Showing posts with label Non-Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Non-Fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 June 2013

Puddles, Piddles and Poodles

Another story from the collection Blind Man's Buffet featuring the perils of peeing while blind.





Puddles, Piddles and Poodles

The Macintosh Institute is a mediocre grade of old mansion house that has long since been dragged out feet first from it’s historical heyday, mainly to keep in line with the more modern mediocrity of selling gas-injected beer. It’s complexion is teardrop grey and it’s expression is that of the resigned old warrior, captured and stoically awaiting the ignoble judgement of the massing lowly hoards. And yet, a fair old supply of ticklish humour might well be found hidden within the dusty wrinkles of it’s craggy frown.

Inside, the hands on the softly murmuring hall clock may well seem to idly report the same old times and the same old patterns over and over again. But clocks are deceivers all! The old Macintosh is proof enough of the bargaining powers of old Father Time. He hardly ever loses a deal in his inveterate negotiations with Mother Nature. It is because of him and his celebrated tricks of imperceptible erosion that dear old Mother Nature has become the universally unparalleled artist she is. She can renew perpetually. But, alas, she can only restore to a finite end.

The Macintosh buildings have not however had any real restoration treatment, neither through the affections of Mother Nature, nor by the attentions of any worldly ministers. The mansion house has been nobly neglected, insomuch as it is still able to peep up from it’s own perimeter grounds and can thus, at a stretch of it’s stubby neck, overlook the invading ranks and files of terraced houses nosing in closer and closer on it’s past triumphs and glories. These past triumphs and glories are nowadays bounded in by webs and webs of malevolently spun chain-link fencing. The fencing skywardly extends the shoulder height of the outer stone wall because a substantial proportion of last century’s lawns have been petrified into flat, black tarmac for the purposes of providing tennis for all seasons.

However, all is not gloomy progress. There is a sector of smiling lawns at the sunny rear of the house which has been preserved as bowling greens. The narrow squat veranda tries it’s levelish best to respectably spectate on the summery proceedings, but the plundered pastiche of antiquated wooden benching and daft collection of plastic crinkled and bow-legged garden chairs around some of the lowest tables on earth, rather distorts the scenic effect like a view through a badly cut lens. Any seated gathering of discerning spectators quietly discussing the merits of the latest backhand cannon would be hard pushed to pass their opinions on to any innocent bystanders, for their sanity might be questioned as, between trying to reach down to their toes for sips of ale and to target the congested ash trays, these people would be trying frantically to hold the legs of their chairs from doing the splits and dumping them into the game below, or else they would be picking out splinters from their bottoms and backs. Ouch. Somehow, respectable folk don’t seem quite so respectable when their limbs and body language might seem more meaningful to a curious gathering of grinning chimpanzees than to a crowd of glistening fingernails and cucumber sandwiches.

It was during one such sultry setting summer evening as the proud solstice sun tried in vain to blink out a piece of rooftop from his eye, that the bowlers and spectators packed in for the night, and Eric and Ron, and Sean and me remained to slouch lazily on the veranda. A cooling breeze carried the fragrance of the street into our colonial environs and tickled the weather worn canopy above us. Yet again, I tried unsuccessfully to settle the flattened and gaunt cushion under my bottom into a position where it might provide some comfort.

Sean had his feet wrapped around the quivering front legs of the moulded chair he was heroically trying to sit on to prevent his sudden trap-door exit from stage level. Ron, who unlike Sean tried using the whole of the perforated seat to sit on instead of more prudently balancing on the front edge, jumped up for the umpteenth time as the back legs of his wobbly chair again gave out slip-slidey signs of collapsing and tossing him backwards into the gloom. He spontaneously turned and stared like an irate jack-in-the-box, at the chair which had instantly righted itself into an upright stance and acted wholly unaware of any problems whatsoever, let alone any deficiencies in the leg department. Chairs do seem to have that ability to convey the imperturbable demeanour of something stuffed full of a trustworthy nature and unquestionable reliability, that is, when there is no sweaty, sprawling bottom pressing down their dignity. However, despite it’s irreproachable stand to attention, Ron again decided to swap his chair for one even further afield, all the while keeping his Winston Churchill glare fixed on the irrational 4 footed beast as if it might jump 7 feet into the air at any moment.

