Life is still fine - we seem to be gettng along. But then, we have now spent close to £50,000 on the house now and two holidays in the summer!!
Nasty in tone that last sentence, I know, but I will let myself go this once.
She was doing a voluntary role - reading at a school. Unpaid of course and about 2 hours a week.
As usual, she was lecturing them about this and that and after one - no doubt - hectoring email, the school came back and said that 'from her tone' it was clear that 'she no longer wanted to work' there - it thanked her and wished her well for the future!
Being let go from a voluntary role is quite a feat.
A number of her friends from a decade or more ago were passing through London - we could see on Facebook. She even got in touch with them. They went out for dinner about half an hour from us - again Facebook. She somehow missed out on being invited.
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Tuesday, 14 August 2018
Wednesday, 27 June 2018
123: My Father 2 ... and Lessons
So, what lessons can be learned.
The good bits:
Objectively, I can say that I am closer to my son than he
was with me. I asked my elder brother (by 7 years) whether he had been different
with him, when he was younger – more cheerful, closer? I did not get a response.
In absolute terms I am probably seen as a worrier but in
relative terms, I worry less I am sure.
I am less judgemental of people.
Have more personal friends.
Probably more content.
The bad bits:
No way near as successful as a professional.
Have not helped people anywhere near as much.
Not as clever or hard working.
And then …
Comes my parents’ relationship. It can’t always have been
bad and sometimes, as a youngster, if I came into their room unexpectedly, I
can remember them springing away from a hug.
But the overwhelming memory is of my mother being hugely
resentful – of marrying into a big joint family, of not having been able to
work. This resentment came out in mocking his family and continuously harping
on about what she might have been. And lots of ill temper almost all the time
and a huge need for control.
He kept his head down for a peaceful life but am pretty
confident that at critical junctures he ruled out options – for example, her not
working – and so the hurt was both ways for sure.
I do not want to end up there. I do not want years of misery
because it is easier to stay than to split. Following his death, my mother is
now enjoying the freedom of a lessening of responsibility. If I live as long as
81, I do not want to wait.
I have a duty to my son and life is peaceful anyway. But if
there is a lesson, in my parents’ marriage, and those of others, it is surely
that the break is better. Perhaps not for all concerned but certainly for the
one wanting to get away. I do not want to create an ideological position and it
is not something I think about every moment and every day – but the time will
come?
122: My Father 1
It is 27th June today. My father’s birthday. He
would have been 92. He died last December.
Sitting at my desk at work, a bit bored and needing distraction,
I open up Facebook. My brother has a post there marking the day – I hadn’t
remebered. Suddenly feel the need to write.
My father was a great man in so many senses. From looking
after his extended family, to being the best engineer I ever knew and a very
successful one, his capacity for hard work and duty to his family, loyalty to his
bosses. He achieved much and left a lot of good memories for everyone.
Towards the end of his life, he suffered from dementia and
it would be true to say that I was not very nice to him over perhaps the last
two years before he died. I could argue that I was protecting the people around
him – specifically my mum I suppose – as he turned into someone dragging
everyone down with him. Equally, it could be that I seized the advantage of him
not being very well to let my frustrations out, to get angry at him because I
could, while convincing myself that the only way to deal with a ‘bully’ is by
fighting back. Or that I do not have the patience to deal with uncomfortable situations. That conflict will always be with me, ever unresolved as I cannot
be judge and jury to myself.
Were we close? Not particularly. He was much older (42 when
I was born), somewhat distant, no interests in common. I went into heavy industry
and engineering because of him as I admired that life but we hardly ever spoke
about work. There were no hugs but he would be affectionate if I lay down on the
sofa with my head on his lap.
I think there was a mutual respect. He recognised that I
very rarely ‘asked’ for anything from him or my parents as a whole. One incident
I remember, I schlepped across London with golf clubs as my mum said she needed their
car and I could not borrow it – mine was with my wife. He got quite upset apparently
because I never asked for anything but had done so once and been denied! (This
is contrast to my brother and sister-in-law who had a much closer relationship
with far greater give and take.)
