IF YOU CAN REMEMBER THEM...
The
sixties.
It has been said, too often, that if you can remember the
sixties you weren't there. I can remember them well enough and that
says it all. Never in my life smoked pot or wore flowers in my hair
and, from my mid-twenties onwards, had little time for the music of
the day. Was never a 'teenager' for that matter; they came later.
Back in the forties you were just a spotty adolescent. Never lived
in a tented commune with the smell of damp clothes and cannabis and
free love, either. Might have been a nicer person if I had; but no,
all that passed me by. I wasn't there.
Met my Leader for the first
time in 1961 (she tells me). We first went out the day the Berlin
Wall went up. I'm not sure whether that signifies anything. We drove,
in my Fiat 600, to a pub out in the country that she “had heard was
quite nice.” When we got there the owner of the shop where she
worked and one of his male assistants just happened to be “having a
drink” in the lounge bar. What a coincidence! We had a pleasant
evening and as I drove her back home I realized, in silent amusement,
that I had just passed the first test: had I not I would have been
driving alone and her boss or his assistant would have escorted her
home. You'd have to be a complete moron not to admire feminine guile
like that.
The following year we were married: sold the Fiat
(complete with fog lights and abarth dual exhaust) to help fund it.
Went on honeymoon to Cornwall in a hired Mini with bald tires. Nobody
gave a sod in those days. Later bought a former McDonald's fisheries
van to drive to and from work. Cats followed me around for months.
Well, I like cats. Mo found work with our local newsagent and I
carried on working for the NHS (poor money, but one day there would
be a pension).
It was the year The Beatles recorded their first
single (Love Me Do), and it was the year Marilyn Monroe died (who
knows how). The assassination of JFK in 1963 was less of a surprise
than it might have been. In a country where everyone has the right to
bear arms, the decision to drive the American President into Dallas
in an open car had to be fatally optimistic didn't it? That said, I
don't think any of it affected us much. We were new to married life
and gently happy. At the beginning of February 1964 our son, Neil,
was born at a nursing home in Emsworth, on the Hants/Sussex border.
Towards the end of July, 1965, his sister Jacqueline was born at
home. Back then, hospital - home - hospital were the advised
birthplace venues for successive babies. Might not be the same now.
In the NHS, as in education, the police and all the public services,
the bureaucratic goalposts were (and still are) constantly changing.
It's the prerogative of politicians to meddle and, one way or
another, they always do. If I had a thousand quid for every Minister
of Health (from Derek Walker-Smith onwards) who was a total twat, I'd
be a very rich man. (To be continued)
READING.
I finished Terry
Pratchett's Men At Arms (published by Gollancz) with the smug
self-satisfaction of a man who has come late to Disc World and still
has a load more of the series to read. Do I need to laud the genius
of the late Sir Terence any more? Surely not. If you've read him
you'll know what I mean: if you haven't, get on down to your local
bookshop and spend a few quid. You'll not regret it.
The World
According To Noddy (Constable). Noddy Holder's “life lessons
learned in and out of rock 'n' roll” is an easy read. Lots of
famous name dropping, but if you are as famous as he is you are bound
to have lots of famous names to drop. The man is entirely down to
earth and it is plain that what you see is what you get. I like Noddy
so I liked the book.
Apropos the above: Our son went to the Reading
Rock Festival in 1980 and came back full of how Slade, a last minute
booking, had stolen the show.
“You'd have thoroughly enjoyed it,
Dad,” he said. “Nobody gave them a hope and they turned out to be
the best thing there.” It did not surprise me.
That was the
festival where, as he was leaving, Neil was shoved up against a wall
and searched for drugs by the police. He has never been a smoker -
tobacco or anything else - or a drug user, so must have been chosen
on appearance alone. (In his teens he could look a bit way out.)
Anyway, they found him to be clean and sent him on his way.
I have
already told the next bit many times, so skip it if you've heard it:
I was paternally peeved.
I was paternally peeved.
“Did you take down any of their numbers?”
I asked.
“No, why would I?”
“Because you hadn't done anything
wrong. If they'd done that to me I'd have taken down their numbers
and written a stiff letter of complaint to the Chief Constable about
it.”
He shook his head:
“They wouldn't have done it to you, Dad.
You'd have walked down the middle of the road in your suit, tie and
waistcoat and the only thing they might have said to you is: 'Good
day, sir.'”
A wryly accurate assessment which I doubt would still
apply today.
Enough for now. More fairly soon if my computer hasn't
been packed for a move by then. The cat Shadow, unabashed by age, has
found two new girlfriends next door. I fear he will strongly object
to being shifted.
1 comment:
I can't get over how much like my Mum Mo looks in that picture.
Kelvin
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