Dusk fizzled all around us. The others had no visual impairment, but I could well recollect the sepia time of the late evening, when the world peered back at you through a cloud of gravy dust, drained of it’s colour and silently calling you to your glowing fireside supper. I was finding the exercise routine of stretching down to find my beer on the ankle high table too wearing on my back, and so I decided to fix the pint glass permanently in my hand while I reclined my upper person in my comparatively sturdy bench and thereby hoped to ease the strain on my spine. It was at this point that I discovered a hard metallic object pressing into the back of my neck like a gun. I knew that the outer wall was behind me, and so I could be more or less certain that no gangster had suddenly crept up behind me to offer me my money or my life. ‘What’s that?’ I inquired with a little surprise, ‘Whatever it is, it’s a bloody hazardous thing to have at head height above a bloody bench.’ I tend to use a lot of gratuitous adjectives while I’m supping ale. ‘Bloody stupid!’ I muttered as I turned the offending object to some advantage by scratching the back of my neck and head on it’s cold & uncompromising projection.

Eric, who was sitting next to me on the bench moved his hand up to discover what the thing was. After only two or three seconds, he seemed to recognise the object. ‘Oh, it’s only a…’

Before he could say what it was, I could feel a sensation permeating my entire back, a sensation which was very familiar, and yet one which I could not identify on the instant. There was an accompanying hissing sound, which again, I could relate with this sensation spreading all ways beneath the nape of my neck. Firstly, my back began to feel cool, which I found quite pleasant, but then this sparkling freshness quickly turned into a piercing chill and was not comfortable at all. My shirt began to feel heavier and burdensome, and clung to my back. Yes, yes, yes! The sensation was definitely familiar and beginning to register in the more uninebriated parts of my brain.

It’s only a tap.’ Eric uttered as his fidgeting hand tried in vain to turn the bloody thing off again before my back became totally soaked. Too late. My whole back and posterior had become well and truly drowned, drenched, saturated and utterly soaked!

I only realised what it was when I turned it on.’ he chuntered unconvincingly while Sean dropped off the front of his bucking chair and picked up a noisy 5.7 from the baying judges, and Ron fell backwards into an instant dentist seat decline as the back legs of his chair split part way and tilted him into a cradle position with his head dangling loosely and his legs kicking wildly in the air. Serves them right for laughing at me so bloody vigorously.

It must be there for watering the bowling lawns.’ Eric surmised as he tried to suppress a couple of Kenny Ball cheeks full of wind that sporadically burst into trumpets of laughter. I sighed deeply. What else could I do? I sighed with that exasperation that is akin to being presented with rice pudding for dessert after having just enjoyed a tasty dinner. The night was still young and there to be helped into old age, irrespective if one was wet or dry.

Fear not for me, dear reader, I can feel a wave of love and sympathy from you warming my chilly back like a well wiggled hair dryer, but there is no pressing need for such mental contortions on your part. I do love you back and thank you for your concern, but I rectified the situation myself as I glugged and glugged yet more and more liquid refreshment into my interior on the premise that the wetter my insides, the relatively drier must my outside feel. One nail to drive out another, so to speak.

In fact, I got so well nailed that, one by one, I sacked all my sighted guides for gross incompetence on the walk homewards. This was indeed a foolish thing to do because I never bother to fetch along my white cane when I am out ‘on the pop’ with friends.

So… in other words… I had just gone and bloody stranded myself!

As they walked on away from me still laughing about the evenings aquatic entertainment, I clung to a beautifully beaming lamppost and tried to climb to it’s source of localised enlightenment. I was certain that the glowing component of this outpost was humming to me in amber, and would whisper it’s secrets to me if only I could get my ear close enough to it’s lips.

Ha ha. And ha ha again.

My vertically inclined expedition had the desired effect on the deserters. Eric came back for me. ‘You’re pissed!’ he said. ‘I have never hever been drunk-ed, my good man!’ I replied coolly, ‘but one day I should like to try it just to see what it feels like’.

You’re pissed’ he repeated. I grabbed his arm and he led me towards the others who were all heading for his home, being the closest of all our homes to the dear old Macintosh. My shoulder brushed a drain pipe as he increased his speed. ‘Hoy, watch where I’m going!’ I said.

Walk straight then!’ he said. ‘Huh to you’ I said.

We’re all going to my house’ he reported. ‘Remember! Your missus is picking you up there.’ I think that I just laughed. I think that he was just trying to frighten me. I think that I couldn’t think very well any more.

