Memory is…

21 of 50

probably not the most reliable master. I know that most of the things I relate here are as I remember them, but are they actually what happened? I’d like to think so, and I think the fact that I can remember them at all means that they are probably about 90% accurate. I suspect some of the finer detail has been lost over time.

Take this for example:

I am sure that this is a photo of my Auntie Elsie, but it is the only photo I’ve been able to find of her and it isn’t marked. My memory says that this is exactly as I remember her, but I have no real way of verifying it. I did share it with my cousin who agrees with me, but anyone who would definitely know has either passed away or probably can’t remember.

I have very fond memories of Auntie Elsie. As a preschooler she used to baby sit me during a period when my family were having a particularly difficult time – I didn’t know this then and only found out much later, I suspect because I was being insulated from what was happening. I remember those days as some of the best from my young childhood, we used to have such adventures and really these were just in her home and garden which were both quite large and amazing playgrounds, with books and boardgames and all sorts of things.

Sadly she died a few years after those days. I don’t remember her passing, but do remember some events surrounding it. One of my most treasured possessions is a pencil and pen set that I was given for the Christmas that year:

If my memory of the events are still quite clear, how come I can’t be sure that the photograph is who I think it is? I’m both sure it is and yet not sure I am correct. Maybe it is the physical gap between the two times. I’ve only come across that photograph in the last month or so and don’t think I’ve seen any in the intervening period. The original memories being set over 40 years ago. I also remember being told that Auntie Elsie was a retired school teacher, but again I don’t know if that is actually true, it certainly seems plausible given how good she was with me as a child.

The memories are there because they were good times – for me at least – even if they aren’t always reliable, does it matter? I don’t think so.

Jobs

20 of 50

My first job – one where I was paid by someone other than a member of my family – was as a paperboy. I’d get up early each morning before school and deliver papers from the village newsagents to houses around the village. It used to take about an hour to do the round, kept me fit and gave me a little money, which I often spent in the newsagents.

At the same time as the paper round I used to cut lawns in the summer months. Gardens in the village where on the large side and many of the lawns were big, but I could do this with my walkman on, lost in my own world.

My first ‘proper’ job though was as a Saturday and holiday relief in a secondhand bookstore. In 50 years this is probably my ideal job and I think in career terms I peaked a little early, as I could quite happily be doing this job now as I was at 16. It helped that I had a love and good knowledge of books and I stayed in that job until I went to university and then did holiday stints when I could. Of course I also spent quite a bit of my wage in the same shop, but this time with a healthy staff discount. I still have some of those books. That shop is in a different location, but as far as I know run by the same person now as then.

Since then I’ve done all sorts of things, including as I do now working for myself. The job I look back on most fondly though is in the secondhand bookshop. I wonder nowadays if you could make a go of such a business, without having some kind of financial cushion or bias in your favour. There’s not a huge amount of money in secondhand books (I’m not meaning rare or antiquarian books, just ordinary secondhand), with business rates, rents etc., could you make a go of a secondhand bookshop? As I say it feels like you need something else other than books to be working in your favour.

Now I’m not thinking about opening a bookshop or anything, but it has got me thinking about how lucky I was to be able to work in one when I did. A few years ago I looked at Christmas work in a branch of a national chain. I went into the store and got a application form, and I was quite shocked at the questions. This is much more about marketing and promotion than knowledge of books and authors. I still like to think my knowledge of the latter is pretty good, but you could write what I know about the former on the back of an envelope, certainly not the 250+ words required to answer the questions on the application form.

I think over the years, some jobs have come to me at the right time. I think latterly I was a bit tied to the promotion/advancement cycle and jobs were just a way of paying the bills. I miss the days where job satisfaction rated higher than the wage slip, and I think I am slowly working my way back towards only chasing work from which I derive a sense of satisfaction whenever I can.

I doubt that you’ll see me behind the counter in a bookshop any time soon, but you never know, maybe…..

No, No, No, No, Yes

19 of 50

I’d just like to say welcome to new subscribers of which there have been a few just recently. Thanks for subscribing, hopefully this email has found its way into your inbox rather than your spam folder, because if it’s there you’re probably not even reading this are you? Anyways I hope that you’ll enjoy this newsletter, but you can of course unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link at the bottom of each email.

This week’s post is a little bit of a follow on from last week.


There’s a piece of conventional wisdom that says you should say “No,” more. That whenever you say yes to something you’re actually saying no to other things. It’s all about balance though.

When I was about 5 or 6 I think I used to say no, to a lot more things than I do now.

