Tuesday, 17 December 2019


NEVER GO UP AGAINST A QUICK THINKER
No doubt you've heard of Cockney “Quick Wit and Ready Repartee”.  If you haven’t, I’m not the one who is going to explain it to you, it’s the kind of remark best explained face to face.
But my subject today is not so much Quick Wit, as “Quick Thinking”, and if you want to find out about that, then there’s mountains of information on the Internet.  Of course, most of it is totally nutty and useless including the advice to: Never stifle a yawn; try chewing gum or maybe give Pokemon Go a whirl.
Nevertheless, it does give some obvious tidbits such as: “Processing speed is defined as the time it takes your brain to take in new information, reach some judgment on it, and then formulate a response”.  Wow! Whoever wrote that is no Quick Thinker!
There are a couple of Mr. Google chestnuts worth remarking on, namely: “Faster thinking can help you in many aspects of life.” And “When people are required to think quickly, they report feeling happier, more energetic, more creative, and more self-confident”.
But to really understand the scope of “Quick Thinking” you need to do no more than look over the shoulder of a Master as he uses his inborn ability to “Just Do It”.
Naturally, I’m talking about LB and an incident that happened when we were all younger and the earth was cooler.  This story involves his love of animals, and Sam, the second Airedale terrier in his household.  
Sam was a wonderfully lovable dog; he was the reason for LB’s hair perm and the star of the one-time dog show.  He was also an escape artist and a bit of a wanderer.  

Mainly he liked to trot off to the local McDonalds where he would sit with a totally untrue hungry look, until some vulnerable animal lover would fall for his tricks and buy him a Big-Mac. Most times his escape was noticed and a quick retrieval from his hamburger heaven was accomplished.  
   But then it happened. One day he’d escaped and couldn’t be found.
          A day passed. Everyone in the family was worried.  But no news is good news.  After all, he was a pure-pedigreed dog, totally micro-chipped and identified with his name and telephone number on his dog tag.  Surely if he had been found someone would have notified the Humane Society.
          Two days passed. Hallelujah, he had been found.  
Well, not found exactly, more “opportunistically rescued” shall we say, from his McDonalds soliciting stand. The Finder, rather than taking him to or calling the Humane Society had held onto Sam while she considered her options.  
Obviously, this was a dog worth some money.  How much she wondered?  She called the number on his dog-tag.  
Fortunately, she spoke to LB.  She had the dog and would return it for a reward. “Wonderful” said LB.  “Would $100.00 be sufficient?”  You bet it would, (remember this was a time when $100.00 could buy Sam 40 BigMacs at $2.50 a pop). Finally, a meeting was arranged for exchange.  Sam was ecstatic to see LB.  The Finder?  Well, she wasn’t quite so ecstatic to see the $100.00 donation receipt from the Humane Society that LB gave to her as her reward.
          It’s very hard to best a “Quick Thinker”!



Sunday, 8 December 2019


CHRISTMAS MEMORIES

Funny, isn’t it, what we do with memories. 

We bring them to mind, toss them around, snip a little here and there, polish up the bits that need brightening then present them to ourselves and others as genuine revelations. Or, then again, perhaps it’s just me that does that.
                Not only do I do this with my memories but it seems I also do it with the memories of others.  Take this blog for example.  So many of the things that I write about come from the recollections of someone else.  A notable memory prodder for me has been LS.  She seems to have been completely involved in the life and lives of our Covey.  Whereas, I, seem to have either been absent or have made amnesiac snips of entire memories.  Take the one she mentioned recently about her Christmas wish for a satchel. I have no recall whatsoever of these events. 