But as we all entered his residence in Cyfarthfa Street, my wife was indeed there. Eric’s wife, Paula was sitting there too, presiding over the tea and chatter, and there were lots of other characters present too. But, like an inexperienced chess player who can only tap into the potential of just a few of his pieces and merely uses the remainder to make up pretty patterns of defence, I could not definably separate the tangled attack of voices.

Eventually, however, I began to catch up with the tempo of the chit chat, and found it much easier from then on to focus on individual voices. This socialising lark, I must admit without boasting in any way, shape or form, can come pretty naturally to a top socialite like me.

Sit down, Spee!’ Paula said affably enough. I think my wife laughed and also said something of a similar sort. Then they all gossiped about me for a while, because I heard my name mentioned severally in the coded conversation that ensued. Females are very clever at coding conversations in front of their beer affected menfolk. It is a truly remarkable talent, you have to agree. It’s like being in a foreign country when the locals are smiling and talking and looking at you, fully giving you the impression that they are saying nice things about you and making you a happy and contended traveller through their land.

However, on this occasion I was not a happy traveller. ‘I don’t want to sit down, I want to go to the toilet’ I said with social ease.

Eric and Paula’s home is of the conventional terraced design. However, Eric, a master builder of sorts, has united much of the ground floor living space into one big, long room by removing dividing walls and passage walls, and tucking away the stairwell between the two chimney breasts. However, to get to the solitary toilet in the burgundy bathroom, you have to trek through the kitchen and rear ante chamber, or should that be the ante chamber-pot.

They’ve all gone to the toilet’ Teresa said.

‘’They’re all out there.’ Paula confirmed. ‘Eric and Ron and Shaun. They’ve all had the same idea as you.’

Sit down and wait for a few minutes’ Teresa advised.

I can’t!’ I said, starting to shift my weight from one foot to the other. ‘It amazes me’ said Paula, ‘why they all keep it in until they get home’.

Teresa, or was it Deonne, or then again, was it Jill, who agreed with this statement, and added, ‘Beats me why they don’t go while they’re still in the pub’.

Cos they’ve made the toilets in the pub as stinking as themselves!’ piped up Teresa, or someone else.

As they all laughed away at something or other, it was very fortunate that I knew the house intimately enough to make my own way to the flipping toilet, where I might do my Richard the Third act and bully my way into becoming the next in line to the throne. To my amazement, however, on my locating the end of the queue, the rebellious hoards were having none of it. My noble countenance could by no means countenance such ignoble ignorance to the pleas of a desperate man. ‘Get to the back of the bloody queue!’ was probably one of the politest comments I remember. The rest were unfit for living room consumption. Luckily these jibes were out of earshot of the womenfolk within the living room.

I’m bursting!’ I pleaded, ‘I can’t hold it any more!’

You’ve only just managed to get your shirt dry,’ said Ron with glee, ‘It would be a terrible shame to get your pants wet an’ all!’

They all laughed at this, including Eric whose sounds gushed through the open bathroom door as he grunted and piddled away. ‘We’ll have to get him a wet suit!’ he blurted, making himself merry with chunky chortles and rapturous crudities.

I don’t need a bloody wet suit, I’m bloody soaking already!’ I snapped back. ‘Bloody hurry up!’

Eric laughed all the louder with the result that he inhibited all his piddling muscles and therefore dilly-dallied all the longer over the subdued bowl.

Patience, my boy’ said Ron sagely, ‘You don’t drink a pint all at once; so you shouldn’t be in such a rush to get rid of it all at once.’

Stuff this for a laugh!’ I resorted to my phrase of no return. I fumbled my way to the back door which opened onto the garden and let myself through into the night. ‘I’ll go in the bloody drain!’

How are you going to find the drain?’ Ron bellowed at my receding heels.

I’ll feel the drain pipe’ I bellowed back. And within a couple of paces from the back door, I felt the down pipe extending from the eaves guttering, and directing me to it’s outlet above the welcoming gully.

Phew!

I followed suit and also extended my outlet above the drain. However, unlike the roof’s unpredictable outlet which goes into semi hibernation during the summer, my own primordial outlet was bursting to deliver a positive deluge of re-processed lager into the aptly named P-trap gully.

Forgive me, dear reader for having to be so course in my conveyance of these details, but it must, I imagine, be true that all of us have had to inconveniently convenience ourselves during some awkward dealing of the fates which have made even the most noble and dignified amongst us outrageously desperate to just dig a hole through embarrassment and simply ‘go go go’, no matter what colour the traffic light of etiquette!

I gasped with bodily pleasure, and then sighed with all of Mick Jagger’s lost satisfaction.

