# Did you think I'd crumble, did you think I'd lay down and die?....#
As my Dad drove me the many miles back up north many memories flashed through my mind. The broken promises, some happy times, but more sadness than joy.
I analyse myself far too much.I am your typical deeper than deep Scorpio
I blamed myself. It must be me? My Mum had told me so. All this was my fault
I was still in this vicious circle then, and I truly believed that.
Halfway there, my Dad said "Do you still like horses?"
I was a little startled and admitted it is a main passion in my life, why did he ask.
He went on to explain that he took me for horse riding lessons as a small child. Delving deep into my subconscious I could see it. Me up high on a beautiful black horse, Dad at the side holding the reins. The sun shining,my feet slipping in the huge stirrups, giggling and happy. He also told me about the time when my Mum took a short cut with me in my pram across Epsom racecourse. She was horrified to look up and see and hear the large group of horses and thundering hooves coming towards us. There was a race meeting on!!
I think my parents were trying to tell me something 'eh?!
It suddenly all made sense now. Why I had always love horses. My favourite books and film was Black Beauty and Follyfoot, and I can always be found saying hello to any old Dobbin. I always call myself "freespirit" because that is how I want to be - a horse galloping with a free flowing mane.
On reaching my house I felt a knot in my stomach. Could I really do this? Would he let me go?
My Mum was there, a greeting party. She argued with my Dad, the first time they had seen each other since the split. My Dad was very quiet, avoided the verbal blows. Eventually she left.
My husband and I spent the whole night talking. He admitted he loved someone else, always had, always would. But he then said something that hit a nerve. "You will never leave me, you would never survive without me"
Survive? He didn't know the meaning of the word. I had been surviving since the age of 4. I survived my Dad leaving, my mothers mental illness, lost love, his mistreatment. And brittle and torn I may be, but yes I had survived. So for the very first time, I answered back and said what I thought. "You may think you have broken me, but you have just made me stronger. I will always survive."
The next day I packed my things and loaded them into my Dads car. Strange how you can load up a lifetime into a Ford Mondeo in black plastic bags! I can remember my daughter screaming in the back seat, his face, an expression of disbelief on the doorstep. After that I did not look back. Just calmly said "Just drive Dad please, just go"
My daughter carried on screaming for what seemed like a third of the journey. Unconsolable. I had not done this lightly, I had done it to save her from a lifetime of misery like he had given me. How can you explain this to a four year old? I knew it only too well. I was her, 25 years ago.
As the car drove on, I wondered what would be the next chapter in this numptys life.
# Oh no not I, I will survive. For as long as I know how to love, I know I'll stay alive.............#
Tuesday, 8 March 2011
Monday, 7 March 2011
Where have you been all my life?
# When will I begin, my life again.....#
The letter in my hand, I made a decision. It was a spur of the moment thing. I am prone to these moments of madness. A bit like the impulse advert, sometimes I act, and think after.
A little reckless, I guess you could say!
I had never had any desire to get in touch with my Dad. Mainly because it had only ever been my Mum and me. Perhaps because the taunts I had from school friends about having no Dad had scarred me, perhaps because my Mum always blamed me for his leaving, perhaps because he had never been in touch.
I had seen photos of him. A long dark haired bearded man. The look of a Jack-the lad, carefree, but in essence a stranger. I felt nothing on looking at these pictures.
For some odd reason, I all of a sudden decided to write back to the Salvation Army. Yes my Nan could have my address, etc
Just like that, decision made. I kept this to myself for now. Things were unstable enough at home.
It was about a week later when a letter arrived from my Nan. A picture enclosed of her and my Dad. He was in a wheelchair. They were pictured with horses, a day out somewhere. The letter explained that she had watched me through playground railings after the break-up. She had then kept looking for me, but not found me. The reason my Dad used a wheelchair for long distances was a long term back injury. Gone was the long hair. In fact gone was all his hair! A bald little old man, insignificant. Still no feeling on looking at this photo.
This was all very alien, strange.
She asked in the letter could she pass on my details to my Dad.
I picked up a pen and paper and I wrote. I was 30 years old. 25 years of hurt tumbled out onto those pages. I was crying as I wrote, but it had to be said. Why did he go? How could he just leave? How could he live with himself after just walking away from us? Why had he never been in touch? Did he really think he could just walk back into my life now?
I admit it was a nasty letter in a way. I had to get that hurt out of me, I deserved my rant and I was jolly well going to have it. How dare he do this to me.
Signed, sealed, delivered. I felt a little smug as I put it in the post box. This is a feeling I have never felt before or since, as it is totally against my nature.
It was probably another week before I got a reply. This was to contain even more hurt.
He explained that my Mum had post-natal depression, she had pushed him to the limit. He had seen other women, stayed out at night to eacape this. He denied the house was ever repossessed or that he left us destitute. He had moved in near his Mum, in the space of a year, met someone else. She had 2 boys of her own from a previous marriage. On getting his divorce he had re-married and brought up these boys as his own. He claimed he had tried to get access but the court had refused.
Perhaps at this point you would sympathise? Side with him a little? Me, I was so angry that I wanted to slap him. I was there at the age of 5 with my Mum, I knew the reality of what we went through. above all it hurt so deeply that he picked up a ready made family and never looked back.
He had given a phone number for me to ring. At this point I felt i had to tell my Mum and husband. My Mum went ballistic. How could I go behind her back and believe him or want anything to do with him? She would not listen to reason as I tried to explain.
I picked up the phone and dialled his number. He answered "Alright darling" As if I was a long lost friend. I let him ramble on, very similar to the letters content. He invited me to meet him and the family. He was living miles away down South, I was then up North.
I made a decision to do it. I had to know. Either to put this to bed once and for all or pursue this other family.
