Friday 28 December 2012

Heralds of the Spring



The winter in our lovely country has actually lasted for the past two years or at least that is what it seems like.
I cannot remember when I last wore my light weight summer clothing but hey! we live in hope and just now I have
a bowl full of sweet smelling blue and white hyacinths in the lounge and gold and white narcissi growing up and of
course January brings along these dainty green and white snowdrops which look as though the slightest wind might knock the down but are in fact as tough as old boots as they force their way through the icy ground giving us renewed hope
and some of their strength to face whatever might come our way and still look good.   Oh! how I am longing to see them again in 2013.
 
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Monday 19 November 2012

working and enjoying life into old age




Being old does not mean being imobile unless your health is in a very serious state.   This precious lady and gentleman are 86 and 92 years of age and they never appear to stop nor to stop enjoying life and seeing the funny side.  They are an inspiration to us all.
Fauja Singh was 100 years old when he ran the London Marathon last year and he didn't even take up running marathons until he was 89.
John Dreelin ran with the bulls in Pamplona this year, he's 77 years old - why?  because all his life he had longed to have a go but knew how much his family would disapprove:  now he thinks he's old enough to please himself!
Roger Allsop swam the English channel at 70 years old.
Fred Mack was 100 when he jumped out of an aeroplane and successfully and safely landed.
Sherman Bull climbed Mount Everest on May 25th 2001 aged 64 years.
Just a tiny portion of the people I have read about lately and admired  - DON'T STOP 'TIL YOU DROP.
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Saturday 10 November 2012

Saturday 3 November 2012

Spanish gardener



I am struggling to tidy up the pots in my garden to prepare for winter bulb planting but it is a difficult job in the bad weather.  I am thankful that I do not have a Spanish garden like this one we saw in Cordoba or I would never get to the end of it.  There is always a lot of hard work before a beautiful display but it's worth it.
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Wednesday 31 October 2012

A bit posh?



Would you like to live in this house?  Well you can't because it belongs to President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe
and is only one of many!
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Sunday 28 October 2012

 


I have been away from my home for just a week and when I returned yesterday I found Autumn
had arrived outside the winow...cold but beautiful.
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Tuesday 16 October 2012

Concerned!




I read this little letter to a magazine and it made me laugh.

At the end of a busy day on police duties I left the station with my canine partner Jake who was barking excitedly and loudly as he knew very well this was the end of our day at work.
As we approached the police van and I took out the keys to open the doors at the back  I spotted a small boy staring at me from over a nearby wall.
'Are you putting that dog in the van?' he asked quietly.
'Yes, I am'  I replied
He looked puzzled and very sad and finally gasped out  'But why? what did he do?'
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Friday 12 October 2012

Still looking beautiful.



Oh dear, these were supposed to be red and lushious for our salads in August and here we are
at the middle of October and still very green.  At least with all this rain I haven't had to water
them constantly.   Perhaps now is the time to look out my receipe for green tomato chutney!
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Monday 8 October 2012

We are very complex to the end!



We are very complicated people and the more we learn about each other and our bodies and minds the more perlexing it is.
When Mel Blanc, a man of a thousand voices had a stroke he fell into a deep coma; he was taken to hospital and his family told he could not be saved and it was only a matter of time before he would die.
They were also reminded that hearing is the last of our senses to go so they should sit and talk with him until the end came which they did.
He never spoke to his loved ones again but whenever the doctors asked a question softly in his ear he would answer softly but only in the voice of Bugs Bunny his most famous creation.
He died some days later and only lost the voice of his beloved BB a few hours before his death.
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Tuesday 11 September 2012

Autumn is here




 

These beautiful rose hips in my neighbour's garden reminded me of when I was a child and my mother
would gather a basket full and make jam and syrup.  Any sign of a sneeze in our house and all the
family would be lined up for a spoonful of rose hip syrup which mother told us would guard us from all known germs!   We didn't mind as it tasted much nicer than the stuff other kids got from the chemist.
Mother wasn't far wrong in her judgement (was she ever?) as I now know that a spoonful of rose hip contains 60 times more vitamin C than the average size orange and is the richest plant source available -
it is also used in the treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis.  What an amazing plant - it spends all summer showing us the most beautiful and sweet scented roses and then gives the beneficial fruits of Autumn.
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Friday 7 September 2012

You never know.....?