Then, one year (2015 I think) he told me that I was the only
one he could confide in – that he was being treated ‘like a servant’ in his own
home. My mother was and is not an easy woman and their's was a harsh relationship
from the outside – with mutual anger and recriminations that came out more and
more over the years. I told him that I was in the same boat and that it was our
lot in life to put one step in front of the other and carry on!!
But he never spoke to me about my admission at all. And while
it may be unfair to say so given all that he did for others, it prompts me to
think that there was a selfishness there – an ‘all about me.’ Behind a modest
exterior was someone who was proud of what he had achieved –
absolutely nothing wrong with that. Or was there? This was not a 'comfortable' pride - a man content. There always appeared to be a
role to be played, it felt like. Being the most hospitable, kind, generous –
and he was all of those things. And he was also successful and gave my brother
and me fantastic starts in life. But he never appeared to be able to enjoy what
he had done. It was always duty, the continuous feeling perhaps that he was being judged, there were always fears and negativity and hypochondria
… and, in a sense, perhaps it all built up inside him to the extent that he was
always the victim. There was this complete focus on work and confidence which
did not extend to much of the rest of his life. Totally comfortable with going
to Libya via Malta during American sanctions or fly in single prop. engines in
the Liberia but huge fears about a simple cataract operation or a minor back-ache.
What is the magic bullet that explains him? This mix of
greatness and smallness? I remember we were in Moscow once and there was a
problem with plane tickets. I expected this experienced business traveller to
take command, and yet he did not – he actively moved away from it by handing
the tickets over to someone else. He went down in my estimation a little then
though I was in my teens. He told me about how he left an organisation and told
his subordinates to decide amongst themselves as to who would take over. I saw
a letter to his eye consultant suggesting a cataract operation on one eye but
then rowing back and writing that he wasn’t at all suggesting a particular
avenue of action.
He was clearly very, very good at what he did – particularly
in the first half of his career – but always seemed to be afraid. My mother
relates the story of his boss saying that he ‘suffers from so many inhibitions,
always inhibitions.’ In which case he was lucky with his managers who
recognised the talent and supported his work.
So, in the end, he was a complex person just as we all are
and it is far easier to spot weaknesses in others than in ourselves.
He was what he was and the positives – certainly for me as
his son – outweigh the negatives. What are the lessons to be learned? …..next
post.
Tuesday, 29 May 2018
121: Funny ... and sad
So, all is well and life continues peacefully.
We must have spent close to £30k on the house in the last few months - on kitchen and bathrooms. The projects have over-run and there has been stress but not towards me or our son. The builder was chosen by her and so, I suppose, the capacity for blame is limited.
Anyway... the reason for writing is different.
We have not had the use of our own bedroom for a while because of the building works and we have been using the guest room. Now that we have two bedrooms again, and now that I am full time living at home - I had been working away during the week on a consultancy assignment - and working in the city, I suggested that we sleep apart during the week.
The reasoning being that I am a very, very light sleeper, she snores very loudly and my sleep is continually interrupted. When she is away or I am working away from home, I sleep well. As sleep is very important for health, this seemed a logical suggestion as I remain the sole earner and it is important for all of us that I remain healthy.
The last time I tried this, she got very upset. And this time she has said that I should go and see the doctor for my light sleep and that sleeping apart was not an option.
So, I have tried to be open, asked for a favour which is in all our interests, and she has flatly refused. It remains all about control. I will go to the doctor and I suppose I will bear the problem until I can't any more - the time is not right to create a fissure but how typical that she thinks only of herself and doesn't give a shit about the effect on me.
The second incident is funny. One of my relations had come over and, for some reason, the conversation turned to cars - and, specifically, £50k cars. 'Is a £50k car expensive then?' I had to point out to her that our's cost £11k and, yes, £50k is expensive. Does that strike you as someone who has had to be careful about money?
