Welcome to this 2nd Edition of "FROM THE WINDOW" a worldwide magazine inviting contributions in the fields of journalism, poetry, travelogues and experiential writing from people in all walks of life and all parts of the globe.
We are a non-commercial internet magazine following a quiet path away from the soundbites and manic zing of mainstream net, promoting understanding of the breadth of common human experience, celebrating a joy in language and run by a pretentious and pompous crip child...
The contents are divided into: firstly, a Guest Column (where we hope to be able to publish contributions from eminent writers and other prominent people), Readers' Writings (arranged in alphabetical order by author's name), The Editor's View, Coming Soon and Poster & Bumph. New this Edition is a Pilfered & Filched section with a choice extract of web publishing.
This month our Guest Columnist is the contemporary composer John Tavener, who has recently reached a wider audience with the playing of a piece of his at the funeral service for Princess Diana. We also have articles on, inter alia, being a crew member in the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race; pieces on identity: being "Irish"; being a member of two different minority groups ie Gay and Disabled; the death of one's parents; childbirth; a day in the life of a violinist. There is a motley selection as usual of "No Can Do" correspondence. I have refrained from publishing my fan mail.
The 1st Edition is still available. The Guest Columnist was the poet Ruth Padel and articles were on a variety of topics such as fear of boats; a newcomer's response to Zimbabwe; the emotional impact of surgical versus congenital amputation; imagination and the prehistoric cave paintings of Peche Merle; the death of a cat; and a day in the life of a family therapist.
I am desireous of this magazine becoming less lamentably ethnocentric and reflecting a broader range of lifestyles, backgrounds and experiences. Therefore I am currently seeking contributions for the next edition from sources across the globe and very much hope that surfers reading this now as a result of my letter-writing or as a result of fortuitous roaming will wish to add their own voices to "FROM THE WINDOW".
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ART AND THE END-POINT
In memory of Philip Sherrard
John Tavener for Westminster Cathedral
My subject is the sacred in art - art that is "athanatos", without death, without change, without beginning and without end.
This is well-nigh impossible to discuss in a time when Man has lost his belief not only in God but also in himself. Do we live in a culture in ruins, as Father Symeon from Mount Athos has recently suggested?
Without doubt, the modern concept of the artist as creative genius would probably have excluded him from Plato's Greece, because any artist who produced a work of sacred art could never think of himself as a creative genius in the modern sense of the word. The artist of the sacred con-creates, reproduces, must submit to the discipline of practising, through endless repetition of a given form, until he has mastered all of it, so that its original transcendence begins to flow through him; no longer a matter of external copying or repetition, but a matter of directing the forces of primordial inspiration, of which he is now the vehicle, into formal patterns that long practice and meditation have allowed him to master both inwardly and outwardly. I would say that the dictum for all sacred Christain art must be as St Paul expresses it in another context: "It is not I that live, but Christ in me": or as the great Islamic poet Rumi put it "I am a dead man walking".
As a composer, living and working in these secular times, I work in an area that seems to concern more and more people. My increasing concern for the sacred needs some explanation. For an artist to work in a sacred tradition, he must first believe in the Divine Realities that inform that particular tradition. This is a "sine qua non" - not of course a guarantee for great art - but it is a "sine qua non". Secondly, he must know the traditions of the art that he works in. He must know the tools, so that he can work with material that is primordial, and therefore not "his"; not his or her expression, but the tradition working through him.
The artist concerned with the sacred must make an act of faith. One must leap into what seems impenetrable darkness. In my own case, it was not a committment to the more familiar path to Rome but to the Eastern Orthodox Church. First and foremost a committment to Christ-God as expressed through the eyes of the Orthodox Church. This is radical in the purest sense of the word and demands a gradual losing of self through a work of endless repentence, constantly failing, but picking oneself up, pointing evermore God-wards, to provide the vehicle through which the only Creator can work.
There is nothing "pie in the sky" about this; the task is daunting, awesome and exigent, and at the end of the day one can expect nothing but crucifixion and failure, because our strength, unique as Christains, lies in our weakness, our frailty and our vulnerability. And perhaps most of all, the task is daunting, because I am a Western composer writing within the ethos and framework of the Eastern Orthodox Church. I now understand, at a distance of some twenty-five years, why I had to be Orthodox - I had found the right musical and metaphyiscal ethos for my musical and spiritual journey. It has always seemed to me that in the Greek East, man starts with God: God around him, God in everything that he sees, and that in the Latin West, man begins with "man", and then aspires towards God. This is reflected in the vastly different theology, the vastly different approaches, the vastly different emphases, and the vastly different art, architecture and music.
So you can see not only is the task daunting spiritually, but it is daunting in specific musical terms. Because if an English composer wishes to write music within the Orthodox tradition, he must, like an icon painter, renounce any ideas of his own, and adhere to a strict discipline based on a system of tones - tone 1, tone 2, tone 3, tone 4, tone 5, tone 6, tone 7, and tone 8. Each tone is different, somewhat like Indian ragas, somewhat like the Gregorian modes, but unlike these insofar as every Orthodox country has developed its own tone system. For instance, there are eight Greek tones, eight Russian tones, eight Coptic tones and so on and so on. All these tones have probably evolved from the dawn of civilisation (probably well over one hundred of them). Indeed one can see many connections between the Greek tones and the Indian ragas. It would take a lifetime to become fully acquainted with even one of these tone systems. If in Byzantine times a melodist was asked to set anything to music, he would first have to set it in the appropriate tone or melody. The music is as much part of the tapestry and strict discipline of the Church as is the iconography. If for instance a composer was asked to set a text to the Mother of God, he would first have to know on which feast day this was propsed, because all eight tones may be needed for one single text, depending on whether the text is to be sung in Lent, easter, Pentecost or any other day in the Church's year. let us first listen to something that unites all Christian traditions, to the Lord's Prayer.
FIRST MUSICAL EXAMPLE: LORD'S PRAYER
I often wonder why the sacred music of any age should sound very different. The answer is that it shouldn't. If composers in the West concerned with sacred tradition were trained in the disciplines of Byzantium, Gregorian Chant, the music of sacred India, music of the Sufis, Judaic chant or any of the Orthodoxies, instead of learning about Schoenberg's "Innovations" they should become aware that innovation has nothing to do with tradition. That is why no innovatory art can possess the magisterial, primordial beauty emanating from the divine, making us creatures through which a theophany could pass.
People talk about composers finding their own voice; this is another totally misleading concept. Not misleading if the composert does not believe in Divine Realities; then of course he can be totally promiscuous in his artistic pursuits, and there is nothing wrong with this. It only becomes wrong if he believes in Divine Realities, and, at the same time, digs from the endless so-called innovations from the last 400 years. I speak of the art and religion the dominant world-view of modern times, indeed a progressive degeneration that characterises every sphere of our contemporary life.
You can perhaps begin to see why the Orthodox find the concept of an anthem or a hymn totally incomprehensible. To us it holds up proceedings, and instead of encouraging prayer and contemplation, it seems to introduce the idea of an entertainment or a concert into the middle of a sacred ceremony. No wonder Stravinsky referred to Mozart's Masses as "operatic sweets of sin".
The icon is a supreme example of Christian art and of transcendence and transfiguration. It posses simplicity, transfigured beauty and austerity. Austerity because the manner of painting has remained unchanged since the first mandelion (or "icon not painted by human hands") bearing the face of Christ miraculously imprinted on a piece of material and sent to the King of Edessa. Icon painting is a strict discipline, requiring fasting and constant communion. An icon does not express emotion (it is geometric and its colour palette is severely limited) and yet to the believer it inspires awe, wonder and the reverence of kissing. The icon is in one sense beyond art because it plunges us straight into liturgical time and sacred history. But what makes a great icon? I believe that it is the Holy Spirit working through the painter, and that is a total mystery.
How far can the art of icon painting relate to music? I will suggest some ways on which the composer may meditate. If the composer knows something of the sacred tones of the Orthodox Church he will have the material. If he understands the significance of the "ison" or drone, then he will have some clues. The composer may dance out of or back into the tone, but it must always be somewhere present. He must also limit the tonal and colour palette, but always knowing where he must insert the Divine archetype by a fully assimilated knowledge of the tones. In other words, the one is the other, the archetype is the icon, the icon is the archetype, there is an indissoluble interpenetration of the one by the other. Though there is a distinction, there is no dualism between the natural and the supernatural world. Hence, the same must apply to all art and to all music. Why this set of intervals? What is its divine archetype? Why this particular rhythm? What is its divine archetype? So that music can be analysed in a specifically metaphysical way, and also listened to in a specifically metaphysical manner. Unfortunately the spiritually impoverished state of music criticism finds itself unable to do this, because in order to understand these concepts, it is necessary to understand a kind of knowledge, that has nothing to do with reason. Blessed Augustine defined it as "Wisdom uncreate". And in order to understand "Wisdom uncreate" contemporary life must cease to be stifled by a cult of experimentation, art for art's sake, and a kind of specialisation that characterises every form of mental activity, requiring only a tiny fraction of our intelligence. This is the condemnation of our times, and until the concept of "Wisdom uncreate" is reunderstood, our civilisation will continue to committ mass suicide with all the relentlessness of a Greek tragedy.
The Church is no longer the wise patron that she was in the Byzantine period, the Medieval Western period, or in Bach's Protestant Germany. As artists, we literally write or paint into a vacuum and into an apparent spiritual void. The point of any sacred art, however, is that it should be functional. Think of Egyptian wall paintings, Muslim architecture, Bach passions, Byzantine icons, the Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Constantinople, the Taj Mahal - all once functional and now in danger of becoming museums: out of the Church, into the concert hall, out of the Church, into the art gallery, out of the Temple, into the greedy anonymous hands of dealers, along with the terrifying devastation of God's world. This is all part of the desecration of the sacred. Surely all creation, in all its fullness, is the necessary expression of Divine Life, with all the freedom and spontaneity of God's being. Otherwise we face the appalling idea of the conception of a creation created outside God, deprived of His immanent presence, and wth no living roots in Him, and thus of a purely materialistic character only. It is not accident, because of what I have said about the Western scientific revolution, that a purely materialistic view of the physical world arose first of all in the Western Christian world, not in the Orthodox East, not in the Celtic tradition, not in the Hindu, Buddhist traditions and neither in the Islamic world.
This is a good point, I think, to listen to my setting of a hymn to the Mother of God from the divine liturgy of St Basil the Great. It speaks of her cosmic power and cosmic beauty over a shattered world - "all creation rejoices". The idea of the cosmological role of the Mother of God does of course depend on things which I regard as fundamental to the whole spirit of Orthodoxy. This is what might be called its symbolic or iconic realism. But without her "Yes" at the Annunciation there would have been no Christ, no salvation and no Life.
SECOND MUSICAL EXAMPLE: HYMN TO THE MOTHER OF GOD
I see the act of recreating in the end as a miracle. After the ascetic pain of labouring to find the best way that I can to depict the subject, then this miracle happens. But also each new piece is an act of repentence, stripping away unessentials, ever more naked, ever more simple ... one might even say ever more foolish. One tries in one's work to follow the life of the Saint, even if it appears completely unobtainable. Through ascetic struggle the Saint reintegrates himself into the paradisial life. Again and again his or her life is associated with a variety of forms of reconciliation to nature, to trees, to plants, to climate: the enduring of heat and cold, the eating with no ill effects of noxious weeds, friendship with wild animals. This is the traditional view of the Saint, common to all great Orthodoxies.
But now comes a more practical problem. How does one communicate to a world that has forgotten these things and has little time for repentence, simplicity or foolishness? - the foolishness of Christ-God, the foolishness of the Mother of God and the foolishness of all the crowds of martyrs, saints and Holy Fools. I said, however, that the world had forgotten, and this seems to me to be the operative word, otherwise why has there been a resurgence of sacred art towards the close of the milennium. Think of Pappadiamandis, one of the greatest Greek writers, think of Yeats, think of late Stravinsky, Messiaen, T.S. Eliot, St Jean Perse, think of Seferis, the late poetry of Sikelianos, think of David Jones, Eric Gill, cecil collins, think of Arvo Paert, and I suppose myself - but also think of this century's great traditional metaphysicians - guenon, Corbin, Coomarasway, marco Pallis, Philip Sherrard and a whole host of others. This seems an appropriate place for a short piece which sprung from the death of a beloved friend, cecil collins, who spent his life devoted to the sacred, painting fools and angels. He was always outside any religious tradition, but he used the world of archetypes that he considered to be more universal. He would take from the Sufi tradition, the early Christian traditon, the Hindu tradition, and indeed any sacred tradition that he felt to be relevant to his art. "Eonia" is a piece which came to me already fully grown - I think of it as an essence, a fragrance, a Haiku, but above alla tribute to the man I loved and whose frail, iconagraphical art touched me deeply.
THIRD MUSICAL EXAMPLE: EONIA
Now let us listen to anothr piece inspired by the death of a friend. athene was a young talented Greek actress who was tragically killed in a cycling accident. the music came to me at her funeral. as in other memorial pieces, it seemed to be her parting gift to me.
FOURTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: SONG FOR ATHENE
We are witnessing a profound amnesia of simple, primordial and eternal truths, in favour of an insane, technological, materialistic, psychological, intellectual culture. A culture and spirituality in ruins. Devoid of gnosis, as T.S. Eliot predicted, a civilisation that rejects what it cannot diminish. If, as I say, the operative word is "forgotten" then there must be a ray of hope. To reawaken the primordial consciousness that lies dormant in all of us, somehow we have to provide a "temenos" or sacred space in which to work. The concert hall, the opera house and the art gallery are all glaring reminders of how fragmented and dislocated we have become. Stockhausen has said the churches will become the concert halls of the future, and there is more than a ring of truth about this. To move the "temenos" back into the cathedrals and churches, not to popularise and desanctify even more, but to allow sacred art to breathe gently on the ancient stones. Let the great medieval cathedrals of England be used to breathe back anew the medieval thought or gnosis that formed them, because it is only through the world of imagination, or through the intellective and visionary organ that lies dormant in most of us, that we can live in an Eternal Now - the home and beginning of all life and of all becoming. And if the Christian Church is to offer a positive response to the challenge of the sacred and to the ecological crisis, it must understand the colossal significance and implication of the Incarnation, in all its amplitude and magnificence. As the Orthodox Christmas services of Compline proclaims, "God is with us, understand ye nations, God is with us".
FIFTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: GOD IS WITH US
Adherence to primordial traditon requires a very deep humility; a humility that at the end of the day says, in the Platonic sense, we know nothing at all; a humility that requires a complete dismantling of the whole present scientific, psychological, popularist, profane and radical dehumanisation of our society, and a comprehension of God that is so deep in its non-literal understanding and humility, that we can only pray with the Fathers of the Church in tiny sentences... "Help me" or..."as You know and as You will, have mercy". Theology in the Orthodox east, has always been regarded as an expression of a given reality, but in the West, largely due to the disasterous teachings of Aristotle, instead of the Platonic elements which had served early eastern theologians as a vehicle for expressing an understanding of man, confirmed through a life of prayer and contemplation, western Aritotelian thought entered a ruinous epoch of abstraction and theory. Art has become abstracted and removed from its eucharistic function, removed also from nature, from its sacramental roots and finally removed from life itself. Is there anywhere in the world today where the right notes or tones have to be found before parliament can be opened? This shows how far we have strayed because it was the norm in Plato's Greece, so integrated was art, metaphysics and life. The closest I get to Plato's Greece, is in being asked to write music for occasions of great significance. For instance, I was asked by Canterbury Cathedral to write an Acclamation for the late Ecumenical Patriarch, His All Holiness Demetrios II on the historic occasion of his entering Canterbury cathedral. I will never forget that occasion.
SIXTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: ACCLAMATION
Another special occasion was the V. E. Day service at St Paul's Cathedral, earlier this year, and for this I wrote three short antiphons. We will now listen to the first and last of these Antiphons.
SEVENTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: THREE ANTIPHONS
I believe that we are in an abnormal state, this split between imagination, reason, art and metaphysics. Our art is separated from sacred cosmology and the teachings of the Fathers on the anthropogical aspects of the sacramental nature of creation. Out on a limb from the sacred, English hymns have references to God and the saints, but they have nothing to do with sacred art. A great deal of art expresses intimations of the divine, aspirations of the divine, glimpses of the divine, either in the human soul or in the world of nature. However, the quality that distinguishes a work of sacred art and that sets it apart from other works of art, is one that can only be described by a word such as "knowledge" or the Greek word "gnosis". As Dante writes:
You who have sound intellects, seek out the doctrine that
conceals itself beneath the veil of the strange verses ...
Instead this invites all of us to seek out "the intellect of love" - a disposition of being that induces and permits the God that constantly desires to reveal himself (if only we could see in our soul) and desires our power of vision. But never forget that the great 20th century Greek poet, Seferis, said towards the end of his life, that it was not amongst the academic, artistic, or ecclesiastical world that he found "the intellect of love", but in the illiterate country people of Greece, because they already possessed it, albeit sublimely. So unless we are all able, in our different ways, to rediscover this "intellect of love", or this "Wisdom uncreate" (call it what you will) we will never find our way out of the spiritual, theological, ecological and artistic catastrophe that faces us at the close of the 20th century.
I ma neither philosopher nor theologian, but my work, my work of repentence that may or may not lead me towards a sacred art - can be judged only by how near the music I write comes to its task. This is my work within the vast area from which I must continue to dig and labour and to try to resituate the modern mentality as a whole within the framework of metaphysical values and wisdom from which it has been so disasterously uprooted.
EIGHTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: THE LAMB
I would like to end, however, on a more apophatic note, perhaps you might even say on a more apocalyptic note, at any rate on a question mark. How childlike, and how deep must be our trust in God in the face of the apocalyptic events that are happening around us day by day. How childlike and how immeasurably deep must have been the faith of the Mother of God when the Archangel appeared to her and she exclaimed, terror-struck, "How shall this be?". No amount of writing, philosophising, poetry, music or painting can in the end give any absolute answer. Faith and doubt go hand in hand, and we try to love both the faith and the doubt equally. The Mother of God trusted, you might say madly, blindly, insanely at the conception of God into her womb. We try hard and continue to follow her example of the joy of believing and yet not knowing, and the piercing agony of watching her Son crucified day after day, hour after hour, and forever asking her question, "How shall this be?".
"Be humble and you will remain whole, be bent and you will remain straight ... Appear plainly and hold to simplicity". Our artistic and Christian attitude must be what, for want of better words, I would call "the poverty of innocence". Today the world places a high value on sophistication, on being worldly wise, on being technicaly clever, or on being professional. Christianity and art of the end point places no value whatsoever on these qualities. Truly Christian art requires a total rejection of all of this. The first priority is that our heart must be soft and warm with the living, wounded and vulnerable spirit. If we do not have this warm heart, this living wounded life, we must ask God to give it, trying ourselves to do those things by which we can acquire it. Most of all, we have to see that we have not got it - that we are indeed cold. The one thing, the only thing that can save us is simplicity. And this simplicity leads to the last revolution left to our dying civilisation - the beatitudes of Christ. In their sublime "foolishness" they speak to a tragic world, that seems to prefer to listen to Caesar in favour of God, who became man because of us. "Let us become God for HIm, who became man for us".
If we are to see things as they truly are, we have to free ourselves completely from any kind of pseudo-knowledge and the methodologies that go with it. We have to free ourselves from all that we think we know, empty our own minds of all that we think we know, of all the conceptions we have formed as a result of going in pursuit of a knowledge we think we have obtained through our own efforts. For true knowledge cannot be acquired by any of these means. true knowledge has its source in the Wisdom or Sofia that is the life blood of all things and where everything is already known. The Mother of God is herself this Wisdom, this Sofia, and she points us, as she does in every icon, towards God. This does not mean that we are excused from the hell of modern life. On the contrary, we must plunge into the abyss, go through this hell, and accept it knowing it is the love of God that causes our suffering. Here is a Christianity that is not only unsafe and uncomfortable, but it has all the untamed feroscity of the desert, and may demand martyrdom, suffering, and a path where we can "get involved", where we can beome on fore to serve God. "As an unconquerable token of victory, an invincible shield and a divine sceptre, we worship thy most holy cross, O Christ, whereby the world has been saved and Adam filled with joy". And then, only then can we begin to say with the Mother of God, however tentaively, "How shalt this be?" Having asked this question our lives, our art and our work will already have begun to stumble onto the road towards the End Point, which ultimately leads to Christ crucified - Christ risen and alive forever.
NINTH MUSICAL EXAMPLE: THE ANNUNCIATION
Naldretts, July 1995
JOHN TAVENER
John has been a friend of mine for four and a half years since I wrote to him about the din in my head & he helped me to get started on outing the din onto paper. HJN.
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Petty theft and high jinx scrumped apples from a neighbour's tree a bit of a hullaballoo naughtiness in class talking back at elders taking the mickey getting into trouble heaved up before the beak...my version comprises being a Bertie Bassett a sweetie-pie mag-pie filling out these pages with bright oddments from elsewhere collected from a scouring gleefully haphazardly and...
this month I present what I feel to be fascinating slices of life from 2 arctic websites.
"Home Sweet Home"
by
Priscilla Calumet
During the first week of February, 1921, my husband and I and our children packed our camping gear into the dogsled to head out to my husband's trap line at Long Island. My son and husband rode on the dogsled while I tied my daughter on my back with a sheet, and off we went. My husband and son were travelling on the dogsled while I was on snowshoes walking behind them. It took a couple of days to get to Long Island but we managed to get there with very little trouble. We set up camp and my husband and son went out and got some firewood for us.
After everything settled, I cooked some moose meat that I had brought from home. We had a big supper and got ready to go to bed .The next morning after breakfast my husband loaded the sled and headed out to visit his traps. After he had visited his traps, he will go and hunt for a moose or two. A little while after my husband left, I cooked lunch for my children and I. First I fed the baby and put her in her swing for her afternoon nap. Then my son and I ate lunch together. I had finished before he did, so I told him about all the hardships that I went through during my younger days while sipping on a nice hot cup of coffee and relaxing while my food settles. I was also making sure that my son ate enough lunch so that I could send him out and play until his sister gets up. Then we could go out and collect some wood so that we don't run out during the night.
About half an hour later we went on our way to get some wood. It took almost two and a half hours before we got back to camp. I put my children down for the night after a big supper. After my children went to sleep I sat up and waited for my husband to come back from his hunting and trapping journey. Almost three hours later my husband came back with three martens, one otter, and two fox, which were all frozen. So I put them aside to thaw out so that I could flesh and stretch the fur. He also shot a moose and had already cut up all the meat. We brought the meat in and put a couple of thighs out so that I could make some dry meat the next day. I also took some of the guts and boiled it so my husband and I could have something to eat before we went to bed. We had some coffee and talked about what we had achieved that day. When we finished our coffee, we went to bed.
In the morning, after everyone had their breakfast, I made some dry meat and hung it up on a rack over a fire that my husband had made for me outside. After the meat was dried and smoked, I packed it up into a gunny sack and put it into the sled along with the rest of the meat and camping gear. All the fur that my husband had brought back to camp had to be fleshed, stretched ,and dried before being packed away in the sled. We got ready to head back to town with our meat and gear.
After we got back to town, my husband gave some moose meat to all the families in town. My husband went to the Hudson Bay Trading Post and sold his fur for groceries and some supplies to last us until the next time he goes to visit his traps at Long Island. That's the way I lived and enjoyed life with my family during the winter of February, 1921.
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Practical Information for Students
Safety first
Taking trips in the arctic outdoors is not trivial. In addition to the extreme natural conditions, one always runs the risk of encountering polar bears. All field programs instituted by UNIS will take this into account. All students are obligated to participate in various safety programs. This includes what to do in case of a polar bear encounter (Including the use of rifles and signal pens). The safety programs also includes the use of a survival suit and rubber boats in arctic climates. A safety course in how to prevent and how to deal with frost injuries and frost bites will be held in the winter time. The student's engagement in these safety programs will vary on an individual basis, depending on need, how long, and when the student will stay at UNIS.
UNIS takes no responsibility for what the student undertakes in his or her spare time. Most of the students staying here will take the opportunity to explore the unique outdoors that exists on Svalbard. This requires the students to take the necessary safety precautions and make the preparations essential for such a trip. UNIS will not verify the safety compliance of these trips. The students will be introduced to some of the safety guidelines that apply on Svalbard through the safety courses taken when they arrive. These safety guidelines form the foundation on which the students may continue to build, depending on which activities the students plan to engage in.
The students that have participated in the rifle safety course at UNIS will be allowed to borrow a rifle and ammunition for self defence against polar bears when out in the field. The student government has also purchased various field equipment which the students may use.
Bicycles
A bike is a useful means of transport, even in the winter. The distance from Longyearbyen town and UNIS to Nybyen (where the student digs are located), is in the excess of three kilometres. This may seem like a rather short distance. However, from experience, we know that it is extremely practical to have a bicycle. Three kilometres is a long distance, especially when the temperatures are 20 degrees below zero (Celsius) with gale force winds. You can bring your bicycle along with you on the plane for the price of NOK 100 from Northern Norway and NOK 120 from Southern Norway. Remember to deflate the tyres, and turn the handlebars and pedals inwards.
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Dear Hero,
Thanks for your email.
I'll tell you what I can see from my window.
I live 40 kilometres east of Melbourne, Australia in the Dandenong Ranges - a series of hills rising to about 1100 metres. I live in a heavily forested area, with eucalyptus trees about 80 foot high, tree ferns 8 foot high, all quite green, cool and pleasant. We're part way through Spring and the trees and ferns have new shoots. We can just see our neighbours' houses through the trees, so it's all fairly private. We're on the western slope of one part of the Great Dividing Range, a continuous ridge of mountains running parallel to the east coast and extending from Cape York at the top of Australia to Mount Gambier in southern Australia - about 4000 km in total. Land to the east receives most of the rainfall whilst land to the west is very dry. Most of the 18.5 million population live on or near the east coast.
From my window, I can see beach suburbs of Melbourne 40 km away and, on a clear day, can see across Port Phillip Bay to the You Yangs, another series of small hills. In the trees on our land, we have numerous native birds. Crimson Rosellas arrive at first light and feed all day on the seed we put out. They sound like a bunch of typewriters, clicking away. At dusk, kookaburras and currawongs arrive to be hand fed scraps of mince meat - except when day tourists are having barbeques nearby! Our pet Sulphur Crested Cockatoo lives in a cage on the verandah outside my window. He arrived 9 years ago and, apparently, had escaped from someone's cage. He talks and, after a while, we could hand feed him. We didn't want to put him in a cage but, after 6 months, he decided it would be fun to start chewing the timber on the house! So, into the strongest and biggest cage we could find. Now he thinks he's Christmas. Safe at night, he can watch T.V. through the window - he likes Pavarotti and screeches along with him. Cocky goes for a fly every weekend and, unfortunately, he keeps coming home on dusk, calling out "Dad" when he wants to come down out of the trees. He lands on my arm and digs his claws in so I have to wear an old cardigan. At night, after our meal, he comes in for a pat and a cuddle. He also swears at the neighbours when he is in the trees and we are for ever apologising to them for his behaviour. The sky at present is a very pale blue with some clouds. As we move into Summer - December to March or later, it becomes a vivid blue. The sun hits the window from about 2:00 pm and stays there until 8:00 pm, causing us to draw the shades. Summer is very hot - about 35 - 42 degrees Celsius, and we spend every bit of spare time watering the trees and plants. It's a dangerous time with bushfires causing much damage, so time is spent keeping the grass cut and the leaves and raked up. Despite this, It's the best of places to live - peaceful, green and cool most of the year.
Take care.
Barry Abbott
night
BARRY ABBOTT
Dear Hero,
I have been asked by Chris Eley to send you a brief message from Australia. Whilst studying my family tree, I was put in touch with Chris through your mother and the Derbyshire Family History Society Magazine.
Chris kindly sent me some information on a member of the ABBOTT family marrying a member of the ELEY family.
To be so far away from my family roots and to then have someone in Wales tell me about my family was an absolute thrill.
My forebears emigrated to Melbourne in 1852, worked in a flour mill, went searching for gold - didn't find any so I'm still working for a living! - then set up a cordial factory then moved wife and 11 children to northern Victoria in 1868 to start a number of wheat stations - several thousand acres each. One of the children was my grandfather. Members of the family still grow wheat on the same land and we're getting together next month for a family reunion.
We're coming into Spring here and, from my window, the trees are now full of blossom, native birds are taking food back to their young. In about tweo months, baby kookaburras arrive with their parents at our back door for hand feeding.
Hope you enjoy this message from the Land of Oz.
Regards,
Barry Abbott, Belgrave, Victoria, Australia
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PART I
Nin - Nin - Nineteen, wide eyed, innocent, what will it be? Will I be famous? Will I be rich? I'll have to wait and see. Ka-sera!
Nineteen, pregnant and scared of childbirth. What if I don't realise I'm in labour? have the baby in M&S or in a taxi.
I'd spent eight months reading every text I could find but I still wasn't ready. Oh well the bambino is not due till 27th February 1987 my scan dates said so, must be right, a day either side max.
5.2.87....3am....I awoke restless and hungry. After satisfying my pangs I crawled back under the duvet. Our new flat was the baltic, everywhere. I lay there just watching my breath in the cold night air, insomnia had taken hold.
...Two hours later, still wide awake and reading baby books I felt a cramp shoot across my stomach. I'd never felt this before and I was surprized by how collected I was, I'll wait and see if it happens again it can't be labour it isn't painful enough!!
....6am I poke my husband and explain he leaps out of bed, half dresses and runs to the nearest phone box to ask for advice. My "cramps" were two minutes apart. Instruction from the mid wife were to feed and water me, delighted I gobbled down hot weetabix, wobits and 2 cups of coffee.
I stood up to answer a call of nature and found myself doubled up, not in pain more like a reflex reaction to the cramps. I was laughing, hubby was not amuzed and ordered me to dress. The ambulance was on its way.
Yes it was official I was in labour.
8cm dilated but I thought the lack of pain rather strange, no broken waters no nothing. Shortly the cramps felt stronger and I just felt an overwhelming desire to push. I rang the bell to explain. The midwife calmly examined me and blurted out PUSH...
Teary eyed my husband announced he could see the head - push a bit harder and slid a wonderful gift of a peachy baby girl.
A precious child I was scared to pick up and break. Instant love and responsibility were ours to cherish.
Whats all the fuss about childbirth I pondered to myself.
<- for four and half years ->
PART II
"POP" "GUSH" panic stricken I knew my waters had broken. O.K., I'm calm, be cool I'd been through it all before not quite the same but it's fine. I screamed to my husband two inches away "fetch me towels sheets I'm going to ruin the matress!" I'd never imagined so much water would come out. Mind matters were racing, the baby's not due for five weeks this time an injection I already has four weeks earlier would not prevent labours onset. mother nature had control now and I suddenly felt very alone. All the alternate day monitoring I'd had for four weeks, I was convinced had triggered my hormones into action. I was furious.
My headless husband went into overdrive.
"DON'T MOVE." pitta patta of flying footsteps echoed in my ears and back again. The ambulance was on route and I wasn't to move a single muscle - I pleaded for my robe and I had no knickers on! Oh god this nightmare had just begun.
The cheery faces of two paramedics peered round the bedroom door..."oh hello love" said one I cringed as I looked up at the familiar face I had served many time whilst working as a teenager. I was then placed and carrymarched down two flights of stairs, bundled into the back and whisked to labour ward wrapped in a cellular white blanket.
"How far apart were my contractions?" I was politely asked. Fists clenched, teeth gritted and panting like a thing possessed, they felt powerful enough to give birth right this very moment. (have you ever had a baby I screamed in my head)
Monitors, monitors, one for a beat one for a pulse, two for me, three for a girl, four for a boy.
For some strange reason I insisted I would never have any artificial pain killers and I was sticking to it!
Being a biologist more so human, my mind biologically went through every contraction, I always knew the theory would be of use one day.
Contractions squeezing, no wringing my baby out. extremely powerful pain I must be dilated now..... five hours later - I hate my husband he's fallen asleep in the comfi chair it all his fault he wanted another baby. I'm so tired I just want to sleep, drifting off and up with a surge of a million waves. I will not complain out loud, I was not taught to show myself up and nor wil I ever not e .v .en. w . h . e . n I . m i . n . p . a : i . n .
I hate the room, bedroom like, wallpaper, make you feel at home, so what I'm so tall every time I'm examined my feet touch the walls, I'm gonna suffocate in here.
The midwife was chinese and when she bent down to "mid wife" she had a large bald patch and she was so petite 3ft tall max. but she was lovely, she ran from room to room. six of us had selfishly decided to add to the world population on this midsummer dawn. Last but not least the screams and wailing disappeared, I knew it was just me left. The midwife refused to give up on me her shift finished at 7am. 8.30am she didn't desert me. My threshold was on its limit I was waiting for this bearing down feeling to I had experienced before. but it didn't arrive.
Full dilation at last. I insisted on spending a penny first so i tiptoed with chinese escort to the loo, and I didn't care what I looked like, past caring.
Gas and air stage _> felt good. I stood at the side of the bed and pushed so hard YES the crowning sensation elated me I knew the work had begun. But I couldn't do it. I pushed in vain only to feel my baby slide back inside to where it started, again and again - I CAN'T! exhaustion and emotion take toil, but determination won through.
________________
| A new life is created |
Amazement and awe again an overwhelming love at first sight. My face drains in color my baby is navy blue. flashes, dread hysterics and I lose it for a moment. Tubes and suction, I close my eyes tight.
My baby ripens and pinks. Its a girl!
The pain, anguish is it worth it?
Everytime!!
ANONYMOUS
- Anon - Aged 30yrs. born and bred in Canterbury. Two daughters one ten going on twenty the other six 'n' a bit.
(Don't drink, don't smoke, what do I do?)
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Genuine Fake
Vienna is surely one of Europe's great cities. It is rich in its art, its music, its theatre, its intellectual life and, underlying each of these, it is rich in its history. History is everywhere, and not simply in the crass heritage industry that is so typical of any modern tourist centre. But, strangely, even the students earning a few extra Schillings by dressing up as Mozart, with their powdered wigs and silken breeches (is that lycra?), don't look as absurd as they might. What is one anachronism in a city of anachronisms?
Contemporary Vienna is comfortable with its past because it lives alongside it. Walk around the city, in any direction, and you will pass statues and plaques for a host of notable Viennese, from Freud, Mozart and the Stausses to city planners, councillors and otherwise forgotten Professors at the University. Often, the accompanying words are brief or enigmatic, presumably because it was felt in 1873 that the reasons for celebrating the life and achievements of Herr Schmitt ('The Leader') or Doktor Braun ('The Teacher') were self-evident.
It is because the past impinges so closely upon the day to day lives of ordinary Viennese (although many would deny that there is such a thing as an 'ordinary Viennese') that it can often go unnoticed. Take language as a case in point. Other German speakers view the Viennese dialect as either quaint or charming, depending upon their predisposition. Nevertheless, languages evolves, even here, so as well as the characteristic greeting of Grüss Gott, and the more occasional Küss die Hand (accompanied by a bow and ceremonious kissing of a gracious lady's hand) from an elderly gentleman, one also hears evidence of the growing multi-culturalism in Ciaow and Hi, from the youth.
