Rules for everyday living

‘A Bird is in the library.’ Vale Ross Gibson, to whom I dedicate so many of my recent thoughts. 

My husband’s recipe for peeling onions. You lop off the ends then peel away the outer skin. Next you split your onion lengthwise. And as you slice, you hold one half together, careful to cut almost to the board. Then after you’ve cut the entire half onion length wise, still holding it in one piece, you chop across the other way. Now the diced onion can fall away and with fewer tears.

Hannah Gadsby’s father taught his children to peel carrots from the fat end down. That way he told them, you always have something solid to grip. Not the spindly end. 

My mother taught me about cucumbers. The stubby English variety. In my day, the thick end was bitter. She told me therefore to peel my cucumber from the thicker end down and slice it likewise. 

These cooking tips we learned from parents stay with us in the same way language sticks. Rules for everyday living. 

Hannah Gadsby’s mother was glad she raised her five children without religion. Something to do with her experience growing up with nuns. Whereas my mother felt sorry for anyone growing up without religion and worried endlessly when each of her children in turn strayed from the church. Though at least four of my siblings have raised their children under the Catholic Church’s influence, a decision I find hard to understand. Unlike instructions for cooking, religious rules can hit hard. 

My husband walked into my writing room just now to say goodbye. He’s off to walk with a friend. As he went to leave the room he gently pushed shut two of my filing cabinet drawers.

‘I don’t mind,’ I said. A double entendre. I was forgiving him for interfering with my open drawers even as they bothered him. They did not trouble me. 

‘I know,’ he said, and in the unspoken way of couples who have spent many hours under one another’s influence, he was saying something similar. Forgiveness for my slovenly ways which I do not care so much about, but he does. And recognition of this form of disorder. No accounting for his own disorderly ways.

Listening to Hannah Gadsby’s memoir on the making of Nannette, her show of 2018, I’m in awe at her creative process. The way she writes ideas down and then thinks about them again and again. Trusting they will return to her from prompts written onto cue cards which she arranges in a particular order. An order she shuffles around on stage.

I saw Gadsby perform live twice and on neither occasion did I notice her using cue cards. 

At that first performance after she mixed up the cards by dropping them just before she went on stage, she writes, that everything went smoothly, effortlessly, as if it was all there in her head after all. Hers is a gift I’d love to share but I also know from my children, who learned the art of public speaking, to pull these things off you need to practice. 

I went to a Rotary public speaking performance once years ago, where one of my daughters was speaking. One other young girl stood to take her turn and she froze. She could not remember a single word of her prepared speech. 

The adjudicator, a kind man, suggested she sit out for a bit and return after someone else stood to speak, but when the girl finally took her turn again she was still frozen.

Turns out she’d rote learned the actual words. A huge mistake, I understand. Actual words are too tricky to remember, the older we get. But ideas we can know well. We can go back to them and ad lib on the spot, especially when we have gone over and over the idea. The only thing we need to keep in mind is a checklist of topics to cover. And try to get them in order. To avoid any need for cue cards, it’s good to have only a limited number of topics in mind. This way our thoughts do not run away from us.

The human mind, the way we think, never ceases to amaze me. And when I hear Gadsby talk about her autism and attention deficit disorder, I hear about another mind, sometimes too full of sounds and ideas to manage.

My mind tends to teem too and sometimes when I write I cannot keep up with my thoughts as they lie ahead in wait. Sometimes a thought I had five words ago will be lost when my fingers are ready to write them down. I wish I could type faster. I wish I could think faster. I wish I had a greater hold on images. 

The sandcastles of the unconscious, an expression I heard someone say on the radio yesterday. It comes to me now, Isabel Allende in a program called ‘Letters of healing’. In it she talked about her 1994 book Paula, which I remember well.

Allende’s daughter Paula fell ill in the December of 1991 with porphyria, a rare condition. She was twenty-eight years old and far from home. Something tells me she was on holidays in Rome, but I might be confusing her with someone else. 

I read recently of Hanif Kureishi’s fall in Rome. His legs and arms are now paralysed. He can only dictate his thoughts from his hospital bed into a machine that transcribes them to the world in the form of what he calls his dispatches. 

Paula was in a coma and could nor communicate at all. During that time as her mother sat at her bedside, convinced her daughter would recover, she wrote letters to Paula, as she and her mother had shared letters when she was young, when they lived apart. Afterwards they continued the tradition. Allende wrote thousands of letters to her mother who reciprocated until her death shortly before the pandemic. 

During the program, Allende talked of how she was safeguarding her daughter’s memory through these letters. Allende had read when people woke out of comas they often could not remember their old selves and needed to recover lives afresh. All traces of their previous identity gone. So, she told Paula all the things that made her into who she was.

I cannot imagine such an event, though Allende wrote to her daughter everyday about her daughter’s past, about the hospital and what was happening to her body and other things around them. Then, saddest of all, a year after she fell into her coma, Paula died. 

Allende was gutted and felt she could not go on until her mother told her she must go on writing. So she used the letters to write the book Paula

Some years later in 2004, Joan Didion wrote her Year of Magical Thinking and then her book on the death of her adopted daughter, Quintana, who also died this time at 39, and this time of acute pancreatitis. 

I think again of one of my friends from many years ago who lost two babies when they were each only a few months old and how devastated she had been until she and her husband finally managed to give birth to a healthy daughter. And my friend, a brilliant writer, tried to fictionalise her story into a compelling novella that never saw the light of day because she moved away and as far as I know she gave up writing. I cannot understand why someone who wrote as well as my friend would give up on her writing.