I told my Mum I was going on a course, and asked my husband to back me up. This was because she was so unstable. He promised to look after my daughter, and seemed to uderstand I had to do this alone.
I remember him waving me off at the coach station, he has a strange look on his face.
Victoria Coach Station London, the coach pulls in after an arduous journey. I step off the coach. It was misty. Just like the scene from the Railway Children, there he is. He hobbled towards me. It struck me as hilarious that he knew it was me after 25 years! He hugged me so tightly that it hurt. No tears, no real emotion, but a strange connection.
We went to a cafe, chatted a while about anything and everything. He then drove me to his home. Along the way he explained one of his step sons had tragically been killed in a motor-bike accident, my other step brother was married, lived nearby.
Over the next few weeks we shared life stories, he kept up his side of the story. There were parts of this I definitely knew were untrue, as my Mum had shown me court papers.
I knew he had never ever requested access. I knew he knew where I was all along.
He had made the decision not to see me or even attempt to.
So what did I do? Did I finally stick up for myself? Did I challenge him? Would you?
No, I was numpty me, yet again. I listened, absorbed as he told me these lies.
I accepted him for what he was before me. A liar.
Those years will never be made up. He will never admit what happened or why. He is just my Dad. I will never have the same feeling as if i had been brought up with him. I really don't think he realises that to this day.
It was during this time, I rang home and my husband was as drunk as a skunk. My Mum was in the background, angry. He had told her where I was. Betrayal once again from him.
Why did I expect any different, he will never change. I knew my daughter was unsafe in this environment and I had to leave.
I made the decision, that was it, I was worth better and so was my daughter. I was going to go back up North and pick up my daughter and leave.
My husband however said to me on the phone you will never leave me....
# One day I'll fly away, leave your love to yesterday ....#
The letter in my hand, I made a decision. It was a spur of the moment thing. I am prone to these moments of madness. A bit like the impulse advert, sometimes I act, and think after.
A little reckless, I guess you could say!
I had never had any desire to get in touch with my Dad. Mainly because it had only ever been my Mum and me. Perhaps because the taunts I had from school friends about having no Dad had scarred me, perhaps because my Mum always blamed me for his leaving, perhaps because he had never been in touch.
I had seen photos of him. A long dark haired bearded man. The look of a Jack-the lad, carefree, but in essence a stranger. I felt nothing on looking at these pictures.
For some odd reason, I all of a sudden decided to write back to the Salvation Army. Yes my Nan could have my address, etc
Just like that, decision made. I kept this to myself for now. Things were unstable enough at home.
It was about a week later when a letter arrived from my Nan. A picture enclosed of her and my Dad. He was in a wheelchair. They were pictured with horses, a day out somewhere. The letter explained that she had watched me through playground railings after the break-up. She had then kept looking for me, but not found me. The reason my Dad used a wheelchair for long distances was a long term back injury. Gone was the long hair. In fact gone was all his hair! A bald little old man, insignificant. Still no feeling on looking at this photo.
This was all very alien, strange.
She asked in the letter could she pass on my details to my Dad.
I picked up a pen and paper and I wrote. I was 30 years old. 25 years of hurt tumbled out onto those pages. I was crying as I wrote, but it had to be said. Why did he go? How could he just leave? How could he live with himself after just walking away from us? Why had he never been in touch? Did he really think he could just walk back into my life now?
I admit it was a nasty letter in a way. I had to get that hurt out of me, I deserved my rant and I was jolly well going to have it. How dare he do this to me.
Signed, sealed, delivered. I felt a little smug as I put it in the post box. This is a feeling I have never felt before or since, as it is totally against my nature.
It was probably another week before I got a reply. This was to contain even more hurt.
He explained that my Mum had post-natal depression, she had pushed him to the limit. He had seen other women, stayed out at night to eacape this. He denied the house was ever repossessed or that he left us destitute. He had moved in near his Mum, in the space of a year, met someone else. She had 2 boys of her own from a previous marriage. On getting his divorce he had re-married and brought up these boys as his own. He claimed he had tried to get access but the court had refused.
Perhaps at this point you would sympathise? Side with him a little? Me, I was so angry that I wanted to slap him. I was there at the age of 5 with my Mum, I knew the reality of what we went through. above all it hurt so deeply that he picked up a ready made family and never looked back.
He had given a phone number for me to ring. At this point I felt i had to tell my Mum and husband. My Mum went ballistic. How could I go behind her back and believe him or want anything to do with him? She would not listen to reason as I tried to explain.
I picked up the phone and dialled his number. He answered "Alright darling" As if I was a long lost friend. I let him ramble on, very similar to the letters content. He invited me to meet him and the family. He was living miles away down South, I was then up North.
I made a decision to do it. I had to know. Either to put this to bed once and for all or pursue this other family.
I told my Mum I was going on a course, and asked my husband to back me up. This was because she was so unstable. He promised to look after my daughter, and seemed to uderstand I had to do this alone.
I remember him waving me off at the coach station, he has a strange look on his face.
Victoria Coach Station London, the coach pulls in after an arduous journey. I step off the coach. It was misty. Just like the scene from the Railway Children, there he is. He hobbled towards me. It struck me as hilarious that he knew it was me after 25 years! He hugged me so tightly that it hurt. No tears, no real emotion, but a strange connection.
We went to a cafe, chatted a while about anything and everything. He then drove me to his home. Along the way he explained one of his step sons had tragically been killed in a motor-bike accident, my other step brother was married, lived nearby.
Over the next few weeks we shared life stories, he kept up his side of the story. There were parts of this I definitely knew were untrue, as my Mum had shown me court papers.
I knew he had never ever requested access. I knew he knew where I was all along.