Bart Connor is the most decorated gymnast in the world and has brought many honours to himself
and to his country the United States.
He represented the US at the 1984 Olympics where he met the Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci and they married the following year and now run a training programme for future gymnasts.
Bart was a very active child from the ages 2 to 3 years but insisted on  'walking' around the house on his hands more often than on his feet.  Visitors to their home thought he was  a very odd child but his mother never once told him to 'stop it'  -  instead she bided her time and as soon as she was allowed to took him and enrolled him into a gym.......and the rest is history.  Never ignore your God given talents.

Sunday 26 August 2012

My kind of Christianity




                      'So what do you believe in?
               Nothing fixed or final,
               all the while I travel a miracle 
               I doubt, and yet
               I walk upon the water'

   From the poem 'Interview' by the wonderful Sidney Carter
                                                                               1915-2004

Saturday 25 August 2012

Memories and such...



My number 2 son has taken to writing stories of a rather dark nature and  has had a modicum
of success, though not to great riches it has to be said.   Most of his stories seem to me to take place in dark old houses situated in vast and lonely places as certainly these types of tales very often need this kind of setting.  This has me wondering if his childhood memories are of visiting
friends in old and atmospheric houses as we certainly had a few who did live in them.
One of our dearest friends lived on the Pennines in Greater Manchester in a huge and much neglected vicarage.  Charles was vicar of a sparse congregation and a huge, cold church but he and his wife Clare loved it and the people scattered around this bleak landscape.  Clare was a lovely, kind and wise lady who took on the long empty post of 'lollipop lady' which enabled her to get to know every child in the area of the school by their first names and often their mothers too.
Before long many of them were attending events she and Charles organised in church and were
able to be greeted with a hug and called by name.  A stroke of genius!
The church house was huge and they could not afford the heating bills and it was usually freezing in winter and summer so Clare usually kept her 'lollipop lady'  layers of uniform on in the house between duties prompting Charles to to be able to ask her 'Is this the way to the kitchen Miss?' whenever they met in the house. 
They asked us to come up and visit them and told us of the glorious views from their house stretching across endless acres of Pennine moorland but stressed not to come before May as the icicles on the windows did not usually melt until then.   Oh! how we laughed, we thought it was a joke.
They lived very happily there until the diocese decided to close the church and they were moved into a small town but were never as happy and decided to retire soon after. 
I should have taken lots of photographs but digital cameras were far in the future then; but it would have been a great help to our son's imagination.  You never know what experiences might come up again in your future life.   RIP Charles and Clare, you were the best.

 

Monday 30 July 2012

Olympic Games




I may not be able to add to my blog for a few days as I am holding out for a medal in the 'Sofa Endurance' event.  x

Saturday 21 July 2012

Some things are just unexplainable....




This picture is of a lady named Pearl Witherington an SOS Agent thoughout the War years.  She was born in Paris of British parents which gave her a dual nationality, love of both countries and a perfect French accent.   She joined the SOE, finishing her training as the best shot the service had ever seen and was paracuted into occupied France where she joined a leader and began causing havoc with the train lines the German army depended upon for troop transportation.  After 8 months her Leader was captured by the Gestapo and she took over and went on to run an active marquis  of some 2,000 men and women with bravery, gallantry and distinction until the war ended when she then presided over the surrender of 18,000 German troops.
At the end of the war she married and lived in London and was strongly recommended for an MC but apparently women were ineligible for such a high honour so she was actually sent  a civil MBE.  She sent this back with a sweet note saying she did not deserve it as she had done nothing civil at all during the war, she had been a serving soldier.
She was to wait 60 years before being given her parachute wings by the British.
 The French decorated her with the Legion d'honneur.
She returned to France later in her long life and died in a Residential  Home near Paris aged 93.   RIP Pearl and thank you.
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Wednesday 18 July 2012

all I need now is..............


 



I have just come across this picture of a tree we had in out garden in Spain
and I realise that all I need is some gin, tonic, ice, the blue sky and the warmth of the sun and I will think it is summer in the UK!
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Tuesday 17 July 2012

uniform ...or not?


