Ghosts

 I fell asleep on the couch yesterday afternoon and woke in darkness. The tv had turned itself off ( it does this as it’s on some sort of timer I haven’t been able to figure out as yet) but the fire was still burning , just that much to give the room some warmth and some light. 
The dogs were asleep.
Dorothy next and on me, the other two in the cracks.
I wasn’t sure when it was, and lay there blinking. 
I could hear the wind, and the tick of the kitchen clock

Then Albert walked passed the couch. 
I heard him rub the couch as cats do with their sides when they are not in a hurry.
A muted rub and a vibration through the cushion 
Then nothing more
I blinked once again and didn’t move then closed my eyes again for a few moments 
before realising it was around 6 pm and time to get up for work


Frankie Goes To Hollywood - The Power Of Love


The tongue in cheek video, somehow spoils the song, which was the backdrop to my psychiatric nurse days back in 1984. It was ironic , for despite being madly in unrequited love with my best friend two years before this date, I was not going to properly fall in love with someone for another decade or so. 
That decade taught me to make and nurture and love my friends
Most of whom I still retain to this day.
At the end of Les Mistersbles , Jean Valjean and Fantine sing “ and remember the truth that was once was spoken….to love another person is to see the face of God” 
That’s where the Frankie Goes to Hollywood video hails from, me now thinks.
I’ve been in love with three men in my life, only one of whom properly loved me back.
I’ve loved many more men and women, as friends and more, and I’m lucky those that love me back do so in a way that I can acknowledge and get comfort from.
My dogs love me too but in a different way as I love them 
They are animals where
Love is more a bond.

“ Dreams are like Angels,
They keep bad at bay, bad at bay, 
Love is the light,
Scaring darkness away”




All Of Us Strangers


Intriguing and emotional films, should in my mind, be seen with someone else in tow. 
Post Mortem’s need to be sat through. Points of view need discussion and raw nerves need to be soothed
As All of Us Strangers finished Chic Eleanor wiped her cheeks and tearfully lisped “Darling that was beautiful “ 
And she is right, it is….it’s a lovely film.

It’s a four handed drama that centres around a forty something gay scriptwriter (Andrew Scott)  , his tentative romance with a lonely brittle neighbour ( Paul Mescal) and his unexpected reunion with the  “ghosts” of his dead parents, ( Claire Foy and Jamie Bell) who died together in a car accident in the 1980s 
I will not explain it any more than that, as this hypnotic, beautifully shot and incredibly acted study of grief, childhood damage, and redemption through love can be viewed in a score of different ways. 

Suffice to say , that Scott’s painful memories of being a gay child in the 1980s are beautifully and from my perspective painfully portrayed as his loving but slightly clueless parents grapple with the “ reality” of how their 1980s parenting helped and didn’t help him through

It’s an intensely personal and heart wrenching study by director Andrew Haigh. Andrew Scott is magnificent in the lead role, he wears  a sad smile which could literally  break your heart, as he plays opposite his “ parents “ and one scene in particular when his dad realises that he has let his son down is a wonderfully powerful piece of cinema , made so much better by Jamie Bell’s subtle depiction of a kind man just out of his depth. 

Is it a ghost story? Or a love story ? Or a metaphor for therapy and forgiveness ? 
It doesn’t matter
As All of us Strangers is all of these things and more.
It’s a great piece of cinema.




Roseanne: DAD'S DEAD!


Nurses are taught to say “ Died” not gone, or passed or anything else
I loved this bit of tv gold

Lovely quiet day today. I met my sister Ann, her husband and my late brother’s wife for lunch at the Dinorban Arms https://www.brunningandprice.co.uk/dinorbenarms/homepage/
I scrubbed up and enjoyed lovely food but average service 
Tomorrow, Chic Eleanor and I are off to see All of Us Strangers 

ABBA The Visitors - Under Attack


I went to Sainsbury’s for lunch.
Their filter coffee is nice and the bustle of the cafe reminds me I’m not feeling lonely today.
A chap started talking to me on scruff which is a chatting/ dating app. He seemed interesting and chatty and talked about choirs and theatre and cinema that was until he asked to see of Photo of me . I sent him one of me and Dorothy in profile and he asked if he could view a “ lower one” 
I sent him a photo of my shoes prefixed by the word, sigh , then blocked him.
I had bangers and mash for lunch and had a small bout of road rage on the way home when a man stopped dead behind tome minor flooding causing several cars to shriek to a halt . The man refused to move on, for an age and I called out in my best Les Dawson voice You Big Girl’s Blouse ! 
Incongruously he waved what looked like a large feather duster at me
So much for learning all about being non judgemental in college yesterday

I played my ABBA LP When I got home 

Who was the favourite?