I am tired of listening about other people's extensions and how they have a budget of £700k or more or are doing up the whole house. One day I said, 'look, I'm sorry I don't earn as much other husbands.' I certainly did not get a 'don't be silly!' in response - more of a silent acceptance ... of my uselessness I suppose!!
I remain unable to leave as our son is only 12 and is much closer to me than her - I could not do that to him. Nor do I want to wish my life away - but this is hard and I am so very tired.
We must have spent close to £30k on the house in the last few months - on kitchen and bathrooms. The projects have over-run and there has been stress but not towards me or our son. The builder was chosen by her and so, I suppose, the capacity for blame is limited.
Anyway... the reason for writing is different.
We have not had the use of our own bedroom for a while because of the building works and we have been using the guest room. Now that we have two bedrooms again, and now that I am full time living at home - I had been working away during the week on a consultancy assignment - and working in the city, I suggested that we sleep apart during the week.
The reasoning being that I am a very, very light sleeper, she snores very loudly and my sleep is continually interrupted. When she is away or I am working away from home, I sleep well. As sleep is very important for health, this seemed a logical suggestion as I remain the sole earner and it is important for all of us that I remain healthy.
The last time I tried this, she got very upset. And this time she has said that I should go and see the doctor for my light sleep and that sleeping apart was not an option.
So, I have tried to be open, asked for a favour which is in all our interests, and she has flatly refused. It remains all about control. I will go to the doctor and I suppose I will bear the problem until I can't any more - the time is not right to create a fissure but how typical that she thinks only of herself and doesn't give a shit about the effect on me.
The second incident is funny. One of my relations had come over and, for some reason, the conversation turned to cars - and, specifically, £50k cars. 'Is a £50k car expensive then?' I had to point out to her that our's cost £11k and, yes, £50k is expensive. Does that strike you as someone who has had to be careful about money?
I am tired of listening about other people's extensions and how they have a budget of £700k or more or are doing up the whole house. One day I said, 'look, I'm sorry I don't earn as much other husbands.' I certainly did not get a 'don't be silly!' in response - more of a silent acceptance ... of my uselessness I suppose!!
I remain unable to leave as our son is only 12 and is much closer to me than her - I could not do that to him. Nor do I want to wish my life away - but this is hard and I am so very tired.
Thursday, 12 April 2018
120: A Quiet Phase
A long time since I wrote and 18 months from the magic
turnaround. Life has continued pleasantly enough with no rows, her
relationship with our son is much improved, we’ve been through many family
dramas together – my mum breaking her hip, my father’s dementia and then death,
her brother’s death, her mum’s stroke – and worked collaboratively through all
of that with mutual support.
Professionally, I have left my permanent role in a large
organisation and gone out contracting. The redundancy money is being used for a
new kitchen and new bathrooms, with new flooring and decorating to come. Lots
of money being spent.
Relationship wise, we have fun, we go out for meals and
holidays are good. Sexually, though, nothing happens for me though I try to
satisfy her, shall we say, manually. (The last time anything happened for me was August 2015 - easy to remember because it was an anniversary.)
But, you know, I cannot forget all that was said and, in the
end, as she herself says of other people, it is not possible to change one’s
nature. There are fewer flashes of the rather difficult-to-deal-with directness
but pettiness, judgement on others, wanting something for nothing, a general
neediness are all there.
I want to live my life a little free, without wondering how
The Other will react. I work with other consultants now and have again realised
that mine is not an uncommon story. One whom I spend a lot of time with was
expressing the same sentiment – to do things for oneself rather than for the
wife or wider family. That sounds selfish and I think it arises out of a
feeling that I am doing things for others where I do not get an ‘equal’
reaction. The old feeling that I do the right things but the reaction is not
what I would expect – like shouting down a valley and no echo returning.
And I do not, in any way, mean ‘gratitude’. Can I explain
that?