The clearest statement, for me at least, of Vienna's remarkable historicism is in its architecture. It is a city well used to making statements with its buildings. Its streets bear witness to a battle of styles taking place over centuries, and in the twentieth century this battle has become more explicitly combative. Presented in 1909 with the opportunity of designing a building for a wealthy tailoring firm opposite the imperial castle, the master of functionalism, Adolf Loos constructed a 'house without eyebrows' that stared out with defiance at the Hofburg with its startling colours and embellishments, built only twenty years before. For an even more extreme juxtaposition, walk along Kärntner Strasse, with its expensive shops and street cafes and rising up ahead is the curving mirrored glass of Haas Haus, and, at a certain angle, appears the reflection of Stephensdom, the 12th Century Gothic Cathedral that lies at the very heart of the city.
On a recent trip, I was walking around Ringstrasse, the boulevard running around the city centre, with an American friend. He was admiring the stunning architecture of the buildings that line the route, and commented that here was a wonderful characterisation of Vienna, as a whole, where a superb building from one era has ended up alongside one from another era, whilst retaining a clear coherence and order. He was right: Ringstrasse somehow maintains a pattern, despite the variety of styles and shapes. But, he was also wrong: this pattern is not a fortunate accident, nor a remarkable example of Germanic forward thinking; rather, it points to another aspect of the Viennese character.
Ringstrasse did not evolve over centuries, but decades, and represented an attempt to create a past. Between 1848 and 1865, the city's fortifications were taken down, and replaced with residential buildings and public structures, all in the ironically named 'Ringstrasse style'. Robert Musil pointed out that buildings of the Ringstrasse, and its host of imitators, "didn't confrom to the Italian style, or the French or the Gothic, but all at the same time." So, as one walks around the boulevard, one encounters the Rathaus (city hall), built in the Gothic style, but if one travels a little further along, in either direction, around the ring, the Italian Renaissance is more influential, in the forms of the new University to the east and the twin giants of the Museums of Natural History and fine arts to the west, and elsewhere, the French renaissance style guided the designers of the Court Opera House. In each case, architects were given great freedom to draw upon traditions and adapt them for their particular purposes, resulting in a startling eclecticism. Some architects simply drew upon fashions of the day, others attempted to represent the changing times, in the typical Viennese way of looking forwards by looking back; consider, for example, the new Parliament Building, built to symbolise a new unity and power for the Habsburg Empire; where else to turn but Ancient Greece?
Like their over-dressed old gentlemen who bow gallantly as they greet women with a kiss of the hand, Vienna is a genuine fake. The Viennese revel in their Gemütlichkeit, their cosy sociability, whilst, at the same time, providing Freud, Jung and Adler inspiration and ample raw material for their studies of hysteria. Whilst Vienna (probably) has one of the highest densities of coffee-houses and taverns of the major cities, it (certainly) also claims one of the highest suicide rates in the world. The composer van Beurden summarised the situation this way: "The Austrian lives in a two-room apartment. One room is bright, friendly, the 'cosy parlour', well furnished, where he receives his guests. The other room is dark, sombre, barred, totally unfathomable."
RICHARD BAILEY
Dr Richard Bailey is a teacher. For the last six years, he has been writing a book on the early life of the Austrian philosopher Karl Popper, and is beginning to realise that he may never finish it.
HJN: Richard Bailey contributed a "No-Can-Do" letter to the 1st edition of FTW.
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10 DOWNING STREET
LONDON SW1A 2AA
10 November 1997
Dear Ms Nightingale
The Prime Minister has asked me to thank you for your letter of 14 September giving your account of what is clearly an often difficult and frustrating life.
Mr Blair was enormously impressed by the courage and determination you have shown in trying to live a fulfilling life despite your disabilities. However, I am afraid he is not able to become a patron of your net magazine or to write an article for you.
I know this will be a disappointing reply but I'm afraid Mr Blair's many committments make it impossible for him to take on the very large number of requests like yours that he receives. However, he has asked me to send you his good wishes for your project.
Yours sincerely
HILARY COFFMAN
Press Office
TONY BLAIR
Tony Blair is Prime Minister of UK and obviously a tad busy. I could wish that the PM demonstrated a more PC attitude with less patronising you're-doing-well-for-what-you-are-ness. Roll on a politician who says he is sorry the disabled have to struggle and who says they will work to dissolve the barriers which make one feel like a species from another planet. HJN.
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Contribution to From the Window Webzine - A Message to my Parents
Hi Hero , I learnt about your webzine from a friend Chris Young who either knows you or someone else who deals with From the Window. Congratulations on a great first issue and for all the time you must have obviously spent getting it off the ground. Chris suggested I might like to submit a contribution , so poring over my hard drive I came across something I wrote a few months ago about my now sadly departed parents. It may be too long for your needs so if you think you can use it in any way feel free to edit it. It really helped me to come to terms with the grief that has receded into the past but hasn't been resolved deep down. I wrote it for myself and my family but if it has any value in shedding light on the dark tangled corners of grief for others then I would be happy for others to read and share it . The process of writing this was exteremely cathartic and whilst painful at the time of writing brought a real sense of inner peace and calm on its completion and it brought alive in my heart and world mum and dad once more
So here its is ......
Message to my Parents
"After your death you will be what you were before your birth."
Arthur Schopenaur
My father died suddenly of a heart attack the day after Boxing Day 1991 aged 72 and my mother died just over 3 years later of a massive stroke in May 1994 also aged 72. The slow process of recovery involves working through what become normal feelings of grief, anger, confusion, despair, loneliness - and though a cliche time does heal and slowly, impercetablity you become ready to live and find joy in living once again. However the problem of making sense of tragedy remains - and this in a world where for the most part a spiritual understanding of the meaning and significance of death no longer applies. It has never been enough to just accept they were gone - totally and utterly - seemingly without any trace save the words burnished on a granite headstone. Where are they now we have all asked, and felt at a loss to answer this the most unanswerable of questions. This introspection is not without cost and so for most of the time it was easier to ignore these feelings of loss rather than confront them and face the inevitable pain that followed.
I decided to write letters to my Mum and Dad . The first was to my Dad - his death was the furthest away and his life was beginning to feel remote, as if it had happened in another lifetime, and having written it in a blur of tears and heightened emotion, I quickly followed it by the next letter to my Mum. Having completed them I was reminded of the memory of a previous letter I had written to my parents many years ago when barely out of University but had never sent. After some frantic searching I found it, and have included it as the last of these letters.
Finally on the phone I mentioned I was writing to grandma to my 5-year-old niece Lauren and asked her to write a letter to her about what she was doing. With the innocence and certainty of a child she replied, "Don't be stupid, Grandma's in heaven you can't send a letter to her?" I replied that might be the case but if she and Adam were to write one I would try my best to make sure they would get to her . So here are the letters and the resulting challenge ...
"Death cannot kill what never dies ...."
Thomas Traherne
Dear Dad ...Wish You Were Here..
Dear Dad,
As you lay dying bewildered and confused in a strange hospital bed, I could not bring myself to say those words I longed to speak, for fear of letting you or me know how desperate was your situation So rising from your deep sleep, old smile returned, we smiled and laughed, holding back the tears, holding down our fears for a future that wasn't to be You were back amongst us, everything to hope for, one more day to sit and pray, We held your hand, stroked your brow and kissed your hard stubbled cheek, Our eyes met and locked as we left to say goodbye, "See you in the morning, Take care, you couldn't be better looked after", we said Back to Mum, David, Carol and myself ,a cabal of hope against hope. Did you know that now was your time to say goodbye to all?
Did you know as you slipped this world, we would be pulled in your wake into a tear filled ocean of sadness? No I don't think you did - and I hope there was no pain, no loneliness, no feeling of loss. I hope against hope you did not suffer these - for they are the wounds of those to be left behind. And those you did not see. As we walked away turning towards our tears, we stopped to wave and your eyes smiled back. That night how I prayed, for just one miracle ever, for me, for you, just this one, I walked into the chapel and begged, I made a deal, just this once, I'd never trouble you again. Brother, sister, mum and booze were my companions that night, surrounded by the tinsel and glitter of Christmas we prayed and hoped - finally falling into the oblivion of an alcoholic stupor to release us from our waking grief.
And then the knock at dawn, the sad pitying eyes of the nurse beckoning us to come quickly, How rapidly we dressed, unshaven, hair a kilter, bleary bloodshot eyes, dreading the moment to come, Seeing you lying there peacefully - life ebbing away - measured by the electronic bleats of the machine, Growing ever weaker as your failing heart failed to recover, Your whitened lips and closed eyes not recognizing us and we crowded round, floods of tears rolling down my cheeks, heaving and sobbing - mind screaming 'I LOVE YOU DAD - I LOVE YOU DAD - DON'T LEAVE ME ' -but my lips silent. Then the machine told us you had finally gone, and we howled with pain, rage, anger and love in what order, there was no order to our thoughts. We stood around not knowing what to do - holding you - refusing to let go, Eventually, gently coaxed by quitened staff - we rose to shuffle uneasily away, the other faces in the ward radiating pity and concern.
Could this be you dad who only days before had spent a happy hour in a country pub, chewing the cud, putting the world to rights. Could this really be happening to a Dad I'd always loved, a true friend whose gentle manner and honest kindly mind I would only truly know when you'd gone. You never let the child within die; not once in a life full of love felt but rarely spoke. We weren't that sort of family - a pity I know I would have quite liked it to be a little different - but not much - you were more than enough - I'll always love you and miss your irrepressible good humor and wisdom of one who lived modestly in the shadow of anonymous greatness.
I just wish you were better, Dad and you were here now so I could hug and talk, but you're not and won't be so that's why I'm sending this letter to you. Be proud of us all, especially Mum who took your place and filled
it when you had gone, and bound us all together. Of David who if you could see him now you cry with pride, of Katherine his wife and wedding you were not to see. Of Carol, Colin, Adam and Lauren who you would have loved with all your heart until it burst. And finally of me, it's been a long time coming and a lot of cul-de-sacs along the way, but I am growing stronger and straighter with every passing day. Strong enough to pause and take some time to say hello, to revisit the infinite pain of when you left us and to finally by doing so help to rest in peace.
While we live Dad, you will never die and maybe beyond that as well - every day I learn more as I lift the veil and hear the rustling of the ether. So goodbye Dad - I love you forever and hug you tightly in my arms. Death is nothing at all. You have only slipped away into the next room.
I am I and you are you. Whatever we were to each other we are still.
Adieu Dad,
Love you forever,
Your devoted and loving son
Ian
XXXXXX
"When we come to the last moment of this lifetime, and we look back across it, the only thing that's going to matter is "What was the quality of our Love "
Richard Bach
Dear Mum .........
Dearest Mum,
I've just finished writing a letter to Dad, so it's your turn to get one - I know I didn't send many letters to you when you were alive, but when I did I know you loved and cherished them. We found all the ones I'd ever sent going back to University amongst your papers.
I hope you've read Dad's letter, that's how it felt for me - I know from the pain of your condition as it was then it must have been much worse for you. We only rarely glimpsed the pain of your loss in the three years we were to have after Dad left us. But what a three years, if I'm ever called to account in the hereafter and asked what I would change then those 37 months would remain exactly the same.
I couldn't forget after Dad died how ill you were, of going to his funeral in a wheelchair, of your skin purulent with eruption and the excruciating pain of spasms that would rack your body without warning and of feeling so helpless as you writhed in agony. My only thoughts were you must, you will get better, and whilst you live however short or long that may be, we will be there for you and with you.
I remember the slow recovery and vast scale of your loss, and then with joy the healing power of music, and what a part it was to play in what were three of the happiest years of my life. For many years I had sublimated real emotion experienced with real people for a love of the arts especially classical music and in particular Opera - that overblown drama passionate, grandiose celebration of the sublime and absurd and of tragedy and love. Of these last two there were neither in my life, and so in the darkened womb of the theatre, caressed by ravishing music and hypnotic spectacle my mind would take flight and learn to fly. I was hooked, and of this drug I simply could not get enough. Much the time I would go alone rather than not go at all - and thus live vicariously through the dreams of others.
Do you remember the first time we went to Covent Garden together - your disability had become a temporary asset - for modest sums we could sit together in the stalls and experience some of the best music theatre this world has to offer. I will never forget, and nor will you. The 'Tales of Hoffman' had become almost second nature as you watched and re- watched your video of the production in eager anticipation of the joys to come. How we dressed up, and getting to the theatre sat in our plush seats amongst the great and the good (but mostly rich) of our society, eagerly anticipating the dimming of lights and the striking up of the orchestra. How we would compare notes during the interval, at the end, and during the next day. We would pack your short visits with many such outings - eagerly planned and ever more eagerly executed. Many hours spent on the phone, the excitement of the brochure, the new season - the rare night of simply perfect transcendence - the tears of Boheme, a stunning Tristan. All this culminating in our two weeks we spent in Vienna - a passion and obsession for music gloriously out of hand. Every night a performance - every day a whirlwind tour of history, music and friendship. I remember on our last trip you writing me that letter of thanks to me and you said some of the kindest most loving words you'd ever written, but were too embarrassed to speak directly.
Yes we were like that, weren't we? I still can't find it, but I know I will, and I know the joy it will bring me when found. I didn't want this new found joy to end - I had purpose, I had a dear and willing friend with which to share and broaden my obsessive passion for Opera, and it just kept getting better and better. Whilst you lived and took pleasure from this world, Dad was not dead, but lived on in you and through us. Though grief was your ever-present bedfellow - I lived not in the shadow of Dad's death but a celebration of your life.
Three happy years we spent and then the phone call from Carol, just when everything seemed perfect and set to last. This more than anything has made me live for the moment and to drink the joy and beauty of the day, for I never know when it will end. I think it was on my birthday -If not close.
"Mum has had a stroke - it's pretty bad ". You had one before so I didn't know what to think - "it's OK she's in hospital. There's no need to come up straight away". So I hoped that this was just one of these temporary
respites - something akin to a bad cold or maybe a little worse. But nothing too much to worry about so even though Carol seemed increasingly agitated on the phone - then that was probably just like you, her natural ability to over worry about trivial concerns.
How you were to prove me wrong. I remember coming up at the weekend and being met by Carol who said to prepare myself for a shock as to how bad was your situation. I was not prepared, nothing could have prepared me for the sight of you dear Mum, your kind face crowned with thinning silver hair, unable to move anything from the neck down. Your body an unyielding, unwielding lump of meat. The tears I had to choke back, the false smile I had to wear. My mum lying helpless in a ward of the sick and dying less than half a mile from the house where I was born. At that moment all the love I 'd ever felt for you rose up to fill the void of despair - so much so that your beauty shone out radiant and lovely and I felt so, so close. If by cutting my hand off at this point would have made you better I would have gladly done so. There followed the most intense, loving and ultimately painful four weeks of my life of all our lives. The drunken hope of small progress as you infinitesmably regained some movement first in one hand and then the other. Your strength of character, your spirit seemingly undimmed. How we would massage and caress your hands and feet and rub in cream and love and hope this would get the nerves working again - if love could had cured anything then we had an abundance to give.
If only .........................
I never gave up hope until there was no more hope to be had. I prayed again long and hard to an unyielding God - I implored him, he hadn't done me any favours over Dad - so how about an even break this time. Any contract, any deal, any time just let you live. I will never forget the night before, it was Carol's birthday - you had rallied after slipping away for so long - whilst we cursed nature and the nurses, and I put on some headphones and played you some music. It was the Blue Danube by Johann Strauss - I remember it being played in the coach on our holiday to Vienna in happier times as we crossed the river itself - I remember remarking how tacky it felt but was moved all the same. I thought this would help. In my naivete I thought music could heal all, so imagine my despair as I saw you reduced to tears and rage as you beckoned me to remove the headset. It was then I knew finally that the music had died and that you were dying. There was to be no more music for us together. That was our last.
I didn't want to leave that night but I was babysitting for Carol and Colin for her birthday treat. So we left and you rallied all the strength remaining in you to wish us all well and for Carol to enjoy her evening. I know now you knew, but you hid it so well, how much that must have cost you, how lonely must you have felt as you slipped away from this life - so much more to do see. There was David's wedding for a start. You got your outfit, and Adam and Lauren - we had our tickets for Aida - your holiday in Naples with David.
Mum if I could only have been there for your last few hours - but you didn't want to put us through it - that was your final gift to us. That night was a replay of Dad's last night, wild, careering drunken hope and a belief in miracles. then Colin's knock on the door at 2 am and Carols mad almost reckless driving as we rushed to get to you, only too arrive minutes too late. You lay there still warm your features were as if you still slept. Carol and I stood together in floods of tears and hugged. You had gone mum and with you Dad as well - we were parentless at last. The door had finally closed, slammed shut forever. The nurse said some kind words and the other woman in the bed across the way cried with us - she had only known you a few days but had grown to care for you. You were that sort of woman - quick to make friends and pretty much unable to lose them.
We busied ourselves for your funeral - got to keep doing something. I'll never forget the WI honour guard that stood in silent remembrance as your coffin left the hall or the parish hall that we spent so much time in as children literally packed out. It felt strange with all your friends here - but neither mum nor dad to greet them. I cried a lot in the months to come, body wrenching, howls of pain and anger, more tears than is decent for a man to cry in a lifetime - I shed in a night, night after night. Then as with everything you learn to live to adapt but not forget. The wound heals over, the scar tissue, ugly and distorted covering the gaping wound. I was to lose myself a little in the wilderness over the next few years. But that's another story, the only thing you need to know now is how right I feel and much I've grown and how much I owe to you and Dad who helped me to grow to this point, and how as I grow further away from when you left us paradoxically the closer I feel I am becoming.
The music was the first thing to die in me - for a year I would not listen to any Opera -it was too painful - too many happy memories. But slowly, imperceptibility it came back - and I found pleasure once more - but this time without the obsession. And the garden of course - always a passion of yours how I wish you could see mine. And my dear friends who travel the path with me - but that's yet another story. Finally your children me David and Carol, the greatest thing to come out of your death was the final and indissoluble bonding of us three. I see the photo on Carol's wall of Dad with Auntie Gladys and Uncle Alan - and I see ourselves and we are now probably closer than they ever were .You built us on rock Mum and Dad - it just took me so long to drill down and find this out.
