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Wednesday, 19 October 2016

The Light They Did Not See

“Mum, we need milk,” announced my son, Conor aged 4.
"Let’s go then,” I said.
The local shop is a 100 yard walk further down  our road, Tanjong Rhu.   Being situated a few degrees above the Equator there is no twilight in Singapore. At 6.30 pm you get a sense the day is ending and by 7pm it’s night time. Conor and I walked slowly, savouring the rapid sunset and the cool of the evening. The street lights flickered into life along Tanjong Rhu and in the tiny kitchens of  the apartment blocks around us we could see people preparing their evening meal. 

“Mum, why are there lights at the top of the buildings?” said Conor

I looked up. “They must be for the planes,” I said, “When a pilot sees them he knows he needs to stay above them.”

We got to the shop, bought the milk, and sweets - the real purpose of our trip and walked home again.

Shortly after 9 o’clock that same evening my friend, Fiona rang.

“Have you your TV on?” she said.
“No, why?”
“Go to BBC World, you won’t believe what you see.”
I searched around the couch looking for the remote, “Has something happened in the North?”
“No,” she said, “bigger than that.”
I turned on the TV and saw a building on fire in New York.
“A plane has crashed into the World Trade Centre,” said Fiona.
“Wow,” I said, “That’s one hell of an accident.”
“It’s no accident, keep watching.”

Just then, a second plane appeared to the right of the TV screen and drove into the second tower.

“It’s terrorism,” said Fiona and hung up.

I sat up all night watching.

The next morning I woke to the clamour of the boys, Tom aged 7, Conor and Joe aged 2 bustling into the TV room for their morning’s viewing of Cartoon Network.  I rolled off the couch and taking the remote from Tom said, “Boys, I’ve got something much more interesting to show you,” and switched over to the BBC.

By now there were four planes down. 

I took my cue from the BBC caption, ‘America under Attack’.  “Boys, do you realise you are witnessing an historical event? This is your John Kennedy moment: you’ll always remember where you were when this happened.”

The boys said nothing: they just stared at the TV.  I sat down again and watched with them.

Then the first building collapsed and as we watched - live – we could see people running for their lives terror stricken, as an enormous cloud of dust reared up behind them. 

Finally, Conor spoke.   Without taking his eyes from the screen, he said, “Didn’t the pilot see the light at the top of the building?” 

Saturday, 1 October 2016

In One Ear, Out The Other

“The way I see it,” said Sam, “I have two ears.   No matter what my mother-in-law says, it goes in one ear and out the other.”

My husband’s niece was being baptised in Kildare and I was getting a lift up with my sister-in-law, Anne, and her husband, Gavin.  I sat in the back seat with my mother-in-law, Mrs D.
 
As we set off from Cork, Mrs. D told me that since the Christening was not until 2pm, we were going to stop for coffee in Leixlip House.
 
The drive north was smooth and we made good time. As we exited the motorway for Leixlip, Gavin asked Anne where would be a good place to stop for coffee.  Anne told him anywhere that’s convenient would be fine.
 
Mrs. D. called out from the back seat, “No, no, we’re going to Leixlip House.”
 
Gavin spotted a Gloria Jean’s and turned the car off the road.
 
“Gavin, we’re having coffee in Leixlip House,” insisted Mrs D.
 
Gavin pulled up in front of Gloria Jean’s and switched off the engine. Mrs. D. turned to me and said, “I guess we’re not going to Leixlip House.”  I smiled back at her in sympathy.
 
Anne and I ordered coffees while Mrs D. went to the Ladies to check on her hair.
 
Looking over my shoulder to check for Mrs D.’s whereabouts, I said to Anne, “That was the most civilised disagreement I’ve ever witnessed.”  She laughed.
 
Sam was right: the 'Two Ear' technique really works.  

Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Feeling the fear...