A short time ago we had a large group of children in the Cathedral for an education day.
The Dean welcomed them all wearing full fig of long black cassock and brightly coloured cummerbund
and they all enjoyed his sense of humour as he welcomed them to the Cathedral, the Archdeacon, similarly attired wandered around having just done a daily Service.  Then one of the Canons came to tell the children what was going to happen
during their day with us but he was dressed in a plain grey suit.  After the meeting and greetings we split the children into groups and off we all went to different areas to take part in the activities and to enjoy ourselves.
I was just getting to know my group when a very worried little blonde girl put up her hand and said
'Miss, I really don't think that man was Canon Robert'
I assured her I knew Robert and that was definitley him and asked why she should think he wasn't who he said he was and she said  'Well he wasn't wearing a uniform so he could be anybody couldn't he?'
This seemed to amuse all the other children and I knew I would have to rescue her so I told her she was a very good girl and never to be ashamed or embarrassed to ask people to prove who they are as we have all been told to.  She was happy with that and looked at the other kids with a look of distain but it got me thinking - do we trust people in uniform more than those who do not wear it and should we?   I thought of a friend who went into a psychiatric hospital and the state his confused and worried mind was confounded by the fact that none of the nursing staff wore uniform and really could only be recognised by the size of the bunch of keys they carried around.   He came home in the same state as he was before being admitted and I am sure that the simple fact that he did not know who to turn to for help led to his delayed recovery.
All the children in the UK wear a uniform of sorts and I am so glad because my grandaughter who lives with me would NEVER get to the school bus if she had to select an outfit for the day, every day.
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Thursday 12 July 2012

Beautiful Bristol



 This is a picture of the Council Houses in Bristol - do they really need all this room?
I know lots of boring items appear on their agenda and I appreciate the fact that
they sit and discuss for hours on end but whenever I pass by I always think what
good accomodation it would make and how much money the council would raise
    by selling the building for up market homes right in the centre of the city....
...........only a thought! 
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Tuesday 10 July 2012

please leave me alone








Why do the servers suddenly decide to 'update' these blogs without our knowledge?
Why fix something that isn't broken?
It has take me some time to understand how to upload my pictures and even compose the text.
I am not very IT literate but I do get used to using sites only to find when I get the hang of it
it has been updated 'to make it easier'...............is it just me?    Grrrrr!

Raja Ram MohunRoy 1772 - 1833



This picture is of Bristol Cathedral and in foreground stands the statue of Raja Ram MohunRoy
an Indian reformer who died whilst visiting friends in Bristol.
I always feel like making a bow to him as I pass him by very often as he is a great hero.
As a religious and social reformer the modern day Indians owe him a great deal.
Whilst working tirelessly against what he saw as superstitious and unjust practises in his homeland such as sati (the practise in which the widow was burned on her husband's funeral pyre), caste rigidity, polygamy and child marriage he also fought courageously to get the British Government on the side of giving welfare to the Indian nation which they ruled and for the education system, such as it was, not only to improve but to include girls.   He died at the age of 61 of meningitis whilst visiting friends in Bristol who were supporting his cause with the Government but not before he had seen the Hindu Nation ban sati for ever.  He is buried in the Arnos Vale Cemetery in southern Bristol.   Lots of visitors from the Indian Continent visit his grave - he lived and died a hero.
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Sunday 1 July 2012

football crazy



One good thing about England being knocked out of the European championship
was the demise of these silly little mittens that appeared on all the car wing mirrors.
Once it was pointed out that the flags attached to cars were coming adrift and therefore a danger to other road users some wit came up with these 'cute' little mittens.
I hope some other brains are designing some other symbol for the next tournament. 
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Thursday 7 June 2012

weeds or flowers?