He had made the decision not to see me or even attempt to.
So what did I do? Did I finally stick up for myself? Did I challenge him? Would you?
No, I was numpty me, yet again. I listened, absorbed as he told me these lies.
I accepted him for what he was before me. A liar.
Those years will never be made up. He will never admit what happened or why. He is just my Dad. I will never have the same feeling as if i had been brought up with him. I really don't think he realises that to this day.
It was during this time, I rang home and my husband was as drunk as a skunk. My Mum was in the background, angry. He had told her where I was. Betrayal once again from him.
Why did I expect any different, he will never change. I knew my daughter was unsafe in this environment and I had to leave.
I made the decision, that was it, I was worth better and so was my daughter. I was going to go back up North and pick up my daughter and leave.
My husband however said to me on the phone you will never leave me....
# One day I'll fly away, leave your love to yesterday ....#
Saturday, 5 March 2011
Should I stay or should I go now
# If I stay there will be trouble....#
Once the haze in front of my eyes cleared, I switched into nurse mode. Grabbing tea towels, stemming the flow, wrapping them tightly around his wrists. Alerted my mum who lived across the estate and where he had dropped my daughter off 5 minutes earlier. Called an ambulance, waited..
My mum brought my daughter to the flat, this was not a good idea for obvious reasons, but she was not of firm mind also as you know!
Sitting in the ambulance, asking him why? He just sat staring into space in a substance influenced dazed state. The anger whelled up inside me squashing my chest so much it hurt. Choking back tears of hurt, anger, distant memories of this past hurt from my childhood back tenfold in front of me.
Whisked into A/E, into a mass of people I worked with, who with professional attitude carried on regardless, with knowing looks and sympathy.
The psychiatrist who breezed in and breezed out. Advice to contact the emergency clinic to arrange an appointment if he got unstable again. The so called caring NHS, who didn't seem to care less, was blaringly obvious.
Home, trying to sympathise, talk it through, understand. When all I really wanted to do was scream "How could you do this to me and why?"
My mums words echoing in my head "You never say how you really feel"
Why was this? Why could I not just stand up and say how I felt?
He sat there with bandaged wrists, and out tumbled a long story. Suffice to say things were revealed that I had never known had happened from this man in front of me.
This was so alarming, that I looked at him and realised I really knew nothing about him at all. You can have what you think is stable, and it can be swept to the floor in one fell swoop. I felt as if the ground from under me was being swept away.
He really had never cared for me at all. I had been the ultimate numpty, entrusting in someone who had never been truthful from day one.
He said he only loved this girl, and never me.
What would you do? Walk away? Forget him? Thats what I should have done. It was handed to me on a plate. He said "Tell me to leave"
But no, I begged him not to leave. this was re-enacting the episode from my Mum and Dad, like a BBC repeat.
He refused to see a counseller even though I tried so hard to make him see sense.
We went and bought a house, started again you could say. Except this was papering over the cracks. The drinking got worse, although thankfully the violence did not. I feel this was by luck rather than chance. However, the emotional abuse was far far worse. To this day those words stick in my mind and you will find that I rarely look in a mirror, as those scars will never ever fade.
My daughters behaviour problems worsened, many psychologists again saw her. Again nothing solved. I despaired of ever getting help. She was, is such a beautiful girl but 24 hours a day with a full time job, mentally unstable husband and Mum, I was bending, ready to snap.
Something had to give. There were so many days when I just wanted to run and never look back.
One day a letter arrived. It was from the Salvation Army. It was my paternal grand-mother. She was writing on behalf of my Dad. Could she find out my address as he wanted to meet me? This was 25 years after he had left me and Mum in Manchester. There had been no contact. I knew nothing about this man. He was a stranger. I had never wanted to meet him. It had never entered my head.
But as I sat there with this paper in my hand, a thought entered my head.... should I?
# So come on and let me know should I stay or should I go?.....#
Once the haze in front of my eyes cleared, I switched into nurse mode. Grabbing tea towels, stemming the flow, wrapping them tightly around his wrists. Alerted my mum who lived across the estate and where he had dropped my daughter off 5 minutes earlier. Called an ambulance, waited..
My mum brought my daughter to the flat, this was not a good idea for obvious reasons, but she was not of firm mind also as you know!
Sitting in the ambulance, asking him why? He just sat staring into space in a substance influenced dazed state. The anger whelled up inside me squashing my chest so much it hurt. Choking back tears of hurt, anger, distant memories of this past hurt from my childhood back tenfold in front of me.
Whisked into A/E, into a mass of people I worked with, who with professional attitude carried on regardless, with knowing looks and sympathy.
The psychiatrist who breezed in and breezed out. Advice to contact the emergency clinic to arrange an appointment if he got unstable again. The so called caring NHS, who didn't seem to care less, was blaringly obvious.
Home, trying to sympathise, talk it through, understand. When all I really wanted to do was scream "How could you do this to me and why?"
My mums words echoing in my head "You never say how you really feel"
Why was this? Why could I not just stand up and say how I felt?
He sat there with bandaged wrists, and out tumbled a long story. Suffice to say things were revealed that I had never known had happened from this man in front of me.
This was so alarming, that I looked at him and realised I really knew nothing about him at all. You can have what you think is stable, and it can be swept to the floor in one fell swoop. I felt as if the ground from under me was being swept away.
He really had never cared for me at all. I had been the ultimate numpty, entrusting in someone who had never been truthful from day one.
He said he only loved this girl, and never me.
What would you do? Walk away? Forget him? Thats what I should have done. It was handed to me on a plate. He said "Tell me to leave"
But no, I begged him not to leave. this was re-enacting the episode from my Mum and Dad, like a BBC repeat.