We go and visit you and Dad when we can and we stand at your grave in Scorton just like you and Dad did before us. Alan's on there now I'm afraid - but there's space for Glady's whose still smoking away, but seemingly solid as ever. She misses you both very much and I think she wants to join you. I hope she's unlucky on that one for some time to come. And I'm writing this book with my friend Rupinder who suggested I should get down and write to you both. So here I am.
I spoke to Lauren on the phone tonight and she's going to write a letter but she confidently tells me it won't get to you cos you're in heaven .So I'll add it to this when I get it and work out a way to tell her how I got it to you .Got to go now, mum - have got the 'Softly Awakes my Heart' from Saint-Saens Samson and Delilah playing on the CD - that was one of your favorites and mine too. We never got to see it but we would have.
I really don't want to go so I'll have to write you another letter filling in all the detail. Who knows you may even get one from David or Carol. I know you didn't leave us because you wanted to, and it wasn't your intention to hurt us so. Love made every space sacred and every moment meaningful.
I wouldn't have had it any other way.
Mum, thanks for everything you were never a burden even when you were.
Till we meet again.
Miss you always, no one can replace you, you were simply mum to us
all.
Your ever loving son,
Ian
XXXXXXXXXXXXX
P.s. Somewhere in my boxes of possessions is a letter that I wrote to you and Dad whilst you were alive but was too hung up to send then so I'll search it out and send it now .
There is no right or wrong. There is only love ....
Carol Chapman
The following letter is one I found hidden deep in my personal archives - it was written in 1983 when I was a much younger man of 22. I wrote it after spending an idyllic weekend at the home of my friend Rupinder's when I was able to observe at close hand the apparent magic of a close family. The carefree smiles the hugs, kisses revealed a warmth and an ease of living which was sadly lacking in my own family, I returned to desire the same for myself and in so doing chose to reflect on the relationships within my own. I was analyzing where we'd come from, where we were and this was my attempt to put it into words. After writing it in a flurry of emotion I showed it to my brother and we mutually concurred that to send it now unannounced could disturb my parents. They may think I've gone mad - so erring on the side of caution it remained unsent, that is until now and I add it as a final message to my parents.....
The Unsent Letter
Dear Mum & Dad,
I sometimes find the occasion to totally express my deepest love for you both. In times of quiet reflection, I dwell on the pain, guilt and misery we your children must have caused you. The older I grow, though temporarily and physically further apart the closer spiritually I find the bond that binds us. My life skirts the valleys and mountains of doubt and certainty but throughout all these mists of confusion, lies one great shining truth, my sincerest and totally absolute gratitude to you both for the simple fact of my creation. For as long as there is breath in my body my soul will cherish you with dear memories.
Dad, you are a solid rock of the deepest integrity which flows effortlessly out of your character, and makes you a rare creature in a world full of dishonesty and mistrust. To be as selfless as you are is moral fibre of the highest order, and in you Dad I sense a deep abiding natural love, the like of which I have seen in no other person. A gentleness, a deep and total respect for all humanity.
Mum, I feel for your suffering, and have often thought we are much alike, and I send out my deepest feelings of love to you for the huge price you have had to pay, as you brought us up for there must have been many years of darkness in your journey in which you dwelt emotionally alone, frightened and afraid .
I have often wondered what makes a marriage work, and thought about the bond between you and Dad, and it is by knowing you both that I understand that which does not need to be said.
These are feelings understood but rarely articulated by all three of us. For David I speak personally that struggled though he did, spitting and cursing as he painfully grew into a man, he was fighting the bitterest battle with himself, a process once understood has most definitely begun it's resolution. I am sure Carol feels the same even though we have regrettably grown apart. It is a source of continual regret that we cannot be closer for deep within I care deeply for her. We are all too similar to be too far apart.
With me, and I think for David also, it was necessary for some process by which we had to break possessive bonds, breathe our own fresh, free air to totally realize what you meant to us. The moment I stopped running away, and you ceased to cling, then I became truly aware of what love meant. You have been a continual lifeline at all levels.
Sometimes memories of our childhood return and though I no longer feel any guilt - I was what I was, why I do not know, but what happened,
happened. But in so reflecting I am reminded most painfully, and sense the stinging realization how this must have hurt you both.
I have found the hardest experience of life, is the hardening of the soul, that protection against emotional vulnerability - that hurts far more than cruel words for when they can no longer penetrate the wall of self-protection then the soul feels imprisoned. In you Mum I feel this must have often been the case. If there is one thought I want to leave with you is that there are NO REGRETS for anything, that you may have done in the past. No guilt, no doubt, no recriminations, love wipes away all the tear-stained bill of incidence.
As we all grow older, and reach the conclusion of our existence the one thought I wish you both to carry deep within always, was that it was ALL worth it. For there is not one ounce of hatred or bitterness in our feelings towards you. Though through the day to day trivialities of our existence this may seem at times distant it is always present. Of the many people that I have met, there are regrettably few that feel towards our parents as we do.
Life may be to suffer; perhaps this is the most honest expression of our mysterious creation. To accept that, which one is, to turn and face the pain, but find behind and in front of me love, then resolution is possible.
Redemption through love. I suppose my destiny is to be sensitive, but whether in joy or sorrow I feel truly, madly deeply that I am living on a precious planet travelling through an infinite solar system, a thought so marvelous it makes me want to weep.
Though we must both appear very cynical at times for ones so young, these are but masks to hide behind, being afraid to express that which we feel. For fear of stating the obvious or repeating myself, and though at times it must seem somewhat secretive to you and may make you feel left out, David and I are closest in the truest sense of the word not just brothers but true dear friends. Come what may you can always rely that we will always be there to help. My friendship grew with David from uncertain beginnings and has flowered into one of the deepest bonds imaginable, for we have wept and laughed together. Often I lie awake and think of him and hope he knows I'm there and I care, the changes in that boy from what he was to who he has become are the greatest reward.
Just a year ago when staying with me, he broke down and wept so profusely whilst standing on Hungerford Bridge over the Thames. For so long had his soul been longing for expression but had remained trapped within an exterior of cynical bitterness. It is only when I realized the loneliness of those long years when he caused so much pain, that I become aware, strange, as it seems that he suffered the most. Most recently after older brother teaching younger brother I felt a hand extended towards me an arm to reach out and comfort me when I needed it. Thus the wheel turns full circle.
The words I have tried to use to express what I am feeling seem so trite and ill equipped for what I am trying to say. But the totality and purity of that feeling can only manifest itself as a flood of tears or a cry of joy. . And even then, though I hate to think about it, the time when we shall have to ultimately depart then no sadness can ever tinge the joy I am feeling now.
Worry no more. If you could truly know me you would know my inner self stands firm albeit sometimes hazy. Dad is my inner rock and you Mum are my guiding ship through life.
To speak of your deaths is one taboo even I hesitate to cross. Though I feel I must speak about emotions unknown to me, I always feel a joy that you will never die, and though the transient pain of departure always hurts, the feeling that you are real, arms steadying behind, a reassuring spiritual presence ever present will remain. When depart you must, carry one thought from me, you were always loved, and never more so than now. We humans often leave unsaid that which must be said, for after all we are only humans .I must come to a close as I am increasingly finding words futile to express what I am feeling.
A silence,
A tear,
A peace
That small corner of the earth we inhabit will exist forever, and so we may be apart we will never be separated .
In the peace of your sleep,
May you glimpse heaven,
In that hushed twilight world,
We are alone, but ultimately together.
Thankyou for everything.
I love you.
Ian
XXXXXXX
Looking back as I re-read it after all the years that have passed I am left with just one regret - why didn't I send it ?
Love brings to life whatever is dead around us.....
Franz Rosenzweig
So where are they now?
Remembering the Dream
Dreams are true while they last , and do we not live in dreams?
Alfred Lord Tennyson
So remembering my promise to my niece Lauren - how will I get these messages to Mum and Dad? In our ends are our beginnings and I would not for one moment dream of saying anything other than death will be the hardest, harshest lesson you will learn during the journey of life. Grief is no more stinging for having a world view in which to make sense of it. Grief and mourning have to do with being abandoned and with loss. They are the natural consequence of the loss of boundaries . I vividly remember after Mum died ringing her telephone number once more and recognizing the familiar ringing tone, weeping as it rang out - unanswered. I only did it the once - I would have not tortured myself more - but I was willing myself to hear her voice once more on the end of line. Of course this didn't happen. That's not to say I've not spoken to them both since. I am fortunate in having had many dreams when I meet one or both of them again. I particularly remember one in which I saw Dad again - he was lying in bed looking exhausted but well. I kissed him gently , feeling his hard stubble rub against my chin, and asked him where he'd been - he replied that he'd been ill but was getting better now and he was sorry if he'd upset anybody. He then said where's your mum ? What was remarkable about the experience was the sentient excitement of it all - the smell (cheap aftershave!) unmistakably Dad, the uncanny sound of his voice, the smiling joy of his eyes as we greeted. Just too real to be imagined. Whenever I have these dreams I awake refreshed and overjoyed that we have met once more and far from being dispirited by awakening. I feel ever more certain I have made contact with my parents once again. Dreams are real while they last . Can we say more of life ?
I will leave you with a short poem that was given to mum after dad died by a friend . She kept it with her always and we reproduced it in the service sheet for her funeral.
Do not stand at my grave and weep,
I am not there.
I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow.
I am the diamond glints on snow.
I am the sunlight on ripened grain
I am the gentle autumn's rain.
When you awaken in the morning's hush,
I am the swift uplifting rush of quiet birds in circled light.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry;
I am not there.
I did not die ..........
On the day when death knocks at your door, what will you offer him? I will set before my guest the full vessel of my life. I will never let him go with empty hands ...
Ian Bunker
ibunker@dircon.co.uk
28th September 1997
IAN BUNKER
My name is Ian Bunker , I'm 36 and work as a software engineer , I love travel , nature and creative writing and too much more to detail here !.
I have recently suffered from mild RSI from overuse of the computer at both work and home which has taught me the much needed lesson of moderation in all things and a proper sense of scale .
Good luck , Ian Bunker ibunker@dircon.co.uk
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14th October 1997
Dear Hero,
Thank you very much for writing and telling me about your life and of your brave response to your disablement.
I was glad to learn of your affinity with Scotland; it is a beautiful country. During World War II when I served in the Royal Navy with fishermen from the Hebrides, we sometimes saw the islands in the distance when we were on convoy duty, but I was never fortunate enough to visit them. The whole of north-west Scotland has a particular grandeur, although I must say that I do not care for the mosquitos in the summer.
You ask me about the effects of age. Perhaps you noticed that The Queen was commenting recently that she found it difficult to keep up, and she is much younger than I am. I am afraid it is true that as we get older, it is more difficult to adapt; fashions tend to pass us by and we have to take particular care to avoid narrowing our horizons.
On the other hand, older people today are in much better health, generally speaking, than their own grandparents were, thanks to modern medicine and drugs, so we are in a better position than they were to enjoy the many wonderful things of life. As we watch the world go by, we can also note the changes that take place among young people in culture and in fashion, with sympathy and tolerance. What we know, and they probably do not realise, is that their cultures and fashions are as unlikely to be permanent as ours were.
Elderly people today though have a very good chance of remaining alert, interested and knowledgeable, provided we try to keep an open mind and continue to feel that we should play a part in society.
I was glad to hear about your hopes and aspirations, although I must add that it is probably too much for any of us to expect that every one of our wishes will be borne out. Nevertheless, we must have the determination, as you have, to achieve them if we can. I very much hope that your present disabilities will not stop you from following the goals you have set yourself, and thank you very much for writing.
With best wishes for your future
Yours sincerely
James Callaghan
***
26th November 1997
Dear Hero
Lord Callaghan has asked me to write and thank you for your long letter of 17th November, which he read with great interest, and sends his congratulations on your success in attracting articles for your website from such auspicious contributors. He is sorry to say that he is not personally able to become one, as I am sure you will appreciate the volume and variety of correspondence that he already deals with prevents him from taking on any further committments.
Please accept Lord Callaghan's best wishes for your continued success in pursuing your activities to the full, and thank you for taking the trouble to write to him.
With best wishes,
Yours sincerely
Gina Page
Private Secretary to Lord Callaghan
RT HON LORD CALLAGHAN OF CARDIFF KG
James Callaghan has been UK Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary (unlike anyone else). He managed all this without a university education. HJN.
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Being Irish?
When I was asked by the Editor to write about being Irish, I was startled to realise that I don't consider myself Irish any more, and maybe I never have.
I have lived in England for over 20 years, but I certainly do not consider myself English. My mother is Scottish, and I lived in Scotland for 3 years, but I do not consider that I am Scottish, though I do have a cousinly feeling for my Scottish roots.
I'm certainly not anything like a citizen of the world either.
When I first came to England I was asked the usual questions about pigs in the kitchen and do they have TV in Ireland?
Everyone considered I was Irish, and I did not deny it. Neither did I fully accept the label.
I grew used to being considered Irish. From time to time I was asked if my accent was Scottish, or Welsh. Several times I was asked if i was Canadian. What did I reply?
Well I replied that I was from Northern Ireland. When I said this I felt as if it still did not properly define my origins. Northern Ireland really seems not much more than a geographical term. The title has no history, no sense of place attached to it.
In recent years when asked to define my origins I have found a new term which feels better. It feels right.
I say I am from Ulster. I was brought up on tales of Ulster - The Red Hand of Ulster; and Finn McCool the Giant of Ulster and the Giant's Causeway.
Ulster has history and a definite sense of place.
Acknowledging being Irish now feels alien. I realise I have been groping gradually to this definition of myself; and the request to write about being Irish, crystallised these thoughts and feelings.
I can no longer accept the label of being Irish. The Irish people don't seem to respect my people in Ulster. At best they ignore them; at worst they hate them.
What does it mean to say I am from Ulster?
Well I need to think about it more, and as I am getting near the deadline I will have to return to that subject another day!
WENDY CLARKE
I am 47 years of age. I have worked as an Occupational Therapist within the NHS for nearly 25 years, after training in Edinburgh, Scotland.
I have been married for 22 years, and share interests in literature and gardening with my husband.
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Dykes with Disabilities:
"We're mad as hell and we won't take it anymore!"
Picture this: You and your girlfriend go off for the night to a lesbian club. At the front door you're refused entry, your girlfriend told by the woman at the door, "Tell your friend she can't come in here - this is a lesbian club". For some reason the bouncer doesn't get it that anyone with a disability could be a dyke. Eventually you both argue your way into the club, only to be harassed and attacked by a very large and drunk dyke who punches you to the ground, screaming: "Who'd f*** you, you ugly c***" and you and your girlfriend are the ones thrown out for causing a scene.
Incidents like this have led activist Kali Wilde to forming a group with the assistance of Sydney's Lesbian and Gay Anti-Violence Project to look into access and equity issues for Lesbians, Gays and Transgenders (GLT's) with disabilities. As Wilde puts it, "I want to make a place where we can have all our identities - there's pressure on us to leave our disability identity outside the door in queer circles; and there's pressure on us to leave our queer identity outside the door in disability circles".
AN ATTITUDE REVOLUTION
I was invited along to a meeting of the group which has got members from different organisations like People with Disabilities, the Coalition of Activist Lesbians, the Gay and Lesbian Rights Lobby, the Intellectual Disability Rights Service and a number of government departments involved as well. The energy and excitement in the room was palpable. As Service Co-ordinator of the Royal North Shore Hospital's Sexual Assault Service Susan Kendall says, "We're talking about huge cultural change - ultimately this must be seen as a human rights issue".
Kendall was instrumental in helping Kali Wilde get the project off the ground. According to Kendall's figures, 25% of their clients at the Assault Service have disabilities and she cites a NSW study showing that 80% of people with intellectual disabilities survive sexual assault. Kendall points out that the biggest problem is the lack of information about sexuality people with disabilities get. "We had a client with intellectual disabilities who was married and had been assaulted. After investigation we found out that she wasn't having sex with her husband because they didn't know how. She didn't know the difference between good and bad touch because no-one had told her, assuming that disabled people don't need to know that sort of thing, but in reality putting her in danger. Now take another example, where another woman says to us that she doesn't like boys but loves hanging with her girlfriend Alison, holding her hand and so on, and you hit real problems. All people with disabilities should have access to information about sexual preferences, but to do so would take incredible change in our attitudes".
Take the story of this woman: "A friend of mine in an institution in Perth ordered a cab to pick her up, then me, to go to a gay club. On hearing the destination the cab driver refused and went inside to 'report her to matron'. Once outed by the driver, this woman was outed by staff to her family. Her rights (the institution called them privileges) were removed and life became intolerable. She had great trouble getting bathed, toileted, helped out of bed, access to appropriate medical treatment and so on, because she was dependent on staff to organise this. Then possessions like her TV 'went missing'. She was forced to move".
THE CHALLENGES AHEAD
GLT's with disabilities in the group generally agreed that the disability discrimination within GLT organisations was especially hard to bear, making them feel it was easier to come out about their sexuality than it was to come out as a person with a disability. To illustrate the point Wilde tells this story: "In 1995 the organisers of two lesbian Mardi Gras floats refused to allow me to participate in their floats in the parade, one saying 'Our float just wouldn't look as good'. Distraught, I raised the issue with a lesbian counsellor. She said this was 'the truth' and 'well, it just wouldn't look as good'. I was shocked...This makes me feel like I didn't belong in the community, and that it had no place for lesbians with obvious disabilities, regardless of our contribution to the community".
Others in the group agreed that it was difficult to get information from Mardi Gras about disabled access, one gay man who uses a wheelchair reported being told to "bring (his) mum or dad along to help (him) go to the toilet" and that Mardi Gras was "not a disability organisation".
