Showing posts with label Inspiring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiring. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 November 2011

In the Jungle, the Mighty Jungle...

Our back garden is becoming somewhat overgrown since mowing with one arm and a three wheeled lawnmower (A horse box reversed over it) makes it exceedingly difficult. This brings dangers in Australia - slithery things move in at the first sight of cover.

After our Dog Banjo's recent accident, it's been essential to build up the muscle tone in his rear legs and so Brenna and I take him out to the back garden and have him chase a ball around - not for too long but just enough to slowly build him up. I've said in previous blog posts that whilst he is a big softie - He will attack any animal which threatens to get too close to Brenna and I. And so it was that in a Morphine and Diazepam induced stupor I took him outside and realised Brenna would have to do the kicking as there was more chance of me landing on my ass than actually connecting with the ball...She did just that and it landed by the garden shed door which was open - Banjo raced after it and then suddenly stopped dead in his tracks. He started growling at the shed before barking loudly and taking tentative steps toward the open door.
"Something's in there." I said to Brenna as she walked toward it.
"Probably a lizard" She called back.
I wasn't so sure as Banjo doesn't usually get this agitated over lizards.
Just to be safe I beat her to the door where Banjo continued barking wildly at the insides. I could see nothing.
Banjo appeared emboldened by our arrival and stepped further forward when suddenly we heard a loud rustle and a menacing "Hssssssss" - Banjo leapt back and Brenna yelled 'SNAKE!'

I think she armed herself with a pitchfork and I grabbed a Dutch Hoe (that doesn't sound quite right does it?) but yes it's a garden implement and not a woman sitting in a nearby window bathed in red light . We stepped a little further inside when the most horrifyingly loud "HiSSSSSSSSSS" and the rustling sound was heard again - something darted toward us but too fast to make out as it retreated again.
"Oh My God! It's a brown snake!" Brenna screamed and retreated - given that they are one of the world's top 5 deadliest creatures it was a wise move. Banjo was going ballistic.
"I saw it's eye! It's in that cardboard box in the middle." Brenna yelled...
I stepped a little closer with the Hoe, ready to strike, Brenna had grabbed Banjo by the collar and was struggling to restrain him.  The 'HSSSSSSSSSSS' came loud and clear and I got startled as leaping from the box came quite a young cat in a dreadful condition. It was emaciated, had chewed chunks of it's own tail due to mite infestation, it was so skinny it could have been Kate Moss in a fur coat. It didn't have the strength to put up a fight but was trying hard to. I stepped around it and there in the cardboard box were 4 newly born kittens - the question really was which would die first? The Mother or the Kittens?

Press 'Play' for the answer....


Monday, 20 June 2011

And Here's To You Mr Robinson...

My book is finally complete :)

The last chapter (not the last chapter of the book but the last chapter to be written) was one of the most difficult to write as it contains so many horrid memories. But here, just for you, is that final chapter...


And Here’s To You Mr Robinson

It had all happened so quickly. We were driving along, my friend and I, on a beautiful autumn day. In the back of the car we hauled an unwanted metal filing cabinet my Mother In Law had threatened to dispose of. Money is tight in Universities and my lecturer friend had taken up the offer of installing it in his office. And so there we were, heading for Stirling University with our booty, when the car in front slowed to a snail’s pace to turn left into a wooded area, we slowed too – the car behind didn’t. In the time it took to hear squealing brakes behind us my life had changed forever. The cabinet shot forward, the impact caused it to hit me square in the back. 

I couldn’t walk properly or any great distance for years afterwards. This troubled me less than the pain. The pain was quite simply unbearable. From that time on, my back would spasm regularly, leaving me a crying heap on the floor. My wife did what she could, my children would look on horrified. The Doctor would arrive and stab me in the ass with Pethadine knowing I’d still be lying there in forty eight hours time – there was nothing he or anyone else could do.

And so the slow descent into dependency on prescribed drugs started. The Doctor as a matter of course would stop by on his way to work and stab my ass with Pethadine, then again on his way home. I slowly became someone else.
Eventually I needed four shots a day until I was given the okay by Docs to go ahead and do it myself. It became eight a day. I was a wreck.