This lovely picture is of the Morning Glory that grew in a great mass all over the bottom
of our garden when we went to live in Spain:  I loved it and stared at it through the kitchen window and through the bedroom window every day and took numerous photographs.
We, that is all the people who lived on our hillside payed a small sum each which allowed us a few hours work weekly from the man, Juan who looked after the whole hillside
I was horrified one day to find him hacking all the beautiful Morning Glory down to ground level.  I ran down the garden to ask him to leave it but he told me 'pero son las
malas hierbas senora'  'but it is a weed senora' so I tried to explain that I loved it anyway
so could he leave it but he was having none of this nonsense from a newly arrived
foreigner - 'no van a crecer mas de la casa'   No, he couldn't leave it or it would grow all over the house!  He knew native plants and I didn't so when he said it would be just as big next year I had to believe him and of course it was true -  I had to struggle with his knowledge at Christmas though when I came back from the shops to find he had cut back
a 6 ft hedge of glorious Poinsettias - I cried. 
When you live in another country you have to deal with many different and to you strange
customs.  I never got used to the great love the Spanish have for Nispero fruits or Loquat as they are called in some countries.  They were brought to Spain more than 2000 years ago by sailors arriving in ports in the Valencian region and they do actually grow well wherever citrus grows.  I hated them as they tasted sour to me and I could only think they could be used to make a pickle but the Spanish adore them and the aforementioned
Juan would be my very best friend each year when I invited him to strip the tree and take
them away.   It all adds to the spice of life as they say.

Monday 28 May 2012

Late Spring in the UK


Today I went over the Mendip Hills to visit a friend in Wells and what a beautiful sight it was.
The hedgerows are bowing down with the sweet smelling May blossoms whilst alongside the road at each side the Buttercups, Bluebells and Ox-Eye Daisies look their very best:  trees and fields will never show a softer green - it's as though they are saying - 'this is the best we can do'.
All the small villages and most of the farm houses were sporting Union Flags and bunting was entwined in all the trees and gardens.
It was just so lovely I couldn't help thinking I would not want to be anywhere else in the
world this week-end as we all get together to celebrate the Jubilee.  Yeeey!

Thursday 24 May 2012

Women!

Women!  why are we so much trouble?   For we females who call ourselves Christians the debate of the roll of women in the church continues.                                    In 1970
Pope Paul V1 warned the then Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr Coggan) that there could be no reconciliation between the churches whilst Anglicans considered ordaining women to the priesthood.  Considerations, committees, synods, denials and even promises continued for
the next 24 years until in March 1994 in Bristol Cathedral, Bishop Barry Rogerson ordained 32 women to the priesthood.  It was a momentous day and many banner bearing protesters (the Press too, acting as if they cared!) surounded the Cathedral to denounce the Bishop and all he stood for.  Bishop Barry warned that in his opinion it would be 10 years before the first of these women or any following them made it to senior status in the church.  Well!  not 10 years but 18 years have passed by and the status of the female priests is largely the same, few have made it to Archdeacon but none to Bishop and the war still rages on.   One of the most respected leader of another faith - His Holiness the DalaiLama weighed in recently by stating that he hoped the next DalaiLama, the leader of 500 million Buddhists throughout the free world and over 1 billion  in the People's Republic of China (who are not officially allowed to declare their allegience to any faith) plus 1 million+ in Asia who commonly adhere to more than one religion of which Buddhism plays a major part........he actually said that he hoped a woman would be his successor as DL.  How could he?  We have had over 2000 years of arguments over the rights of females in a world of which females are half of the population.  Sort it out your Holiness and then announce your decision to the world
please no committees we beg you.

Wednesday 16 May 2012

Molotov

Recently one of the newspapers mocked the speech impediment of the new England football manager; he said it did not worry him as he was used to it - there is a sadness in that comment.
At the same time there was a serious issue discussed in the newspapers in the USA as to whether Winston Churchill had a lisp or a stammer as apparently he always pronounced a
single s as sh - does it really matter?   In this country he was thought to have a stammer left over from a nervous childhood.  He developed a stage craft ie., long pauses until he found the right word he could say  -  through this method his speeches became quite dramatic as we all know.
Lately I was reading about another very famous Statesman who was making speeches at the same time as Churchill and also had a stammer which he managed to conquer for most of the time, when he didn't manage to do so it greatly angered Stalin who thought everyone would see it as a sign of a weak man.  His name was Vyacheslav Mikhailovich   who was Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Russian Government and protege of Stalin.  He put all the words from Stalin's mouth into powerful oration and was made to sign everything to keep Stalin's  'reputation'  intact.
He married a Jewess who was the love of his life but Stalin
 thought to show so much love was a sign of weakness in a man and during the war had Polina arrested and sent to Lubyanka Concentration Camp.  Molotov was a very important man but could not prevent the arrest of his wife;  in an act of defiance that could have led to his death he ordered a dinner for her every night and had it placed by an empty chair so that no one would forget her: a year later Stalin ordered her release from Lubyanka but sent her into exile in Siberia never allowing Molotov to know where she was.  She was released immediately on the death of Stalin and rushed back to Moscow never to leave his side again.
He was given the name Molotov early in his career which  is Russian for 'hammer' his other nickname being 'stone-arse' because of the amount of hours he sat working at his desk.
He died in 1980 during the reign of Mikail Gorbachev and is buried in Norodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, his head stone names him as 'Molotov' 
A weak man?.....never.