The group agreed the challenge is attracting other GLT's with disabilities to join in the party to be able to lobby for change successfully but they concede it's very difficult to estimate just how many people are concerned. A recent survey on lesbians with disabilities auspiced by Women with Disabilities Australia and conducted by Kerrie Watson had 100 requests for the forms, although only 20 have been returned so far. The interim results however indicate that dykes with disabilities just don't feel included in the GLT community, with a rating average of 2 on a scale of 1 to 10 - (1 being poor, 10 being excellent). Several respondents gave negative ratings like minus 5; minus 100 in one form!
COAL researcher Alison Daniel is setting up focus groups to talk about issues facing lesbians with disabilities but reports few takers so far, saying it's been hard to track them down. Kali Wilde says she has a good idea why - "The majority of lesbians I know with disabilities tend to be closeted about their sexuality or their disability. I know a woman with no legs who's a lesbian who says - 'No! No! I don't have a disability!' and likewise I have friends who keep their sexuality very quiet. It's that problem of belonging to more than one minority groups - it's not one plus one equals two, it equals six - it's an exponential degree of discrimination against you sometimes".
Wilde has faced these problems directly, with services like Home Care whom she has fought for a number of years to get help she needed. As she says: "The problem is their desire to regulate my sexuality - if I'd suddenly said - 'I'm not a lesbian anymore' - I'm sure I would have got the service". At present Wilde has Home Care service, having successfully won her right to assistance.
The group is working with the Departments of Women, Housing and Ageing and Disability to see change happen. Kendall is hopeful of their response, but says "Government is barely meeting the challenge in people without disabilities, so we're on a long road to make disability visible to render it invisible, if you get me - we really should be looking at the whole person and their needs - this could take 100 years".
WHERE THE ACTION IS
Whatever happened to the myth of the daggy disabled dyke? I tell you, these women are GORGEOUS and the sense of being at the cutting edge of social change, taking the disability and queer communities by storm, is electrifying.
The group's organising a one-day conference for early next year and they're open to ideas and feedback, so if you'd like to get involved, you can contact A/Client Services Co-ordinator at the Lesbian and Gay Anti-Violence Project, Ian Archer-Wright on 61 2 9360 6687.
Also, if you're keen on finding out more about the Lesbians with Disabilities National Survey, contact Women with Disabilities Australia on 61 - 2 - 62421310. And Alison Daniel is still very keen to hear from lesbians with disabilities who'd like to contribute to her research - leave a message for her at the COAL office on 61 - 2 - 9211 9202.
This piece is excerpted from 'Lesbians on the Loose', a magazine published in Australia. If you're interested in further information you can contact them at email - lotl@ozemail.com.au.
KATH DUNCAN
Kath Duncan is a 36 y.o. free-spirited freelance journalist, based in Australia. She was born with limbs missing, but has gained a lot of magic, good friends and great meals along the way - although the leg and arm are still missing. She has worked in radio broadcasting, film and video soundtrack and now print, but is open to all the new experience life can chuck at her.
HJN: Kath Duncan contributed an article on the emotional baggage of congenital and surgical amputees to the 1st edition of FTW.
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A Day in the Life - 8th November 1997
This morning the radio alarm sprang into life just in time to enjoy the medley of patriotic tunes from around the British Isles with which BBC radio 4 entertains its half-awake listeners at 5.55am on a Saturday! Andy crept downstairs to make a cup of tea, we had an hour to get ourselves together and get our son George out of bed and dressed. I had packed his bag the previous night and at 6.45am I loaded him and his copious amounts of luggage and accessories into the car to drive him to the Nanny's house, where he was to spend the next three days.
I then returned home to pick up Andy and our luggage. Isn't it strange how two adults can fit all their requirements for three days, incuding concert dress, tails, drumsticks and a violin into rather less space than one small boy needs!
Half an hour later at Gatwick, we found where the Philharmonia Orchestra were checking in and joined our colleagues in the queue.
Our journey was being further complicated by having to transport several large instrument boxes in the hold of the plane rather than in the orchestra's lorry, which would usually have carried the load by road, unfortunately, the French lorry drivers' strike had put the kybosh on this.
Having used the time in the airport lounge doing some Christmas shopping, (A busy musician has to grab the opportunity when it presents itself!) we boarded our flight to Madrid.
2.30pm local time.
The orchestra were safely installed on three coaches having been shepherded through the airport by our tour manager and the local concerts agent.
After a short ride to the hotel, we had 55mins to check in, unpack and freshen up. 100 people (or thereabouts) descending on a hotel lobby with cases and instruments, fighting for room keys and space in the lifts is not a pretty sight or a comfortable experience! Anyway there was certainly no time for lunch.
On arrival at Madrid's fine Auditorio Nacional, Andy rather apprehensively went to look at the set of Timpani that had had to be hired locally (Thankyou French lorry drivers). The double bass and harp players were in the same situation.
The drums were acceptable, but only just. They were a problem to tune and set up and the largest drum was the wrong size, putting Andy in a similar position to a builder trying to knock a fence post in with the aid of a toffee hammer rather than a sledge hammer.
The rehearsal passed without incident, conductor, soloist and orchestra all know the hall and we had performed most of the programme two nights previously at the Royal Festival Hall in London.
6pm local time
We returned to the hotel, we had until 9.30pm when the coach would return to the hall for the 10.30pm concert. This venue provides two concerts a night and we were on the "late shift". The hotel being in the business area of Madrid and this being a saturday, none of the local restaurants opened until 9pm, so we were reduced to taking a Burger King meal back to the hotel room - Glamorous lifestyle isn't it! We then managed an hour or so of sleep.
Both having bathed and dressed, we returned to the hall. The audience from the first concert were still leaving as we arrived backstage to warm up. Andy checked his drums, still playable - just. One of the harpists was attending to her instrument which had been hired out missing some of it's strings. (There seems to be an opening here for a reliable musical instrument hire company!)
The concert; The audience seemed initially slightly bemused by Ligeti's Lontano. The very quiet opening was disturbed by coughing and rustling, but they soon became enthralled by the very exciting and extraordinary orchestral colours that the composer uses. The young Finnish conductor, Esa Pekka Salonen is generally recognised to be one of the finest interpreters of Ligeti's music.
The pianist Paul Crossley gave a fine performance of Ravel's G major concerto.
After the interval, more Ligeti, this time a shorter early piece, Apparitions, another quiet opening becoming more and more punctuated by the apparitions of the title appearing unexpectedly round the orchestra in the guise of screaming violins shrieking woodwind or rasping brass.
The concert ended with Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy. I made the mistake of glancing at my watch just before we started. It is not a psychological advantage to know that it is past midnight and that one is required to play a substantial symphonic work. The Philharmonia however came up trumps as usual We were warmly applauded by a very appreciative audience.
A day like today is not uncommon in this busy orchestra's life but however tired we are we always seem to manage to "pull a great show out of the bag". It is far from an ideal lifestyle however and the stresses and strains take their toll on the players.
1.20am local time. Lights out.
We returned to the hotel, Andy grabbed a quick drink at the bar, and I began writing this article whilst I awaited his return. We got into bed eighteen hours after getting up, having travelled for a large part of the day, sustained only by an aircraft meal and a burger! In 5 hours time we have to get up and travel to Valencia, this time by train which will be more pleasant than flying. On Monday we fly home, on Tuesday we rehearse and perform in London's Royal Festival Hall, our home and on Wednesday we travel on the Eurostar to Paris for three weeks, this time baby George comes with us. What a life! Busy, tiring but rewarding.
IMOGEN EAST
Imogen began studying the violin at the age of 6. She became a Junior Exhibitioner at the Royal College of Music and went on to study there full time on leaving school.
Having gained an ARCM & GRSM she left and was immediately offered a job in the BBC Symphony orchestra where she stayed for 41/2 years. Imogen moved to the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1987 and now plays no5 First Violin. The busy orchestral schedule leaves her no time for other musical activites but she enjoys gardening, and has an 18 month old baby who keeps her and her husband Andy Smith (Philharmonia timpanist) fully occupied.
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I'm a bit busy this month, so not much time to write an article for From the Window. But here is the answer to a puzzle that has perplexed the children of farmers and other country dwellers for years:
Q: How do you tell the difference between a stoat and a weasel?
A: A weasel is weasily distinguished because a stoat is stotally different!
Regards, Chris
CHRIS ELEY
After a number of years globetrotting, Chris Eley settled to life on a 32-acre smallholding in Wales. Current population 40 sheep, two dogs and a cat.
HJN: Chris Eley contributed a daft article with an even dafter poem on luggage loss in Indonesia in the 1st edition of FTW.
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After my bit of a do in Milton Keynes on Wednesday, I passed a sign post on the way out of MK that made me stop. Seven years ago or so Joy and I spent a day in MK and among other places found The Peace Pagoda, on Willen Lake, built by a buddhist order who were also buiding a residence and temple which, at the time, was little more than a wooden hut. So I went to look at the pagoda again and see if they were still there.
They were. There is now a rather beautiful , though unfinished, wooden temple, with a set of gardens around it. A water garden. A traditional Japanese stone garden of pebble and rock. A vegetable garden. I asked someone working in the garden if I could walk round, and did. I was walking away when I decided I really did want to look inside. The gardening lady, apparently Scandinavian, called, apparently in Japanese, to unseen people in the building and ushered me to the door where it was evident I should leave my shoes.
A tiny Japanese lady came to greet me (maybe 4 foot 9?), with shaven head and a simple wrap-around top, bowed, and led me to the Main Hall. At the "shrine" end were gold statues of the (Shakyamuni) Buddha, a framed photo of a broadly smiling old Japanese gent, flowers, and the most extraordinary collection of gifts, including a box of big plastic bottles of pop (still shrink wrapped), a bag of potatoes, a (smaller) bag of pasta, a tin of tomatoes, and a ghastly kitch pseudo-silver clock in the form of a penny farthing bicycle. Carpeted floor. One cushion on the floor, smack in the middle. Tiny lady says "please sit on cushion". I do. She kneels facing the shrine and begins to chant, a series of repetitions of the same sounds each ending with the voice lowering and the forehead on the floor. Marks of respect, first to Buddha, then to their teacher (the old Japanese gent), then, after turning to face me, to me. I now know the chant was ..."Na-Mu Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo", or "I will follow the lotus sutra". (If you want more on the order, the Lotus Sutra, etc, though I can't think why you should, I can provide a bit). She then went to a covered bowl, removed a single boiled sweet and, with a bow, offered it to me. At my request she then stayed and talked for a few minutes and told me some stuff.
It was all very extraordinary, and odd, and not "me", and yet it did connect to me and gave me a very happy little time. The following emerged.
Na-Mu Myo Ho Ren Ge Kyo.
Two electric blue dragonflies
together but separate
sparkle
then still
on a white lily.
The smile and gestures
of the tiny, graceful nun who welcomes me
communicate more love
than a thousand words.
The Japanese poet
knows in his heart how imperfect words are
but cannot completely restrain
the urge to describe the infinite
and so
the haiku is short
but communicates with intensity and gentleness
like the smile and gestures
of the tiny, graceful nun
who welcomes me.
Bill Fine. 4th June 1997.
After a brief visit with the people of Nipponzan Myohoji temple.
Thank you.
BILL FINE
Bill Fine? Well ......Happily ordinary husband of Joy and father of Andrew and Christopher. A relisher of family life. In total, father (variously) of six, grandfather of two.
Works for The Computability Centre, a registered charity involved in computing for people (all ages) with disabling conditions (all types).
For more about The Computability Centre ...
tccadmin@bham.ac.uk
http://www.bcs.org.uk/computab/index.htm
0800 269545.
HJN: Bill Fine contributed a article on tandem parachuting to the 1st edition of FTW.
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TSAREVITCH
I resurrect you
Peaked pinched mask who
stares out
Not comfortable from sepia
But clown white from blood-teasel
Congealed at last
Your spiked prison not like
That liquid one you've lived
Since that first nurse-scream.
So now this tower
All round, that crimson fury
Matching thin throb within
Will cool, go grey, cold
Like you when I have stopped
Reading you these words
Your tower having proved
Hedgehog-haven again
Prepares now
To be ante-chamber
To a tomb
While poor cocoon
You live out last futilities
doomed
To mere niche in academic discourse
Or political double-speak.
Little rich Guy
But cold
Grotesque claustrophobe
Your body will break out red
As red breaks in
There have been so many
Lonely towers
Monumented through known time
Yours perhaps most pitiful
Little puppet-boy
Bleeding into 1917
Between two tyranies
Freedom got for none
Least of all you.
We glimpse this
Before blinds down
You're snatched backward
Into oblivion
Teasel turned inward, poor insect
Intended red flows untended
Bundled down
Sepia earth
Roots and damp silence.
God give mercy to
All like prisoners
And captives
And one
Such as
This
Little
Face
In
Time's
Perspex
Boxes.
PETER GILES
I'm a visual artist, writer, countertenor, and part-time teacher. I grew up not knowing which way to turn creatively and ended up trying to do it all! I have succeeded (up to a point, at least!) in making a living, gratefully using these and other abilities given me by the Creator! Such lack of tight specialization in any one art-form is against late-twentieth-century mores and holies., I'm afraid, but so be it! Because the editor has invited me to contribute to the next issue of Through the Window , and because the verses above are so brief, I think it more appropriate to sing a louder biographical note on that occasion!
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Dear Hero Joy,
I received your letter concerning From the Window via Ms. van der Top who works at our school. I am an English teacher for students in grades 7 - 10 which is the children aged 12-16. I asked my 13 year old kids to write something for your site concerning the view from their windows, their favorite places, a window on their souls, and the day that changed their lives. I will be collecting their final copies on Oct. 8.
I have a step-son who was born deaf and mute and can understand many of the feelings that you expressed in your writing. He however, was not blessed with your language abilites. I have suggested to his real mother that he try to sign something to her for your website as well.
Good luck with your endeavor and hopefully you will like some of my students work.
Kind regards,
Grace Knox
ARTYOM
As I hear the noise of the racing cars decreasing as the sun comes down, I always look through my window. It is the most beautiful time of the day when I can see the sun coming down and the pink horizon slowly forming. I feel like I am looking down from an airplane, though I am only on the tenth floor. A huge statue of a horseman rising over the sky is standing on one of the green hills that end only when the fog comes. A few buildings in site ruin the wilderness of the picture that seems so unbelievable being in the middle of a Russian city.
As the sky becomes black, like the curtains closing at the end of a theater play, all you see is the dots which attract your attention by their brightness. You desperately wait till the morning...
As the sun appears, I open my eyes and see it shining so brightly as if God himself was coming down on me. The bright sun brings me happyness in the morning. It is like a drug which makes me excited and full of energy. I don't want to leave my room. I'd rather stay here the whole day and do nothing but look at the blue, blue sky as the pink horizon forms again and again... Until there was a moment that changed my life when I had to go and live in Holland where the view is my garden and the sound of the traffic whole day long. There isn't much sun in the morning either - mostly rain. But in my heart I will always remember that scenery which I didn't see anywhere else in the whole world: the blue, blue sky and the pink horizon, and the bright sun in the morning shining in my eyes and giving me energy for the new day. I can still imagine it so clearly after those three years that I spend in Holland, and I will never forget it.
TOMMY MAGUIRE
Through My Window
If you stand at my window long enough you'll she the nature out side if you just take a quick look what kind of weather is out there. No that's not right you you should stay there and listen to the birds and tress waving, look into the neighbours and look deep into the sky, then if you say you can't see nothing go do it again and again. See I don't really look out of the window much apart from if I'm checking to see what I need to wear because of the weather but if you look careful and patient you really can see so much. I could sit at my window for nearly a hour unless I got distracted by that traffic across to my left if you look you can just about see the road, but there are a lot of tall trees in the way of the noise road which sometimes big trucks wake you up by speeding down the road. There a small cannel that divides us from our neighbours house which has a huge green fence going around it, our roof sloops all the way down so you can see about 2 meters of thatch and there a lot of grass that you can see.
If you looked out the window of my favourite place that's probably Jamaica on a nice hot day, you would not want to get up because picture this your on a cliff over-looking a bay with crystal clear water and a lovely sandy beach coconut trees here and there. Nobody else around in this enclosed bay and the sea is calling your name... COME SWIM IN ME, COME SWIM IN ME. I have always liked places like this because I guess it gives you the feeling that you own it or something or it's like you can go skinny dipping anytime freely!I have to paradise's one would be Jamaica and the other would in any ski resort because I love to look at the snowy mountains and be in a valley with huge peeks and just standing anywhere and it's like your wanting to yell out and run around.
If someone wanted to look into my soul then they are crazy! No, kidding, if anyone wanted to look straight into my soul they would have to look at a lot of stuff. Because my soul is what makes me and there are a lot of things in me like what I like, who I like, what I believe in my soul is just me it's just "Tommy". If you did not want to look totally at it your see things like Women, Money, Music, Sk8ing, Women, SCHOOL, Women and Me. It's funny because this is one of things that I just can't explain it's weird !
Something that I had to come to terms with or something that changes my life is losing someone that is real close to you like in, My case I lost my Grandfather last year and this is something that you just don't want to happen but it does and you try to avoid of forget that it happened is probably something that even today I don't realise that it happened and there's nothing you can do about it but you want to get rid of the memory is one of the hardest things in life and I think this is one of the saddest things that can happen and it really changes your life in so many ways.
