs of Moher

Pollock Holes



The view from my back door, The Pollock Holes.  Twice a day, the Atlantic Ocean receded to reveal a large platform of rock, flat enough to walk on and with several rock pools, three of them large enough to swim in.  I swam in the nearest one to the left of the picture everyday and then thawed out on the deliciously heated rocks.   In one of the smaller rock pools my niece, Marie found a starfish.

Saturday, 20 August 2016

Prison Food Tastes Better Than this

I am sucking Strepsils. I can feel a cold coming on and my son has finished the Berocca.  The forecast is bad: heavy rain and winds in the South West and this morning, I'm South heading West over the County Bounds to Kerry.     My first stop is Brighid's workshop in Gortaclea, half way between Killarney and Tralee.  

On Sunday, I drive north via Tarbert to the land of my ancestors in west Clare where my mother and her sisters have taken a house in Kilkee.  My grandmother, Mary McMahon grew up in Milltown Malbay and boasted that she owned the first flush toilet in Clare.  My grandfather, Michael O'Dywer, a medical student from Kilrush, was arrested during the War of Independence by British troops for being Michael Collins.  He spent one night in jail.  My uncle John told me his father used to complain about his mother's cooking saying, "Prison food tastes better than this."

The British troops weren't far wrong: my grandfather did run errands for the old IRA.  In fact he was so active he neglected his studies and doomed to fail his final anatomy exam, the IRA stole the papers for him and he passed.  The irony is that he when he qualified as a doctor he could not get work in the new, free Ireland and had to emigrate to England where he set up his GP practice in Forest Gate, in east London.

Holiday time with my mother and her siblings is chaotic.  There is fun but before then egos clash, tempers flair and words fly; no one escapes unscathed.  My extended family are like Jack Russell dogs marking their territory before they settle down.  Every year my mother swears she'll never to do it again.  But over the winter months, amnesia sets in, memories soften and come January she books another house declaring, "This year, it will be different and, what if we never see Uncle John again?"

Prison food would be better than this.

Friday, 19 August 2016

Work Shop Junkie


On Saturday I am due to attend a workshop on getting in touch with my feelings and unblocking my chakras.  It’s a follow up to one I did in May.  The one in May brought up strong feelings of shame in me and it was horrible; I felt five years old again and dirty.  I am hoping that these shameful feelings will be explored more thoroughly and I'll find out why I have them and how to deal with them.   
 
 The girl running the workshop is my friend, Brighid and I’m making up the numbers.  I’m a workshop junkie.  I love the pressure cooker atmosphere of 10-12 strangers hooking up for one day and spilling their guts for the rest of us to analyse.  You hear amazing stuff.  I’m getting better at shutting up and listening.  Great lines I’ve picked up so far are, “It’s the crank that starts the engine,”  “What’s meant for you, won’t pass you by,”  and “Of course your parents push your buttons, they put them there in the first place.” 
 
Workshops foster honesty and you can't beat honesty for seeing the utter rawness and creativity of people.  People detect bullshit quickly.    A lawyer from Dublin in a writing workshop in Bantry (best week of my life ever) admitted in her first written piece that she was nervous about meeting us.  Hearing her admission of vulnerability snagged my heart and I instantly felt myself reaching out to her.    

Whoever is responsible for my feelings of shame, I don't care anymore.  I'm done blaming and analysing.  The drama is not worth the cost to my nerves.  I just want to be able to deal with whatever comes up in the future.  Speaking of drama, this Sunday, the day after the workshop I drive to Kilkee, Co Clare to spend a few days with my mother and her extended family.  19 egos across three generations crowded under one roof in weather that is forecast to be awful................. 

Thursday, 18 August 2016

Letter 18th August 2016

I sent my first letter today.  To my son's school. To pay a bill.  It's the start of the school year and I always send my cheques in a card.  Marita, the accountant says she looks forward to getting them!  The four boxes in the picture house my card collection which I keep next to my bed.  How sad is that?!?
The card in which I sent the cheque. Ta da!  I can't remember where I bought this one:  I've had them so long but it was probably Thailand.  The cards are only two inches square and are adorable! 