He refused to see a counseller even though I tried so hard to make him see sense.
We went and bought a house, started again you could say. Except this was papering over the cracks. The drinking got worse, although thankfully the violence did not. I feel this was by luck rather than chance. However, the emotional abuse was far far worse. To this day those words stick in my mind and you will find that I rarely look in a mirror, as those scars will never ever fade.
My daughters behaviour problems worsened, many psychologists again saw her. Again nothing solved. I despaired of ever getting help. She was, is such a beautiful girl but 24 hours a day with a full time job, mentally unstable husband and Mum, I was bending, ready to snap.
Something had to give. There were so many days when I just wanted to run and never look back.
One day a letter arrived. It was from the Salvation Army. It was my paternal grand-mother. She was writing on behalf of my Dad. Could she find out my address as he wanted to meet me? This was 25 years after he had left me and Mum in Manchester. There had been no contact. I knew nothing about this man. He was a stranger. I had never wanted to meet him. It had never entered my head.
But as I sat there with this paper in my hand, a thought entered my head.... should I?
# So come on and let me know should I stay or should I go?.....#
Friday, 4 March 2011
China in your hand
# Don't push too hard, your dreams are china in your hand...#
So back to the party. Me a student nurse, he was a friend of my best mates boyfriend.
Not my usual type, blonde, same height (Miss Jones has a penchant for tall, dark you understand..although its hard to generalise, I have to be honest here!)
He was I suppose the "bad boy", was in care as a youngster, skirmishes with the law, you get the idea. It wasn't the best chat up line of all time, "Can you show me where the bog is like?" That should have really told me something, but you know what young love is like, we've all been there?!
Anyway Cyndi Lauper always reminds me of that party, my mate and I loved her at the time, and I think that album was on repeat all weekend. We were quite unseparable that weekend, but I wasn't bowled over if I am honest, perhaps attracted to someone down to earth. It wasn't long before I was spending weekends at his flat, or he at mine. This was a whirlwind time of late nights, studying for nursing exams and partying.
It was a year later he was drunk in a pub and on Valentines Day said "Hows about thee and me getting engaged?" again, not smooth or that much of a compliment but I was taken in.
We moved into our own flat, got married and thats when the problems escalated.
To say he liked a drink was an understatement, I would come home from work to find the lounge piled high with empty cans, various "mates" in residence and a general free for all.
All to their own, but after a 12 hour shift, this was a little wearing!
One day I overheard a conversation I shouldn't have, when he told his mate "I only married her to have kids" This sent me reeling emotionally, though I never told him I had overheard it. The drinking continued, but along with it a rage that would escalate in him putting holes in doors/cupboards etc. I knew this was bordering on something, but they say love is blind?! I knew there was something underlying this rage, but could not work out what. I had always told my mother as a teenager, "I will not tolerate a partner hitting me, thats it"
In time, I found out I was having my daughter. This time period was good, and he was supportive immediately after. However the drinking escalated to all time heights along with other substances.
My daughter in the midst of this mayhem, was growing up fast. However she seemed to be displaying worrying behaviour. I remember taking her for vaccinations and on the way home her screaming. Not just a toddler tantrum, this lasted half an hour. There was just no controlling her. Biting, scratching me, screaming. I can see the peoples faces on the bus now. One woman said to me "my child is handicapped, and she does not make a noise like that". This embarrassed me so much that the tears were pouring down my face. This behaviour however became a daily routine. Getting called away from work because she had hurt someone at playgroup/bitten them/punched them etc. My husband comatose on the sofa, my mum still suicidal. Madness around me, like a Dr Who credits tunnel I seemed trapped in. I had to wrap her in a blanket to stop her hurting me or herself, and got used to the stares and comments on a daily basis. The "experts" so called as I am afraid I have seen so many in so many places that I feel let us down so badly, told me it was my fault, I was a bad mother, there was nothing wrong with her. I was accused of wanting a label for her. This angered me. I was a professional, I knew this was not "normal behaviour" and was something of the ilk of autism/aspergers etc. The help and support however was nowhere to be found.
She tried to jump out of windows, would run off ahead without warning, in front of cars, was aggressive, screamed constantly and it was like Jeckyl and Hyde when she could be a little loving and was a very intelligent child.
My husband was so drunk one day that I flipped, I had had enough. I tried to reason with him, but when he said "You have too much to say for yourself" that was the final straw.
Still calmly, I stuck up for myself saying he needed to get himself sorted out. With that he put his hands around my throat and pushed me back so hard my head hit the wall.
Did I stick to what I always had said? Did I leave? Well its easy to tell someone what they should do. But with a small child and someone you love, in reality that is impossible.
One night he didn't come home. I knew where he was. Across the road on the estate with a girl half his age. Everyone knew.
The next day he rolled in, just as I was ready to go to work. He admitted what he'd done.
I did what I always do, coped with it on my own, went to work, pretended nothing had happened, never told a soul.
That night I came home from work. As I opened the door, the next few minutes were like a film still..
He was stood in the bathroom, blood pouring from his wrists. Timed exactly for when I would walk through the door. The one thing he knew my mother had repeatedly done to me as a teenager. The only person I had ever shared this hurt with. The one thing he knew would scar me yet again.
# But they're only dreams, and you shouldn't push too far #
So back to the party. Me a student nurse, he was a friend of my best mates boyfriend.
Not my usual type, blonde, same height (Miss Jones has a penchant for tall, dark you understand..although its hard to generalise, I have to be honest here!)
He was I suppose the "bad boy", was in care as a youngster, skirmishes with the law, you get the idea. It wasn't the best chat up line of all time, "Can you show me where the bog is like?" That should have really told me something, but you know what young love is like, we've all been there?!