CHRIS ERVIN
It really is a fine window. It comfortably rests on the right wall of my room. Divided into six sections by a wooden plank, it resembles a tic-tac-toe board. The window spends most of its time acting window-like, by being transparent and staying in a state of permanent stillness. It's only function being to look through it. And what a view ! From my room, which was, before being converted, and attic, you can see almost all of Naarden (but then again. Naarden isn't that big.), and you certainly can hear all of it. Less than a kilometer from my house, there is a train station. It runs all day, all night, never ceasing the drone of metal upon metal, in the train's effort to stop. It can be maddening to me. What I see from this particular window is a lawn in bad need of mowing. At a slightly oblique angle to the center a tree rests. It is not very large yet, but you can almost here it straining to reach to the sky.Though all of this, the window continues to sit. At one point in its life, parts of it were alive: The tree that the wooden planks came from must have been a strong tree; nothing could bring it down until the chainsaw cut through its midsection. If aliens ever do find us, they will never try to trade information and make peace. No, they'll cut us up and use us as furniture. Windows are everywhere. They pear into and out of our habitations. They exist figuratively, as well. My soul has a window near it, like the large surgical auditoriums that exist in some medical hospitals. From here, you could see many different images of a thousand lives not lived, if I had made different changes here and there. You should see many humorous figures walking about, forever making jests towards the more serious members of my soul. You will see many, many figures with nonplused looks on their faces; the quizzical section of my soul. And you will see the Wired Section, where most of the information fed to my soul is copied, faxed, altered, and otherwise processed with. Windows can also look into real places. Back in Oregon, there was a massive theater only a twenty-minute drive away from my old house. Though there were only seven screens in the Evergreen Parkway 7, they were all very large, and made the average movie go-er feel a wee-bit small. They were well tended to by the hapless teenage projectionists making their minimum wage and smiling. I would go there every other week during the school year to see the latest movie that was playing. I usually go for the sci-fi films, but when I was feeling the need for something more substantial, I would go see something like The English Patient. I would never, ever, go alone; traveling with four of my closet friends we would take the Tri-Met bus system to the theater.Windows can even see important things in your life. One of the pivotal moments of my life was the deception to move to the Netherlands. My parents asked me if I wanted to move during our Thanksgiving dinner. Afterwards, I saw that same dinner in reverse. Without much choice in the matter, I agreed, and four months later, I was leaving my home of eight years, and all the friends I had made in that time, to go to a country I knew little about. Now, I am glad I did so.The window has not changed in any visible way from the moment I started. But, I know, deep in the center of the wood, and in the middle of the payne of glass, the window is changed from the experience it has had with me. And, to finish of this essay, I will quote the great Polish director Krzysztof Kieslowski: "At this moment, in this café, we are sitting next to strangers. Everyone will get up, leave, anf go their own way. And then, they'll never meet again. And if they do, they will not realize it is not for the first time."
JUSTIN
Soul's plagues
Gazing out my window. Gazing into my soul. Gazing at my lonliness, that keeps my heart in thrall. My soul is like a burdened web, of future things to come. My window is of happy spring that makes my bud heart glow. My life is like a tangled web. All ridiculed with fate. Growing into adulthood to live, for a while...You wish to see out my window. As I sit here this night, gazing out at the world. Out my window...there is sky, dark gray and black. Like black coffee. Little sugar lumps floating about, dissolving. I gaze down and grasp the sight of trees. Figures of trees. Like wearing a black painted vail. Light shines, weakly, discouraged by the darkness about. I see a figure in a kitchen, then nought as the light goes out, It shall return in the morning, I am quite sure... There are six windows. Like six newspapers. The Sun, Mail, Telegraph and such. They tell me of the world outside... Six windows of the Acropolis. Past the houses and the trees. There is a river. Almost hidden in the darkness. Can just make out a figure, of a man and a knife, slashing apart my soul, so full of strife. I see cars go by all dark and faded gone. I see headlights that light up the road. And the yellow streaks down the center. A truck flows by. Bearing the sign, happy dale. Wish. If wishes were stars, and caramel mars, the galaxy would be full of caramel stars. For my wish of a thousand, is just many.. depression, not happy a day, but, depression is what makes the world go round. Depression, lost love, money. Depression, definition. Feeling sorry for ones self without much real reason. Depression... What would the world be like if it always rained. Probably depressing but not defiently so. For I love rain...My life is always changing. No one day can change it. I like it, different with every turn. But just supposing there was a day. That day would be the day my brother was born. Sure that really changed my life. Though I know not for if for the better. He is always there. To pound in. Play soccer with, joke with. I now sleep in the same room as the skunk. I changes my life. Nothing is kept secret from his prying eyes. He loaths fun I sometimes think. But then again, Only five years till I shall be away from him. Be able to keep a secret for once, After all is said, may I add "woppie".Out of the window. My favourite place. There is a bath. A bath of birds it is for. I am not quire sure. I sit on the bed and stare out of the window. At the world. At the birds. Rhythmic beating, happyness, song. Makes one feel again quite young. Singing songs... I enjoy summer in this place. Briton. Where else, Quite beautiful. I gaze at the flowers/The roses and such. The flowers. With strange and confusing names. There is a wall. Not high but small and, pretty red stone, brick. The window is a small and bared one. Bared from the inside. Just like my soul.It is growing late and I weary with fatigue. I shall write more.
tommorow...Always tomorrow...
Another day...Another dawn.........
Tomorrow...
ALEXA
From my window
This is from my window...
When I look out my window I see a quiet canal, with some people walking around and some people on bikes. I like to look out my window and see the people outside going on with their lives.
The window of my soul is bissy full with people and things to do. I always knew I was adopted. That I had a different mother and father then my big sister and brother. I didn't know much about her. I always wondered about my birth mother. But I knew that sooner or later I would meet her again. I just expected it to be later then sooner. It all started 4 years ago on a summer day. We were all outside swimming and having fun. lunch with our friends and family, when the phone rang. My mum went to get it and stayed on for about 20 minutes. Then she came back out again with a weird expression on her face. She told me that the woman that called was my birth mother and she wants to meet me. I was so shocked, I had never expected her to come and find me. My mother told me my birth mother's name was Lisa and that we would meet her for dinner tomorrow night. I had so many questions for he. Like why she gave me up, who is my father. All my questions will be answered tomorrow! I couldn't believe it. I couldn't believe that all this was happening so fast and that tomorrow I would meet her family. I was so excited that I couldn't sleep. I kept on trying to imagine what she looked like. The next morning, when I woke. i knew that it was going to be an important day. The day that would change my life forever. I didn't do anything special that day. I just thought about Lisa. Me and my mom got into the car at a quarter to seven and drove down to the restaurant where I would finally meet my mother. The first time. I was very scared and nervous. As we walked to the table a woman got up and said "Hello, I'm Lisa." I will always remember those three words. Lisa was not what I expected her to look like. She was really young, and shy. She was a ballet teacher. She teaches six year old. She is only 27 and single. She explained to me everything and why she gave me up and who my father is. She asked me if I would like to be friends and I answered "I would love to. She lives four hours away by car. We talked for hours. Then I kissed her goodbye. I felt so fake. Like I was watching it on a T.V. It wasn't happening to me. I didn't say much on the way home. I thought about her a lot that night. I wonder what Lisa would be like if I lived with her. She called the house the next day to say bye. I am very happy I met her and she answered all my questions. Now I feel I can close the book and stop wondering about her. I still get letters from her and see her once in a while...
GRACE KNOX
Grace Knox is a teacher at the International School of Amsterdam. Of the 23 articles sent to me I have selected 5 for publication. HJN.
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Dear Ms. Nightingale,
This is to acknowledge receipt of your very pleasant correspondence. I have been a school headmaster for many years and I have read hundreds of papers written by students, but seldom, if ever, have I read one from an eleven-year old that would reach your level of competence. I applaud you for your love and appreciation of language and I wish you every success with the publication of your worldwide magazine.
You asked about pivotal points in life and, since I read your note, I have been thinking about that. I am a 66 year-old American man and I have lived my professional life in seven different countries working with private, independent American international schools for more than forty years. Most of my work has been in the Far East, in Taipei and in Japan, but I have also lived in Kuwait, Kenya, India, Pakistan and, of course, Egypt where I am now located. I have enjoyed those years of work. I have enjoyed being part of the various cultures of the world, - I have enjoyed the challenges of helping schools improve, - and most of all, I have enjoyed working with children. Through these years of happy employment, I have not thought of pivotal points in which you are interested. Rather, I have just gone on and on, enjoying life.
I have many fond memories. I remember climbing in the Himalaya Mountains in India to a place where I could see from the east to west, mountains that were perpetually covered with snow. I particularly remember an evening when I watched the sun set on those mountains and the white snow strangely turned pink. It was a breathtaking view that has stayed with me through the years and has reminded me, over and over again, that beauty is a rare gift that greatly enriches life.
Another pivotal point was the day I decided to live and work outside of my native country. I sailed out of New York and as we passed the famous Statue of Liberty, I thought I would be away from home for only one year. I wondered if I would be homesick and if I would adjust to living in a different culture. I remained abroad for 43 years. A new life awaited me in India, an exciting life. I found as I transferred from one country to another, that each land is beautiful and people, no matter where they come from, are basically good.
I have known sorrows, too. When my eldest son died of AIDS, I experienced a sorrow that has never left me and never will. But most of all, I have been blessed with happiness.
Perhaps I have rambled on and on needlessly. Before signing off, I again wish you well in your publishing plans and I wish you happiness and God's richest blessings.
Sincerely,
Dr. Guy Lott, Jr.
GUY LOTT
Guy Lott
Associate Superintendent
American International School in Egypt
PO Box 8090
Masaken Nasr City 11371
Cairo, Egypt.
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October 6th
Dear Hero Joy Nightingale,
Thank you very much for writing to me.
I'm extremely sorry to say that I can't commit myself to anything else in the foreseeable future, as the diary is cross-hatched with work and engagements, and the desk is groaning with neglected letters.
I do hope you will understand and accept my apologies and warmest good wishes.
Yours sincerely,
Joanna Lumley
JOANNA LUMLEY
Joanna Lumley is a terribly Brit tv actress with local connections and best known at the mo for her role of Patsie in Ab Fab. HJN.
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Empty Bottle
by Matthew Morrissey
I'm an empty bottle
and there is no music today
no music and I don't want to play.
you can turn to your cd player
you can scream and shout
but you will not hear my sound.
Take your lovely small hands
take your little dainty feet
and your huge blue eyes
and make what you will
I will not make a sound.
empty bottle talks all day
the full one never makes a sound.
MATTHEW MORRISSEY
Matthew Morrissey teaches music at Canterbury Christ Church College but I don't know him. HJN.
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How strange that I should be trying to write about those things that are "core to my sense of self" as the editor wants: such self-examination is anathma to me and goes quite a long way to explaining why I am an opera director and not a performer of some description. My job involves completely focus on an individual or group of individuals and helping them to maximise themselves and examine themselves. Often, by this vacarious process, I end up revealing and learning more about myself than any performer ever would but let it stand that I am very bad at such things. I will try...
My job needs an almost schizophrenic approach to people: my happiest times are watching people as they go about their day ("From the window" indeed) and to observe them properly one needs a world view as equally tempered by optimism as cynicism. We all have the potential for good and evil: a director needs to show that push and pull in every character. No individual is wholly good or completely bad: the world is every shade of grey with the potential for momentary flashes of white and black. It is why people are fascinating to me. On my commutes into London, I look at the crowds of people in Victoria Station and know that each of them is equally worthy of attention, has a story to tell etc etc. I also know that the vast majority of them would drive me crazy and I would not like them - but that does not make them any the less interesting as possible dramatic characters.
In the people around me I see truths about myself, I think: a mirror that reflects my preoccupations and prejudices. In this way I delve deep into myself but can give it back to the artists I direct and the designers with whom I work. I notice a quality in them that I need or like but it is the act of noticing that makes a production "mine". Another director would chose something else. My shows tell me what I think about the world and ask the questions I want to ask about myself: to get the answers as well would be greedy, but I do know that I am happiest when I am directing and therefore dealing with the building blocks of humanity: love, friendship, enmity, uncertainty, contingency. Nothing is definite, all is in transition, all is potential, life is fundamentally fantastic. Optimism and cynicism but no pessimism.
JOHN RAMSTER
John Ramster is a freelance opera director working for the Royal Opera and Glyndebourne Festival Opera as well as anyone else who will have him.
John Ramster, Flat 6, 5 Sillwood Street, Brighton BN1 2LG.
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It is to do with the killing of girl babies in China - Mei Ming means "No Name" and was given to one of the children who died. It is something I feel strongly about.
To Name But One
Eyes too old too young
Mei Ming
Uncover me
and lay me bare
for all to see
Mei Ming
Moan for us
and hear
the music of the earth
it is for you
Mei Ming
The sweet waters of the seas
and the warm air
petals of the dawn
and of the dew
it is for you
Mei Ming
Move for us
and feel
the stirring of our hearts
see for us
Mei Ming
and watch our souls
They skim the skies for you
Mei Ming
And at the end
you turn your watchful gaze
you moan, you move, you see
you hear
a still, calm voice
and we remember you
Mei Ming
LUCY ROSS
40!
4 children - 16,13,11,9
Optimist
Montessori trained
OU degree in process
Husband - writer
Tap dancer
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Hill towns of the Val D'Orcia: On Route-Finding, Muddy Boots, Tuscan Soup and John Dewey
As the van rolled south on the drive back from our fall trip in Tuscany, all
the weary freshmen hikers napped soundly. The sun was low in the sky, the road was clear and I had several hours of quiet driving to reflect upon our panoramic hikes between hill towns of the Val D'Orcia. Highlights of the three major hikes across the Tuscan landscape, included getting close to the earth under an autumnal sun and cultivating an esprit d' corps among trip participants as the kids navigated our routes, decided and shopped for food, collaboratively prepared our meals.
My wife Gina and I are big believers in learning by doing. Learning by doing is a fundamental principal in experiential (outdoor/activity) education, and in most of the trips planned at St. Stephen's. This concept is an old one, of course, but it has a lot of staying power and boasts wide-ranging applicability. For example, in his 1916 Education as Experience, learning guru John Dewey states that students learn more about materials studied -- and about themselves -- whenever they do things. Sixty years later, Harvard education professor (and colleague of Edward Steinberg) Jerome Bruner supported the idea of learning by doing in The Basic Structure of a Discipline when he wrote that "the best way to learn history is by behaving the way an historian would." As the miles toward Rome melted away, I was reminded how learning by doing clearly is the fundamental principle behind much of what we do in our lives as teachers both inside and outside the St. Stephen's classrooms. The trip program reflects how learning by doing survives as part of Rev. John Patterson's founding vision for St. Stephen's School over three decades ago...
Our first hike began at the Romanesque abbey church of Sant'Antimo. While little is left of the monastery complex purportedly founded by Charlemagne, the church with its Volterran alabaster is one of the jewels in the Tuscan crown. Along olive tree- and grape vine-lined paths, we ascended the hills for 10 kilometers to reach the castle at Ripa D'Orcia. Most students took turns in map-reading and trail-finding. Once defended by the Sienese during the Renaissance wars, the Ripa D'Orcia castle gate stood open, unguarded from our noisy entrance. Mr. DeAngelis "covered us" from his perch on the castle ramparts. Back at our comfortable agriturismo farmstead outside of Pienza, hiking boots were unlaced and a hearty pasta and salad meal was prepared and shared by all.
The second day afforded us an even longer hike -- 14 hilly kilometers from Bagno Vignoni to Pienza. Our hike was preceded by a therapeutic foot soak in the steaming sulfur springs bubbling through the tiny town of Bagno Vignoni.
Our cross-country trek offered stunning views, but it also included several hours of slogging across soggy farm fields, muddy after the previous evening's rain. The clay of the Tuscan soil built up and formed "platform boots." The mud slowed us down and even obscured trail markings for our intrepid orienteerers with their maps in hand. The final upward piece into Pienza, however, was rewarded with some spectacular views and an ice cream snack. Now famous for its peccorino cheese, Pienza once was a sleepy, unremarkable hamlet called Corsignano. That was until native son Enea Silvio Piccolomini, the scholarly Pope Pius II, hired Alberti's disciple Rosellini to transform "Pienza" into the model of a Renaissance city. Back at the agriturismo, with muscles aching just a little a bit more, a homemade Tuscan-style bean soup took the chill out of the evening and some chicken on the grill completed another fine meal.
Our final day supplied us with sunny vistas on the windswept, steep trails between Pienza to Montepulciano. Along this 10-kilometer stretch, we had to support each other as we descended and climbed some of the steepest hills on our adventure. Knees creaked and backs strained as we rounded out our 32-kilometer hiking tour. Lunch was particularly satisfying as the hikers collectively produced a veritable feast from their day packs as we sat on a hill next to an abandoned farmhouse. Our vistas back toward Pienza were surpassed only by glimpses of Montepulciano ahead. As we hiked together toward the last historic and scenic hill town on our trip, and the students were consulting each other with their maps and encouraging each other with their words, it became clear to me how organic the connection between education and personal experience really can be.
CHARLES TIERNEY
Charlie Tierney teaches history and is the the director of studies for the St. Stephen's School in Rome, Italy. He lives with his wife Gina and 9 month-old son Finnian in the school's boarding department and has been involved in St. Stephen's trip program for the past two years. He has taught and coached in American independent schools for the past 14 years.
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CREIGHTONS NATURALLY
The first leg of the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race 1989/90
To the Doldrums
On Saturday 2nd September 1989, Town Quay in Southampton woke up early. Before 07:00 hrs all the crews were working hard on the final
loading of the boats and the removal of all unnecessary weight. There were many tearful good-byes in amongst the apparent chaos of the final preparations.
After 5 months of anticipation, competition, training and preparation I was (almost) on my way. At 09:00 Crieightons moved down Southampton Water, the last time the majority of us were to touch land for over 34 days. The mood on board was frivolous, toasting and cheering all the other competitors as we passed them on our way (under engine) to the start ..... 12:15 and we swept past the starting line in the back third of the fleet amongst, seemingly, thousands of spectator boats.
Beyond the Needles the spectator fleet evaporated and the 23 boats headed South and into the sunset.