Friday 11 May 2012

Mother

When my father met my mother in 1925 she had never seen a picture of herself as her
family did not own a camera and her family home did not own a mirror - her mother
thought mirrors were not only unlucky but made you think too much of yourself.
Dad took her to a photographer's studio and using most of his weekly pay had this
picture taken of her.  It was to send back to his parents and sisters and brothers to tell
them this was the girl he was about to marry.  It was the only picture she ever had of
herself as young woman it would be many more years before the next one was taken.
On this picture she was 23 and had never been out with a man or even spoken to many outside her own family, dad was 35; their happy marriage last nearly 50 years
only death parted them.

Monday 7 May 2012

Remembering

It is one year today since my sister died and although she had been ill with cardiac disease
for some time the final news of her death came with great sadness.
In the few days following her death I remembered everything she had said (she was the fun  member of the family) and I relayed it all constantly to my bored loved ones as my way of coping with her death.
Now just one year on and I can't remember a single word she ever said no matter how hard I try.  I can though remember clearly all the things she did.  I have been thinking of her today and how kind she was to me as a child and growing up into adulthood.  I cannot remember ever having a cross word with her.  In the early sixties when materials were expensive and scarce she would recycle all my clothes for me so at least I did not feel so much 'behind the door' when all the hippy fashions of the age came into being.
For our other sister who was a competition skater she would sit and sew hundreds of sequins on to old blackout material so that she would look good.
When our eldest sister who lived abroad was having serious problems with her marriage,
her health and her finances she flew out and brought her home.

This proves conclusively that it not what we SAY to others in our lifetime but what we do for them that makes the difference.

                      'Rest in peace my dearest sister, to rise again in Glory'

Wednesday 2 May 2012

Extreme Love

Last week on BBC1 Louis Theroux did a programme looking at people living with a loved one who is suffering from Demensia.  It is never an easy subject and for once Louis Theroux appeared to be out of his depth; he was touched by the great love and patience showed by some of the carers - especially those who had been married a long time and had managed to keep a very tentative hold on their partner.
When my mother was almost 80 years old and a very active and bright lady she was knocked off her feet by a young man on a racing bicycle and suffered head injuries which needed 22 stitches.  The fellow picked up his bike and ran off leaving her lying in the road
where she was eventually found by a young 'hoodie' who called an ambulance and  knelt holding her hand until help came.  The injuries quickly healed but shock hit her badly and she spiralled downhill into demensia. Clever doctors told us the accident had nothing to do with her rapid descent into demensia but we know differently!

My three sisters and I found it very hard to bear and dealt with it in our own different ways.

My eldest sister, the one most like our mum, totally lost patience, she visited, and looked after mum's mail and finances but as far as I know never actually spoke to her again.
Sister number 2 simply ignored the whole scenerio and carried on a 'pretend' life with our mother denying that mum had actually 'gone away' and did not know who she was.
Sister number 3 was 'Sister Practical' - she washed all mum's clothing, her person, her hair and her nails and cooked treats for her.
I was the youngest daughter by quite a number of years and did nothing of any good.
Mum decided that I was her sister (who had taken her own life when young) and would grip my hands and talk for the whole of the visit about life when they were young, their Irish relatives and the German bombers who came every night and just missed her.  Strangely; although she did not recognise any of us as her children she always ran to me recognising me immediately as 'her sister' and there fore imprisoning me for the next hour or so.
She was like this for 12 years and eventually had to go into a Care Home.  She knew nothing, could not read, write or tell the time, dress herself or even feed herself.
One skill she did not forget was that she could sing, she always had a wonderful voice
and at the very end of her long life it was the only recognisable thing left of our mother.