Wednesday, 17 August 2016

Going Postal

After the high of the West Cork Literary Festival, I am running out of steam.  I go back to work tomorrow.  In fact, the Leaving Cert results are out today and my heart goes out to all students and their parents this morning as the minutes crawl towards 9 o'clock.  School yards around the country are filling up, as I write, with anxious parents and their equally anxious children.    I've been through it twice and have another in two years time.  It's inspiring to witness those who get what they want:  last year I saw one boy come bounding out the school doors, clear the yard in three strides and sprint all the way home to tell his parents. And, heart breaking to see those who don't: I saw another boy get into his mother's car, put his head in his hands and cry.    

I work in a University and from today, the phones will be hopping all day, everyday right up until the end of September after which time it will slow down to merely going berserk until Christmas.  I love my job but the next four months will be draining to the point of being toxic unless I make it my goal to retain my joy of writing. 

To do this, I have set myself a challenge.  From tomorrow, Thursday 18th August, I will write a letter a day to a friend, any friend, and post it.  Big deal, you might say.  I know it's not a big deal, particularly for someone with my ego, but I can't take a year off and live in Dingle nor can I live on five Euros a week since I still have semi dependent children and a job.   

The reasons to write letters:

               My friend, Betty - whose tulips I destroyed in 1965 - told me recently that out of  her Over 55's Group, she was the only one to receive a letter in the post in the last twelve months, and it was from me.  I think that's sad.  There's something heart warming about getting a crisp, warm, fat envelope landing unexpectedly in your door complete with stamps, postmark and your name hand-written.

               My friend, Mary - who slapped my face when we first met in 1979 - passed away this October three years ago.  In July 2012, on the train to Dublin, I sent her a text, 'I know you are in Robert's Cove at this time of year, when would be a good time to call down?'  Mary texted back, 'I'm very sorry Geraldine, I've just been diagnosed with cancer, I have three weeks to live.'  I realised at that moment I loved her but had never told her.  I wanted to jump off the train and run all the way back to Cork.  When I did get back home, I called in.  Her husband, Tony, her children, Russell and Katie, her amazing neighbours, extended family, and friends were taking care of everything.  Everyone had a role, everyone seemed to know what to do whether it was keeping the house spotless, ensuring minimum disruption to the household routine, minding the two younger of her four children, or cooking meals.  Tony took compassionate leave from work and never left her side.        What could I do?    I decided to do what I always did when I sense a distance I can't leap; I wrote to her.  Every morning, before work, I'd go into the Student Centre in UCC, buy a pretty, funny, witty card and fill it with words.  During my lunch break, I would type a longer letter: Mary had complained back in the days when I lived in London that my hand writing was awful and, conscious that she might be speaking for all my 'lucky' letter recipients, I typed when I could.  Mary lived for another 15 months and I kept up the correspondence until she died.  Even when I knew I would see her that day, I wrote a letter and tucked into a card.  She told me when she was too sick to read them herself or was in the middle of treatment, Tony would save them up and read them to her in date order.  Sending someone a letter is an act of love.  And it's so simple.  You are only sacrificing time.

               Completing the circle.  I wrote my first letter, when I was 10 years old, to my grandfather in London.  He was dying, although I don't think I realised it at the time but I knew he that he must be very sick as my mother had gone over to visit him.  My mother she told me afterwards my letter made Granny cross but it made Granddad laugh.    

Lonely and homesick when I left home at 21, writing letters got me through it.  Writing bridged the gap between feeling helpless by maintaining a connection with the people that meant the most to me.   I shall call it The Daily Dose because that's what it will be for the poor unfortunates who will be at the receiving end and don't yet know it!

P.S.  The very best of luck to all Leaving Cert students today, I hope you all get what you want.

Tuesday, 16 August 2016

The Angry Doormat

In January 2014, a friend from Singapore came to stay for the weekend.  The visit was not good timing for me as I had an essay to  hand in the following Wednesday but I 'offered it up'.     She arrived on the Thursday night in a bad mood and it stayed that way until she left again on Sunday.  She makes no secret of her disdain for Ireland and arriving in January during the worst storms on record sealed her opinion of my homeland.  She's an amateur photographer and so I took her to lunch in Kinsale and then to Garretstown to photograph the spectacular wild Atlantic.  The winds were so strong on the beach front, we could only exit the car from the driver side.  The winds nearly ripped the door off and half a ton of sand blew in during the two seconds the door was open.  We had a delicious lunch in the Bulman which was particularly cosy under the raucous conditions - the road in front the Bulman was swept away the next day by a freak wave.