Life quickly settled into routine with the 4 hour watches dominating, 3 watches of six crew each. I was destined to be a member of the 04:00 'till 08:00 watch, soon christened the 'Master Blasters' by the rest of the crew due to the insistence of our youthful sail trimmer that we proceed with every square foot of sail up, regardless of any other consideration.
The watch routine was one of helming in turn - in the worst weather only 4 or 5 of us - sail trimming to obtain maximum boat speed, sail changing and packing when necessary, and on deck maintenance of the fittings, sheets (ropes) halyards and winches.
From the second morning out we were alone apart from numbers of commercial craft heading up the Channel. The winds were variable giving us average speeds of 4.7 to 9.5 knots over 24 hour runs during the first week. We saw pilot whales just before dawn on most days and on a couple of occasions were accompanied by small schools of Dolphins - common variety!
Nearly all was downwind sailing, under mainsail plus one of the 6 large spinnakers and, occasionally, with the blooper flying as well - a superb sight with these huge sails dwarfing the seemingly small 80ft yellow hull.
On the fourth day, in strong winds in the darkness before dawn, a large rolling wave caused us to undergo an inadvertent gybe (the boom smashing across the boat from one side to the other) and a steel preventer line whipped across catching two of us behind the thighs. I was slightly bruised and Malcolm suffered heavy bruising and a nasty gash on the back of one leg.
Later on during the same watch the spinnaker car crashed down its track on the mast, breaking the end of the casting. We repaired that break but during the following night the casting on the other spinnaker car sheared and the pole drove back through the mainsail. The larger of our two yellow tri-radial spinnakers also suffered major damage when it wrapped around the forestay and ripped side to side. The clutch on the desalination plant (vital for our fresh water) also failed and the decision was made to call in at Tenerife and pick up a spare clutch plus three spare spinnaker cars which were to be flown out.
Cooking and cleaning duties were carried out on a Mother Watch system, one person from each watch spending a day below decks out of the watch-keeping rota. This did not include Watch Leaders or Sail Trimmers. In normal conditions we would do Mother Watch every fifth day and, on a number of occasions, this dropped to every fourth day while the sailmakers were taken out to rebuild yet another spinnaker.
Food on board was superb. Two of the crew had been responsible for the provisioning and had done an excellent job. Every morning for 4 of the 5 weeks we served porridge or cereal, followed by either sausage, bacon or egg on successive days and, on Sunday, all three. Lunch tended to be a light meal of cheese/tuna (from the tin!)/pasta/salami together with salad. Dinner varied, consisting of both vegetarian and meat dishes and, on Sunday, a roast with dessert and wine. (By the end of the leg the boat had lost a great deal of weight in terms of food used. However, most of the crew had put on 2 to 3 kilos of body weight). In addition, each crew had a piece of fruit and a well known confectionery bar daily and, at intervals, bags of sweets or mixed nuts appeared for a treat.
On the seventh day out I was hoisted up to the mast head 110 feet above the water to free a jammed halyard. The degree of swing even in those relatively light airs was extensive although the view of 'With Integrity' was superb - our cruiser class competitor bearing down behind us with blooper and star cut spinnaker flying. I failed to free the halyard, eventually getting it done by feeding it down through the mast, out at the bottom and back round the top again. All that day 'Integrity' caught up however hard we trimmed and concentrated on boat speed, and by evening she was to the West and about 4 miles astern. At night we lost her but the next morning she was level and 8 or 9 miles to the West, disappearing during the morning.
Our call at Santa Cruz in Tenerife was uneventful, 45 mins from breakwater in to breakwater out, less than 10 minutes alongside and most of that out of politeness to the agent who insisted on going to get us the previous day's English papers. They were, however, most welcome.
The sea changed from a deep blue in the Bay of Biscay to an angry angry green as we sailed down the coast of Africa. Off the N.W. corner of Spain we picked up a Wagtail and a number of other birds and also thousands of flies which took 3 or 4 days to get rid of. On deck one morning we found a small squid and on most days a number of flying fish - the latter were the only fish we caught and were excellent grilled, if rather salty.
Washing wasn't a problem on this leg. The weather was hot enough to wash on deck, in fact too hot for much of the time to wash down below in the 'heads' anyway. As the showers in the heads drained straight into the bilges and then had to be pumped out, their use was banned and everyone used a bucket on the after deck. Salt water shampoo worked very well but we lost two buckets over the side as they were wrenched from people's grasp as the boat raced along at speed. Clothing was also washed on deck and then the usual rinsing method was to tie them onto a line and trail this astern for a few minutes - some articles of clothing vanished as well.
We went through the middle of the Canaries while 'Integrity' went out to the West and, with a good following wind running between the islands, we stretched out ahead. We managed to blow out the fourth spinnaker on the 12th day giving the sailmakers more work to do, again it was blowing only just over half the recommended wind speed - design fault?
We arrived at the Northern edge of the Doldrums at 16N as we approached the Cape Verde Islands off Senegal in West Africa one evening. I was helming at over 11 knots with the lee rail buried when a squall hit us. We dropped the headsail for a smaller one with 24 knots of wind across the deck and, within 20 minutes, the wind died away to 3 knots going round in a circle. We wallowed in the swell watching the sunset to the West wondering how long it would take us to get through.
The last Twenty Days, from the Doldrums
On the following day 15th September, the wind picked up slightly and we managed a noon to noon run of 132m, our best to date having been 229. Our intended course was to have been SW through the most obvious 'cut' between the Cape Verdes. However, we were caught by a wind shift during the night and were forced to run down the east side of the island chain running SSW. During the latter part of the day, we left the main islands behind and turned SW to cross the Atlantic at its narrowest point, from the bulge of Africa to the bulge of S. America. It was a funny feeling.
It was beginning to get extremely hot and humid and there were usually more off-watch crew sleeping out on deck than there were on-watch crew.
In these conditions of high temperatures, high humidity and low wind strengths, life below deck was unbearable - sweat breaking out with the least exertion. Even the bunks, especially upper ones like mine directly under the decking were hot, airless and getting pretty 'high'. The underside of the deck 30" above the bunk was too hot to touch during the day and even with all seven hatches open the temperature remained at 38°C, 100°F.
Washing my sleeping bag liner did not help a great deal either! To conserve fresh water all taps except one (a foot pump in the galley) were turned over to salt water intake. Hence all washing, cooking, washing up, tooth scrubbing was carried out in salt water. (It occurred to me on a number of occasions when scrubbing my teeth or cooking vegetables that I hoped the designer of the boat had got the salt water intakes in the hull well away from the outlets from the 'heads' (loos). It was worrying that the galley was towards the stern! However hard washing was wrung out and allowed to dry it always felt clammy due to the salt crystals, and in these temperatures was uncomfortable to come in contact with.
Off-watch was spent on deck during the day moving from shade patch to shade patch provided by the mast, sails, anything. On-watch in the open cockpit was hard. The deck was too hot to touch, clothes were unbearable to put on, and suntan lotion and sunblock (Creightons products of course) dripped off with the sweat almost as soon as they were applied.
On the second, third and fourth days in the Doldrums, we managed reasonable daily runs although the heat got on everyone's nerves. In an attempt to raise spirits we continued our habit of an hour or so 'choir practice' on deck every few evenings prior to dinner. This was accompanied by whisky for those who liked it, made up powdered orange juice (Jo's bargain) for those who did not, and mixed nuts from somewhere in Jo/Dave's secret storage for those who were hungry. As the quality of voice even appeared to drive the clouds away, we arranged a speaker on deck with tape accompaniment. The usual was sea shanties.
On Sunday 17th September, we spotted a turtle swimming a couple of hundred yards off our starboard beam, pulling ahead of us. During the afternoon the wind dropped to 0. The boat speed dropped to less than one knot and 15 of the crew dropped over the side into the Atlantic. It was bliss. The sea was deep deep blue and beyond the measuring capability of our echo sounder, over 240 metres or 780 feet. Our position was more than 500 miles W of the coasts of Guinea and Senegal, 10N 24W, yet a swallow stayed with us a short while to rest before flying on. I stayed in the water for almost 2 hours enjoying the coolness and freshness before we all got on board again for tea.
That evening we had a series of rain squalls. It was eerie in the dark listening to the staccato drumming of the rain and wind off the port bow. It took a long time to reach us and when it did the effect of the wind was dampened (literally) by the bullet like raindrops. People materialised from below in various stages of dress/undress to take advantage of a decent fresh water shower, and a line of people stood underneath the boom taking in the heavy rainwater collected off the mainsail, 1500 sq.ft of catchment area. As suddenly as they arrived, the squalls passed over leaving a few unlucky ones fully lathered up with nothing but salt water to rinse with.
In these still airs we often reduced to mainsail only to avoid damaging any of our headsails/ spinnakers against the rigging as they hung limply or flapped occasionally in the random wind flurries. For two days we dropped our main sail also and hoisted the reserve one which had come extremely second hand and free of charge from an American maxi yacht.
Monday, 18th September was the pits, 48 miles for the 24 hour run.
The main consolation on watch during darkness were the stars, with little wind and therefore little cloud, the night sky was an amazing sight with the constellations 'moving' position as we tracked south across the equator and into the Southern Hemisphere. The sighting of the Southern Cross each night was awe inspiring.
On Tuesday our 24 hour run was 76m, Wednesday 133m, Thursday 114m, then Friday only 53m. Depression on Friday, the only light relief coming from Schlussel von Bremen off our starboard beam talking on VHF radio with Integrity off our port beam, each thinking that we were the other - we could see both of them but due to the horizon they could not see each other. We kept very quiet!
The wind started to build that night, we were in the SE tradewinds and therefore out of the Doldrums. Eight days to pass through 700m of ocean, still 200m to the Equator.
Life picked up with the breeze. In general we were keeping Integrity behind us and sailing on a close reach. This meant that life was uncomfortable with 10 - 30 degrees of heel, hour in hour out. It was also touch and go as to whether we should sail faster with headsail or spinnaker and Martin kept us active by constantly changing from one to the other - the record was 10 hoists and drops in a 2 hour 40 minute period.
We also celebrated by bringing out the last bottles of whisky and gin from their hiding places and having another evening choir practice. I also saw my first Albatross, fairly small with 2.5 ft. wingspan.
On Sunday at 00:15 hrs most of us came on deck for the actual Equator crossing and watched the navigation system count down to 0 degrees N and then 'go negative'. As I was on deck I got involved with the duty watch in a sail change, teach me to be in the wrong place.
The next afternoon the Skipper, Navigator and young Martin prepared to do the honours and welcome the 17 of us deemed newcomers into King Neptune's domain. We were sent below while they prepared and all 17 of us headed forward and locked ourselves in front of the watertight bulkhead in the bow section, the front 12 feet of the boat. On the helm Martin could not understand why the trim of the boat altered so drastically. He understood when they found us, 1.25 tons of ballast moved from aft to the very bow! One by one we were ordered on deck, blindfolded and led along to be seated on one of the large winches. We were then welcomed with a mouth and hair wash consisting predominantly of peanut butter, stale mouldy bread, chilli powder and tabasco sauce, rinsed off with diluted washing up liquid and a couple of buckets of seawater.
We saw far more dolphins now, mainly Spinners, and more Albatross' and Petrels. Also on one occasion the incongruous sight of four small black and white ducks swimming in convoy exactly as if they were on the village pond. As we bore down on them at nine knots they did not wait to see if there were any bread crusts on offer but flew off into the distance. Also sighted a whale about a mile astern appearing as a vague black hump with a few plumes of spray.
The winds were now a great deal better averaging 15 or more knots across the deck. On Wednesday, 27th September we achieved what was to be our best 24 hour run, 272 miles, only three short of our target for opening a presentation bottle of 10 year old Scotch.
It was also an eventful day. I gained my 'first' in the sail tearing competition, on the helm, when the No. 2 headsail ripped on the foot. Depression settled in also when Integrity appeared with the dawn not far astern of us and paced behind all day.
That night we had more sail failure with the Drum spinnaker tearing again and the halyard shackle then breaking and depositing the replacement storm spinnaker in the ocean. We also managed to tear the foot of the mainsail. We then held Integrity until the lightweight spinnaker went, and with an inferior sail up they gained to stand about half a mile off our port beam at dusk. All night we ran neck and neck but in the early hours of the 28th day at sea we bore away down the correct 'rhumb' line for Uruguay.
In so doing we lost boat speed but Integrity did not move to cover us for over 4 hours, and by then we had approximately 8 miles over them which we never lost.
Some thrilling sailing down the coat of Brazil but very little shipping although we passed down the outer edge of the Pampo oilfield in the dark. Oil platforms on all sides of us. There were also a number of potentially dangerous events which occurred, usually when we were hit by 'Pamperos', squalls, which arrived seemingly out of nowhere. One of the crew almost got flicked overboard when she got on the wrong side of the spinnaker sheet during a hoist. She ended up with rope burns round the back of her knee and only the quick action of the crewman on the winch saved her from a broken leg or being thrown overboard.
We were also hit by a pampero after dark, already with a reef in the main. The squall snapped the reef line and while we were desperately attempting to get the second reef line in, the spinnaker net snapped. The storm spinnaker wrapped around the forestay and blew out, 7m from the middle of it blowing away into the Atlantic. We then gybed to get on a more favourable course but unfortunately gybed back breaking the starboard running backstay block, and the reefed main hanging below the boom nearly swept two crew over the side.
Three days out from Uruguay we were caught out by our strongest winds yet. The afternoon watch had been particularly exhilarating and with 10 minutes to go to changeover (and supper) we were sitting on deck enjoying sunset when Martin on the helm yelled for headsail drop. He had read the clouds correctly and even though we were on the foredeck and starting to drop the sail, in less than 20 seconds the wind increased from 20 knots to over 40 before we got it to the deck. We immediately took in a double reef in the main and as the wind was also swinging in direction we tacked to keep on course. We hung on in the cockpit sailing under double reefed main alone at over 11 knots with the wind at 50 - 54 knots. Then down to supper about half an hour late.
Early morning calms were also a feature off the coast of Brazil and our last morning was no exception. We drifted at 2 - 3 knots on the early watch in the mouth of the River Plate and came close inshore to take advantage of the land breeze. We picked up and ran hard for the finish at Punta del Este. Events were not over. We flew our spinnaker as a huge yellow flag and had to bear away to get it down before heading up the last mile to finish. The wind was increasing all the time and was over 34 knots as we crossed the line at 19:40:30 GMT after 34 days at sea, 5,092 miles, average speed 7.39 knots.
Passing down the line of boats already in was an exhilarating feeling. Their crews appeared on decks cheering, clapping and sounding foghorns. We had come 17 out of the 23 boats in the fleet, 8 days behind the leaders but most importantly we led With Integrity by over 23 hours.
My first beer for 33 days was fantastic..........
Postscript:
Steinlager 2 (Peter Blake) won all 6 legs.
All 15 crew were rescued from the capsized hull of Martela O.F. 126m off the Argentine coast by two of the other Maxis, Merit and Charles Jourdan.
Creightons Naturally won the Cruiser Division from With Integrity (Great Britain II, in her 5th Whitbread).
Maiden (Tracey Edwards) the first all women crew to compete won legs 2 and 3 in her Class.
As a tragic reminder of the dangers of ocean racing, at 03:45 on 12th November, two crew members of 'Creightons Naturally' were washed overboard in the South Atlantic with sea temperatures of 7C. Both were wearing VHF radio direction beacons and were picked up in 30 minutes. Bart Van Den Dwey lived, our Belgium Sail Trimmer. Tony Phillips, Watch Leader of the 'Master Blasters' was unable to be resuscitated and was buried at sea.
DAVID TOWNSEND
Now 42. In 1989 a 33 year old dinghy sailing planning brewer with two sons. This was a practical romantic challenge to gain selection for something previously viewed as unobtainable. Done, completed, enjoyed - then able to contemplate midlife with equanimity.
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DISCUS
I am a painter and print-maker. It is my primary economic activity, and it is one of the main ways in which I define myself. But my formal art training stopped at O Level, and this worries some people. They feel that I cannot be a real artist if I did not go to art school. Would you go to a doctor who had not been to medical school? Or a solicitor who had not been to law school?
Sometimes it worries me. I contemplate the possibility of Art A Level on Wednesday evenings. Or how about a two-year part-time foundation course? Or there is the new five-year part-time degree course at the College. I could even commute into London twice a week for a MA.
At school, my one sporting success was a remarkable and unexpected ability to throw the discus, which caused me to be elevated me to the Senior Athletics Team. The games teacher made some attempts to alter and improve my throwing style and technique. Although I was not unwilling to be taught, these attempts simply had no effect. She left me to get on with it on my own, and wrote in my report that I "continued to throw the discus with apparent ease".
CALLY TRENCH
Cally Trench was born and brought up in a series of London suburbs. She studied Chemistry at Oxford, where she met the mother of the editor of this website. After three years as a civil servant in London and Hong Kong, she became a full-time painter and a part-time teacher. She now lives in High Wycombe with her husband and two young children. Her paintings are concerned with looking down onto water and sand, and with childhood, such as liquorice allsorts, shells, sandcastle flags and ice lollies.
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HELPING WOMEN TO GIVE BIRTH
PUSH! PUSH! PUSH! Here it comes! Well done,it's a boy!/It's a girl!
These are the familiar words we associate with giving birth delivered by a midwife with a stentorian voice.
But being with a mother as she gives birth involves more than giving these commands. Above all it is a privilege to share such a special precious moment- we are all born only once in our lives- there is no repeat performance. Video cameras can produce a film of the event but have yet to capture the total experience; the real sweat, the real pain, the wonderful smell of newness.
The midwife is there at the beginning of our life's journey; she will have ensured that we are developing within our mother and have prepared her for the imminent birth. 'Midwife' is the Old English word which means 'with woman'; in French she is 'une sage femme'. The English term is focussed on who the midwife helps and is not a description of who or what the midwife does.