While my hour of relief was still in it’s incipient stages, I could swear that I could hear a kind of whining coming from the drain below. I put it down to a trick of sound at night. The sudden torrent of hot fluid must have re-awoken the cold, shrinking chambers of the unsuspecting gully. It was a silly sound. It was a small sound. It was an intermittent sound. I heard it. And then I didn’t hear it. And then I heard it again. I even changed the angle of my emission to see if this made any difference to the tone or volume of the sound. I couldn’t detect any perceptible change, but then again, I could not be sure. And then I didn’t know if I had heard a sound at all. The prattling voices that had assaulted me in the living room might well have started a ringing in my ears.

But then, in the next moment, I was sure that I heard a sound again. But it did not sound like an echoing drain or a gurgling gully. At least, I didn’t think gullies made such noises when being employed in this manner, and I can surely say that I have had cause to listen to the water music of many a gully in the past.

Hoy!’ said Eric, who had at long last spent more than his fair share of pennies, and had come to poke his head out of the back doorway to see if I was okay, ’What are you doing? You’re piddling on U-Bee!’

You-what!?’ I asked vacantly. Part of my brain was being drained into the whimpering gully, and so, my thought processing equipment was not up to much.

U-Bee!’ repeated Eric, stepping down into the garden and drawing up alongside me.

I began to feel my brain had all gone into the drain and I could no longer understand the English language. ‘U-Bee!?’ I repeated after him, ‘What’s a U-Bee?’

That’s U-Bee!’ he said yet again, ‘It’s U-Bee! You know U-Bee! Ubee!’ His voice gradually picked up a strange and shrill elastic in it’s wavelength as it twanged out of him and stretched out in front of me.

What the hell’s a U-Bee!?’ I yelled with unsociable intent. I couldn’t figure out, and I couldn’t care less that I couldn’t figure out what a U-Bee was or how it came or manifested itself from the stinking depths of the Cardiff’s sewers. I couldn’t care less if Eric had become acquainted with all the ghostly goblins and dark demons of the midnight vapours, and invoked their spirits nightly for ballroom dancing. I couldn’t care less what I piddled on just as long as I was piddling. ‘What are you bloody talking about? What the flipping hell’s a U-Bee!?’

I must confess, dear reader, that contrary to my usual easy going manner and impeccable personality, that I became progressively peccable as Eric began to find the situation hysterical. I’m sure that he practically half suffocated himself when his gulps of airy intake were repeatedly forced back out of his lungs by squeals of laughter. He squealed, I tell you. He squealed like several swine trotting a marathon.

I completed my depressurisation with a wiggle and a shake, and made myself decent once more. ‘you’ve gone crazy, man!’ I declared to the foolish fellow near me, now bent double with weakness and holding onto the window cill for support.

U-bee’ he squealed. I did tell you that he was squealing, didn’t I? ‘Jill’s… It’s Jill’s…’

What’s Jill’s?’ I asked, attempting to get around the blubbering heap and take myself indoors.

It’s Jill’s, my next door neighbour’ Eric whined out like a genie escaping in slow motion.

You piddled on U-Bee!’ he blasted all at once.

Good’ I said coldly. However, now that the deed was done, I was getting ever so slightly curious about the mysterious thing that I had just piddled on, ‘So, what the hell’s a U-Bee? Are you going to tell me what the flipping hell a U-Bee is, or are you just going to sit there and explode?!’

It’s Jill and Gary’s…’ he answered, making a slight recovery in his respiration, ‘It’s Jill and Gary’s miniature poodle. it’s Jill’s dog.’

Oh, well,’ I thought to myself in stages, ‘When it came down to a soaking of the back, I had to consider myself the lucky one tonight!’

I left Eric squealing at ground level and went indoors to socialise some more.



Monday, 18 February 2013

Niece from Greece

Another Cardiff City FC story. And another typical incident post-match involving my dad. These things tended to happen every week to him...





Niece from Greece
One of our delightful young nieces, that we’d never ever met before, and was really the daughter of Teresa’s cousin Lena, came to stay with us in Cardiff while she attended college for the betterment of her squeaky speaky English.  Ismini was, fortunately for me,  a football fan, being from Thessalonika, a destination for several of St Paul’s letters of admonishment and good hope.  


Ismini, known as Minnie, was 21 years old and with a background in department stores and tavernas, her mother however, wished to turn her into an air stewardess.  Hence her presence in South Wales and her ambition to improve her basic English.