Last week, a friend told me how she took her young children to the woods and had a great time running through puddles and playing hide n'Seek.   I got shivers at the very idea: it's not a place I would go to on my own or take my children.  I see houses out in the country surrounded by banks of evergreen trees and wonder how they can live with such a dark, brooding presence beside them.  The sound of the wind blowing through trees, to my mind, is a lonely sound.  And then there is the fear of one of them falling on top of you, or your house or car.

Last weekend my husband and I celebrated our anniversary in Parknasilla hotel which is set on 500 acres of land.  On the drive down a storm was blowing in the from the Atlantic.   The utter blackness of the night, the lashing rain and the acres of tall, dark, brooding trees lining the narrow country roads leading to the hotel sent my mood plummeting.  

However, the next morning dawned fresh and delightful and after eating a massive breakfast including four poached eggs - a misunderstanding with the waiter - I suggested we explore the grounds.  

A small gate takes you down a path lined with eight foot high freshly clipped hedges until you emerge onto a small beach with a full view of the Atlantic.  We crossed the boardwalk spanning the beach and reached a grassy knoll on which were a series of white painted wooden signs pointing to the Heron's Walk, the Islands Walk.  Enchanting.  We opted for the Islands Walk.  

We came to a grove of trees.  I hesitated.  I reminded myself I was with my husband and kept going.  The trees didn't look like normal trees.  Trees are tall and straight with green leaves on top.  We were surrounded by a tangle of pale, thin, smooth boughs that looked like long, bony arms and that reminded me of the old, gnarled fingers of my granny.  The greenery came from several feet over our heads, the low growing ferns and the beautiful emerald green moss that seems to cover every rock and boulder.  It was easy to see where the stories of leprechauns and little folk came from.

Every so often our path would be crossed by a tiny stream struggling to make's way through clogged leaves and twigs.  The engineer in me found a stick and happily squatted down at its banks to nudge the debris out of the way until the stream flowed again.


I confided in my husband my uneasiness of wooded areas.  "This is where you find the bodies of murder victims," I told him, "according to the news they're always found by a man walking his dog or by a woman out jogging."  My husband pointed out that the murders are usually done elsewhere and the bodies are only brought to woods to be dumped.  I told him I didn't want to be the person that found the body either. 

That night I did not sleep.  I don't know whether it was being in a strange bed, eating too late and too much or the room being too hot.  At 1.30 am I stopped trying and got up.  Bringing my phone and book with me, I found a seat in a corridor in front of a window overlooking the sea although at that hour nothing was visible.      

Once my eyes adjusted to the dark, I realised the night sky was clear and truly beautiful.     Being so far out from 'civilisation' the stars were at their brightest and, although only a finger nail, the moon glowed bright too.  I opened the window to breath in the sea air.  It was so still that the only sound you could hear was the sea lapping against the rocks.  

I longed to go outside but I was afraid.  I was afraid I might get locked out, afraid of who I might meet - man or beast - and, so afraid of being afraid that I might scare myself to death.  The fear turned to practicality - I didn't want to wake my husband looking for my clothes at four into the morning. What kind of lunatic does that?

I sat on that chair. I meditated.  I prayed and waited for sleep to take over. 

Finally dawn broke.  I looked out the window.  It was another beautiful morning.  I made a decision.  I would go for a walk in the woods. Alone.

I let myself back into the bedroom.  I crawled past my sleeping husband.  I found yesterday's jeans, my shoes - no socks - and coat.

I nodded good morning to the night porter and let myself out the front door.  I crossed the boardwalk and into the first grove. I reassured myself with, "Rapists don't get up this early," and "Murderers wouldn't dump bodies during daylight hours."

I was so jittery, even the sound of my shoes squelching in the soft earth and wet leaves unnerved me.   At every turn in the path I checked over my shoulder for strange men and rabid dogs.  There were none but the hood of my jacket made me jump a few times.  I re-traced my steps from the day before.  I approached the part of the Island Walk that dipped downwards causing the growth around the path to look like a mouth.   The mouth contained nothing but darkness.  I kept going.  Once inside it wasn't as dark as it first seemed.   