It's hard going entertaining someone in a bad mood but I did it for the history we had together and it was the right thing to do.  Before she left me on Sunday, she said, "You're too much of a doormat, you need to do something about that."

I did.  I blocked her from Facebook and I have no interest in seeing her again.  Childish of me I know but I know I'm at fault too for my lack of sincerity. Maybe she picked up on my lack of interest in her, it could be she missed her family and, Ireland in January is bleak.  There's a lesson in here for me somewhere; I'll figure it out yet.

Monday, 15 August 2016

Mystical Monday Morning

 Today, I witnessed the first signs of Autumn.  Not fully awake, I drew back the curtain to see the barely risen sun struggling to pierce the early morning mist giving the scene an 'other world' effect.  Beautiful.  Still in my pyjamas, I rushed downstairs.  No one else was up. I stepped outside to a haven of tranquillity and nature at peace with itself.   I didn't want to miss a moment of it.  Like an intruder, I tip toed around my garden, getting my feet soaked in the grass and looked in awe at the familiar through this filtered light.  Overnight, hundreds of tiny cobwebs created out of trembling droplets of dew strewn across my garden linking bush to bush, across the lawn and even to my car.
   


         In the picture above in which you get only a hint of the mist, the Mawn Breesha on the left I stole from a ditch in Dingle.  I yanked a handful, kept it moist in a plastic bag and planted it when I got home later that day.  It doubles every year. We are lucky it grows so easily and abundantly herein the South West of Ireland; one of the benefits of living in the rain.   I saw some in Dublin when I walked Howth Head with my cousin Fiona last week but it was sparse and thin.  The hydrangea was a mother's day gift from my son which has grown from a tiny pot plant to a handsome bush with these miraculously deep blue flowers.  I love the contrast between the wild, intense orange of the 'weed' alongside the porcelain fine China blue of his Highness.

My husband planted our Christmas tree in the front garden; the cobwebs are clearer in this picture and I think it is appropriate that being a Christmas tree it is garlanded by strings of dewy diamonds.
Blackberries and cobwebs.  Summer is fading but Autumn is here in all its beauty. 

 
My back garden.  The apples are not from a tree.  At least, not one that I grow.  I throw out a couple a week for the birds.  The sweet pea to the right I planted last year and it came back in monstrous proportions.  The colours are fantastic from deep cerise to delicate lilac.  The willow trees at the end are my attempt to create a privacy screen.  My friend, Carmel gave me ten x 8 foot long willow cuttings which I stuck in the ground February 2015.  Six rooted.  I stripped down all growth except the top shoots.  This is their second year and the growth has doubled in quantity.  Note no garden space is taken up.  My son had his 18th birthday party at home and we hired a marquee which took up the entire lawn.  The men putting up the marquee moved all my pots to the bottom of the garden and since they looked prettier there I left them.  It has created a lost civilisation effect with the colour and shape of the pots peeking through the rambling roses and honey suckle.

These tree lilies be in the soil but I keep them in pots so I can move them around.  Right now they are outside my kitchen window for their colour and scent.


I am so grateful that I live where the fuchsia grows easily.  When I lived in London in the 90's I attended a Summer Fair in my local park and came across a tiny fuchsia plant in a pot.  Overcome with nostalgia, I asked the man how much it cost.  He looked at me and said, "Where you come from these things are wild!". How right he was.  Until he told me I never noticed.
One of my favourites,  the Mawn Breesha.  It's hard to believe that this plant, along with the Fuchsia is not native to Ireland; it grows so rampantly here.  It's considered a weed but I love its easy growth, reliability and its fantastic pop of colour.
Sweet Pea, Nasturtiums, bird house and bird feeder.  So far, only snails eat from the feeder.

There is a web linking these two hydrangeas near the top, you can just about see it!
Spider's web on Christmas Tree.  You can just make out the lacy effect of the webs on the lawn behind.

The same web from a different angle!!


Note to self: use only one device when taking photographs.