Things reached a head when on a cold, snowbound winter at 3am I was found walking naked alongside a motorway. Apparently I had been trying to get ‘somewhere’.

I woke up to find myself in a psychiatric unit. Worse than this however was the fact it was a locked ward. The realisation was painful to say the least. I was assured I was there voluntarily and had not been ‘sectioned’ – the aim was to wean me off Pethadine which would take six weeks to complete in detox. The ward it seems had two halves, one for people with psychiatric illnesses and the other for detox. It was little comfort to know.

Strange things happen when in such situations, suddenly you become powerless. Everything you do is decided by someone else. Even your ultimate release is dependent on the approval of others. I’d been told in no uncertain terms that although I was there voluntarily – any attempt to leave would lead to me being ‘sectioned’ – the legal term for being held against one’s will. I was so distraught with what I had become I resolved that regardless of the pain I would beat Pethadine. I did precisely that in four weeks – two weeks ahead of schedule. 

A weekly staff meeting would be held to determine who was fit for release and who wasn’t and of course - I would sit in when it was my turn for the thumbs up or down. One Nurse, Senior Staff Nurse Robinson - was responsible for my ‘care plan’. His approval or disapproval meant everything when it came to being given the all clear to leave. In conversations with him in the ward he continually pressed me on my plans when I leave.
“I’m going back to music – put a band together and have a successful career’ I’d tell him.
“Not very grounded in reality is it Rory?” He’d say disapprovingly. “Let’s face it you’re in your forties, disabled, grey haired, and I don't know of anyone who has succeeded in the music business from that starting point.” 
“I’m not ‘anyone’ – I’m me and I can do it” I’d insist.
“You know I can’t approve your release until you come up with realistic objectives”
“I am being realistic”
“Oh no you’re not”
“Oh yes I am”
And so the discussion would descend into pantomime farce every time.

I actually became great friends with my psychiatrist at the time, Adam – a genial giant from Australia. Eventually when I was released we’d go for a beer at weekends and relive that terrible time – but for now, I was stuck. Pleading with Adam didn’t help.

“They are my staff Rory, I have to work with them daily. I’m dependent on them. I daren’t overrule them. I’m trying diplomatically to let them know I think you’re ready for release but I can’t run over them, can’t ignore their opinions. Mr Robinson most definitely has the opinion that so long as you harbour the ‘musician’ dream - you won’t be going anywhere. He feels he can’t justify it within the care plan and the criteria he has to meet”

I was despondent, six weeks had become two months. Every Friday I’d hobble into the staff/patient meeting on my walking sticks and sit listening to what they said about me and then Mr Robinson would ask;
“So what are you going to do about money Rory? How are you going to live?”
Every Friday I steadfastly refused to say anything other than the same thing “Musician”
“I’m sorry but I have to deny your release Rory. You have to become realistic.”

Adam would come to my room and offer words to alleviate the distress but nothing would work – so long as I said “Musician” I was going nowhere. He urged me to take another tack, to lean on my degree and just say “I’m going to work in an area suitable to my degree”. I refused.

And every Friday we’d go through the denial ritual. Two months became three months. I hated Mr Robinson.

I lost a lot of friends whilst in psychiatric hospital. I guess it was the ‘stigma’. Very few people I knew visited other than my sons, my wife and some former band mates.

I was into my fourth month in a locked ward, sitting in a lounge facing the entrance doors when I could have cried at the vision I saw walk through them. She was a friend, she was my lawyer but more than this – she was the Scottish equivalent of the District Attorney (Procurator Fiscal). Well known throughout the region she was a true ‘Public figure’. I swear I saw some of the staff go weak at the knees when they realised who she was – they had no idea why she was here – was it an investigation? She told them crisply and clearly but politely that she was here to see Rory Grant and they almost fell over one another in their haste to lead her toward me. I stood up and we hugged. She sat in the chair next to me and apologised for not visiting sooner – but she’d been under the impression I’d be getting out ‘sooner rather than later’ and had fully expected to be visiting me at home by now. We talked for an hour or so before we smilingly parted company – she to her delightful house overlooking the Moray Firth and me to my locked room. Mr Robinson unlocked the door for her and I swear I thought he bowed to her on the way out.
He caught up with me in my bedroom later.
“Don’t ever give me a fright like that again Rory’
“Like what?”
“Why did you have the Procurator Fiscal here?”
“She’s a close friend. That’s why”
“A friend? Of yours?”
“Did I also mention she’s my lawyer Mr Robinson?”
“No but you mustn’t frighten staff like that. You should have warned us she was coming” He was clearly shaken by the experience.