What kind of trees were these?  I eventually realised they were really old rhododendron bushes that had run amok.  Kerry has the kind of soil Rhododendrons love and they grow rampantly there.  I remembered a couple getting lost in a Rhododendron forest somewhere up the country and had to be rescued.  That must have been embarrassing - telling your friends afterwards you were rescued from shrubbery.  Their leaves only grew at the very top of the shrub above my head where they could catch the sun.  Underneath was a mass of scrambled limbs, their branches bleached white like dead bones;  creepy and perfect for an old witch hiding children or boiling rabbits in black pots over an open fire. 

Occasionally, I emerged in the open to cross a wooden bridge spanning a water inlet.  The sea water was so calm it barely moved.  The water didn't ripple so much as heave as if there was a monster moving slowly beneath the surface.  A flash of white swooped past me and screamed.  My heart clenched but it was only a sea gull.  I watched a grey heron, almost the same colour as the rocks around it, take off and land almost casually on another rock further down stream.

Maybe it was the endorphins but after an hour I started to relax and actually enjoy the walk.  Nature was at peace with itself and so was I.  All was well.  I even imagined my six year old self going berserk with happiness in these woods chasing my brothers and sisters.   I came across Bishops Walk; I didn't remember doing it the day before.  This walk led to enchanting twists and turns in the path with uprooted oak trees that could definitely house colonies of fairy folk.  A stream flowed by strong and true.  It didn't need my help.

It was 9 o'clock when I got back and my husband was hungry for  his breakfast.  I got dressed properly and cleaned my muddy shoes.  I told him about my walk.  He looked at me surprised and said, "I thought you were afraid of the woods?" "Not anymore," I said. 

This morning, I was mulling over my 'feel the fear and do it anyway' moment when the doorbell rang.  I could see a small, round man through the stained glass window in the front door.  'Must be the postman,' I thought and got up to open the door.

"Do you want your trees cut?" said the man, handing me a card.
I looked at him blankly, "Excuse me?"
He nodded at the card in my hand, "I'm Pat the tree surgeon, do you want me to have a go at your hedges. I could do the whole lot for a 100 Euros."
I stared at him in wonder.  In all the ten years I have lived in this house no one has ever come to my door asking to cut trees.  Was this serendipity at work again? 
"Are you alright, Missus?" 
I agreed to let Pat loose in my garden and within minutes I could hear him revving up a chain saw.  Ten minutes later, he reduced my shrubs to stumps.

Pat not only did my hedges, he cleaned the gutters and asked if I had Fairy Liquid to get the muck off his hands.  While he washed his hands in the sink, I told him about my fear of trees.  
"I've been working with trees all my life," said Pat, "and I can tell you, I've never found a body yet.  Will I check back with you in the spring?" 
"Do," I said, , "you never know what I might need then."
Pat dried his hands and made his move to leave.  
"Remember," he said, "no matter what happens, Jesus loves you." And then he was gone.

I shared this serendipitous moment with my husband.  "Fuck me," he said, "you let him into the house. He's seen where you keep the car keys, he has a chain saw and he knows where to hide your body!" 

I didn't agree....... Jesus loves me. 

My husband double checked the house alarm and hid the car keys. 






 

Sunday, 25 September 2016

Sleepless in Kenmare

Hi Fiona,

It's 3.35 am and I can't sleep. I had insomnia as a child and I think it's coming back.  When I was three years old my parents were given a bottle of champagne as a present and on one of my nocturnal forages I found the champagne and drank it. How I got the cork off is a mystery but perseverance and patience in the face of seemingly insurmountable obstacles has always been one of my strengths...

My mother found me passed out on the hall floor the next morning.  She didn't take me to the hospital. Maybe it was too late to pump my stomach as the alcohol had entered my blood stream by then. I wasn't allowed out of the house for a week until I 'dried out' but more probably to let the alcoholic fumes fade from my breath.