I spent a couple of days with my brother and sister-in-law
while my wife was away. And my sister-in-law and I had some conversations. She asked
me who or what did I love? Of course my son, but what about others? She gave
her own of example of going on holiday, staring at art was something she absolutely loved
as she could lose herself.
I replied that, if I were being brutally honest then that
list would be restricted to my son and my friends. Both are people who demand
nothing and I am just ‘me’ – liked for who I am while not being taken for
granted. A close cousin could be added to that list but even in stating that I
knew I would come in for some teasing – so, I didn’t. And that is what I mean I
suppose, a few paragraphs up. I feel as if I have worked and done things
because I have had to and not for the greater purpose of ‘living a good life’ which
surely must be the aim of privileged people like us who have won the lottery of
birth.
‘You see yourself as a Provider,’ my sister-in-law said. And
I suppose I am but that is not the person I want to be. That is the role I have
had to assume as there is a great Want in the Other. I would have loved an
adult relationship where we are ‘happy’ and know how to enjoy without so much
need. But, disappointingly, what I have is an unequal relationship where I have
been forcibly criticised for not being good enough as a provider with no
attempt or desire to build a partnership or to help. And that does not necessarily
mean being employed – it means a oneness, an acceptance of being good, of being forgiving towards making mistakes but also living up to each other and being, as the cliche goes, the best version of ourselves and having the support to be so.
And let me not be disingenuous. I like living in the house
we live in now rather than the one we lived in for five years previously, which
was fine but I felt was less than what I ‘should’ have. And so, if each of us
has an in-built measure of ‘success’ then why do I criticise another’s view of
what ‘should’ be? I suppose because there is only the Need there and not the
attitude that – while there is always a huge amount of luck (starting with
birth) – there has to be Work too. Birth, intelligence, qualifications are critical and can provide a head start but unless these are of exceptionally high levels still form only the foundations - the rest has to be worked for. So much can go right and so much can go wrong but the only thing in our hands is our effort and attitude - the rest is uncontrollable and we have to be lucky.
With my son and, as a child, things can be different.
He is now 12. A few weeks ago he was not very well and he went to sleep
with his head on my chest and his arm around my waist. Last night he came to my
room as he could not get to sleep and stayed with me – my wife is away. A year
or so ago, I had fallen asleep – or so he thought – and he came and gave me a
little hug before going to bed himself. He is not doing that because we are
sending him to a fee-paying school or buying him gifts but something far
simpler and deeper. And, I have truly learnt ‘love’ from him, the oneness that
fills me with warmth. And, it turns out, I have written before on this - Dear Son.
And I try to role-model the behaviours I am trying to inculcate – openness, conscientiousness but, also, something that was significantly lacking in my growing up, and I am probably being very unfair here, a feeling of being loved. I am not sure I had that even though my parents no doubt felt it. It was a feeling of not being good enough, about being controlled and having to 'do' things to be liked. Some of that will always be felt and, yes, I do say to my son that there is very little for free and work is what gives us the freedom for other things – but that, at its best, work does not feel like work and actually is part of who you are and what you want to be.
But I also ask him (and he knows the answers) as I tuck him in, 'who is my most favourite soul in the universe?' 'I am.' 'Who is my life?' 'Me' 'Who is my reason for living?' 'Me.'
And I try to role-model the behaviours I am trying to inculcate – openness, conscientiousness but, also, something that was significantly lacking in my growing up, and I am probably being very unfair here, a feeling of being loved. I am not sure I had that even though my parents no doubt felt it. It was a feeling of not being good enough, about being controlled and having to 'do' things to be liked. Some of that will always be felt and, yes, I do say to my son that there is very little for free and work is what gives us the freedom for other things – but that, at its best, work does not feel like work and actually is part of who you are and what you want to be.
But I also ask him (and he knows the answers) as I tuck him in, 'who is my most favourite soul in the universe?' 'I am.' 'Who is my life?' 'Me' 'Who is my reason for living?' 'Me.'