Sunday, 14 August 2016

Visting Dublin

Medicine Woman

I was in Dublin on Wednesday for work reasons and decided to extend my stay to catch up with my cousin, Fiona in Sutton and friend, Deirdre (she of Cloona fame) in Monkstown.
Fiona's husband, John is an artist and has obtained a licence to draw random people on the street.  He asked me to pose for practice as I look like Mrs Ordinary.  I obliged.  He did the above in 20 minutes.  While not a flattering portrait, he has the likeness right and I particularly like the American Indian quality he has given it.  

Tuesday, 9 August 2016

Why I Write


Throughout my teenage years I hankered to experience the magic of America. Twenty one and broke, I did the next best thing; I worked as a nanny in New York and Boston.   After two years, I returned to the centre of the universe, Cork, to register for college.  A year later, I followed my boyfriend to London, ‘for the summer.’  I stayed ten years.  Boyfriend listed me as his ‘spouse’ on his visa application to China.  I said yes.  China fell through but we married anyway.    In 1997, after the birth of our second son we moved to Singapore where I had son number three.  We moved to Hong Kong in 2002 and returned to Cork in 2006. 

Homesickness dogged my 22 years abroad.  From New York and Boston, I wrote 24 letters home a week.  In London, I typed the letters but made copies.  Singapore, I posted and faxed the letters home.  Every morning, in Hong Kong, thanks to the wonders of the internet, I emailed my family and friends who were now dotted around the world, even those who lived next door.   

During the SARS crisis in Hong Kong 2002, my husband gifted me a 12 week creative writing workshop with Jane Camens.  Jane introduced us to ‘Morning Pages’ from The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron.Julia Cameron - The Artist's Way   Jane explained that the practice of writing everyday not only clears the sludge from your brain, it is meditative as well.   The penny dropped.   All those letters I wrote were therapy.  I wasn’t writing them for the benefit of the reader: I was doing it for me. 

I write because it cures me of the blues.  I am an extrovert and optimist.   All who know me will describe a friendly, talkative, small woman who never shuts up.   Yet every morning, I wake and think, “Oh fuck, another day.”  I roll out of bed, shove on my imitation Ugg boots, slither down the stairs, fill the kettle, haul out my Foolscap notebook wedged between two cook books, sit at the kitchen table, sip my way through two pints of warm water and write my pages.  

Pure drudgery but always, without fail, by the time I get to the third page, something shifts in my mind.  The sludge starts to loosen in the pipes and clear thoughts start to flow.  The walls separating me from the rest of world melt away and I feel lighter.  My resilience and sense of well-being is restored.   Then the magic happens.  Somewhere in the middle of the toxic spew that’s now on the page, a gem appears.  It might only be a phrase or a sentence or an idea but it sparkles all the same.  I lift it out, polish it up, sharpen its edges and work on its shape until the piece emerges - small, precious and almost perfect. 

Like me.

 
http://juliacameronlive.com/the-artists-way/

Saturday, 6 August 2016

Twelve Ladies A' Reading


In the summer of 2012, Bridget invited ten of her neighbours and me to lunch at her house.  Lunch kicked off at 1pm and all I remember next is falling in the door back home again sometime after 11pm.  In those missing ten hours the book club was born.
We meet once a month and take turns hosting. The first time I did it, I panicked. I bought a selection of cheese, grapes and crackers; threw them on the table leaving Bridget to open the packets.    The second time, I took the day off work, baked three desserts, cleaned the kitchen until it sparkled and hoped the kids wouldn’t come home. 

Then there are those among us who are natural hosts.  A bowl of browned chicken legs sat on Grace's coffee table.  Bridget took one and nearly fainted, “These are gorgeous!” she said and turning to me on the couch, “Try one, Ger.”  I whispered back, “I don’t eat limbs.”  Bridget picked one up and handed it to me, “Try it!”  It was delicious.  While the others clamoured for the recipe, I finished the bowl.  Her crushed Oreo cookie, mint cream layer cake cut into cubes was a work of art and should’ve been in an art gallery.  We ate it anyway. 
Denise hosts every Christmas. As you enter her gingerbread house nestled in a sleepy hollow on the edge of Douglas village, you are greeted by the scent of cinnamon and sugar from the mulled wine simmering on the stove.   Her English sheepdog asleep on the rug in front of a blazing fire, the fat tree in the corner covered in candy canes, lit candles on every surface and a sit-down three course dinner for all the hungry ladies.   