Champagne remains my first drink of choice but a pint of Bulmers will do in a pinch.  Neil and I are down in Kenmare for our anniversary and while the hotel is lovely I can never sleep in a strange bed hence my writing to you: you're the only one awake. 

I could chance the hotel bar but I can't find my clothes in the dark and don't want to risk waking Neil.  There is a can of cider in the fridge at home but it's too far to drive.

What news have I? Bugger all really. Tom has started his new course in Galway and LOVES it, thank God. I asked him were the girls in Galway as nice as Cork but he refused to be drawn.  My boys tell me nothing... Joe's match was cancelled because of the rain.  The rain today was spectacular; thank God for water proof clothes. 

Speaking of which, I must have been sprayed with Teflon as a child - right after my alcoholic phase - as I seem to be oblivious to the negativity around me.  People's agonies seem to have no effect on me. I'd have made a terrible nurse: I laugh when I see people in pain.  Tonight at dinner, Neil noticed a woman at the next table complain about every course and even sent her dinner back.  At another table, he noticed a woman giving her husband a bollocking. I saw two men sharing a bottle of Dom Perignon at 185 Euros a bottle.  They were a handsome couple, happy and relaxed and even took selfies of themselves. They were a hoot. Why argue over dinner? why complain? It ruins your digestion. Actually, why have champagne with dinner? Drink the champagne; fuck the dinner.

It's nearly 4 am.  If you are awake text me back. All I need is one drink and I'll be in a coma.

It's so peaceful at this hour of the night/morning.  The rain has stopped and the sky is clear. I can see thousands of stars, some are in clusters while others stand out alone sharp and bright.  The moon is barely a fingernail.  I could go for a walk but if I go outside, I might get locked out.  And I might meet other nocturnal beasts and scare the shit out of myself.

Sleeplessness is a curse and I'm pouring out my heart to you dearest, and one and only awake, friend.  It's great having friends in different time zones: there's always someone up.  And as the saying goes it's five o'clock somewhere. Where? Middle of the Atlantic? No pubs there..... I'm hallucinating. Thank God for predictive text: who can spell 'hallucinating' at this hour? 

Alright, I really am going to bed besides, I'm bursting for a piss. Take care, my wise and lovely friend.  When you're in Cork, schedule me in for a marathon chat. That's if you're sure you want to see me again. My kingdom for a cider and a packet of Taytos right now.  Night, night x

Thursday, 22 September 2016

Battenburg Blues

"Feed your inner child" said Andrew, "it's the key to getting in touch with your creative side."  I am doing a course, The Artist's Way with Andrew Carroll and our assignment each week is to do '"something silly but fun that appeals to your inner child."  I immediately thought of how I've always wanted to have an entire chocolate cake to myself and smash my face in it.  

"Synchronicity and serendipity are at work here," Andrew told us, "look out for them and see what they bring you."

'How to get the chocolate cake?' I asked myself, 'do I make a cake or just buy it?'   I loved the idea of plunging my face into a cake in front of my children and making growling noises like the Cookie Monster from Sesame Street but Andrew said we had to do our assignments alone in order to fully immerse ourselves into the experience.  

I decided that I ought to do this assignment at home because devouring a whole cake in public using no hands might have me arrested not to mention the mess I might make.  Yet how was I to get a cake into the house past three permanently 'starving' boys and a sweet toothed husband undetected?  As for being alone in my own home......, that never happens.  I'd have to do it after they've all gone to bed.  

The next day was Friday.  Three temporary staff from work were finishing up that day and my boss, Mary bought a Battenberg cake during her lunch break to mark their leaving.   My eyes lit up when I saw the Battenberg.  As a child I always thought they were the ultimate luxury: a big chunk of cake smothered entirely in thick chocolate.  Mary was about to put the cake in the fridge but I urged her not to as chocolate tastes best when served at room temperature.  She agreed and put the cake on the filing shelf above the fridge instead.