As much as she wanted this prized item, she knew that the likelihood of Santa, the Tooth Fairy or any other mystical being bringing this to her was extremely remote.  Despite her prayers, her straight forward requests and outright begging, she knew, in no uncertain terms that there was no money for such a useless item.  Better forget it and get on with living.
                And living is what it’s all about.  Christmas was very close so there were lots of preparations, even for a poor family.  Mum had things to do and places to go, so she got on her bicycle with the plan that any shopping could be carried home by LS who accompanied her by running beside.  That’s when destiny intervened.  Mum nearly fell off her bike!  There in the window of the local Sweet Shop was a large notice: “WE HAVE CHOCOLATE” it exclaimed in large letters.  Amazing, fantastic, wonderful!  It had been years since anyone had seen chocolate for sale and here was a sign proclaiming, they had it!
                That was it, Mum bought three small Cadbury bars and gave them to LS with the instructions to quickly get them to the boys (LB & LLB) who were waiting at home. In the meantime, she would continue with her errands.
                The chocolate excitement having now been transmitted to LS, she grasps her precious cargo and runs as fast as her legs will pump towards home.  That is, she runs until she can’t run any further because she tripped and smashed her head against a low coping wall. (For those who don’t know: Coping is a covering of stone, concrete, brick or terracotta, placed on exposed top of a wall, to prevent seepage of water.)
                Around this point in the story, LS’s memory gets a bit foggy, probably because she had passed out from a concussion.  A kindly neighbour picked her up and took her home and waited with her until Mum returned from her errands.  Mum being mum, doesn’t know what to do with a child that has a bump as large as an egg growing on her forehead, so she follows the old adage: “When in doubt, leave it out”.  There it was left until Dad took charge when he returned from work.
                He knew it was hospital time.  But, unlike here and now, there was no car for transportation, and ambulances were for life threatening accidents only.  That meant a steady walk up hill to the tram stop, then a tram ride to the hospital in Central London.  Eventually, they reach the hospital where LS was cared for.  Dad and she returned home.  Her head was bandaged and Christmas day came, just as it always does.  And it came with a special surprise:  A shiny new satchel for LS!
                Makes you want to believe in the miracle of Christmas, doesn’t it!

Wednesday, 6 November 2019


HOUSEHOLD HAZARDS

Survival of the fittest or, how to be aware of the dangers that lurk unseen.


The most marvelous thing I can say about our upbringing, is that we survived.  Forget the incident of World War II and all the bombs that missed us, I’m talking about everyday living.  I'm talking about just waking in the morning and still being alive when it was time to close our eyes at night.   Looking back on that aspect of our lives I thank the cockney gods for looking after us, although I did wonder if what we experienced was normal so I asked Mr. Google. He seemed to think that the top nine household hazards were: #1. Falls, #2. Fires, #3. Carbon Monoxide Poisoning, #4. Choking, #5. Cuts, #6. Poisoning, #7. Strangling, #8. Drowning, #9. Burns.  Having this cautionary list may have helped us., but that’s a debatable point.  We made our own lists. We faced our dangers as they appeared and we dealt with them.

I don’t know if it is still the custom in Britain, but, when our little Covey lived there it was a really big deal to reach the age of 21 years. So much so, that you always received a birthday card with a large silver coloured cardboard key affixed. 
This signified that you could now have a key to the front door; the benefits of which would enable you to come home at whatever time you wished.  It might have been merely symbolic in some families, but for us it was an actuality. We children were not given a front door key, or any other key. If you happened to come home at a time when no one was home, then you waited outside until a key holder returned, and a key holder was always a parent!

Obviously, this was an inconvenience, however, that was all it was.  Inventiveness runs heavily in our Covey and the mere lack of a key did not stop anyone, especially the agile LS. Her method of choice needed the top window of the boys' bedroom to be unlatched and open for air distribution. British windows did not at that time have insect screens. She would then scale the brick facing of the building, reach through to the inside latch of the larger window, open it and crawl inside. No key, no problem. Hazard # 1, met and dealt with.


Of course, not everyone had LS’s agility, nor was the small upper window always open, so, while this was not a method available at all times, it was not a total hindrance. 

I know that in the past, houses on this side of the ocean came equipped with cute little doors whereby the milkman could deposit milk from outside that the homeowner could reach from the inside.

  A similar but slightly larger mod-con device was installed on our apartment to handle the delivery of coal.   Yes, I know what you’re thinking and you’re right.  It was possible to crawl through this opening to land on the coal in the cupboard which opened into the front hall.  Well, it did open, provided that the safety latch had not been engaged. And there, as Shakespeare said “is the rub”. If the inside latch was open then you emerged inside the apartment, somewhat blackened with coal dust, but victorious. Conversely, if the latch was on, as it should have been, then you spent a very uncomfortable time in the dark because the way in was just that: a way in: it could not be traversed the opposite way.