Thus it was that we wended our way to the Cardiff City Stadium one mild evening in February to cheer on our darling Bluebirds taking on the Foxes of Leicester City.  We met up with a pile of friends and made our way to the upper tier to witness the commencement of battle.  When at a live match, I use an earpiece tuned to Radio Wales in my one ear and a chatty chum, usually Martin,  in the other ear to provide commentary and fill in the fickle fortunes of a 22 man tournament.  


We howled and cheered the match away while Minnie took videos and photographs on her mobile phone, and Cardiff were victorious by two goals to nil.  A little lucky at times, but we were happy enough to win.  You must understand, although foxes can catch chickens easily enough, bluebirds are much more elusive.  We soar downwards, take a couple of pecks at those silly foxes, and off we escape back up to the sky.


With voices just about still intact, we supped on a glass of lager in the Premier Lounge in order to give our transport a little time to get to us.  There was a stadium of over 22,000 to clear so there was no rush to get away amongst the bustling crowds.  Instead we took a leisurely drink and watched the other results roll in.  



Then we strolled outdoors again, me holding onto her arm, to find Teresa for our lift home.  While walking around the car park, Minnie said suddenly,  ‘Oh look, there’s our black player!’ and started to drag me towards him.  Before I knew what hit me, Minnie asked him imploringly for ‘One Picture please’ in her most ingratiating accent, and pushed me next to him.  It must be Seyi Olifangana, our Nigerian star I thought to myself with immense satisfaction.  Fantastic.  He was so unexpectedly tall, he ducked his head down to my level in order that Minnie could get us both in the same frame.  I said to him after her mobile had brightly flashed, she’s come all the way from Greece to support Cardiff.  He acknowledge my comments with a foreign accent of his own.  He was a really great guy, very charming and polite.


Before I had a chance to thank him properly, Minnie dragged me off again to pose with another player.  ‘One picture please’ she repeated.  I didn't know who it was, but he put his hand on my shoulder at Minnie’s charming supplication and we both smiled for her camera.  As I thanked him, she dragged me off yet again and approached another cluster of players.  This time I stood back as she snapped away at their compliant smirks.


It suddenly occurred to me that no one else was autograph hunting or taking photographs of our beloved heroes.  It may have been 30 or 40 minutes after the end of the match, but surely there would have still been enough City fans around to mob the players.

That Homer Simpson moment hit me straight between the eyes!  Doh!  I turned to my niece from Greece and said, ‘Are you sure these are our players?’  for we seemed to be surrounded by not just one or two players, but the whole squad.  She stopped concentrating on her mobile phone for a moment and looked around us.  Then she laughed as she recognised one of the players.  ‘Oh no’ she replied and started to giggle, ‘there’s the Japanese substitute that came on for Leicester in the second half.  I recognise him now’.


Oh goodness!  This story must be kept top secret.  Nobody must know that I have been posing with the opposition.  Posing only?  Nay, not just posing, but smiling and cavorting with the enemy!  If Minnie ever turned out to be an unscrupulous operator, she could certainly hold me to ransom.  But fortunately, she is my niece from Greece.


27 February 2011 


Monday, 24 December 2012

Growing, Growing, Gone!


This is a story taken from the collection "Blind Man's Buffet" which will be available in full later this year. The collection outlines my dad's experiences with blindness and this story in particular illustrates how he managed to find the fun in everything.



Growing, Growing, Gone!

It was a cloud sniffling sort of September morning.  The type of morn that plainly signposts the rougher route through summer’s dregs towards bleaker climes.  Overcast and comfortless to the fuming cars and grumpy, old trucks perpetually phasing in and out of ear-shot like some confused tribe of rust-gargling nomads.

My 9 year old daughter, Rania was home from school with a cold.  And so was her friend, Rachel.  Both in MY home!  Baby-sitting 2 sick kids was not exactly my cup of tea that morning, especially on finding my supplies of Earl Grey nothing but an aromatic memory.

A quick committee decision on tea gathering needed taking.  And it was!  So, with a girl guide on each hand, and our chilly, little escapade well out of radar range of any over-protective motherly instincts, we all sneaked off to the local supermarket.

At first it seemed like the wrong decision as my poor, aching arms flailed like reigns on unruly fillies, trying desperately to steer a course away from the irresistible lure of telephone kiosks, dropped bicycles, shop fronts, pillar-box slots, vegetable displays, parked car door handles, dripping drain-pipes, gutter wildlife, unclaimed litter and the like.  My feral street scavengers needed taming; and quickly!  Otherwise, I risked having my upper appendages stretching so close to the ground as to warrant my hasty re-classification to a quadruped.