At 4.30pm, we downed tools.  Mary filled the kettle, put out extra mugs and sliced the Battenberg into 8 pieces.  Everybody helped themselves to a cup of tea but nobody touched the cake.  Not even me: I just wasn't ready for it.  Mary was upset: not only did nobody want her cake but what upset her even more was that it might go to waste.  I offered  to bring a few slices home for the boys.   Mary looked at me eagerly and said, "Would you take the whole thing?"  A light bulb went off in my head. This is what Andrew meant by serendipity: I needed a chocolate cake and now the universe had given it to me.  

Mary carefully wrapped the Battenberg in sheets of photocopying paper and sellotape.  Because of it's awkward triangular shape, it's a hard cake to wrap; she went to a lot of trouble to make sure none of it leaked out.  I didn't have the heart to tell her what I intended to do with it.  

I laid the cake gingerly at the bottom of my lunch bag, covered it over with newspaper and headed for home.  The front door was locked.  That's odd.  I had to use my key to get in and as I stepped into the hallway I heard no sounds from the TV.  I peered into the living room.  The TV wasn't on and there were no starving boys on the couch demanding, "Where's my dinner?"   There was no-one  in the kitchen.  I called up the stairs but got no reply.  I was home alone.  Synchronicity.  I hurried into the kitchen: it was now or never. 

I placed the Battenberg on the kitchen table and carefully cut through the paper and sellotape with a scissors.  I tied my hair back.  I placed a tea towel around my neck, another on my lap and then, taking a deep breath I plunged my face into the cake.  It tasted horrible.  Like a dog nosing around in his food bowl, I persisted looking for the best bits.  But there were none.   The cake part tasted like sawdust and the chocolate crust was bland and oily.  Disgusted and disappointed, my inner child spat it all out again.  No wonder nobody at work touched it. I roughly wrapped the cake back up and plunged it into the bin. 

My next 'inner child' assignment is to re-live one of my favourite childhood memories: eating cold, hard-boiled eggs - with a little bit of salt - sitting on a tartan blanket on Garretstown beach shivering in the wind.  I can't imagine what serendipity and synchronicity will bring me this time.   

Sunday, 18 September 2016

Blue Glass Earrings

"I'm sorry, I don't have change,"  I said as I handed the girl a 50 Euro note.
"That's ok, I have," said the girl.  She took the note from me and put it in a cash box.  Then adjusting her glasses, she picked up a calculator. 
Several seconds passed. 
"The change is 42 Euros," I said.
The girl nearly dropped the calculator.  "I'm sorry," she said, "I can make candles but I don't know how to use calculators."
I felt such a brute.  I softened my tone. "Here, let me show you."
I took the calculator from her, keyed in the numbers and turned the calculator back towards her so she could see the answer.  She whispered, "Thank you" and proceeded to pull out my change from the cash box.

I was on a mission and in a hurry.  I had a tickets to see Gloria Steinem back in Bantry at 12 noon that day but had dashed over to Skibbereen in search of earrings. And not just any old earrings. Elaine, who attended the Travel Writing workshop with me at the West Cork Literary Festival, wore gorgeous, hand-made earrings everyday and on the last day she had ones made of blue glass. I couldn't take my eyes off them. When I asked where she got them, she said "Skibbereen Farmers' Market, the best market in the world."

So here I was on Saturday morning at Skibb Market where there were loads of earrings but not the ones I wanted.  Of course, that's the whole point of Farmer's markets: the stall holders are artisans making unique, one of a kind products and therefore no two  products are going to be the same even if made by the same person.    Maybe the blue-glass-earring maker was sick that day.

My mother bought a fairy door painted on a stone.  It's adorable and I'm sorry I didn't get one myself.  I did get homeopathic drops which the label tells me 'feeds the third eye and fuels creativity.'  It's delicious.  