She loved the days when the local Vicar came into the home - he would give them all a Blessing and then sit at the piano and play songs and hymns for the next hour or so.
He told us that he had never found anything that our mum did not know and she would sing every word, head thrown back and smiling broadly.

No wonder Louis Theroux was a bit thrown by the behaviour of some of the people he met, my sisters and I are still sad at what happened to our mother but we always tried to cheer each other by saying that SHE did not know what SHE was like so it seemed not to hurt her - but it almost broke our hearts.

Wednesday 25 April 2012

ANZAC DAY


This is the day the Australians and New Zealanders and the South Sea Islanders
remember their war dead and all we in Europe should never forget the sacrifice of
these young men who came right across the world when asked to help us fight for
the freedom of Europe.
This picture is of the War memorial for the ANZACs at Villiers-Bretonneux in the Battlefields of France on the Somme where hundred of thousands of Aussies and Kiwis
are buried or have a memorial marked simply 'KNOWN ONLY TO GOD'.

British tanks were losing out to the Germans at this spot when they were joined overnight by the Australian Infantry who managed to drive out the German Army ten times their number but at a cost of twelve hundred Australian lives.  When the war was over the
people of this little town tried to claim their lives back and in the meantime raised enough
money to put a memorial to the gallant army who had helped save them.

A plaque on the memorial reads-
    "Soldiers of Australia, whose brothers lie here in French soil,
     be assured that your memory will always be kept alive, and
     that the burial places of your dead will be respected and cared for"
                             
                                                LEST WE FORGET

Sunday 22 April 2012

Abu Qatada

I, along with the rest of my fellow citizens are intrigued by the case of Abu Qatada whom our Government say is a terrorist, a trainer of terrorists and a disciple of the late Asama bin Ladin the most famous of all terrorists.  They would like to return him to Jordan as he holds a Jordanian passport declaring he is a citizen of that country.  Most people, when they go to live in another country become unsettled from time to time - it is called homesickness.
Not so this family, the UK Government have already spent nearly 1 million pounds keeping he and his family and they now want rid of them - enough is enough they say. Lawyers don't agree as they have already made fortunes fighting his weak case against deportment and see a chance for earning a great deal more as they involve the European Court.  It will take brains much larger than mine to sort out all the pros and cons of this case.  Flights for he and his extended family are already booked and free but they don't intend to use them.  I really can't see us ever getting rid of him as there is no one brave enough to make a final decision.
Ironically this man was born in Bethlehem - now who else do we know who was born there?

Monday 16 April 2012

Memories and sadness

Today I had an email from a friend just back from Vienna where he had visited a mutual friend and was just reporting on her state of health and her good wishes.  She is a lady in her late 80's whom we lived very close to some long time ago.  She is the  only
person I have ever met or even heard about that admits she was totally mesmerised by Adolf Hitler - everybody else appears to have hated him from the very beginning!  She was born in Vienna and stood out on the street all night long waiting for his visit, wearing  her Hitler Youth uniform with pride.  I asked her one day how she felt when the war ended and she said she felt was disgusted, shocked, disolusioned and deceived and felt she could never trust her own judgement again.  'Why do you think I never married nor have any close friends?' she said.
She was in her early twenties when the war ended and had a breakdown in mental and physical health lasting for the next 10 years or so and still found it all too easy to break down into floods of tears whenever she thought of the war years so part of the plan to spend a time in England was to try and feel at peace by getting to know some Brits.
She did make friends of sorts with quite a few Brits and went as far as she was able towards friendship.  She said she could not believe in a God who would allow all the terrible things to happen and she could not attend church.
She loved music and played it constantly as she read her books and every morning when I passed her door I heard her playing the same music and on asking her what it was she told me it was Schubert's German Mass (I came to love it too and it always reminds me of her)
and every single day she played the Zum Sanctus -

       Heilig, heilig, heilig, ...Heilig ist der Herr!

       Holy, holy, holy.....Holy is the Lord

Methinks you gave yourself away there dear Leibet.