Without success, I tried to tie this hazard into one of Mr. Google’s warnings.  He seems not to have heard of this danger. Perhaps, like the milk cupboards these alternate entryways are no longer in service?

This might be a good time to mention that these memories come from the very strong nudges of my Covey, (these are from LS) because, my personal knowledge or involvement in any of these hazardous activities has completely escaped my recollection, or as happened with “The Secret Tunnel”: I know it occurred, yet at the time I was blissfully unaware as I went through life in a dreamlike state.  Such must have been the case when LLB was fixing a motorbike in his bedroom, (yes, inside, in a bedroom!) and he contracted a very serious infection in his arm. Or, when LB nearly blew up the entire building when the beer he was making, exploded.  And, I certainly don’t remember a huge fish in the bathtub.  So, in all of these retellings, I must be held accountable for any errors or mistakes. Nonetheless the following story I do remember occurring, but as usual I wasn’t directly involved.

Perhaps you’ll recall that we at one time lived in the lower half of a two-story house.  Quite an ancient house, with a back scullery that contained a large corner boiler (for cooking clothing), a sink with running cold water, and a black gas-cooker (known today as a stove). 
This story took place on a Sunday afternoon. I was not there of course.  I was probably out with my cycling club. Dad was undoubtedly adding a few coffers to the local publican’s till. LB and LLB were off doing whatever young boys do, LS sat in the adjoining kitchen planning her next endeavour, and Mum, well, she was in the scullery cooking the Sunday roast! And that is where our story begins. 

Things usually worked out fine if the cooking was left to Dad, but for whatever reason, on that day it was Mum’s responsibility.  She was getting concerned.  The roast was not cooking.  But it was O.K. she’d figured out the problem: there was no gas.  The meter needed a shilling. 


Electricity and gas were not billed, they were paid as used via in-house meters with little coin slots in which to deposit shillings.  Now I know for a fact that many people actually deposited a few shillings in advance of need.  We didn’t.  Mainly because we never had enough shillings to spare.


All that was required was for her to find a shilling and put it in that hungry meter.  That’s not an easy task in a household with very few extra shillings. And remember it had to be a shilling.  Two sixpences or twelve pennies wouldn’t do. Searching her purse, she hit zero.  Then she checked coats on the very outside chance that maybe, just maybe, someone had left a lonely shilling in a pocket.  All to not avail.  Finally, after running around the house searching every nook and cranny, miracle of miracles, she found a shilling!  The meter could be appeased. Clink, turn the knob, gas was restored.

She ran to the scullery, knelt down, lit a match and BOOOOM!!!  LS watched as the explosion blew Mum from one side of the room to the other.

When I returned from cycling I remarked at how strange she looked. And she did for the longest time.  No eyebrows, no eyelashes and no hair on the hairline.

Proving once again the Mr. Google has no idea what the top household hazards were for our little family.

 


Wednesday, 5 June 2019

Meeting, Dating, Mating

MEETING, DATING, MATING.

I’ve heard it said that the Devil makes work for idle hands.  Well, I think he also makes work for idle brains.  

Lately, I’ve been in a rut of nothingness.  I can’t seem to create anything for my ETSY store and I’ve not made any contribution to my blog.  Today, as I’ve been sitting on my couch idly staring into space it could only be the devil that has me contemplating the methods that today’s youth use to “find each other”, or otherwise make a lifetime connection.

When I hear about Internet dating sites, I think how different that must be from the methods used in my youth.  

I’m pretty sure my children know that their father and I met at a local dance hall.  The local pub and ballroom dancing were the accepted techniques for meeting a member of the opposite sex.  If you were planning on the dancing routine you needed to be able to dance, hence the Sunday afternoon “tea dances” were I good place to hone one’s skills in that department. 

So, as my thoughts traveled down this rabbit hole I started to wonder: How did our mother and father meet?   I don’t think I ever knew.  Did they meet at a pub?  Did they meet at a dance hall? Could they dance?  Yes, they could.  I know because Mum could do a very excellent “Charleston”, with knees and arms gyrating in perfect time to the music. 