 Who was your favourite patient ?

It was a question a more junior nurse asked me a few days ago. She punctuated the question with the word ever! 
Thus making the answer all rather difficult.
Forty one years of patients
You’d think they would merge into one.
They don’t! 
Former medic Should Fish More will, I think agree with me here
Certain patients will capture your heart, head, humour , conscience, memory and psychi for all different reasons, and will remain close by like memories of a lovely holiday or a particularly sad family funeral.
Favourite isn’t the right word to use here, it can’t be.

A chic Italian interpreter who wanted to dance with me before she died ( we danced)
A lost, and handsome  North Yorkshire man, shaken by mental illness wanting to hold my hand when he saw me out shopping in central York in 1987
An Iraqi boy of eleven, paralysed in the war careering around the spinal unit, cackling like a loon, with my first dog Finlay tied to the front of his wheelchair.
Indumati, a bad tempered, irascible Hindu lady who could hit me with a piece of fruit at ten feet even though she was blind as a bat.
Being the birthing partner of a Sheffield teenager giving birth to her first baby who she called Harley Davidson 
The wife of a man with a lacerated liver who begged me to save his life as he bled to death.
The jovial schizophrenic lady to annoyed the pious chaplain of Chester’s Deva hospital by peeing on the chapel’s floor during Church service.
And the Welsh farmer’s wife who gave me a pair of Turkey poults after I had looked after her on intensive care.
I could go on….. I’m on a roll.

Self Care

 I’ve got skills practice in an hour. 
This is a recorded zoom meeting between me and my colleague Donna .
It will last an hour with each one of us playing the therapist for thirty minutes each.
Our tutor will assess the video sometime this week.
Yesterday I set up zoom and got everything set up.
In between times I called friends for chats, 
It’s amazing how much the cottage feels alive with the sound of chatter in it.

I’m working nights tonight so made a big brunch.


Soda bread toasted with garlic topped with Greek yogurt, salmon and avocado , topped with a left over spoon of mushy peas…
Bloody lovely.
I won’t eat again until this evening 
Eating special meals has always been important to me, and it’s a skill I have indulged myself in since I was single. 
In counselling , it would be termed self care 
Respect and care for myself in a time which isn’t always as nurturing as it could be.

Or perhaps I just like my food 

The Zone Of Interest



Domestic Holocaust
Jonathon Taylor’s adaptation of the novel by Martin Amis is a cold affair. Cold, chilling and hard work.
Filmed as if it was a fly on the wall documentary we follow the everyday life of Hedwig Hoss ( Sandra Hüller) the wife of Auschwitz Commander Rudolph( Christian Friedel) who runs her household of five children, maids and gardeners in a well appointed modern town house, feet from the concentration camp wall. Her house and particularly her garden is her pride and joy, and it is soon apparent that the war and her marriage has elevated her in rank and privilege to become the self proclaimed “Queen of Auschwitz “

We see very little of the camp itself , save for the fire in the sky chimneys of the crematoria, casting light and noise in the night like something from Tolkien .
But we hear it.
The factory hum of machinery and traffic, the constant shootings and occasional screams , this is the backdrop to a horror ignored by Hedwig who raises her family in the Hitler Way, with good food, exercise, fresh air and country pursuits .
The negative effects of living such a life is lost on the adults but we glimpse how the children have reacted. One sleep walks nightly, another collects human teeth, two others swim in the river and are covered in human remains and have to scrubbed in the kitchen sink whilst another boy, rather heartbreakingly listens passively as a prisoner is drowned by guards for not following orders. 
Only one person is shown to acknowledge the horror of the Hoss’ new life and that is Hedwig’s mother who leaves the family home in the middle of  the night to escape the world beyond the garden wall.

This is a hard watch. The actors are given little to soften their characters and the sounds of the camp never leave the narrative and wear you down by the end the film.