Anyway Cyndi Lauper always reminds me of that party, my mate and I loved her at the time, and I think that album was on repeat all weekend. We were quite unseparable that weekend, but I wasn't bowled over if I am honest, perhaps attracted to someone down to earth. It wasn't long before I was spending weekends at his flat, or he at mine. This was a whirlwind time of late nights, studying for nursing exams and partying.
It was a year later he was drunk in a pub and on Valentines Day said "Hows about thee and me getting engaged?" again, not smooth or that much of a compliment but I was taken in.
We moved into our own flat, got married and thats when the problems escalated.
To say he liked a drink was an understatement, I would come home from work to find the lounge piled high with empty cans, various "mates" in residence and a general free for all.
All to their own, but after a 12 hour shift, this was a little wearing!
One day I overheard a conversation I shouldn't have, when he told his mate "I only married her to have kids" This sent me reeling emotionally, though I never told him I had overheard it. The drinking continued, but along with it a rage that would escalate in him putting holes in doors/cupboards etc. I knew this was bordering on something, but they say love is blind?! I knew there was something underlying this rage, but could not work out what. I had always told my mother as a teenager, "I will not tolerate a partner hitting me, thats it"
In time, I found out I was having my daughter. This time period was good, and he was supportive immediately after. However the drinking escalated to all time heights along with other substances.
My daughter in the midst of this mayhem, was growing up fast. However she seemed to be displaying worrying behaviour. I remember taking her for vaccinations and on the way home her screaming. Not just a toddler tantrum, this lasted half an hour. There was just no controlling her. Biting, scratching me, screaming. I can see the peoples faces on the bus now. One woman said to me "my child is handicapped, and she does not make a noise like that". This embarrassed me so much that the tears were pouring down my face. This behaviour however became a daily routine. Getting called away from work because she had hurt someone at playgroup/bitten them/punched them etc. My husband comatose on the sofa, my mum still suicidal. Madness around me, like a Dr Who credits tunnel I seemed trapped in. I had to wrap her in a blanket to stop her hurting me or herself, and got used to the stares and comments on a daily basis. The "experts" so called as I am afraid I have seen so many in so many places that I feel let us down so badly, told me it was my fault, I was a bad mother, there was nothing wrong with her. I was accused of wanting a label for her. This angered me. I was a professional, I knew this was not "normal behaviour" and was something of the ilk of autism/aspergers etc. The help and support however was nowhere to be found.
She tried to jump out of windows, would run off ahead without warning, in front of cars, was aggressive, screamed constantly and it was like Jeckyl and Hyde when she could be a little loving and was a very intelligent child.
My husband was so drunk one day that I flipped, I had had enough. I tried to reason with him, but when he said "You have too much to say for yourself" that was the final straw.
Still calmly, I stuck up for myself saying he needed to get himself sorted out. With that he put his hands around my throat and pushed me back so hard my head hit the wall.
Did I stick to what I always had said? Did I leave? Well its easy to tell someone what they should do. But with a small child and someone you love, in reality that is impossible.
One night he didn't come home. I knew where he was. Across the road on the estate with a girl half his age. Everyone knew.
The next day he rolled in, just as I was ready to go to work. He admitted what he'd done.
I did what I always do, coped with it on my own, went to work, pretended nothing had happened, never told a soul.
That night I came home from work. As I opened the door, the next few minutes were like a film still..
He was stood in the bathroom, blood pouring from his wrists. Timed exactly for when I would walk through the door. The one thing he knew my mother had repeatedly done to me as a teenager. The only person I had ever shared this hurt with. The one thing he knew would scar me yet again.
# But they're only dreams, and you shouldn't push too far #
Wednesday, 2 March 2011
Theres a place for us, you know the movie song...
At the very same disco the same year on New Years Eve, I found myself dancing with the most fantastic guy.
Eyes of blue that encaptured me and mesmerised me to the spot... A close dance, a kiss to welcome in the New Year that left my head completely spinning like never before.
This relationship touched me deeply, so deeply that I would never forget him ever in my life, or the true love I felt for him.
Sadly events with my mum worsened and she became very jealous and critical of friends.
I was to meet this fantastic person one Saturday and my mum was in such a poor state that I dared not leave her. In the good old 1980s we had no mobile phones, and so in essence I stood this person up. On that day he never knew what really happened and we lost touch.
This person would reappear later in my life....
At a fair I met my next brief encounter - Darren, 12 years older, loved soft metal, leather jackets, loving, caring. A whirlwind of patchouli oil, some of my still favourite records and a lot of growing up!
The next boyfriend I had was the real life boy next door. This was a tempestuous relationship of 2 years interwoven with naiivety, ill matched, again tainted with my family events.
One day a note on my doorstep - "Sorry, I have fallen out of love with you"
This relationship breakdown was at the time one of the final straws. On finishing school I decided to be a nurse, throwing myself into training. I also left home at 17, moving into bedsit land, deciding that I needed my own space away from home. These times were another growth spurt and I enjoyed some freedom away from home.
Nursing was the only career I ever wanted to do and I was hoping this would be a positive chapter in my life.
A few days into my training, I met who would become my first husband at a party
Would this be the one for me?
When you gonna realise, it was just that the time was wrong.....
At the very same disco the same year on New Years Eve, I found myself dancing with the most fantastic guy.
Eyes of blue that encaptured me and mesmerised me to the spot... A close dance, a kiss to welcome in the New Year that left my head completely spinning like never before.
This relationship touched me deeply, so deeply that I would never forget him ever in my life, or the true love I felt for him.
Sadly events with my mum worsened and she became very jealous and critical of friends.