Mr Robinson raised his clip folder at the following Friday meeting – “I feel Rory has made spectacular progress in achieving all the criteria laid down for his release though the question of what he’ll do for work is still a thorny issue – Have you had any further thoughts about that Rory?”
Without even looking up I murmured my usual response “Musician”
Adam piped up – “And why not a musician Mr Robinson?”
Mr Robinson flapped around with his papers and clipboard before announcing to all "Yes, well...I agree. You’ll be recommended for discharge today Rory if everyone else agrees.” 
Everyone else had always agreed.

Three months later the band had been back on the road for a month. I listened as the announcer welcomed us on stage. I was forty four years old, disabled and grey haired. Haggerston Castle was the venue and two thousand folks rose to acclaim us before we had even struck a note. I smiled at the audience and stepping back from the microphone triumphantly muttered, “Fuck you Mister Robinson, Fuck you.”



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Monday, 13 June 2011

A State of Mind...




I was eighteen years old, given a uniform, handcuffs, truncheon and whistle - and sent off to patrol one of the most violent environments in Britain at that time - Drumchapel. Very few people from Drumchapel became Police Officers. A criminal conviction of any sort precluded you from applying - effectively ruling out a significant portion of younger people from the sprawling housing estate from ever joining the force. Not that this indicated most folks from Drumchapel were criminals - absolutely not. Poor educational qualifications, poverty, ill health and a whole heap of other social ills excluded them from applying. But I'd made it in, and was proud of doing so. Growing up in Drumchapel and unlike most of my friends; I'd avoided any kind of trouble with the law not because I was a saint - but because I could run really fast.

I wasn't enjoying this particular time in the force however. Arresting people you'd grown up with, knocking on the doors of friends to drag their Dad off to the cells wasn't pleasant. But it appeared I was the only Officer at that time who knew every single street, every back alley and so my knowledge of the area was invaluable where the all important 'response times' were concerned.

It was raining, raining so hard that even through my PC Plod boots my feet were soaking wet. I had another two hours of this shift to go - another two hours of stomping around streets looking for folks with hooped shirts, masks and carrying a swag bag. I never saw any - ever.

That night my call sign was 'Hotel' and my partner was 'India' - on a night like this we both wished it was 'Mike Hotel' or 'Mike India' - Mike would signify we were a mobile unit. As it was, we both plodded miserably around the streets knowing that even criminals stay indoors when the weather is bad. Our expectations from a night like this were low.

Suddenly our radio's crackled into life - "Foot patrol India - Foot patrol Hotel'
On this dreary night even sorting out a 'domestic' would have been welcome so I quickly grabbed my radio 'Hotel over'
'Hotel - Do you know where Linkwood Drive is and are you anywhere in the vicinity over?'
'Affirmative on both - four or five streets away from Linkwood now. Can be there in less than five minutes over'
'Roger Hotel.  Can you and India please attend - Anonymous Triple nine call. Report of a person trapped in a burning vehicle. Fire Service have been informed and are en-route over'.

We both started running as fast as we could. I realised that a quick left through a tenement and out the back door, over a back fence then through another tenement, would have us there in next to no time. My partner albeit the senior officer offered no protest. He knew I had grown up here, still lived here, knew where I was going.

