Be patient toward
all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves,
like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue.
Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be
able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions
now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some
distant day into the answer.”
― Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
― Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
Was
there ever a truer line than John Lennon’s “Life is what happens to you while
you are busy making other plans” in Beautiful Boy? Its origin can be traced
back to a 1957 Readers Digest article by the American writer and cartoonist
Allen Saunders (thank you, Wikipedia), but the sentiment holds good, no matter
who the author.
After four and a half years of
stress trying to sell my Cardiff house, I made so many plans in the summer of
2016. With debts cleared, finally being mortgage free, I started to work on so
many projects that had been on the back burner. A screenplay, TV series, a
novel. I finished writing a book about being broke (heck, if it was going to
happen, I might as well try to make money out of it).
Then, 2017 came. Life that
happened while I was busy making other plans. It was a year in which I lost
several people, one my oldest friend from school, Shelley. My mother had an
accident and, while I was caring for her and rushing around, I had one, too; I
am currently nursing cracked ribs and am unable to travel. All those Air Miles
I planned to use sit languishing in my Virgin Atlantic account, where I log in,
daily, dreaming of where they might take me, had life not interfered with those
damned plans.
But I am lucky in that I am a
writer. We need material; it’s our lifeblood. My childhood fantasies of sitting
in an attic, producing masterpieces (between bouts of contemplating suicide,
naturally) are long gone. You have to live. With that comes pain, anguish,
suffering, fear – the things that every human endures, in different forms. But
there is also joy, surprise, fulfilment, energy, happiness, contentment – so
many truly great experiences to be had on a day-to-day, even hourly, basis.
This will go down as the year in
which I discovered the extent of friendship. During my most difficult times,
Facebook has been a godsend. I have been overwhelmed, moved beyond belief and
genuinely surprised by people’s kindness: old and new friends, complete
strangers, all expressing genuine concern and, regularly, offering practical
help and support.
I have made new friends as a
result: people I would probably never have met, were it not for the
circumstances that brought us together. Relationships with old friends have
strengthened as we have found ourselves sharing similar experiences. Those
conversations we once had about how well the property market had served us have
given way to ones about the difficulties of elderly parents; the days of
wondering where we would buy our second home in warmer climes have been reduced
to watching A Place on the Sun on Channel 4 Catch Up.
Seeing my mother struggle with
growing older has made me fearful of the inevitable, but then I remember how
depressed Mum was at reaching 40. I’ve always tried not to dwell on things I
cannot change, and I have had – and continue to have – a better life than most
people. I’ve been to so many places and lived in countries many simply dream of
visiting for a couple of weeks holiday a year.
They are choices that have not
come without a price, and dealing with problems without the support of a
partner is, I have come to realise, tougher than it looks. When you are single
and work from home, the onus is on you to do so much more than you actually can
– physically and emotionally. That’s when accidents happen – as I’ve just
discovered, to my cost.
The decision to rent a house back
in Bath, where I once lived for 11 years, was taken in order to be closer to
Mum, were anything to go wrong. It’s therefore ironic that she spent Christmas
by herself in her house and I in mine, owing to our respective injuries. I
still have my New York apartment (and will keep it – I still call New York
home), but I can honestly say I’ve loved being back in the UK, too. I left Bath
under a cloud in 2008 when I was burgled twice in one week and my neighbour was
raped at knifepoint at 6pm, coming back from work.
I’ve now reconnected with old
friends and made many new ones. Yesterday, by chance, I bumped into Nerys, my friend
and neighbour from Coity, where I grew up. We hadn’t seen each other for 40
years and laughed non-stop. She reminded me of the plays I used to write and
make them perform in our back garden (Mum tells me that making my brother be a
dying swan was a particular favourite).
We talked of Auntie Mimi and Auntie
Gwen, who we used to visit in order to get sweets, laughing hysterically at
what we now realise was Auntie Gwen’s Alzheimer’s (“Those are nice socks,
Nigel,” she persistently told my brother). We talked of collecting tadpoles; the horrid woman who, literally held the keys to the castle and would never let
us have them (we learned how to scale the walls); the scary woman in the post
office; Coity school, where the headmaster told us that we weren’t clever if we
weren’t wearing glasses by the time we were seven.
I’ve rediscovered the Garrick’s
Head, the theatre pub in which Keith Waterhouse and I shared so many happy
times. I have a great local in the Pulteney Arms, which shows rugby and has a
great quiz on Monday nights. Now, as a sidebar, can anyone explain why
everyone, and I mean everyone, who says, “I’ve got Geography covered” in a team
turns out to know absolutely zilch and couldn’t tell its Asia from its Elba.
Just saying.
So, on this last day of the year,
thank you to what I will call The Year of Friendship. Every word, every good
deed, every offer of help, accommodation, holidays etc. etc. has been truly breathtaking;
the milk of human kindness has been a veritable dairy farm, and I thank you
from every fibre of my heart.
This year wasn’t what I had in my
plans; but life happened.
And living is always better than the alternative.
A very happy 2018 to you all.