Dad, on the other hand, in the kitchen, taught me (a very apprehensive and nervous 15-year-old about to go to her first Sunday tea dance) how to do the “Two-step”.  I remember him telling me to listen to the beat of the music and just let your feet follow. 
This dance should not be confused with the Western Two-Step, it was more like the Fox Trot, nevertheless, while it was not a dance that was popular in my dancing days, his advice still held true.

By the age of seventeen I had mastered the art of social ballroom dancing and had graduated to the night time occasions.  So, with Mom’s admonition: “Don’t let them ply you with port!” and my good friend Jean, I went connection hunting.

Every weekend, Jean and I investigated many of the Mecca dance halls across London including the Hammersmith Palais and the Lyceum in the Strand which had been converted from a cinema and still retained a sloping floor, but our favourite was the local Locarno in Streatham. 
This is how it looked when empty - can't remember ever seeing it that way!
So it was, that one evening I was walking down the stairs to the dance hall, as D was walking up, he changed his mind and his direction as he accompanied me down.
The Ladies and Gents were upstairs!
And so, it began.

This wouldn’t be a blog about the Covey if I didn’t include the other members.  I don’t know for sure how they met, so I have taken the liberty of approaching the female contingent to fill in the rest of this information.

I’ll start with the youngest member LLB.  They followed the tried and true British method of meeting in a pub, but beyond that, nothing is tried and true, it could have been, as his wife put it: Destiny!

The destiny part starts three months earlier in August 1965, when Mum & LLB made a visit to Canada.  Apparently, Mum was hoping that he’d meet a gorgeous Canadian girl.  Why she would want that I won’t even try to guess, but he didn’t meet anyone, they returned to England, so the point is moot.  Meanwhile, back in Canada, a real-live-gorgeous-Canadian girl is planning her extended visit to England, to stay with a cousin in Harrow.  Harrow is about 10 miles north-west of central London.  It’s famous for a boy’s school that was founded in 1572  by John Lyon under a Royal Charter of Elizabeth I.   Real live Canadian girl whom I shall call “Sh” visits her other Aunt and Cousins who happen to live a hop skip and a jump from our family home.  (Starting to get strange eh?). With the exception of the name deletion: I’ll let her words fill in the rest:

I went to the Bank of Swans with my cousin and saw LLB there, I never spoke with him, but I told my cousin I would like to meet him.   
The next weekend when I went back to visit my aunt I had hoped they might have set something up, but when I got there my cousin was out with his girlfriend, so it looked like my evening would be spent watching TV with my Aunt and Uncle.
I suggested to my Uncle that I would go down to the Off Licence in the pub and pick up some cigarettes for him, and when I got there LLB was playing darts w
ith his friends, I struck up a conversation, he walked me home, and the rest is history.  
Looks as if it needs a bit of a spruce up now.  Back then it would have been sparkling new!
Once I met LLB, I soon moved to my Aunt’s place.

When you're in the throes of destiny it seems you just have to stay put and let life come to you.
One of the things I'm noticing as I'm writing this blog, is how young we all were, when we made such life affecting decisions.  I was a teenager of 17 years of age when I met my husband.  Fortunately, I knew everything then.  It’s only as I’ve aged that I’m getting a clearer picture.

We go now to our second member LB as told by his wife “S”

I had just turned 15!  We met at the Fair on Clapham Common. I was with a friend who knew one of the boys in the group.  We had a good time as a group.  Around 10.00pm LB asked if anyone needed a lift home, (On his scooter) I was already late so that would really help.  I was wearing a pencil-tight skirt, got on and couldn't get off.  He drove me home and had to help me off. 
He asked me to go to the Social club the next night and I agreed.  He was smart, charming, funny but considerate.  Also, cute to look at.  He hasn't changed! 

The fourth and final story comes to us from LS.  As you will see she has both favourite meeting venues covered,but then again, she had two opportunities to do so.

How I met husband #1....whilst living in girls hostel...I was approached by a girl to help her out...she was really interested in some bloke and had arranged to meet him in the local pub...when she got there, he had brought his friend with him and said, unless she could get a date for the friend they would be moving on.....I agreed to be that date....the rest is history....