As the wine flows and the noise levels rise, husbands make themselves scarce.  When Bridget hosted, her husband who has to get up early in the morning for work, went to bed with ear protection.   
The benefit of a book club is that sometimes you get to read something you would ordinarily shy away from.   An Evil Cradling, by Brian Keenan is that book for me.  The true story of the incredible friendship between Brian and John McCarthy while held as hostages in Beirut for over four years is told with raw honesty and compassion.  Their unusual decision to use humour to defy their captors is inspirational as it not only ensured their survival but that they did so with their sanity and humanity intact.     One incident in particular haunts me; Brian got a severe bout of food poisoning which lasted for almost two weeks.  Without complaint and with gentle compassion, John cleaned up after him and tended to his needs like a mother to her new born baby. 

Twelve is a perfect number: any more than that and it becomes a brawl.  Half of us are from other parts of Ireland and so with our differing professions, personalities, and backgrounds, the discussions are invigorating but respectful.  I am always surprised by how 12 people can read the same thing and yet come out with wildly varying viewpoints.
I see our book club (Anne, Bridget, Dara, Denise, Dolores, Grace, Helen, Kathleen, Pauline, Terri and Vera), as a microcosm of women in Irish society today: a little bit noisy, a little bit tipsy, passionate, well-fed, plenty to say for ourselves, and, of course, well read.

 

Friday, 5 August 2016

Timid Writers Need Not Apply

“I’d like to do what you’re doing,” said Jean, another mum from my son's school.
“Oh, that’s dead easy,” I said, “just send your articles into Ronnie; he’s the editor and he’ll print them.”
“How much do you get paid?”
“I don’t, I do it for free.”
“Fuck that,” she said and walked off.
In 2005, on the recommendation of a friend, I went to see a Russian shaman. I was living in Hong Kong at the time and worked as the librarian in the French International School. I wanted to know:  am I a writer.  The shaman told me I was not destined to write a novel but that I should write articles for a magazine and once I had built up a collection, I could publish a book.  She also told me there was a little girl waiting for me.  “You mean if I go again, I’ll have a daughter?” I said.
 “Yes but you’ll have six sons first.”
At the time, I was volunteering as deputy editor for AWARE, the American Women’s Association’s monthly magazine.  I wrote the back page, On a Final Note and regularly contributed researched articles as well.  On the strength of this and in an attempt to forge a link with my home country, I sent one of my On a Final Note pieces to The Douglas Weekly in Cork.  They printed it and asked for more. I wrote a snapshot of living abroad, living as an Irish Ex-pat in Asia, raising a family of three small boys all rolled into one.  No money changed hands.  A year later the Weekly merged with the Cork Independent which covered the county as well as the city.  It didn’t occur to me to approach the Independent which I now think must be a reflection of my timidity at the time.
In 2008, I start submitting weekly contributions to a max of 400 words to the Douglas Post.   Ronnie McGinn, the editor of the Post, told me my pieces are popular and readers have told him they only pick up the Post because I’m in it.  So I know I’m liked.   I came across a great quote in the Irish Times on-line recently, ’Mickey Spillane, when criticised for writing pulp fiction, he retorted, “More salted peanuts are eaten than caviar – the public likes you, you’re good”.
So I know the public in a little corner of Cork City like me, what next?  Mary Morrissey gave a presentation at the West Cork Literary Festival this July, to promote the MA in Creative Writing with UCC.  I applied for the MA in 2013 but was not successful.  Since my primary degree is Law, I decided to do the Higher Diploma in English Literature as a natural bridge into the MA programme.  I graduated in 2015 with a 2:1.   The part time option for the MA in Creative Writing UCC is offered bi-annually; the next slot is September 2017.  I intend to apply in December 2016 and I’m in discussion with my job-share partner to restructure our working week around my lecture times. 
In the meantime, I am focussing on upgrading my blog, The Morning Growler, named after my favourite blend of Cork Roasters Coffee.  In February 2008, I attended one of Vanessa O’Loughlin’s Inkwell Publishing workshops in Killiney Castle Hotel in Dublin.  Guest speaker, Elizabeth Murray (Beth) introduced to us to the concept of Blogging, its benefits and the fact it’s free.  I immediately set about creating my own.  The blog is not only a vehicle to reach a wider audience, - I wish - but is also a means of cataloguing my better pieces.  I registered this week for Beth’s Blogging and Beyond on-line course which starts Monday, 8th August 2016.
The Post gives me the discipline to keep writing something every week, to stick to a word limit and to a deadline which I never miss.     The Blog allows me to write honestly and at any length I want.  I haven’t told anyone I have a blog.  I am, so far, reluctant to do so because: the articles are about things that happen to me; I don’t write about issues that people care about; and I don’t have an expertise that I can share.  After Beth’s course, I may think differently.
Attending the workshops with Vanessa, the Listowel Writers and the West Cork Literary Festivals have been wildly successful in setting my brain on fire and tapping my creativity.  I have written six 500 word articles this week alone and I fear it will fizzle out unless I find something to keep it going.  Doing the on-line writing courses has prodded me to write outside the box but also to force me to lift up my eyes and look to the horizon.  Yesterday afternoon, I wrote to Blake Creedon, sub editor with The Irish Examiner and asked him to consider me as a contributor.  I attached one of the more risqué 500 word pieces while telling him I had several more lined up.  The audacity of me.  A month ago I would not have done that. 
Having to come up with a 1,000 words on what to do next in order to propel my writing higher has been useful in ways I didn’t expect.  It exposed the fraud in me: it’s now shit or get off the pot.  It has forced me to quit the daydream, to climb down from my comfortable nest on the fence and put down on paper ‘what exactly were my ambitions?’   In doing this, the baby steps unfolded and the concrete actions I needed to take became clear.  This Monday, I will blog with Beth for eight weeks.  In December, I will apply for the MA in UCC and by then I will have written a 1,000 word piece for my portfolio that will finally secure me a place on the programme. 
Maybe I’ll hear from Blake.  
 

