Archive for August, 2007

GOODBYE (AGAIN)

August 30, 2007

 

So here we are, off again.

            21 hours in the air, care of Emirates. I’ve never flown Emirates before. People are often asking me which airline I prefer; that seems a very sophisticated question – as far as I am concerned it’s the one that gets me there intact, and if it leaves on time and arrives on time that’s a bonus. The food and facilities seem much the same. On Qantas you get jokes. On Singapore you get sexy ladies in figure-hugging uniforms, if that’s what turns you on.

            The prospect of the journey – not to mention security regulations, every tiny pot of cream or liquid in a plastic bag, and not just any plastic bag – is such a nightmare it’s difficult to get excited about going. But then come to think of it I’m not, not really. Excited. I’m entering Australia this time, for the first time, as an Australian citizen, which feels weird and faintly fraudulent. I don’t really know why I’m going. It’s the same every time – I don’t like leaving places. I don’t like leaving people. I don’t want to go. I do want to go. Oh dammit, I’m going.

            The Guardian did a piece about my travels a few weeks back. http://www.guardian.co.uk/weekend/story/0,,2140019,00.html They called me a ‘nomad’ and planted a backpack on the sofa next to me (provided by the photographer – I’ve never used a backpack in my life). The fact is I’ve stayed put here for the last 3 months, which is not what you’d call nomadic.

            No matter what you leave out of the suitcase there’s never enough room. And only one item of hand luggage, which includes a handbag. Can’t understand the regulations, they make no sense.

            I feel quite depressed.

            Okay, here goes. Goodbye England, again. See you in December.

Happy 100th birthday

August 25, 2007

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Today would have been my mother’s 100th birthday, if she was still alive

            My mother was quite a star of screen and stage in the 1930s. She gave herself – or maybe some studio did – the stage name of Nancy O’Neil, which I suppose was a tad catchier than her real name of Nancy Smith. I didn’t know she’d been a star until I accidentally came upon a scrapbook of her press cuttings caringly put together by her younger sister Lorraine.

            I was amazed to see pictures of a pretty, sweet young woman with sparkling eyes and a lovely smile. She was obviously quite something in those days; she did all the celebrity stuff (other than acting of course) like making ‘star’ appearances at carnivals and balls. She appeared altogether in around twenty films and half a dozen West End plays, always playing the lead. For a decade she never stopped working. The reviwers loved her. They made a big thing of her being an Australian, which is ironic really, considering the first thing she did on arriving in England was to get rid of her Australian accent (via RADA), and the second thing she did was to hardly set foot in her native country again throughout her life.

            It’s a sad truth that our memories of our parents are of old people. My daughter could not believe the ‘rather grumpy’ old woman she knew was ever a ‘sweet young thing’. I never knew mum in her star days, so the person looking out from those old newspaper cuttings is unfamiliar to me too.

            She was not a very happy mother. I think she only had her children (my brother and me) because it was what was done in those days. From the word go we were looked after by nannies and au pairs, and we were sent off to boarding school at 7 and 8 years old respectively. She had a mantra, which she repeated often, that ‘they couldn’t wait to get rid of us’. Today that sounds pretty cruel but again, it was the sort of thing they said (and to some extent thought) in those unchildcentric days.

            Needless to say we had a spiky relationship, especially when she tried to tell me how to bring up my children. I always felt mum was a far nicer, gentler and more compassionate person than she allowed herself to be; or perhaps that prevailing fashion allowed her to be. Prevailing fashion said you suffered your children and the very worst thing you could ever do was spoil them; that’s ‘spoil’ as in praise, make much of, enjoy, and listen to. I used to pity myself for being her daughter but since having children of my own, I pity her that she did not allow herself to enjoy us more.

            Still, she had a good life until my father died, and she got old. There are one or two of her films still floating about, which means she exists for posterity.