How I met husband #2.....I was still married to #1....had the boutique and at the end of the day, did not always go straight home to the happy homestead.....this particular night Chris and I went to listen to a jazz singer that we really liked...after,  I said I would drop her home and then carry on home myself.......She was not ready to go home, so asked me to drop her off at a local private club ...
Image taken directly from the family album.

’The Banana Factory’ (mingling, bar/dancing)..when we got there...she said, “just come in with me in case there’s no one in there I know”....I did...met Don.....

the rest is history....

Just to round out all these little stories, it seems that LS has the low down on where the originators of this little Covey met:

I really think Mum met Dad ...wait for it....in a pub!....She evidently went to the Loo...when she came back he was sitting at the table with her friends....she may have had her eye on him before she left for the Loo...

Enough said!



Sunday, 14 April 2019

Oh, How Things Have Changed!


OH, HOW THINGS HAVE CHANGED

In this day and age of technology, you only have to be about ten years old to be able to make that statement.  Imagine what it’s like from my prospective!

When I was ten years old, I could not even imagine what 2019 would look like.  Telephones had been invented but were not widely available unless you had pots of money, same goes for television, maybe someone had one but until the war’s end I’d never heard of the miracle of pictures coming through wires. But I’m not really thinking about these huge advances, I’m thinking more along the lines of everyday items that today’s households take for granted.

Paper was invented in China about 100BC, but it wasn’t until 1250AD that it reached Europe, so it’s no surprise to me that I grew up without the knowledge that paper could be used in more inventive ways than producing a newspaper or writing down a grocery list. (And please, don’t think I’ve missed out the obvious toilet paper – I haven’t – that’s what we used the newspaper for!)  Eventually, Izal toilet tissue found its way into our household but whether that was an improvement over newspaper is debatable. Izal paper was like hard-shiny-tissue paper.  It crackled when you touched it!


So, if that was what was available for rear-ends then I can assure you that the quicker, picker upper of today’s paper towels for household spills was very far in the future.  We used dish clothes or rags.

Food shopping was nothing, I mean nothing like shopping today.  When I was a child, supermarkets may have been up and running somewhere, but not where I lived.  Shopping was done locally.  

Vegetables were bought from the greengrocer, bread was bought from the baker, and the general grocery store was where you bought everything else.  The greengrocer weighed your potato and carrot purchases and then looked at you with a knowing nod as he said “Where dya wan ‘em luv?”.  


This of course indicated that he expected you to have brought with you a suitable container for carrying them home.  Usually, this was a shopping basket.  This same scenario played out wherever you shopped.  No one yet had thought to supply paper bags, and plastic bags had not yet been invented.

So, in this tremendously deprived environment it’s hard to believe that our little Covey was the first on our street, maybe in our borough, to proudly hang blue-totally-plastic drapes in our front window!

The war was over at the time of this memory because we no longer had brown sticky-tape criss-crossing the windows. But it's not a good solid memory.  I don't recall how they arrived in our front room. I don't know where they came from.   If they came from the same supplier as the doomed towels then Mum must have kept that information to herself or they would never have seen the light of day.  I have a vague recollection that we were told they were presented as a gift from wherever she worked at that time.

These were made of the miracle substance PLASTIC!  It was all shiny and very, very blue. It had no pattern, it was just blue, imagine a rather thick garbage bag but blue, very blue.  These drapes had no hem, no finished edges of any kind.  I can’t recall how they were hung because the standard method of the time was to thread a piece of string or elastic through a top casing then tie the ends to a couple of nails.   This stuff could not be sewn, and even if it could’ve been, Mum couldn’t sew. 

This is the closest approximation I can make.

There was another caveat with these valuable lengths of plastic: the windows could never be opened.  Well, they could be opened, but we didn’t dare. English windows did not or do not have insect screens so it would’ve been an easy task for anyone to reach through, give a good tug, and steal them.

I never knew where they came from, nor do I know where they went. But they must have gone, because LS recalls blue velvet drapes from which she cleverly made herself a skating skirt. Perhaps they did get stolen.  I like to think that they were re-cycled and they are still with us.
After all, it's said that plastic lasts forever.






Sunday, 10 March 2019

What's Up?


We all know someone who always knows what’s going on: what’s available, what’s for free and where to get it.  