Thursday, 4 August 2016

Lust, Guts and Tibetan Bowls in Cloona

          My friend, Deirdre and I are planning our return trip to Cloona.  Last December, we booked into the Cloona Health Retreat in Co. Mayo for a week.  What we really wanted was time together in a pampered environment and this was a compromise between India and no money.
On the Saturday before, I took the train from Cork to Dublin and attended a Blake/McCarthy family re-union in the Carlton Hotel.  I stayed overnight with my cousin, Fiona.  To my surprise Fiona knew about Cloona: she had been there before and her husband had been four times.              
That’s the extraordinary thing about Cloona, it does not advertise:  it’s all word of mouth.  Out of the 12 guests during my week there, nine had been before; they make it part of their annual routine.             
Back to Fiona, “Cloona is a place for reflection,” she said, “you’re not supposed to go with a friend.”  I shrugged.  I asked her what she liked about it, “It’s hard,” she said, “but by the end of the week, I always feel different. I can’t explain it and I don’t want to because your experience will be different from mine.  But I’d be interested to know what you think.
The following day,  Deirdre and I met up at Heuston station and boarded the train to Westport.  The train journey is over four hours yet the train to Cork is two and half; as the crow flies, Westport is closer to Dublin than Cork. 
The train was packed with people returning home from their Christmas shopping; Brown Thomas, Hollister and Abercrombie bags filled the overhead compartment and in between the seats.  The air hummed with chat and laughter and the minute the train set off, the other passengers started to eat.  Everybody seemed to have a picnic.  We hadn’t brought anything and went looking for the dining car.  We met two women standing by one of the exit doors as they waited to disembark at the next station who told us there was a vending machine in the last carriage but to access it you had to wait until the train stopped at the station, get off and hop back on again.  But they warned us it was risky: you could either be stuck in that carriage until the train stopped again or worse, be left behind.  We decided not to bother and were about to turn back when one of them said, “Here, I bought these sandwiches in Heuston but never got around to opening them,” and she handed me a triple decker pack with chicken, mayo and stuffing.  The other woman, immediately the other woman pulled out a bottle of Coke from her shoulder bag, “This hasn’t been opened either, you’re welcome to it.”
             We were met by taxi at Westport station driven by Mary. At Cloona, we made ourselves comfortable in the lounge and as other people arrived, we introduced ourselves.   When we were all present, Dara, the director of the retreat explained, “Life is all about making decisions.  It’s not the big decisions that determine your life but the little ones you make every day.  All decisions are made in your gut.  If your digestion is not working properly then you tend to make poor decisions.  When it is working properly you make the right decisions. Hence the term ‘gut instinct.’” 
             For breakfast we had choice of either apples or oranges or both, lunch was soup and salad and ‘dinner’ consisted of dried figs, kiwis and bananas.  On first rising in the morning, we drank two large glasses of tepid water.  Wait for ten minutes because as Dara explained that is how long it takes for water to pass through your gut, followed by a shot of wheatgrass which is sweet but disgusting, and got more disgusting as the week went on.  Wait a further 20 minutes for the wheatgrass to shuttle through your gut and then you feast on the apples and oranges.