I was to meet this fantastic person one Saturday and my mum was in such a poor state that I dared not leave her. In the good old 1980s we had no mobile phones, and so in essence I stood this person up. On that day he never knew what really happened and we lost touch.
This person would reappear later in my life....
At a fair I met my next brief encounter - Darren, 12 years older, loved soft metal, leather jackets, loving, caring. A whirlwind of patchouli oil, some of my still favourite records and a lot of growing up!
The next boyfriend I had was the real life boy next door. This was a tempestuous relationship of 2 years interwoven with naiivety, ill matched, again tainted with my family events.
One day a note on my doorstep - "Sorry, I have fallen out of love with you"
This relationship breakdown was at the time one of the final straws. On finishing school I decided to be a nurse, throwing myself into training. I also left home at 17, moving into bedsit land, deciding that I needed my own space away from home. These times were another growth spurt and I enjoyed some freedom away from home.
Nursing was the only career I ever wanted to do and I was hoping this would be a positive chapter in my life.
A few days into my training, I met who would become my first husband at a party
Would this be the one for me?
When you gonna realise, it was just that the time was wrong.....
Sunday, 27 February 2011
The early years - like Adrian Mole
# Halfway up the stairs is the stair where I sit. There isn't any other stair quite like it...
Probably the very first memory I have is of sitting in my high chair, with a non currant teacake. I say non as the currants lay around the edge of the plate. "Dirty little flies" I told my mother, refusing to eat them. Strange how I now adore all this kind of fruit.
Another sitting on a huge log (my pretend horse) on Wimbledon Common. This deep love of horses stayed with me all my life. It was not apparent to me why, until much later in my life, (be patient dear reader, you will discover why!)
The next is sitting halfway up the stairs of a house in Manchester, around 4 years of age, my mother at the bottom pleading with my father not to leave, screaming at the top of her voice. He, faceless in my memory, however hard I tried to remember, as he slammed the door with its beautiful stained glass window and left, so loud that the stairs shook.
I remember crying and running back to bed pulling the Camberwick (remember them?!) bedspread over my head and staying there for quite some time, falling asleep hearing my mother howling in the next room.
The next memory is of seeing a large "blue bird" in my face and screaming.
"Its just a blue-bottle" soothed my mother. Peace ensued.
Another memory of my mother on her knees in what seemed like a vast front garden cutting the grass with a pair of kitchen scissors. As the sun caught her auburn hair, tears glinted as they rolled down her face soaking the grass below. Me, fetching my play scissors and joining this task, "I'll help you Mummy" . Mum always tells me now how I was a helpful child, but that I never open up and should say what I feel. Few people in my life have ever recognised that in my persona, seeing and believing the happy, smiling Miss Jones to be the real me. Those who do break down that outer cloak and see below the surface know who they are in my life.
Another memory of my mother making toffee in a huge saucepan, and eating it with it all over my face. The fact that my mother said thats all there was in the house, not making sense at that time.
The hard smack of an umbrella across my cheeks as my mother screamed "its your fault your father left, you are so like him"
Leaving that house as it got reposessed, crossing a major road in Manchester struggling to keep up with my mother (which is probably why I still walk like a Seargeant major), as the belt holding her suitcase broke spilling the contents all over the floor.
The next memory have is being in a grand hotel, with a huge spiral staircase and a Christmas tree on the landing. No, mother did not meet a sugar daddy, this was a temporary accomodation from Manchester council. In this place, I remember Kentucky fried chicken, tree cones at the side of my bed half opened (my mother always taught me to love nature). Christmas morning with a pile of presents from the long term wealthy residents staying there. One man of whom was like an Adonis, tall, dark, long hair and a smile like Michael Landon, as he swept me into the air, dancing and singing to Christmas tunes.
I crept out of bed one evening, as my mother slept, down the glamourous staircase, to a door marked "kitchen" , knocking on the door, and as it swung open, proclaiming "I'm hungry". The chefs in their tall hats smiling and a lovely waitress who piled a silver platter with sandwiches taking me back upstairs. My mother horrified that I had embarrassed her so.
I have to confess I could be a devilish child at times. The main memory of primary school is of a girl who annoyed me in class so much, that I held aloft a huge striped tin of Copydex glue above her head. The satisfaction of that glue pouring out all over her beautiful black shiny hair, I am afraid still raises a smile! I was frog marched to the heads office, and taken back home by an irate mother. The poor child had to have her hair cut elfin style and for some reason never sat next to me again!
Another devilish moment is of a boy on whom I had a small crush who kept pulling my skirt, over and over again. I warned him nicely, but on the 20th pull, I turned and slapped him full pelt across the face, knocking him to the ground. Let that be a lesson to you guys, this lass has a sting in her scorpion tail!
My mother continued in her depression and had many suicide attempts, often asking me how she should do it. We were by this time living with my auntie in Yorkshire.
Here I learned how to knit at the age of 9, and loved the huge radiogram in the corner of the room. The dulcit tones of John Denver, Glen Campbell records, as well as the vast collection of soul and Motown of my mothers collection.
I continued to devour books, reading my aunties Readers Digest collection of Catherine Cookson ilk at a very early age.
As my mother was always ill, I spent a lot of time with my Auntie. She was a feisty character and taught me to protect myself form the world outside. Fun loving she also liked to dance and sing, which ensued this passion for music, still now.
One day my mother was very unwell and when I came home from school she was not there. For a week we had no idea where she was. I remember looking out of my bedroom window, watching the snowflakes drift past, the sky go dark, then light, not wanting to miss her return.
A while later she had turned up in Guys Hospital, after another attempt on London Bridge.
I threw myself into my studies but did not fair too well with a lot on my mind.
