Bra Straps

 


Cold and wet today and I’ve pulled myself up by my bra straps
The bleed in my right eye can be seen if I close my eyes. 
It’s the shape of Elphaba from Wicked, how apt I thought……

The Welsh and I drove to Colwyn Bay for coffee and shared sausage butty, which blew away the cobwebs and on the way home I bought a chicken to roast for lunch. I will plate up an extra meal for a friend across the village which I will pop off later….



As we got out of Bluebell behind the cottage a shout in the wind made me look up. A couple in the graveyard were waving at me. The couple Luke & Shana were Americans and Mormons. As it turned out , his relatives, way back had rebuilt the church and my cottage, a fact which literally blew his mind, given that he only wanted to ask me about the ownership of the church.

I made a coffee, and lit the fire
And as the Welsh slept, drying their coats on the kitchen reading chair 

The cottage filled with the smell of roast chicken 

Only Me


Another lisping choir’s performance and one I enjoyed from the back row just over Silvia’s left shoulder.
I’ve wrapped Christmas gifts today and sent them. 
And have written some of Trelawnyd Productions recently commissioned Christmas Cards
Fuck me we are becoming a franchise 



I’ve also sent Nu a copy of Kathy Burke’s autobiography a Mind Of My Own , not because it is Christmas soon , but because I enjoyed it so much. 
I suddenly remembered it was nephew Leo’s birthday today , and I was annoyed that I had forgotten it…
I sent money via on line banking and messaged him with instructions to spend it on comics and film tickets. 
He sounded cheerful πŸ˜ƒπŸ˜ƒπŸ˜ƒ



I can’t shake the blues today, even though I’ve been busy…..
To chase away a virus inducing sense of loneliness , I’ve made spiced Italian bean soup with pancetta and smoky paprika and have cooked spiced chips laced with garlic and curry powder . I’ve drunk lemon juice spiked lemsip and spent far too long in a hot shower
And I had a good cry with Roger on my knee, over nothing more than a face lick.
Hey ho xx

On reflection , I know where today’s mood came from.
I’ve recently complained to the Post Office that I suspect we residents down Cwm Road are getting deliveries just once a week. I was asked to clarify my worries last night, in a phone to a chirpy woman full of apologies and good humour.
Are there other house residents worried about their post? 
She asked and I told her that I lived alone
So nobody else?…….she repeated and I fell into that trap and said, almost apologetically

No it’s only me 

The Production Begins

 Things are coming together for the show, even though the process feels as though we are heading a group of cats. Affable Despot Jason , helper Will, Dave and Director Kira got on the stage to work out the sound system in the village hall as I discussed the running order with compare Billy . 
The Velvet Voiced Linda was already smooshing the bigwigs from the Male Voice Choir as our recently conscripted administration manager Gina ( a tiny powerhouse of a woman who seems to be on every committee going) sorted out flyers and posters and funding and local counsel leaders to attend on the night. 



I just fielded questions and wrote things down . The main rehearsals start next week, but one young star did her sound check tonight. 
Quite lovely and all rather magical 

Bits

 It wasn’t until midday when I started a teams meeting with a friend that I realised that I had lost my voice 
My friend , who is German asked me how such an event could have happened 
I’ve sung too much Opera recently I replied sarcastically, to which he replied 
“ I didn’t know that you sang opera !”
Irony is lost on him 

I’ve drank lemsip and cooked which is the best panacea to a lost voice and I met my sister and her dog Rory for a lesson in manners at a local fenced field. Her dog is young and lacks social skills with other dogs , so a runaround with my two seemed the best way forward, and it was. Mary occasionally snapped at his over confidence and Roger ignored it, but for the most part the trio ambled around in a friendly and quiet manner.
My sister was impressed. 

The only other thing I have done today was to pop in to see a neighbour whose cat had been run over at the weekend. Her on line reaction to her loss has been profound and heartbreaking so , I’m a typical diversionary manner I popped around with the praying Mantic Christmas decoration to see if it help a little and I think it did given her online reply 



Cold


It feels like winter
Tonight is bloody cold,
I haven’t a story to share, except that Mary had the right idea and 
Hid herself on the little yellow armchair and wrapped herself in the 
lovely soft green throw given to me by my Chic Eleanor 
I went to my sister Ann’s house for supper ( amazing Spanish Chicken and chorizo )
And taking a lesson from my old girl I cocooned myself on the trendy blue couch with Roger and Bun , 
Covering us all with the spare duvet when I got home.
The storms and bad weather have damaged the graveyard 



Another Mother Story


This is Baroness Von Budberg-Bonningshausen. 
That slightly breathless haughty expression. That imperious " suffer no fools" icy stare. That lived in face, moulded by gin and cigs .
I was in fact,  looking at my mother in the latter part of her life


My mother died in a residential home which she hated. The " care" staff were generally inflexible and ill trained but the home was one of the few that would accommodate her smoking, so beggars could not be choosers. She had her own neat room and use of a shabby " staff room" where she could puff away at her cigarettes by the open fire door , so she and we, her family, were grateful , but like all institutions , she was placed on a " care plan" which limited her smoking periods to times the staff felt it appropriate that they could supervise safely.

My mother resented this control bitterly, and fought every rule with the tenacity of a St Trinian Schoolgirl.
( I must note here that one of her biggest allies in the home was the cook, a woman that would often bend the rules to wheel my mother outside where she could puff away at her full tars under a spotty umbrella....strangely that cook eventually came to live in Trelawnyd and is now our Flower Show cookery judge!) 

