Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Lousy times. I have thought several times about deleting my last lengthy post and haven't felt inclined to write since or even speak much. On balance, I'm keeping it in not because it is wholly indicative but it is what it is or was when it was written and may lead to thought. A few sporadic thoughts which have been triggered by what you have written. First, that attire. I knew a real life Crocodile Dundee for a short while. The man from Perth at Geneva, scientifically bright, was never conventionally dressed. In attitude very Australian, his idea of relaxing wasn't watching television but scuba diving off islands others never visited and putting into catalogues lists of endangered species. His sidekick from the north, suited, could only claim to have the occasional kangaroo in his garden. Lord knows why they both latched onto me. Apparently it was some sort of additional research. On the Sunday evening, I'd arrive. There would be a smash on my door and there they would be with a bottle of whiskey and a message that I wouldn't be allowed to have a quiet night in like my managers. They got me into a car one weekend where we travelled most of Central Europe at ludicrous speed for 48 hours. On the stopover in some mountainous region, I was intending to take a quiet shower but the door flew open for their observations. They wanted to know if British men "had one". Now that they knew that they did they were satisfied. Good times. Much amusement all round.
Back in 1979, I was 16 and signed up to do school voluntary service at a local school. Late infants or early juniors. The most deprived in the borough. No one else chose that option. I was nervous as hell but as always the words almost convinced otherwise. This proved easier than I anticipated. In the main, the litlle girls took to me and were somewhat huggy. The boys were very questioning with the readiness to be critical on my indifference to team sport. But they were won over by a sense of humour, an easy going way on discipline - I have only ever become very irritated with middle class adults on low standards of behaviour - and the fact that I neither exhibited violence as was experienced in their homes or been so absent as to have walked out. A part of the requirements on me was that I should attend a parents' evening. "You won't like the parents" I was told. And mainly I didn't. The attitudes were I thought cold, rebellious and aggressive. Even in those days, there was a suspicion about a teenage male being kindly towards what in the moment only was a possessiveness on their part with their own children. Fast forward to the early 2000s. A mate of mine at work - married and with offspring himself - had become the leader of a local cub group. Some kid on one of their camps was causing mayhem with a knife. He took him home and when his mother in her underwear opened the door she said "you' have to take him back - I've got my boyfriend around". As for the very good university mate who has three - one most recently at Oxford - his wife works at a local school. "The stories she tells". "The children?" "No....not the children. It's the parents. Would put the hairs up on the back of your neck." "Yes, Richard, I have an understanding and it doesn't wholly mean it is a symptom of these times".
At one point in the same decade, I had fallen out so badly with what was then my GP surgery. They knew a lot about me including my increasing opposition. "Would it be ok to touch you here?" The latter day sensitivity came about with the threat of court action on a lack of concern. However, it really didn't matter however much time I ever went into explanation for they were bound to get it wrong. The world and his wife can touch me anywhere. I'm really not bothered and an occasional reassuring arm round the shoulder is more than fine. Just don't expect me to offer you any more than a hearty handshake which in itself I had to teach myself. It isn't indifference or disgust but rather I find that physicality is the shallow person's form of communication. The higher Daily Mail reader does communication best by talking and listening while those who really aspire feel that they closely communicate while the people stuff is very low down in the mix. That is to say we do it via music or nature as mature children of the world and that is love or if it is not it is a far bigger emotional connection based in shared interests. I cannot tell you how isolating a walk can be around others' work and relationships. I'm so sick of being asked about my status by the thin.
Towards the end of the 2000s, I turned up alone at Camp Bestival. Wasn't sure about the event seeing that there would be a lot of families and all of the baggage that can go with it. But, hey, it was Lulworth Castle which I like, it was the Flaming Lips who are older than me and dress up in animal suits or roll around in a ball - spot the lack of emphasis here on either family or big business - and Chuck Berry, my favourite granddad at that time. What could possibly go wrong? Well, it got off to the most awful start. On my arrival at the check in desk, some twenty-something bloke, a child himself although probably also a parent, looked at me accusingly and said "what - on ya own?". It really upset me for two days as if I was there for some dodgy sort of reason. And I have to say that it was only alleviated when I was about to go home and packing up my tent. Two children raced over and said "Mummy thought that you might like a bag in which to sort out your things". I looked back and the evidently single mother was smiling. I just think she may have spotted in the previous days the man who was a little unusual for having a big grin on his face because of the wonderful entertainment while being strangely alone and more benign that anyone is likely to find in a partner.
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