            I remember playing tennis with her one day, a long time ago. I was still at the age when the older generation would sometimes give the younger generation the benefit of the doubt and let them win the occasional game. I hit the ball and it was in but she swore it was out. I presumed she would do the honourable thing but she absolutely wouldn’t. We stood there arguing for around ten minutes, while my father quietly looked on, and in the end as I remember I stormed off the court with the worst grace I could muster.

            I guess that summed up our relationship.  It’s a shame. It wouldn’t have taken much on either side. But that’s mothers and daughters for you.

Happy birthday mum.

 

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LIFE AFTER SIXTY

August 15, 2007

Turning sixty has positive advantages.  Free travel throughout London, concessions at cinemas and galleries, no national insurance and a small (in my case very small) but welcome pension. With luck nothing creaks yet, you feel no different to when you were half this age and since you are now famously ‘invisible’ you no longer have to cross the road to avoid building sites (I haven’t had to do that for a while, admittedly). For all of which I say, hooray.     

      The children have left home and are doing okay. The husband has gone as well. So now what?        

     There are no rules for people over sixty. The rules that applied to our parents don’t apply to our generation. We are younger and our expectations are different. We have maybe a third of our lives ahead of us and we don’t intend to spend them sitting quietly in front of television (or anywhere else).  We think and feel half our age but we know, clearly, we are not.  At half our age we had not had kids, seen them through school and university and out into the world while trying all along to be supportive but not suffocating, at the same time looking after elderly and increasingly frail parents, doing our best to keep the balance between family, motherhood, wifehood, daughterhood and career; we feel we still have the energy of a thirty year old, if not even more because we are less likely to waste it getting into a paddy about things beyond our control such as stalled trains that will deliver us to our destination ten minutes after the curtain has gone up or the vital interview or the meeting was supposed to take place.        

       We make good workers because we are experienced and calm and enjoy the work for its own sake and not because of what it will lead to.  (Convincing employers of this is another matter of course since most of them will be half our age and may not like telling someone twice their age what to do.)  We are concerned with the here and now rather than the what-might-be-when because, frankly, life is getting shorter.  

        We are as sexy as we ever were, with the added advantages of experience and the freedom of knowing we’re not going to get pregnant. We are realistically if regretfully aware that the face that looks at us in the mirror no longer represents the thirty year old we still are, that sleeveless dresses and short skirts are beginning to look doubtful on us but jeans and dropped-waist trousers are still perfectly okay; we are trying to strike the balance between middle-aged fuddy-duddy and ‘cool’ – which is a word we probably wouldn’t want to use naturally if only because it makes our kids wince.  We are up to speed technologically, just about, we can socially network like the best of them (though we may be unsure about whether or not to register for Facebook; the answer to which depends partly on how much we want to avoid embarrassing our kids, who in their turn are invariably watching carefully to see whether their ageing mother is turning out more like the Queen Mum or Barbara Windsor).        

         Somewhere along the way some of us have parted company with our partners, probably through our own volition. Having  done so we are now looking for replacements, on the internet or elsewhere (though where elsewhere?), and finding little joy because the men of our age seem so old, and the whole prospect of starting up a brand new relationship from scratch, whether or not sex is involved, is terrifying.  We probably have our own homes and are reasonably financially independent so we’re not looking for breadwinners, or someone to father our kids. We want companionship and a good laugh, but dammit, most of the men of our age are out there chasing women half our age. 

          We are still working and will have to keep on working till we drop, because we have spent our lives following ridiculous professions like writing and acting, earning what we can when we could, which was usually not much – hence the small pension – and never able to save much; or maybe we gave up work for the kids and to look after elderly relatives (hence again the small pension and lack of savings).  Still, working keeps us actively in the world and concerned about the world, and that has to be a good thing.        

           But most importantly, we are sixty and we know it. We know we feel fit and young now and that in ten years’ time we may not. Whatever it is we want to do we have to do it now. It may seem a selfish way to think but it isn’t always possible in life to be selfish, which is another reason to indulge now.        

Which is why I am doing what I’m doing.