I remember driving over to Wales from Sheffield one morning and when I arrived I was greeted by the home manager ( a woman I detested because she was rather common and somewhat physically sloppy). She told me that mother had been somewhat " buzzer happy" when requesting her morning fagtime and due to staffing issues, the staff had not been able to " organise" her break by the fire door for hours.
I told her firmly that I would now do the supervising.
I dressed my mother and helped her into her wheelchair without a wash or even a hair brush and as she puffed away at the first cig of the day, her nerves subsided and she became more herself even though she looked like the wreck of the Hesperus.

The manager appeared at he door, obviously guilty at leaving my mother cigless for so long and started to talk to my mother in a patronising " we've had our little chats about these cigarettes before haven't we Joan?" kind of way. The manager standing at the door with all the power and my mother sitting in a shabby staff room on an incontinence pad with non...........I found myself starting to build myself up for a sharp little conversation about courtesy.

But I need not have worried. With fag in hand and with her hair looking like a bird's nest, my mother smiled her best hostess smile and trilled to the manager " This is my son, he's a charge nurse on a busy spinal ward in Sheffield and he would love a cup of tea if you would be kind enough to get him one..he's just driven 100 miles to see me"

The manager hesitated and my mother added with icy charm " Thank you soooooo much" .
The cups of tea duly arrived, served by a support worker who gave my mother a wink and as we sat in clouds of smoke drinking our drinks the manager appeared again to ask us if everything was ok
With her face the colour of putty my mother nodded graciously in victory and as the manager walked away, but not out of earshot, my mother turned to me , fag ash all splattered down her front , and said in a loud Maggie Smith stage voice " That woman is a real BITCH,"

Telling A good Story

Brothers. And sisters ( +inlaws) before the trache

Working in palliative care, I understand all too well the power of the diversion story, something that deflects the attention from death, dying, symptoms and sadness

This post from fifteen years ago is a case in point

“ My brother was tired when I visited him this evening. He was also rather weary and fed up with the tracheostomy which is to be expected.

Unable to speak , interaction can be a little difficult for him and for us, and when visiting , being in the hospital. I was reminded of when I used to take my mother out from her nursing home room, and I was glad that the story I recalled got my brother, sister in law and visiting nephew Peter smiling.

My mother in the months before her death was a terribly difficult character. A chronic bronchitic and un diagnosed COPD sufferer she was confined to her room on an oxygen concentrator which she found dreadfully frustrating seeing that she was a 60 cigarette a day lady!). To take her out, she needed bottled oxygen, so on my weekly visit from Sheffield ( a 200 mile round trip) I used to "borrow" one of the huge oxygen cylinders from work! which I used to smuggle out of the spinal unit ( by using one of the patient's wheelchairs as a trolley and a big woollen blanket!)

When I finally reached Prestatyn, I would have to toilet my mother (not the most pleasant of jobs) , then trundle her down into The Prof’s nissan micra for her weekly afternoon out!

 I had learnt early on that she would have to be sat on a selection of incontinence pads ( or if these ran short some subtly sculptured plastic carrier bags overlapped to catch the drips) and after getting her sitting comfortably and connected up to the massive oxygen cylinder, we set off for the outing of her choice.
Now she was a bit of a cheap date!

Her favourite trips included :

*A fish and chip supper in the car park at Prestatyn Beach ( the car windows would always be full of coughed up mushy peas afterwards much to The Proff’s amusement)
*A drive up to Gwaenysgor Hillside
* or ( and most importantly) a trip to Sainsbury's car park! ( which is a supermarket for those that don't know)

At Sainsbury's I would set her up with a cigarette and a crossword (praying that a spark would not ignite the flammable Oxygen- now don't worry too much I WOULD always turn the O2 off when she lit up) and I would go into the store to purchase her weekly "treats" as she would sit quite happily in the passenger seat, waving as passers by like Princess Margaret 

These treats would always be the same

2 strawberry tarts ( with cream)
2-3 miniature bottles of gin
1 crossword book with pen
A selection of sweets ( to bribe the Nursing home staff so that they would take her for more fags during the day!)
A box of tissues
20 fags,

She was a crafty old cuss too, for every week after she  accepted her booty, she would suddenly "remember" some other item she had supposedly forgotten! 
I went along with this ruse....and would dutifully go and get her another miniature gin " for tomorrow night" she would say.........and as I did, she would enjoy one of her sneaky 50ml bottles of Gordons, before jamming the plastic bottle in the ash tray or down the air con vent flap!

It was nice to see my brother smiling at my memory....mind you, he would have told the story better if he could talk...he was always a better storyteller than I would ever be”

Nuremberg

 

If Russell Crowe didn’t make another film, Nuremberg would be a fitting swan song, for he plays the wily Nazi Herman GΓΆring, the central defendant in the famous post war crime trial with suitable pompousness but with a power, on par with his old gladiator days. 
This “behind the scenes” film version has Rami Malik as the psychiatrist Douglas Kelly who is employed by the Americans to assess each of the 22 defendants for the likelihood of self harm. It is him who plays a cat and mouse game with the German second in command and he who reports back to the prosecutor Robert Jackson ( Michael Shannon) with snippets of information that will allow the allies to win a courtroom battle with the slippery German.
As someone well versed with the behaviour of psychiatrists, I found Malik’s interpretation odd to say the least. He is angry, smirky, overly involved and no way objective. The performance is overblown and unrealistic and therefore the interplay with Crowe, ( who steals every scene they share) is incredibly uneven. 
Shannon , is suitably intense as Jackson, and both Leo Woodall and Richard E Grant shine as a Jewish German army translator and the Tory MP, David Maxwell Fife who finally saves the day.

I will leave you with this, the Waitrose Christmas Advert….its lovely, but has triggered in me a troubling worry with the tone of this year’s adverts…..more with that another time