Each birth that I have attended has been a miracle in itself; different in many ways- every mother, every baby is an individual. Each time invokes in me a sense of wonder and of suprise!
Labours can be so variable in length and intensity, there are moments of concentrated activity, moments of intense quiet and again moments of intense activity. It is not left to the midwife to hurry events too much but to be aware if Nature needs a helping hand.She must also know when to keep her hands off if Nature's course is doing well. Remember she is to be 'with woman', talking to her,gently encouraging her, praising her, listening to her, watching her. These are qualities which I did not find described in text books but gleaned from other midwives- those with fairly scant experience and those with years of experience. I tried to lighten the pain, lessen the fear and ease the journey in order to practise, in the words of one of our leading contemporary midwives,'Sensitive midwifery'.
When the time of birth arrives the words of encouragement should be the finale of a truly wonder -full experience.
CAROLYN TWOHIG
Carolyn Twohig is a nurse and a midwife who practised midwifery from 1985 to 1994.
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CONTINUED FROM 1ST EDITION
31 Aug 1997
woken at 9 to b
E told about Diana. Huddled around BBC world service which has suspended all programmes. Realised that I was really shocked & quite upset (somewhat to my surprise).Have spent day discussing whether she was malicious and manipulative or tortured and wronged.
It is unbelievable. Esma wishes she were back, I am glad I am not. One of the few icons of our time has been removed.
What are the tabloids to do?
tom
6 Sept 97
Dear Ho.
Diana, Princess of Wales was buried today, here, like the rest of the world. It has been an odd week of the puerile versus the cynical, and set repeatedly against the vista of a suffering world.
I tried not to watch but, (and I hope these sentiments do not age as embarassing self indulgence) but I could avoid neither ceremony nor my tears that followed (to my immense surprise!) (I blame Mr Taverner) She was quite a giant in an era of built up knocked down mediocrity. Its hard to reconcile grief for a woman that I regarded with respect only in passing & that I watched with an apathetic lazy eye. But today has been a washout for me. LODSA love Tom x.
P.S. Esma's enigmatic sister arrived today.
P.P.S. sorry if you got both the Diana memos. Luck o' th' draw!
12th Sept 1997
Hey, it rained today for the first time, somewhat contrary to expectation. surprise was mingled with a joy that I never would have associated with grey clouds. and boy DiD it rain! Everyone was like: "Hey, no man, it's just a shower." - but it was f***ing torrential.
the noise and the sight of water being poured onto tin roofs. swelling and saturating cracked earth and dusty broken grass was as if some error had occured, an accident, a cock up by the God of rain, who'd pressed the wrong button. I felt like people should react, be alarmed or at least amazed. generally show a little more concern than to wonder whether they should just get a jumper or if it would be warmer inside. Insoluble Amazement.
tom.
26th September '97
We drove to Victoria Falls today. 600 miles. 10 hours. Shit roads and little to see. I drove for 4 hours, with only the constant Advice of esma & Sharon to stop me from actually quite enjoying it.
I have not seen the falls and therefore cannot pretend, as Sharon did, that they are magnificent or majestic, but merely say that I have extremely high expectations. sometimes in places such as these, it is quite hard to see. |One only looks, as if through a camera lens, in two dimensions, records for posterity and marks it down in postcard & diary.
It is hard to stop. To realise that what you are in, where you are, is not just special (for that can be anywhere) but magical. A place that exceeds views and touches spirit. A place that goes beyond reality. in other words is UNREAL. constant yet so massive that my tiny brain cant begin to fit it in. I am still surprised when I hear its roar at night.
PS I lied. I saw it tomorrow. But I only realised this next week.
t x
7th October.97
Dear Ho.
Esma has been confounding herself with handicrafts for the past two days. Her attempts to create a beautiful, chic, handmade lamp have led to 5 blown fuses, 3 cold dinners, several explosions of temper, one runaway (-Tom, entirely justified), numerous hours of semi-wasted time, some very bad jokes, some equally unpleasant frustrated screaming, an ungainly collection of hammers, saws & pliers, and not quite the lamp that I think Esma had in mind.
Very little fun was had by anyone at all. Esma has not grasped the premise that these things never ever look like you thought they would. Nor are they "easy, half an hour, hey presto." she is determined that this is other peoples fault. i.e. me. I have made a fun/wobbly chinese lantern. Es is on her second go. I am refusing to help.
Love Tom x
15th Oct.97.
DeAr Ho.
Have DeciDed! Vegetarians to oMnivores are As atheists to Christians.
Both trying to convert the other on the grounds that the other is wrong in his beliefs.
Christian to Atheist. "You are wrong"
Ae to Ch. "No, I've thought about it & this is what I believe." Ch: "But you're wrong" - & vice versA. Over & over again Meat, religion, football. All the same. Noone listens to soMeone who siMply dismisses what they believe. in dividuals are capable of being influenced, persuaded or just changing their mind. But only the weak will be bullied into it. Hence a pleA to the oMnivores of the world to leave Me alone. (oh & the Ch. actually.)
that was: "Thought for the Day" Love Tom x
23rd October.
DeArest Ho.
The weAther hAs changed.
After A week of seriously unseasonal cloud & rAin the sun has arrived an' it is Hot! HOT. In HarAre its averAging around 32ish but elsewhere up to the 40's. Science and religion blend seemlessly in conversation. "Screilingionce" El Nino pips Global warMing to the post & then wees on it. (An almost deific figure) "Who is "El Nino"?" More person than Cloud formation. A god. Malignant, menacing & Destructive. The fate of the country rests in his hands. How staggering to realise that the weather can outgun economic policy. Viva El Nino crackpot dictator to the world. Much (love/heart) toM xx
Tue 11th Nov 97.
DeAr Ho.
Have just discovered how bananas should taste. I aM always suspicious when that is soMeone's opening gaMbit when proferring fooD. But. Wow. Yeh. they taste like bAnnana's, but like bananas tatse when you are totally stoned (ask ya folks?) No dry floury pale bland, freeze dried bannana flavoured Mush. This short, squat discoloured cousin revealed fruit that firMly but juicily explodes on the tongue like a perfect summer strAwberry. fresh & flavoursome a lingering perfect aftertaste, that whispers sunlight filled secrets over your palette. If you think I exaggerate I dont blame you. You may never know more than EC regulated Fife strAighties. You eArn my pity for your suffering. (or am I just stoned?) I am off to gaze at the bunches hanging beAutifully in the kitchen. Love & kisses tom x
(17 Nov)
ZesA have blown up the centre of Harare,. Had ZesA been, as their name evokes, a liberation terrorist guerilla outfit armed to the teeth, this may have been World News. As they are, instead, the electric co. for Zim., it did not. However, the resultant carnage of this inefficiency/incompetency/ idiocy in allowing their main transformer to explode has been equivalent. No business, no traffic lights. No lights! Here in the suburbs we are smug/snug & it is funny. But after two days of the ATM's being back on (!!!) I was unsurprised to find them not only down again, but every VISA transaction being Telexed!! to London. "Fortune" the bank clerk, smiled broAd & said "Ah in Zimbabwe it is always something." tom x
TOM UGLOW
Tom Uglow is a 21 yr old who has lived his entire life in Canterbury and Oxford surrounded by loving, if often somewhat deranged, friends and family. His genes rest in Law and English Literature/ Publishing but through a process of elimination he reluctantly calls himself an artist. He is currently enjoying an illuminating extended visit to Zimbabwe and although he has no plans other than eventually returning, is open to suggestions.
In his dreams he wishes to pursue his passions of art and books and earn money combining the two, whilst listening to a lot of music. He is a friendly Virgo who also plays rugby and is a vegetarian. Any int. replys to esma @spicer.icon.co.zw (please inc. photo)
HJN: Tom Uglow contributed a diarist's string of postcards and a less structured article on being a Brit new to Africa to the 1st edition of FTW.
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Dear Hero,
I received the information concerning your magazine through my English teacher, who received it from Michael Lee. I am a 13th grade student at the school and your idea touched me. I have always wanted to start my own magazine, but I have very little time. Much of my spare time is taken up with writing poetry, which is one of my great loves (Please excuse any typing or grammar mistakes, I am using a French keyboard which is rather disconcerting). I am sending you one of my poems, and would be thrilled to send you more. All of my poetry comes from personal experiences, however it is mostly abstract.. well, I consider it rather abstract. Please feel free to do whatever you wish with my poetry, and if you would like some more, do not hesitate to ask.
I use the internet regularly and have a personal e-mail address:
eric.van-der-wal@itu.ch
Please feel free to contact me here at any time if you wish. I am also taking the liberty to send your letter and request to two schools in Australia with which I have connection. The University of Newcastle, where my aunt is a part of the Study Skills unit, and my old International Baccalaureate School, Narrabundah College in Canberra, both of whom I know will be interested. I will endevour to respond to any correspondence rapidly. Please excuse my forwardness, but I saw speed as neccessary.
This is one of my favorite of my own poems, and it is taken from some personal experience (dreams).
Reality
Corner of my mind I see,
Things that keep on chasing me,
Lines and textures they may be,
To me they are Reality.
The closing in of three dimensions,
Using all their own inventions,
Lines I cannot cross; conventions,
To me it is Reality.
Dreaming technicolour dreams,
Life of pinks and reds and greens,
Nothing is just what it seems,
To me it is Reality.
Split infinity, hopeless capability,
Rolling and rolling till we reach Ability,
Time to set your spirit free,
A state of mind: Reality.
With the best of wishes,
Sarah van der Wal.
SARAH VAN DER WAL
see above. HJN.
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as the momment dictates...
here in Ian's shed in sarf London. Well what can I say ? FROM THE WINDOW is a triumph. You have created a mag which veers from thing to thing with great ease and excitment. It sits on the web but is just as happy on paper (no java nonsence bouncing about) I am touched that Ian has sent you something - is great.
MUST see you soon
LOVE X X X
Chris
CHRIS YOUNG
Chris Young works in IT but is something of an artist. He was generous enough to drive us to the Hebrides of Scotland in February, more tales of which might follow...HJN.
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Recollections: Part 2. Home
Our home is a 200 year old semi-detached house built of red brick and kent peg tiled roof with too busy a road outside at the front droning cars most daytime weekdays and a larger southfacing garden to the rear chock-a-block with fragrances and birdsong. Originally it would have been a mile beyond the city walls of Canterbury and well within view of the magnificent cathedral of sandy stone but now post war suburban homes tie us into the city and also divide us from the open country. Spring is cooing madly in the garden and the palest golden sunbeams are playing on the new leaves. It merges in my mind with a rippling piano and I surge out restlessly into the blue yonder floating next to the big flappy rook that is building its nest at the top of the ancient pine just beyond our garden fence. The rook caws of rurality and not suburban living and is most welcome because of it. I hear it in the early morning while I am still abed and watch it as it soars off to join the others up the hill beyond the university (where dad is Dean of Humanities) up to the rookery in the woods where rolling English fields begin....the sea lies on another 5 miles north, lined by little colourful beach huts and endless bungalows full of retired folks and amusement arcades and steeply shelving, relentlessly moving flint-stone beaches - a far cry from the wilderness quiets of Scotland (of which more below).
I used to consider the university grounds wild, and had a wonderful childhood there among the bluebell woods and kited braes and slithering sledgeing slopes and ponds with tadpoles kingfishers and flags always eagerly anticipated. There's a very tiddly sized stream where we used to play pooh sticks on a farm bridge and I dreamt sunny dreams of future songs and choral works (now written out on paper) and a pretty country church with a terribly English churchyard and skylarks wittering merrily overhead....but then I lost myself to Heidi and Little House on the Prairie and thought far away places were somehow happier. Foolish child! It was a very very happy time.
I was of course disappointed when I first went abroad and discovered the sameyness of places (eg supermarkets) and it took a while to overcome my dismay that the Alps were so tidied up and yet so chill and drear and misty day after day after day in midsummer, but Italy hit the spot and enlivens my moody days. When I first visited St Marks in Venice and tasted the golden gloom of the interior, a thousand tourists treading by disturbed my calm sleep not one bit, jolted my repose not one bit, and the refreshment gained from such calms acts like a lure or a drug, demands revisiting. And so I have paid three visits to Venice and three times attended Mass (though I am not Catholic) to hear the choir and the bells ringing out into that golden gloom of gorgeous harmony. Yet what I've found most entrancingly "of me" there, is the lulling ocean made gentle vaulting azure aloft city dancing like a mirage far off on the horizon and me adrift in a bobbing boat hung amidst fragrant song and brilliant hot whispering wind alone within my imagination and far from feeling alone. Within the city all the walls decay marvellously into crimsons merging into mauves and greens and highlighted by midday dazzle lacing ripples of gold onto the facades high up high up above the canals....
Hot calm cool fury
calm cool fury
hot
I detest the cold and finds it thwarts my yearning need to be out of doors. I feel more myself under the sky than at any other time and breathe deep of the fragrant winds of song that seem to fill me with a sense of unaloneness: I suppose I find my spirituality fed by quiet wilderness and stressed by urban blare. I love to visit the Hebrides in Scotland treading in my mother's childhood steps and gleaning from the greys a buoyancy. I used to find it incomprehensible how my mother grinned and felt restored by barren drizzled chill stone but I had a truly awesome summer two years ago when I made a journey of the soul through shimmering silver sealochs and whispering ocean's gentle lulling song brought close by impenetrable mists and wildly whooping whaups, and ravens clacking overhead in huge black fringed wing`ed swinging flight and a seal close by transferring weighty blubber from rock to silent deep with the strangest of balletic movements and scarce a ripple. The mind has grown a ballet for oboe piano and cello plus dancer and narrator out of this summer in the isles and it was being rehearsed for performance of musical extracts by fellow students at the Royal Academy of Music postgraduate concert when my place there abruptly terminated last year and threw me into deep depression.
I've visited the same village on the same isle two further times since then to search for the silver seas but ne'er a drop of silver is there there but more and greater love. The community we stay in natters madly from hour to hour and everything hinges on the school shop and kirk. I meet with folk who include me. It's novel. But it's not at all a quaint community because it's hitched up to net and fax and revitalised by in-migrants and it's thrivingly aware of its difficulties, and its mesmerising qualities. The natives stand and watch the storm clouds rolling by and talk about how truly lucky they feel to be living there. One bus driver stood in the rain in darkest February and said that he felt as if he'd died and gone to heaven when his boss arranged a birthday treat of a job transfer to Mull. This sort of palpable happiness is amazing to a girl brought up in stiff upper lip southern England where the idea of living amongst blizzards and winter gales seems perverse in the extreme.
The glittery blue days of summer sun run the mind back into Celtic traditions of sailing from isle to visible isle and drawing sustenance from the plenty in the sea. There's a wonderful fringing of machair where the peat is overlain by windblown sand from ocean's grinding shores that lends itself to fragrant wild flowers and grazing herds and wintering homesteads of sturdy hewn rock solidly sheltering in modern cosy comfort the sailors home from the sea. The sea is the ancient highway respected friend not foe and its bubbling songs stir me to a frenzy of delightedness, the bounding boat like a leaping dolphin (that brought sickness to my mother) brought real gleed laughter from my throat and rippling piano music to my mind.
When I am thus content my disability is but a nuisance, a thwarting of my running free and wildly flinging out my songs, a thwarting of my deep desire to put up sail and bob forever free of cumbersome land. I adore the tonal equalities of sky and sea, of rock and cloud, of shore and sunset - the balanced above and below and self poised betwixt the two. Quiet silver sealochs, gently bubbling burns, brilliant bare rock: I find Scotland is a place of symphonic sound huge braying billowing orchestrated building blocks sturdy crystalline forms with tones turned by clear cut facets into kaleidescopic brainstorming....the view from my window at home calms my wild spirit into southern sheltered havens of industry - I come home to work after such feasting. I am preoccupied with quiet preoccupied with finding space to unravel the coils of crotchets and tone tone tones spread out without disruption the strings the yarns the enigma of osmosis...salt the beachcombing into distilled lots
HERO JOY NIGHTINGALE
I am an eleven year old girl with a locked-in syndrome caused by a profound apraxia of all my muscles and the retention of dominant babyish reflexes. I am a wheelchair user and need complete care. I cannot make voluntary sounds and therefore cannot speak. Spelling is my greatest delight as it affords me the freedom to direct the course of my life. I crave acceptance as a really quite ordinary person, with an artistic temperament and a nice enough personality. On the whole I prefer adult company to kids', and my own company to 'most any other. I am bloody-mindedly independent and rarely acknowledge the wisdom of my mother's grey years.
I live in England, in the same town as I was born in but I love my mother's native land of Scotland even more. I also find Venice hard to eradicate from my mind, it swims like a tantalising mirage on my horizon informing my tastes and swelling my longing need to be truly me. I yearn to visit with people beyond Europe but have not a lot of dosh available for such sojourns.
I need quiet. I hear music in my head a great deal of the time in a way I have come to accept is unusual. I was a composition student on a part-time Intermediate place at the Royal Academy of Music in London, participating alongside the undergraduate and graduate students when I was 9 years old, but they abruptly terminated my place and thrust me into a terrible depression.
I am currently looking forward to holding an exhibition of my installation art in Canterbury next July and to seeing this magazine flight forward with some life of its own.
I rarely am brave enough to admit my age. For me this is my "coming out".
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Our next issue's guest columnist is the Secretary General of the
United Nations, Kofi Annan
Your contributions alphabetically arranged
including Being Irish, part 2; a trip across Oz
Part Three
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The Editor would like to thank Canterbury Christ Church College, and Kent Education Authority for providing resources that enable this magazine to be published. I am most appreciative of the IT work for this edition undertaken by my very dear pal Chris Young. My mother has been an energetic assistant typing and proof-reading upon request, buoying me through the bad times and always letting me follow my own inclination.
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