“Tidy your room.” – No

“Eat your greens.” – No

“Go to bed.” – No

I was also a cunning, or perhaps that should be devious so and so when I wanted to be. I once gained considerable plaudits from my Mum for having such a tidy room after she’d asked me to do something about the disaster zone that was my bedroom. At least that was until she discovered that my solution wasn’t to put everything away where it belonged but to push it all under the bed and pull the covers down so it couldn’t be seen. I think most of my toys were confiscated for that one, or at least all of the ones under the bed were, which in reality was most of them. I also suspect that my Mum considered sawing the legs off of my bed so that I couldn’t pull the same stunt twice.

Nowadays it’s a little bit more straightforward. I’ve been booking a couple of speaking gigs for next year this morning (I talk about allotments, veg growing that sort of thing, if that’s of interest and you’d like a talk obviously do get in touch). Now that Covid rules have been relaxed, most of these talks will take place in village halls in the evening, and involve an element of travel to get there and back again. Each time I say yes to one of these is an evening that I don’t spend at home with my family. Of course I am compensated by a small fee, but sometimes I do wonder if that’s all worth it. I enjoy it though, I like standing up in front of a group and talking – I know I’m weird like that – I also know that the minute I stop enjoying it, I’ll be saying “No,” more.

It’s a bit like being 5 or 6 again. I only used to say no to the things that I didn’t like doing. I really didn’t like tidying my room, I liked it being a mess and having all my toys out so that they were close at hand to play with. Okay it might have been a bit of an obstacle course, but that’s part of the fun too. Until of course you tread on that upturned Lego™ brick and……

40+ years later of course there are some things that I have to say yes to that I don’t enjoy doing. Life and society is like that, otherwise it would be anarchy. Mostly though these are things that we don’t get to have a choice over, or rather there are more stringent punishment than just having your toys confiscated for non-compliance.

At the moment I’m having to give considerable thought to whether I say yes or no to signing a revised contract with a client. They want something more formal than our current arrangement, unfortunately there version is a bit too formal for my liking, so we’re talking about it. Ultimately we’ll reach an end point that either we’re both happy with or one of us (mostly likely me) walks away from. For me this is very much about if I say yes to this, what other things am I going to be saying no to, and is that compromise worth it. I’ll see. If life has taught me anything is just because someone tells you your room has to be tidy, doesn’t always mean they are right.

Thanks for reading.

Time & Decisions

18 of 50

50 years… 18,261 days… 438,264 hours… 26,295,840 minutes… Time passes quickly doesn’t it? Except perhaps when you’re waiting for something. Like when you are 10 and you’re a week away from your birthday, then each day feels like a month. You get there and the whole day passes in a blur.

One of the things that I’ve learnt from doing these posts, which are in part me telling some stories and hopefully also some of the things that I learnt along the way, is what I value most. They are the things that over the passage of all that time I can still remember, mostly happy memories.

As you get older though, some of the things, and in particular the people that made those memories with you pass on. I’ve noticed that a lot of the famous people from my youth have been passing on with increasing rapidity over the last few years, no surprise really given that they were 20 to 40 years older than me at the time I was watching / listening to them.

I’ve also been looking through a lot of old photographs recently and that’s been triggering particular memories of when certain photographs were taken or of certain people. Coincidentally I’ve been reading and listening in other places that life shouldn’t be about working until you die, but about enjoying it while you can.

All of this had left me thinking a lot about my own mortality and life path – both past, present and future. The Stoics would have you remember death – Momento Mori – and not seek to put off until tomorrow what you should do today.

I’m in the relatively fortunate position to have very little debt, in part because of work related decisions that I’ve made at various times, which looking back weren’t made on the basis of enjoyment but from a position of financial benefit. I’ve sometimes said if I was able to make those decisions over again with the hindsight that I have now I might make different decisions. Of course in doing so I’d be in a different position in life both personally and financially. So those decisions were made for the best reasons at the time, based on the knowledge and information available and I am where I am now because of them.

That said decision going forward now could easily be made on the basis of different reasoning and I think looking back at those enjoyable stories – I doubt I’ll tell any of the horrible ones, although I wouldn’t rule it out – means that seeking enjoyment and happiness is more important now than perhaps financial gain is. Do I really need more money? Well it’s nice to have but not essential, although there is a recognition of at least a basic level of income. Do I need a happy life? Absolutely.

I’m cogitating a lot on this and thinking about what I want so that it can underpin future decision making. If fifty years worth of decisions have taught me one thing it’s to learn from each and everyone of those decisions, even if at a later point in life you think you wouldn’t make the same decision again if you could go back and change it.