So no blue glass earrings.  But I have my candle.  The scent is Vanilla Sugar and it smells divine.  It's gentle aroma is like the girl who made it: sweet and non-toxic. I see it as a reminder to take the world easy and be patient.   


 

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Robbing The Eye Out Of My Head

"She'd rob the eye out of your head," said my mother.  Garretstown beach, July, 1975.
 
I used to write for the Douglas Post.  Every week my mother would let me know that she read my latest 'piece' and would have a comment: "That never happened to you!" and, "I remember that incident, it didn't happen like that!" and, "You called her Ellen but I know full well you mean Annette O'Connell."
 
When I still only worked part time, I called in every Wednesday to my parents and have my lunch with them.  This particular Wednesday, my parents had just come back from a fortnight in Lanzarote and mercifully, my mother had missed the previous two editions of the Post.
 
As my mother poured out some spuds onto my dad's plate, she said, "My friend, Shirley told me you wrote about me last week." 
I paused in my chewing and tried to remember last week.  "No, I didn't." 
But my mother was insistent, "Shirley said I was in it."
"No, you weren't"
"But Shirley said I was."
I looked at my mother and said very carefully, "Mum, I wrote it. If I say you're not in it, you're not in it."
My mother tossed her head and smiling to herself said, "I'll ask Shirley."
 
The following Wednesday.  "What Shirley meant was," said my mother, "it's the way you write: she can see my style in your writing."
I stopped peeling my spuds and looked at her.
"So," continued my mother triumphantly, "you get your writing talent from me."
I smiled.  "That reminds me," I said, "of the couple talking about their baby son.  The husband says, 'I think Johnny gets his brains from me.' The wife replies, 'Yes dear, I think you must be right: I still have mine.'"
 

Wednesday, 14 September 2016

I FIND YOUR FONT OFFENSIVE

On Sunday over lunch my 16 year old son asked me, "If you had a daughter, what would you have called her?" 
"Georgia." I said.
"Georgia?  What kind of name is that?" said my son frowning at me. 
I smiled sweetly back at him. "What would you call your daughter?  If, you ever have one."  
"I don't know, but if I had a boy I wouldn't call him Blake."  Blake is his middle name and my maiden name. 
"Why not?"
"Blake is a knacker's name."
He might as well have punched me in the chest. 

Monday morning at work, my colleague, Diane sent out an email to 'All Exchange Users' with guidance notes on how to complete an application for funding form.  It's something she's required to do every year yet despite the clear, step-by-step instructions, the forms are often returned with vital pieces of information missing.  When sending out the instructions this year she carefully underlined the relevant points and highlighted in bold and yellow what not to do. 

Another Diane, with the same surname, received a phone call.  
"I find your font offensive."
"What?"
"The email you just sent. It's offensive."
"I didn't send any email."
Yes, you did. Just now. To all exchange users and it's rude."
"I don't know what you're talking about!"
"It's about funding.... Instructions on how to fill forms....  Ring any bells......?"
There was no bell but a penny dropped.
"You mean Diane in the Fees Office," said Diane, "she probably sent it."
"Oh,  now you're trying to pass it off on someone else."

Later that day, another colleague, Marita was heading home on the bus.  A lady boarded the bus with the help of crutches.  Marita could see there was a seat available so she stayed put.  A few stops later when Marita got up to leave, an elderly woman came up behind her and hissed, "How do you sleep at night?"
Marita blinked at her, "Excuse me?"
"You never offered your seat to that poor lady on crutches, you're a disgrace."

The humidity we have been experiencing this last week seems to be softening the brains of Cork.  The clammy air, charged with lightning accusations and imagined insults, is sparking friction and offence among seemingly normal people.  The Irish can't handle heat and the sooner we revert to cooler conditions, the better.    

In the meantime, everybody can just font off.