In the end, I would like him to be a gentle person, with
good friends, fulfilled at work and the ability to be content. Might take him a while – as it
takes all of us, and he will have his own journey – but hope he gets there.
Tuesday, 1 August 2017
119 - 'Like a Woody Allen film'
3 school friends and I got together over dinner last week-end - one had come over from France. As a group, this was probably the first time we had got together since 1987 but individuals had been in touch throughout that time.
As evening turned to dusk, so we talked about life and stuff.
The one in France had married a French guy, divorced, lived with another and been forced to, essentially, run away - then married a great Scottish guy (who was divorced and, indeed, a grandfather, himself) and now appears to be content in her personal life and they have a lovely 7 year old daughter.
Another married her sweetheart from age 16, they had a daughter (now 16) and then he ran away when their child was 1 - with someone he met at FriendsReunited! My friend then married an Irish guy with whom she has two further kids.
And I, of course, have my own story.
One of my friends texted the next day to say that the dinner conversations could have formed the content of a Woody Allen film!
As I relate that line to other friends, that is true of virtually everyone. The four of us are ordinary people trying to live ordinary lives, but things get added to our lives like lego pieces or fall on us like dust and there is little that may be called simple.
Can I continue the metaphor further? Can we be the 'wall' that the proverbial jelly falls off of and retain who we are while dealing with the vicissitudes of life or do we allow ourselves to be overwhelmed and break down.
And, of course, these are first world problems. Floating across the Mediterranean in search of a better life, scraping of rubbish heaps to earn money - those are problems. Us? Unless they are medical and tragic, we make them but can't always unmake.
As evening turned to dusk, so we talked about life and stuff.
The one in France had married a French guy, divorced, lived with another and been forced to, essentially, run away - then married a great Scottish guy (who was divorced and, indeed, a grandfather, himself) and now appears to be content in her personal life and they have a lovely 7 year old daughter.
Another married her sweetheart from age 16, they had a daughter (now 16) and then he ran away when their child was 1 - with someone he met at FriendsReunited! My friend then married an Irish guy with whom she has two further kids.
The third worked her way through a number of relationships - some that may be considered 'rebellious' as she is Jewish. Then married a Jewish guy somewhat older than her and has a 9 year old son.
The details are not to identify but how varied people are.
And I, of course, have my own story.
One of my friends texted the next day to say that the dinner conversations could have formed the content of a Woody Allen film!
As I relate that line to other friends, that is true of virtually everyone. The four of us are ordinary people trying to live ordinary lives, but things get added to our lives like lego pieces or fall on us like dust and there is little that may be called simple.
Can I continue the metaphor further? Can we be the 'wall' that the proverbial jelly falls off of and retain who we are while dealing with the vicissitudes of life or do we allow ourselves to be overwhelmed and break down.
And, of course, these are first world problems. Floating across the Mediterranean in search of a better life, scraping of rubbish heaps to earn money - those are problems. Us? Unless they are medical and tragic, we make them but can't always unmake.
Thursday, 20 July 2017
118 - Do I / we live up to these principles?
A Harvard Study: https://curiousmindmagazine.com/parents-who-raise-good-kids/
The headlines are:
Spend Quality Time - do things like reading
Be Role Model - including admitting mistakes and making time for yourself
Teach to Care for Others - including responsibilities and duties for others; not just 'be happy' but 'be kind and be happy'
Practice Appreciation and Gratitude
See the Big Picture - be kind, empathetic outside immediate circle
I think we - as parents - are ok at what is being stated but could do more on the last three.
The headlines are:
Spend Quality Time - do things like reading
Be Role Model - including admitting mistakes and making time for yourself
Teach to Care for Others - including responsibilities and duties for others; not just 'be happy' but 'be kind and be happy'
Practice Appreciation and Gratitude
See the Big Picture - be kind, empathetic outside immediate circle
I think we - as parents - are ok at what is being stated but could do more on the last three.
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