Ultimately there is never a wrong time to change direction if that’s what you want to do, but as time passes some of the options become limited due to age, illness or for other reasons. Making decisions when you’re older may mean that you have more information and knowledge to draw on, but you still might not get the answers you want.

AudioMo 2022 Day 2

For Day 2 of AudioMo I used the Sennheiser Ambeo Smart Headset which records the audio binaurally. So when listening back it’s best to use headphones and you’ll hear the left and right sides of the audio as they were recorded.

Listen to the end for the peregrine falcon. The pictures of the fox and peregrine that I took are below.

About 25 minutes of audio and me burbling on, so if you do make it all the way to the end, thanks for listening.

AudioMo 2022

I taking part in AudioMo again this year – an audio recording of any length each day through the month of June, posted to Twitter with the hashtag #AudioMo.

I’m going to pin this post to the top of the blog for the duration, and update it with a link to each new post (when I remember to do so), so you can find them all on this post during the month.


Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Day 4

Day 5

Day 6

Day 7


Day 8

Day 9

Day 10

Day 11

Day 12

Day 13

Day 14

Day 15

Day 16

Day 17

Day 18

Day 19

Day 20

Day 21

Day 22

Day 23

Day 24

Day 25

Day 26

Day 27

Day 28

Day 29

Day 30

My (Limited) Acting Career

17 of 50

We’ve all been there. You’re cast as; a King, a Republican, a Prime Minister, a Shepherd, Jesus, Mary, Joseph or the wee donkey. It’s either the school play, nativity performance or some other “production”. You rehearse for what seems like months, and then the great and the good – your parents, other relatives, school governors and the local vicar come along and watch your performance.

I think I have a particularly impressive list of characters that I’ve played:

Second Shepherd,

Slim the Cowboy (brilliant gambler, terrible pistol shot),

Oliver Cromwell,

Part of The Dragon (slain),

A rabbit.

Despite these successes I retired from acting at an early point in my career. Instead preferring the lure of outdoor life. Looking back I wonder if I made the right decision. If I hadn’t maybe I could have stayed the course, gone to Hollywood, who knows. I’m pretty sure though that I made the right decision.

To this day I can remember the line that I had to be prompted about in every dress rehearsal and performance when I played Slim the Cowboy – “But that’ll mean going all the way back to Sacramento again.” I can’t remember the context for it but despite not being able to remember it at the time I can remember it to this day, and it’s the only line I can remember from that play, from any of the plays.

Since my retirement I have kept my finger on the pulse of the up and coming actors. As a school governor I have attended a number of productions, and recognise myself in today’s aspiring actors. There seems to be a wider range of productions these days, although the old stalwart of nativity play still seems to be very popular.

They are of course there to serve and educational purpose, as well as entertain the legions of parents, siblings, grandparents, aunts and uncles who come along to suffer through watch the performances. To transmit wider messages of good will, hope and happiness. I suspect that today they are an institution in schools throughout the land, like the school fete, carol concert and a wealth of other activities that make up the school year that are outside the straight lessons in classrooms that most people instantly associate with “being at school”.

So did you act when at school? If so who did you play? Or are you an actor today because of starting out at school? I’d love to know, leave me a comment.

Thanks for reading.

May 2022 Update

Dad – late 1940’s

I seem to have fallen into monthly updates here, whilst still posting my FiftyFromFifty newsletter over there.

It’s been a busy month work wise (see below), and also in a few other areas. I’ve had my film camera out again and have been working my way through a couple of rolls of film some of the results I’ve posted here and there are more to come. I’ve been looking at buying some more rolls of film as I’ve almost used up the small stock that I have. Unsurprisingly the prices have gone up quite a bit, but I have a couple of ideas of different things that I want to try so I don’t feel like I need to buy large quantities of film at the moment.

I’ve also been breathing new life into old photos and slides, scanning boxes and folders of them in fact. I’ve found quite a few that I’ve never seen before and many of relatives in their younger days. Some are obvious as to who they are, others I’m not 100% sure of, possibly because they died before I was born. Some are labelled, but they are in the minority.

I’ve been able to visit my Mum – as opposed to only speaking to her on the phone – now that her care home is covid-free again. It’s strange that we’re now supposed to be “living with covid” and yet hundreds of people are still dying on a nearly daily basis. It really does feel like the government has failed this country in dealing with this killer virus and continues to do so on daily basis, preferring to pretend that there’s nothing to see. Their favourite phrase seems to be that we “just need to move on”.