My best friend at the time proved an escape. We disappeared into the 80s whirl of Wham, Duran Duran, with our "clunk" cassette recorders of the day in the local park. Drinking her uncles rhubarb wine until we spinned into another world.
Her mother, love her, adored me, making up apple dumplings for my overnight stays. She used to annoy my friend by saying "Why can't you be more like your friend, she's such a sweet girl and looks after her mother"
Happy days spent in Liz's garden, with her vicious rabbit who always escaped! Her next door neighbour Ian, who I adored who we used to try and impress by playing his favourite bands tapes Status Quo and our girly giggles.
My first kiss was in a school disco with a lovely lad in a Herrington jacket and chinos! Michael you rocked my world, even though your braces got in the way. My mother was non-plussed with the lovebite on my neck on my return.
More happy days with Michael on the waltzers at the local fairs, and his name all under my fablon coated exercise books.
My friend dated her next door neighbour, which hurt quite a lot at the time, but then this fizzled out. I remember making up a 4 some date with my friend and her next boyfriend and her neighbour. We were watching Prince in concert, sat on the sofa. I remember sitting with arms crossed next to Ian who was doing the same. All of a sudden his warm hand held mine, arms still crossed so no-one knew. The shared smile, the warmth of love washed over me during very difficult times for me.
This all came to pass on Valentines Day. Armed with a daft card full of hearts I knocked on his door to go for the school disco. His face said it all, we could not be, he was sorry, he was confused about someone else in his life. As I always did, brushed myself down and attended said disco. Drowning myself in pernod and black, I caught his eye across the floor and he stood, a tear in his eye. The glass in his hand, crushed by his frustration, smashed to the floor. For that moment I knew he did love me, but that we just were not mean't to be.
It's not at the bottom, it's not at the top. But this is the place where I always stop.... #
Probably the very first memory I have is of sitting in my high chair, with a non currant teacake. I say non as the currants lay around the edge of the plate. "Dirty little flies" I told my mother, refusing to eat them. Strange how I now adore all this kind of fruit.
Another sitting on a huge log (my pretend horse) on Wimbledon Common. This deep love of horses stayed with me all my life. It was not apparent to me why, until much later in my life, (be patient dear reader, you will discover why!)
The next is sitting halfway up the stairs of a house in Manchester, around 4 years of age, my mother at the bottom pleading with my father not to leave, screaming at the top of her voice. He, faceless in my memory, however hard I tried to remember, as he slammed the door with its beautiful stained glass window and left, so loud that the stairs shook.
I remember crying and running back to bed pulling the Camberwick (remember them?!) bedspread over my head and staying there for quite some time, falling asleep hearing my mother howling in the next room.
The next memory is of seeing a large "blue bird" in my face and screaming.
"Its just a blue-bottle" soothed my mother. Peace ensued.
Another memory of my mother on her knees in what seemed like a vast front garden cutting the grass with a pair of kitchen scissors. As the sun caught her auburn hair, tears glinted as they rolled down her face soaking the grass below. Me, fetching my play scissors and joining this task, "I'll help you Mummy" . Mum always tells me now how I was a helpful child, but that I never open up and should say what I feel. Few people in my life have ever recognised that in my persona, seeing and believing the happy, smiling Miss Jones to be the real me. Those who do break down that outer cloak and see below the surface know who they are in my life.
Another memory of my mother making toffee in a huge saucepan, and eating it with it all over my face. The fact that my mother said thats all there was in the house, not making sense at that time.
The hard smack of an umbrella across my cheeks as my mother screamed "its your fault your father left, you are so like him"
Leaving that house as it got reposessed, crossing a major road in Manchester struggling to keep up with my mother (which is probably why I still walk like a Seargeant major), as the belt holding her suitcase broke spilling the contents all over the floor.
The next memory have is being in a grand hotel, with a huge spiral staircase and a Christmas tree on the landing. No, mother did not meet a sugar daddy, this was a temporary accomodation from Manchester council. In this place, I remember Kentucky fried chicken, tree cones at the side of my bed half opened (my mother always taught me to love nature). Christmas morning with a pile of presents from the long term wealthy residents staying there. One man of whom was like an Adonis, tall, dark, long hair and a smile like Michael Landon, as he swept me into the air, dancing and singing to Christmas tunes.
I crept out of bed one evening, as my mother slept, down the glamourous staircase, to a door marked "kitchen" , knocking on the door, and as it swung open, proclaiming "I'm hungry". The chefs in their tall hats smiling and a lovely waitress who piled a silver platter with sandwiches taking me back upstairs. My mother horrified that I had embarrassed her so.
I have to confess I could be a devilish child at times. The main memory of primary school is of a girl who annoyed me in class so much, that I held aloft a huge striped tin of Copydex glue above her head. The satisfaction of that glue pouring out all over her beautiful black shiny hair, I am afraid still raises a smile! I was frog marched to the heads office, and taken back home by an irate mother. The poor child had to have her hair cut elfin style and for some reason never sat next to me again!
Another devilish moment is of a boy on whom I had a small crush who kept pulling my skirt, over and over again. I warned him nicely, but on the 20th pull, I turned and slapped him full pelt across the face, knocking him to the ground. Let that be a lesson to you guys, this lass has a sting in her scorpion tail!
My mother continued in her depression and had many suicide attempts, often asking me how she should do it. We were by this time living with my auntie in Yorkshire.
Here I learned how to knit at the age of 9, and loved the huge radiogram in the corner of the room. The dulcit tones of John Denver, Glen Campbell records, as well as the vast collection of soul and Motown of my mothers collection.
I continued to devour books, reading my aunties Readers Digest collection of Catherine Cookson ilk at a very early age.
As my mother was always ill, I spent a lot of time with my Auntie. She was a feisty character and taught me to protect myself form the world outside. Fun loving she also liked to dance and sing, which ensued this passion for music, still now.