She and I sat side by side in novel writing classes at the Council of Adult Education during the late 1990s and we talked about our respective struggles. I told her the greatest grief I could imagine was to lose a child. She told me she could not imagine anything worse than being the daughter of a father who sexually abused his child. And as we compared notes, each became aware of the other’s grief in a way that made us ever more sensitive to one another’s writing. 

Such tragedies make it hard to understand how people can go on living. The words of Les Murray’s poem to his father come to mind, ‘Don’t die Dad – but they die.’

People die and others go on living until they too die. Hannah Gadsby’s dad has died. Isabel Allende’s mother and daughter have died, and she is now in her eighties, and will no doubt die soon enough, while Hanif Kureishi will go on living for an indeterminate time in a body that will not let him move. Still, he goes on, his mind alive and well, even as his body is useless. 

That’s perhaps the best we can hope to do with our one wild and precious life.

Live it. 

Lost

‘One is quite alone when the last one who remembers is gone.’ Miss Marple.

Last weekend we decided to clear away the last of the bay tree branches left stacked against the back garden wall after roof repairers needed access to the roof to fix a leak and to do so they culled the tree. 

My daughter used loppers to get the branches down to an accessible size while I gathered the off cuts in my arms and plunged them into the green garden waste bin. It was satisfying work watching the pile of ugly, now well dried and dead branches, disappear. 

Not till later in the afternoon did I realise one of the rings had disappeared from my left hand. A Russian wedding ring my husband made for me, he a jewellery maker in his spare time, among his many side interests. 

I love this ring, for what it represents, an eternity ring in yellow, white and rose gold, one band each. 

I traced my steps from the kitchen, bathroom, then bedrooms, back outside to the rubbish bins. I even checked the soiled nappies I had changed from my grandchildren who stayed over that day in case in the process of cleaning them the ring had slipped inside. But no luck. 

Then the final frontier, the branches crushed and stuffed into the green wheelie bin. 

I had stood on top of this bin many times to flatten the load and make room for more. It’s amazing how many twigs, leaves and branches you can compress into one bin under your own weight. 

‘The only way to do this,’ my husband said once we were certain of the loss. ‘Go through the branches layer by layer, sifting the pieces into piles.’ 

‘The proverbial needle in the haystack,’ I joked not wanting to believe I had lost my ring for good.

Slowly and carefully, I watched as we deprived my once neatly filled green bin of its contents and the back garden was awash, not only with autumn leaves from the pin oak that are piling high at this time of year, but now the delicious scent of bay leaves added to the general mess. You could not see the ground.

‘You should always wear gloves when you’re gardening,’ my three-year-old grandson announced from the side lines. Wise words his mother must have said to him whenever they embarked on a spell of gardening. But here was omnipotent me imagining I did not need gloves for my asbestos fingers. I never bother with them unless I’m dealing with toxic substances.

And then – you guessed it – there among the leaves and branches, my husband found the ring, glinting at him in all its golden glory.

What joy. A simple joy, the joy of finding the thing that was lost. 

Before we found it, as we were clearing away leaves, I had wished we owned a metal detector as do the wonderful characters Andy and Lance played by McKenzie Crook and Toby Jones in The Detectorists.

Johnny Flynn’s theme song from the series ran through my head: 

Will you search through the lonely earth for me

Climb through the briar and brambles

I will be your treasure…

I felt the touch of the kings and the breath of the wind 

And the call of all the songbirds,

They sang all the wrong words…

I’m waiting for you.

I’m waiting for you…

But we had eyes and fingers only, no metal detector. 

Who’d have believed, we found my ring.

The smell of bay leaves recalls the memory of a time I walked along the bare wood frame of a house under construction in the Farm Road Estate when I was fourteen years old. My sister, two years younger, and I trawled these houses before lock-up stage in search of empty lemonade bottles abandoned by builders. We cashed them in at a nearby milk bar in exchange for chocolate.

You needed to take care scaling these splintery beams. They were raised a couple of feet above ground and a slip could leave you with a gash down the side of your leg. 

It was a balancing act and needed concentration, so much so that our conversation was jerky and piecemeal. On one such day, I told my younger sister what our older sister had told me. The facts of life.

A quaint phrase and one I carry around with me. The birds and bees. How babies were made. In my young mind, these were essential elements to describe a process whereby procreation happened: a man put his penis into a woman’s vagina and spurted his seed, which then broke the skin of her egg inside. In this way they made babies. 

My body still trembled with horror and disgust, even when I was now with my younger sister, and I was in charge. A shift in position, conveyor of information to the ignorant one instead of being on the receiving end. Still, I held both positions in my mind. The one who knows and the innocent, uninformed one. 

My younger sister took it in her stride and far more graciously than I had managed with my older sister. 

‘It’s disgusting, I had said to her.

‘I thought you were more mature,’ she said, so I held my tongue. My big sister had told me in a state of sensibility, as sober as a nun, and she said it was to protect me from any need for our father to convey these facts to me, as he had done to her.

Coming from a sister was less unfathomable than coming from a father. We people born with vaginas who knew our fate was to be penetrated, whether we wanted it or not. 

How, and if, these events connect I leave to your imagination.

There’s something about memories, like lost treasure, they’re endlessly compelling.