We’re still planning our house move, and although it’s still a little way off, I’ve made some significant progress this month in making it happen and there’s more to come hopefully next month.

We’ve had a few issues with Wilson’s health which has resulted in more unplanned trips to the vet. He seems to be doing much better now, but he was a cause for a bit of concern earlier in the month.


Work

This month has been busy with a client project and also having to renegotiate a contract. There’s been an exchange of emails over the content of the contract which at the moment I cannot sign. I’m hopeful that we can reach some middle ground but I’ll have to wait and see what comes back from them by way of revisions before being able to make a decision. In the meantime I have delivered on what I have been doing for them and there’s is potentially more work in the pipeline.


Allotment

It feels very strange knowing that this is probably my last year on the plot with a potential house move imminent. It changes the way you think about things and what you’re going to plant where. At the moment we’re getting a good crop of broad beans and I’m hoping to be able to plant out squash and courgette this week, as well as some climbing beans. I’ve also got some bush tomatoes coming along that look like they are about ready for larger pots or potentially going into the soil.


Books

I’ve read a few books this month, including finally finishing Derek Jarman’s first volume of diariesModern Nature – evidently it has taken me nine months to read them and as they’re not very long I’m not sure why. I would definitely like to visit his gardens in Dungeness one day and see just what he was able to do in such an inhospitable space. I’ve since moved on and am reading his Pharmacopoeia: A Dungeness Notebook and a little of his second volume of diaries.

I’ve also read a couple of books that didn’t pass my fifty page rule (or 20% on a kindle if there are no page numbers), I don’t name and shame because I think this can sometimes be as much about personal taste or mood at the time of reading, and I have been known to go back to books that haven’t passed the test and reread and enjoyed them so it’s a rule of the moment rather than to be rigidly applied.


TV / Film

Really not much to report here at all, mostly we’ve been watching repeats, programmes from the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s, programming that fills the time but ultimately means that I spend more time reading with the telly switched off. I have been enjoying Bosch: Legacy which I think is the only bit of new content I’ve been watching but I think that only has 2 episodes left, so probably by the time this goes out will be finished.


Well I don’t think that there’s much more to say this month.

Stay safe and take care.

The Climb to the Top

16 of 50

We’d slogged our way up a very clear steep path to the summit. We could see that there was a flagpole there and as we cleared the crest a memorial and a couple of benches positioned to allow a seated person a spectacular view.

As we stood catching our breath we could see that seated on one of the said benches was a little old lady. This caused something of a double-take. We’d been pretty hard pressed to clamber up the slope; there was no way that she’d managed the same feat with her walking stick. We figured we’d been had, and that there was another way to the summit that was less arduous. A little scouting around revealed that there was indeed a much shallower path, an indirect route that lead around the sides of peak but achieved the same ends. We went down that way.

This was on the first day of a family holiday in a little Wiltshire village where we’d gone to stay for a week. We’d been gifted a week in October in a neighbours’ holiday cottage on the condition that we closed down the cottage for the winter. Ultimately we did this a number of times over several years, and this became a regular family escape.

It was a little village with good access to the Wiltshire Downs, a good selection of small shops – newsagent, green grocer, butcher, general store, electrical store, small garage/petrol station, a chippy, and to my absolute delight a secondhand bookshop. I got to know the owner of the latter very well over the years, and although the shop is gone now I still own a few of the books that I purchased there.

In later years it became a stopping point on holidays to the West Country and Cornwall and immediately prior to Covid I visited again a number of times on the way to and from a client in the neighbouring county. There’s now a charity shop near to the old bookshop, with a good collection of secondhand books and I’ve also found a number of treasures in there. Some of the other shops have gone, as has the petrol station but many remain to this day and whilst many things have changed, it’s still very much the same village of my childhood and still appears to be a thriving community, even holding a literary festival in the autumn.

This village still holds a favourite place in my heart. I haven’t had the opportunity to visit since early 2020, so I do wonder how things have changed if at all in the last couple of years with the implications of Covid.

Once upon a time we looked at a possible house move there and at one point had a property in mind, but that didn’t work out and plans changed. I doubt that we will ever do that now, but it is a place that will be an anchor point in my life. One of only happy memories (I’m sure there were somethings that I’ve probably chosen not to remember) and some unfulfilled things, but still….

One that I am determined to complete at some point is to climb to the top of another nearby monument. This one is manmade and stands not far from this little village. Over the years, those family holidays and other visits, I’ve been there a number of times to climb to it’s summit. Although generally open to the public at certain times, each time I’ve tried it’s been closed for an unusual reason. It does seem a little like fate conspiring against me but one day.