In this day and age of course it’s not that difficult; if you keep abreast of the nightly news on T.V., perhaps have a twitter feed, and have a few notification apps on your phone, you’re good.

But what if there was no television; no internet; no phone?  Of course, I’m referring to my childhood in general and my mother in particular.  

We had a radio (providing the batteries were charged!) to hear the latest news.  Mainly though, we had “word of mouth” (that’s where one person speaks to another person).  This might be a bit of a foreign concept in today’s world of “word of text”, however it worked rather well at the time. It was the reason that as soon as the butcher had a supply of liver in his shop window, within five minutes there would be a line-up around the block.

When Mum was younger, she was gregarious, outgoing and friendly which probably meant she must have been an expert W.O.M. person.  That’s how come she knew when to send me to collect the supply of concentrated orange juice from the local government offices.


As I’ve mentioned before, we didn’t stay full time in London during the war. Courtesy of our government we took trips to various locations throughout Britain as evacuees.  One of these trips was to Birmingham.  Please don’t ask me why we were evacuated to Birmingham which is about a two-hour drive from London and is a major industrial area, it’s very close to Coventry, which had the hell bombed out of it during WWII, just take my word for it – that's where they sent us.  My memories of this place are very sparse and are mainly centred around my youthful fashion sense and the group of women known as the Women’s Voluntary Service or WVS. for short.

These ladies, aside from making jams and doing all kinds of good deeds, also distributed clothing to needy evacuees, as it says on their site: “Children bombed out of homes – needed clothing!”


I know for sure we were never bombed out of our home, but that wouldn’t have stopped Mum from applying for free clothing once she knew about it.  Hence my memories of Birmingham.  A place very similar to the official picture where we were all fitted with suitable attire including a pair of black lace up shoes for me that I considered to be extremely ugly.
Don't remember ever looking this smart!
No doubt you’re thinking that free clothing was a real bonus, and it was in more ways than you can imagine.  At the time, clothing, like almost everything else, was rationed.  That meant that the coupons that might (with a heavy emphasis on the might) have been used to buy us clothing, could now be sold for hard cash; a much more desirable commodity.

Mum’s creed was: “If you can’t be rich and you can’t be lucky then you’d better be wise.  It more or less meant: Keep your wits about you, be street smart, don’t be taken in by false promises and stories, look out for number one, and try to finagle your way to the front of the line if possible.

This last piece of advice was a very tricky maneuver but fortunately Mum was very good at it.

Eventually. Wartime came to an end, rationing was being phased out, slowly, slowly, life was returning.  However, we were still a family of six living in a bottom floor one bedroom flat.  


Not that we were alone in this condition; Hitler’s bombs had flattened vast areas of London and many more families were in similar predicaments. Mr. Google tells me that at the close of WWII Britain faced its worst housing shortage of the 20th century. An estimated 3/4 of a million new houses were needed in the United Kingdom. But materials and labour were in short supply. 

Most rental accommodations in London were owned by the local municipal government, otherwise known as “The Council”.  Therein an austere group of bureaucrats were put in charge of making housing waiting lists and checking them twice, or as many times as they considered proper.  We were on such a waiting list!  I’m not sure what choices the “Waitees” had, but I do know that some people were assigned to Prefab houses, and some were sent out of London to satellite cities, but the preferred option was to stay in London, close to schools, shops, jobs and other familiar surroundings.  

But that meant you had to be on the “lucky” list to get a brand-new brick built flat in a low-rise apartment building on a council estate, with all mod con, such as a bathroom with a bath and running water, and every room with that great unknown: central heating!

Mum certainly believed in luck, but as I’ve mentioned, she didn’t depend on it.   She liked to give it a little nudge.  One of her nudges in this regard was to make regular visits to the local council offices with all four of her children in tow to plead her case and ask if her family’s name had come up yet?   Her question of course was accompanied with copious and constant crying and much hand wringing.  I’m pretty sure that the council employees ran for cover when they spied, once again, Mum and her brood coming through the door.  Four unruly children and a blubbering mother.  


What could they do?  I know what they did in our case.  They put us to the top of the list.  We were the first family to move into a three bedroom council flat with central heating and all mod con!