 

Friday 13 April 2012

A Lovely Day in Somerset

Visited with a friend yesterday, newly bereaved and feeling a bit raw and lonely.
We walked in the sunshine and she talked about her loved one and then we had coffee in the Cathedral cafe and could not resist a wander around the Cathedral shop.
Later after we had parted I reflected on the old saying - 'Adam and Eve did not know they were in Paradise until they lost it'   I will try to remember what a beautiful country I live in and what a wonderful family and friends I have.

Thursday 5 April 2012

It's not easy being a Christian

Here in our lovely country of UK we pride ourselves on being a Nation of free speech, beliefs, chosen sexual orientation, religions and many other things.  Being a Christian seems to be the only thing challenged, we are not allowed to speak of it or wear any symbols in the work place. Even John Lewis one of the most favourite retail chain of shops in the country have decided to call Easter 'The Spring Holiday'.  Tomorrow, is a Holy Day for we who call ourselves Christians, it is Good Friday and the day will be marked as special by many throughout the land.  Last year in Trafalgar Square upwards of 20,000 people attended a play about the life and death of Jesus called 'The Passion' and tomorrow they are expecting more people. Sadly there will have to be a Police Presence to keep the peace, something that would never have been imagined even 5 years ago.  Last Sunday called Palm Sunday I walked a short way in procession, there were about 250 of us plus a choir of 50 men and boys.  We had only gone a few steps when three young men started to shout at us in loud voices but soon it became apparent they were simply being facetious rather that fractious - they shouted they would call the police to come with riot gear as we were making a public display of ourselves and waving crosses around which is against the law.  Many of us (myself included) smiled at their off the wall humour and gave them a wave, at this they took off their silly baseball caps (do they ever flatter anybody?) and stood in complete silence until we all passed slowly by.  Then shouted
'Have a good pray folks'.   I think we all enjoyed it, them and us and I hope the people get off as lightly in Trafalgar Square tomorrow.

Thursday 29 March 2012

On the Bus

Yesterday I went to catch a bus in the centre of the city and in the late afternoon it can be a
difficult occasion.  Shoppers are returning home with all their plastic bags, children who finish school early are flooding the bus stop all carrying huge rucksacks and chattering like magpies and slow seniors are rushing to catch the bus before the deadline for their free bus pass expires so taking all
this into consideration it can get fraught with lots of glaring and pushing going on.  Yesterday however was funny.   I arrived at the stop just seconds before the bus, which was rather full on arrival. However, we all queued in good British fashion and presented our passes or money to the driver.  I really thought I would not get on this one as it was very full but the driver continued taking our fares and chatting in a friendly manner as we all crowded on and I found myself squashed between two huge schoolboys in the gangway.  The driver saw there was no one else waiting so closed the doors and prepared to move off but suddenly looking into his huge mirror he called out  'Whoa, how many have we got standing, I'm only allowed 5 you know'  some wit called out  'There are just 3 of us mate let's go'  and as we pulled gently away from the kerb the driver had another go
'I can see about 7 from here'  actually there were 11 of us.  Suddenly every one saw the funny side of this and we all started smiling, laughing and actually talking to each other as the bus pulled it's way slowly through the dense traffic of the city.  What a pleasant journey this turned out to be though we were all uncomfortable, tired and hot.  

Wednesday 21 March 2012

Spring is here

 Spring has suddenly arrived in my back garden as the bulbs begin to bloom and the grass grows ever longer but remains too wet to cut.  It has all been frozen so many times this year and each time the temperatures go up and the icy places melt we are boggy again.
I am really fed up with having to clear up cat mess from our lawn  and so I have had to decide after all these years that I do not like cats.  I have had cats all my my married life and loved and cared for them but now as the only cat free house in our cul-de-sac we are the chosen toilet facilities for all the neighbours moggies and it is not nice. It is also the first garden I have ever had where no birds sing!   We might just have to get another dog!
 This little basket of winter pansy has bloomed throughout the rain, fog, frost and snow amd cheered us every day.  The clocks go forward into British Summer Time this weekend so they might soon have a few friends growing alongside them so they can have a rest for the summer months.
I love Springtime and early summer - new life.
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