Sunday, 11 September 2016

The Wrong End of the Stick

I love to talk.  I can talk to anyone about anything.  Small talk, or big talk, is my speciality.  Sometimes I miss the mark and I look stupid but as long as there's dialogue I consider that a success. George White, a good friend from a previous life said to me once, "What I like about you, Geraldine, is you always get the wrong end of the stick."

My husband, two older sons and I were at a rugby function in Newcastle, Australia just before a Lions game in 2013.  Mingling in the crowd, I recognised Eric Rush, an ex-All Black player.  The man, who invited us to the function, offered to introduce us.  Eric was very friendly but my sons, aged 19 and 16, clammed up in the great man's presence.  I told Eric I recognised him from when he played for New Zealand in the Hong Kong Sevens.  Eric noted my accent and told us he was half Irish: his dad was from Belfast.  My husband said, "So you could have played for Ireland then?"  Eric seemed taken aback by the idea and said, "Well I don't know about Ireland, they seem hot and cold to me." I immediately jumped in and said, "Oh no, we've been having great weather this summer." My two sons groaned aloud and said, "That's not what he means, Mum!" Eric turned to the boys and asked if they played rugby.  Their tongues now unlocked, they eagerly filled him in on their rugby playing credentials. 

It turned out that Eric was the guest speaker and when he got up to speak, he welcomed 'the family from Ireland' and told the crowd of his Irish roots.  Back in the 60's Eric's father took the 10 pound boat from England to Australia but when the boat stopped in Auckland he got off and headed for the pub.  Whenever Eric complained to his father about his drinking, his father would reply, "Shut up, son, if it weren't for my drinking you would be playing for Australia." 

It was a brilliant night for us. Grabbing the stick, at both ends, puts you in the path of interesting people and great memories. 

Friday, 9 September 2016

Happiness is.............

....not having to use the Rochestown road - west bound - to drive to work, getting back home after a blustery walk in the mad wind and it starts to rain and, when it's raining really hard but you don't have to be anywhere. Perfect.

Saturday, 3 September 2016

The Dilemma

When I lived in Boston, Lavonne was my best friend.  Lavonne is from Minnesota and true to her Norwegian roots, she was beautiful with her pink, white skin; piercing, blue eyes; wispy white, blonde hair and tall.  We both worked as nannies and met every day.  The one thing we had in common was that we both loved eating.  Every evening, we'd cycle the twenty minutes to a home-made ice-cream parlour and eat a pint bucket of ice-cream each.  On Sundays, we'd head into Boston town and eat our way through Faneuil Hall gorging ourselves on triple chocolate fudge brownies with walnuts, rocky road ice-cream with strawberries (we deluded ourselves that at least the strawberries were almost calorie-free), custard-filled doughnuts and hot dogs.  We weren't capable of resisting anything.  If we weren't eating, we were 'dieting' but it was futile in the face of so much temptation. 

With Lavonne, I went to my first night club, Dirty Dick's.  A black man asked me to dance and I nearly passed out with the excitement.  His name was Randy. Lavonne met up with a guy who told her he was Julian Lennon's cousin - he did look like him.

On Paddy's Day, Lavonne cooked me dinner.  Pasta with pesto sauce and spinach salad followed by pistachio ice cream, all slugged down with kiwi margaritas.  Entirely green and entirely delicious.

One day, about eight weeks into our friendship, Lavonne confessed she had a dilemma.   "There's something that's really been bothering me," she said, "and I was wondering if maybe you could help me.  You know, maybe we could talk it through and see if we can work it out."
"Sure," I said, "What is it?"
Lavonne took a deep breath.  "Well, it's just that..." and she stopped.  She smiled sympathetically at me.  I braced myself.
"What?" I said.
"Well..."
"For God's sake, Lavonne, what could be so terrible?"
Lavonne let out a big sigh and looking deep into my eyes she said,  "The thing is, Geraldine, I've never had a short friend before."
I waited. 
"Is that it?" I said.
"Well, yeah," said Lavonne, clearly annoyed.
I don't remember how we resolved the 'dilemma' but the friendship survived.

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.................