             Breakfast was followed by hour and a half of gentle yoga, so soothing there was always someone snoring at the end of it.   After lunch, it was a walk with Dara in the prettiest countryside I have ever seen, it reminded me of scenes from Postman Pat when he does his rounds.   Dara taught us how to walk.  “Imagine your pelvis is a bowl,” he said, “brimming with water.  When you walk up the hill you tilt your pelvis up as if to keep the bowl level to stop the water spilling and when you walk down you do the opposite.”    It was difficult and it looked strange.  12 high visibility vests following their leader with pelvises tilted, passing motorists gave us wide berth.  
             After dinner, we had the sauna-time, my favourite part of the day.  The idea is to relax in the steaming heat for ten minutes, then hop into the brain-freezing, ice-cold showers for as long as you can stand it – it’s difficult not to scream – but then you have that delicious moment back into the sauna hut as you feel the heat seep into your bones.  
            As the week went on and we all got to know each other, our inhibitions melted away.  Shuffling around in dressing gowns and slippers became the norm.  Deirdre found a weighing scales.  Big excitement.  We lined up to weigh ourselves.  Everyone has gained exactly four lbs.  We asked Dara for an explanation, “You came here dehydrated, now you’re rehydrated.”  It was hard to hide the disappointment.   With all the fruit, salad and water we were consuming, it would have been nice to have lost something!
             To be fair, we were never actually hungry but food fantasies plagued us all. We escaped into Westport for half an hour on Wednesday afternoon; I nearly cried as we passed steamy café windows and saw cosy little pensioners settling down to pots of tea and slices of apple pie.  Deirdre wanted to visit the health food store and as she chatted to the cashier, I spotted chocolate and nut power balls on the counter.  “Would they be allowed?” I ask Deirdre, “they’re only little.”   The cashier looked at me horrified, “If Dara knew I sold you those he’d kill me!”  
             We meditated every morning - before the tepid water and wheatgrass - and evening, right before bed with Guy, the Buddhist.  He taught us laughter yoga.  Completely fake at first but the lunacy of it eventually catches on and the laughter becomes real.  “Your mind does not know that your body is faking it,” he said, “but it releases the happiness hormones anyway.”  Fake it until you become it.”
              Dara brought in therapists and we could sign up to whatever we liked.  Since we paid the therapists directly, they were excellent.  I chose, on Fiona’s recommendation, Declan for the deep tissue massage; he was just what I needed.  Deirdre went for the Tibetan bowls and said it was amazing.  Suzie, from Dublin also tried the bowls and described it “like the best orgasm you ever had multiplied by 100.”  Nuala emerged from the bowls sobbing but smiling and said, “I’ve made my decision.” Gavin read my horoscope; he told me I was leading too comfortable a life and to embrace my fiery side.       
              Fiona was right,  I did feel different. My taste buds sharpened; as the week went on fruit tasted sweeter. My body felt clean and strong; this in turn boosted my confidence and mental clarity.  It was a revelation to me that that fruit could constitute a meal.  I learned that there are other ways to comfort yourself other than food.    After all my lusting after coffee and cake, I felt a disdain for sugary foods and found myself gravitating to the good stuff.  
              Over Christmas I ate what I liked and actually lost 1 lb!!!  On Christmas day, I did make myself a cup of coffee but it tasted toxic and bitter.    It wasn’t until the following April, trying out a new café with my friend, Carmel that I allowed myself a ‘flat white’ coffee.  It was exquisite.  I keep it to one day.  
             Deirdre and I are going back this December.  It’s an odd time to take a break, right before Christmas, but after last year’s experience it works for me.  I sailed through the craziness of Christmas, the January blues didn’t touch me and I still had enough good will to spend a week with my mother in February. 
Going back is a must: those Tibetan bowls……...