My plan was minted in a minute and born of my frequently re-surfacing mission in life to cheer up the world.  On presenting my idea to my little companions, I found that I had won over their fullest attention.  Wow!  The omens were definitely good.  Rehearsals were brief and taken in our stride.

As we approached the kerb of the pedestrian crossing, little did mankind suspect the momentous moments about to unfold.  For it was here, on the lower Pelican Crossing of Crwys Road in central Cardiff that the first ever ‘Pelican Hop’ was performed.

I do confess that this particular world premiere was not exactly acclaimed with rapturous applause from those witnessing this crinkle-in-the-page of history, but even the Olympic Games must have had humble beginnings!  Probably a thrifty bunch of Ancient Greeks dashing around the outer pillars of the Parthenon to avoid the high priest’s collection tray.

The beacons bleated out our cue.  Vehicles grudgingly folded their arms and waited.  Hand in hand, we springingly stepped out onto centre stage, right foot forward.  In unison, we took 1-2-3 full striding steps, and then hopped!  It was a pedalling style hop, with one knee rapidly following the other high into the air.  Again I counted ‘1-2-3 HOP’ and we were halfway across.  Those crossing in the opposite direction made way like bewildered extras.  Again I synchronised ‘1-2-3 HOP!’  Then our finale onto the pavement ‘1-2-3 TURN ROUND AND BOW’  It all worked splendidly.  Quite splendidly!

 ‘Brilliant!’ I congratulated my sprightly gazelles.

 ‘But, dad,’ said Rania, ‘people are laughing at us.’   And indeed, people were laughing: drivers, passengers, pedestrians, loafers, window-gazers, road-sweepers, old uncle Tom Cobley and all! 

 ‘That was the whole idea, darling!’ I replied, musing on how productive our few simple steps had proved.

On our return journey, having unwittingly purchased Darjeeling (but that’s another story) we developed the choreography by replacing the middle hop with a switch, whereby the girls changed flanks, one passing in front of me and the other behind me.

And thus the ‘Pelican Hop’ was born; a novel, if slightly dotty, way of crossing the road.  Simply intended to passingly amuse passers-by.  My daughter and I developed it further over the subsequent weeks.

But now, dear reader, I must transport you forward in time by a little over 2 months, to a Sunday after midday mass.  Walking homewards in a group too desultory to resemble a family unit were my 16 and 12 year old sons, Rania and myself.  Our precise geographical location was the approach to the Richmond Road pedestrian lights.

I tried to encourage, even implored, my sons to join in the, by now, ritual Pelican Hop despite there being little hope of their participation due to the notoriety it had cumulatively gathered amongst family and friends.  They were too grown up to play ‘silly buggers’ as they put it!  Nevertheless, ever-persevering, I even tried commanding their obedience as their paternal lord and master.  But all I received in response were mockery and derision.  However, their dissension had been fully expected.  What I had not at all expected as a result of their jibes and resolute refusals to risk being laughed at by strangers, albeit in sparse Sunday traffic, was their contamination of Rania.

I was utterly dismayed to hear her also refusing to Pelican Hop; my own, true partner refusing to dance and leaving me without an act.  I couldn’t believe the suddenness of it all.  I begged and pleaded with her to re-consider as we neared the crossing and to at least accompany me in our simple original routine.  My adjurations were fruitful for she consented at the last moment.

The bleepers sounded and Peter, my eldest, ran off as if trying to break the world record for someone running 100 metres with a coat over his head.  Tony merely trotted briskly ahead of us, turning and dissociatingly laughing as if all aloof of the pursuing idiots.

Rania and I took the floor1-2-3 HOP!  Our first hop was long, high and handsome.  Again I urged ‘1-2-3 HOP’ but during this second hop, her feet hardly left the ground for she had followed Tony’s gaze towards a laughing driver and passenger, and, despite my redoubled promptings, there was no third hop for Rania.
It was over!

Perhaps, in later life, the aroma of Earl Grey may turn her thoughts towards making people merry, making people happy… and therein discover her own, personal route to happiness as a result. 

But enough philosophy, if you do happen to spot clowns, couples or quartets Pelican Hopping around your neighbourhood, you’ll know where it all began.  If not, you know it’s simply because my darling daughter suddenly grew up.