One day my mother was very unwell and when I came home from school she was not there. For a week we had no idea where she was. I remember looking out of my bedroom window, watching the snowflakes drift past, the sky go dark, then light, not wanting to miss her return.
A while later she had turned up in Guys Hospital, after another attempt on London Bridge.
I threw myself into my studies but did not fair too well with a lot on my mind.
My best friend at the time proved an escape. We disappeared into the 80s whirl of Wham, Duran Duran, with our "clunk" cassette recorders of the day in the local park. Drinking her uncles rhubarb wine until we spinned into another world.
Her mother, love her, adored me, making up apple dumplings for my overnight stays. She used to annoy my friend by saying "Why can't you be more like your friend, she's such a sweet girl and looks after her mother"
Happy days spent in Liz's garden, with her vicious rabbit who always escaped! Her next door neighbour Ian, who I adored who we used to try and impress by playing his favourite bands tapes Status Quo and our girly giggles.
My first kiss was in a school disco with a lovely lad in a Herrington jacket and chinos! Michael you rocked my world, even though your braces got in the way. My mother was non-plussed with the lovebite on my neck on my return.
More happy days with Michael on the waltzers at the local fairs, and his name all under my fablon coated exercise books.
My friend dated her next door neighbour, which hurt quite a lot at the time, but then this fizzled out. I remember making up a 4 some date with my friend and her next boyfriend and her neighbour. We were watching Prince in concert, sat on the sofa. I remember sitting with arms crossed next to Ian who was doing the same. All of a sudden his warm hand held mine, arms still crossed so no-one knew. The shared smile, the warmth of love washed over me during very difficult times for me.
This all came to pass on Valentines Day. Armed with a daft card full of hearts I knocked on his door to go for the school disco. His face said it all, we could not be, he was sorry, he was confused about someone else in his life. As I always did, brushed myself down and attended said disco. Drowning myself in pernod and black, I caught his eye across the floor and he stood, a tear in his eye. The glass in his hand, crushed by his frustration, smashed to the floor. For that moment I knew he did love me, but that we just were not mean't to be.
It's not at the bottom, it's not at the top. But this is the place where I always stop.... #
Saturday, 26 February 2011
Its only me!
Well hello, again, hello, just called to let you know,
This has taken a long time, 42 years in fact, so lets just hope its worth the wait?!
Its also because I am no good with things technical so my internet providings were really not providing and my profile has taken all morning to load doh! Bored yet? Oh you've gone....
Oh no you're still listening. I can see you there looking absolutely gorgeous. Well gather round on the carpet in front and Miss Jones shall begin....
The enigma that is Miss Jones, who is she? where is she? and what makes her tick tock?
I guess I should start at the very beginning. My instability in myself is deep within. This is down to having my Dad leave home when I was 4 and a very mentally unstable Mum which on reflection left a major scar. This rejection and instability and loneliness led me to withdraw into a shell in my younger years and create an imaginary friend. This friend became the topic of writing as a very young child. This writing seemed to be a talent of sorts I was told and became a major part of my young and teenage years. I went on to write poetry as a teenager,won some writing competitions and a grade A in english language.
I love all things written and spoken, which is probably why I am addicted to Twitter and thats my excuse and i am sticking to it!!
You would always find me with my head in a book, losing myself amongst the pages and disappearing into an imaginary world.
At school I have to confess I was a lonely child, bullied due to being part of a single parent family - a crime in those days it seems!
I remember days of things stolen, name calling and a humungous lump on my head from a boy who hit me round the head with a football boot. (Maybe thats why I am a rugby fan non?)
I think this bullying led me to study deeper and I am so deep that I sometimes drive myself around the bend. I am a "whydowe?" Why do we do that? Why is that so? etc. Deeper than an incessant pool 'tis Miss Jones.
Are you interested to know more?
Are you sure?
Maybe now I have started I may not stop> I will let you guide me.
# I think about you every day, and I couldn't wait, hello....#
This has taken a long time, 42 years in fact, so lets just hope its worth the wait?!
Its also because I am no good with things technical so my internet providings were really not providing and my profile has taken all morning to load doh! Bored yet? Oh you've gone....
Oh no you're still listening. I can see you there looking absolutely gorgeous. Well gather round on the carpet in front and Miss Jones shall begin....
The enigma that is Miss Jones, who is she? where is she? and what makes her tick tock?
I guess I should start at the very beginning. My instability in myself is deep within. This is down to having my Dad leave home when I was 4 and a very mentally unstable Mum which on reflection left a major scar. This rejection and instability and loneliness led me to withdraw into a shell in my younger years and create an imaginary friend. This friend became the topic of writing as a very young child. This writing seemed to be a talent of sorts I was told and became a major part of my young and teenage years. I went on to write poetry as a teenager,won some writing competitions and a grade A in english language.
I love all things written and spoken, which is probably why I am addicted to Twitter and thats my excuse and i am sticking to it!!
You would always find me with my head in a book, losing myself amongst the pages and disappearing into an imaginary world.
At school I have to confess I was a lonely child, bullied due to being part of a single parent family - a crime in those days it seems!
I remember days of things stolen, name calling and a humungous lump on my head from a boy who hit me round the head with a football boot. (Maybe thats why I am a rugby fan non?)
I think this bullying led me to study deeper and I am so deep that I sometimes drive myself around the bend. I am a "whydowe?" Why do we do that? Why is that so? etc. Deeper than an incessant pool 'tis Miss Jones.
Are you interested to know more?
Are you sure?
Maybe now I have started I may not stop> I will let you guide me.
# I think about you every day, and I couldn't wait, hello....#
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