As luck would have it we emerged just twenty metres or so from the 'burning vehicle' - it was no burning vehicle - it was a burnt-out vehicle. I'd seen it days before and had asked the council to remove it but nothing other than robberies ever happened quickly around here. Inside the mangled wreckage, I could see someone moving in the driver's seat. We approached wondering what this was all about. In the driver's seat sat a kid who could have been no more than twelve years old, his hands clasped around the contorted steering wheel. The only real danger was from jagged, twisted metal threatening to puncture him but given he'd found his way in, I guessed he'd know an easy way out. I took a good look at him and realised he appeared to have Down's Syndrome.
I got back on the radio "Hotel to Bravo - Stand down the fire service, stand down any other units. No fire, no danger, will update shortly - received?'
"Received and understood Hotel - standing down fire service"

"Hi there" I said to the kid.
"Hello" he answered, without really looking in our direction. He continued trying hard to get the steering wheel moving.
"This your vehicle?" I asked smiling.
"Yes"
"I must ask if you have been drinking alcohol whilst driving today sir"
He laughed and shook his head as though I were stupid.
"Do you have a licence for this vehicle?" I asked jokingly.
He smiled again, "In the house" he answered assertively, pointing to the tenement beside us.
"Can I ask you to step out of the car please sir and get me your licence?"
Surprisingly the door still worked and out he stepped onto the street, into the pouring rain.
Laughing I asked again "Now, do you really have a licence for this car or are you pulling my leg?"
"I Joking" He replied.
"So, where have you been?"
He looked at the burnt out wreck, looked at me and his face lit up so warmly that momentarily it banished the rain.
"Everywhere" He said before running off into the tenement entrance.

That one word 'Everywhere' -  uttered from a kid who had more than his share of injustice heaped upon him taught me something right there and right then. Life is a state of mind.

At times when I've surveyed the wreckage of my own life - It's a lesson I've tried to hang onto.


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Sunday, 12 June 2011

Thinking out loud.

Well, I'm back and would like to thank everyone for their kind messages of sympathy - for those of you who e-mailed I'll sit and write replies over the next 24 hours (I'm even slower typing for reasons which will become clear in a moment).

Mum's funeral was yesterday and only now do I feel I can get my head down and get back to work.  I climbed into bed last night though quite despondent. Mum had said farewell - my arm and hand were giving me hell and a faucet had snapped off in the bathroom causing consternation - How do you fix things like that with just one hand? My hand had been giving me so much hell that I took the splint off from it and left it in the sitting room - just to get some movement going in it. Bad mistake.

I love my Dog, I adore my dog! He's a two year old Black Labrador with more lust for life and fun than any dog I  have ever known. He even plays games on his own in the backyard if no one is available - give him a ball and off he goes throwing it for himself and chasing it. He's in the bad books today though - I awoke this morning to find he'd eaten my hand splint overnight. A panic stricken phone call to the hospital ensued and they are making me another one for Wednesday.

My wee wifie (I don't really call her that lol - I wouldn't dare, but it'll give her something to break off from writing the second in the series and talk to me about when she reads this lol) Well I'm so happy for her, for us both really - her debut novel which she published herself made it to the Bestellers list at Amazon on Kindle - No 87 is the highest spot she's held so far so I'm really, really proud of her (Oh and I'm happy with my role too - I edited it). Woo Hoo! I can say I edited a Bestseller!

I suppose this blog post is what a blog post normally is - an update of what's been happening while I've been AWOL. I guess that means there's no usual punchline, no signature 'style'...

Well maybe there is...

Couldn't help being very reflective this week - You know? Thinking about what really matters in life. Nothing comes higher than family and friends, the people you know and love - as I was reading through the comments many of you left, I was touched by everyone's comments in this sad week. So many people said 'Thinking of you' - it struck me what a wonderful compliment that is - to be 'thought of'. It doesn't matter who you are, where you are, or what you do - the knowledge that someone, somewhere is 'thinking of you kindly' is an enormous compliment because at that moment in time it means you have been given their undivided attention. You've occupied their 'brain space' and in some way one hopes, their affection. It might only be for a fleeting moment but it doesn't matter - you made yourself either loved enough, important enough, valuable enough, cared about enough for any number of reasons - to be 'thought of' by another.

With that in mind - I know it's cheesy, I know it's cliched, I know it might even come across as glib - but it's true nonetheless - I'd like to say that at differing stages this week none of the following were just 'names' to me - You were all 'thought of' with much appreciation and kindness...

Alec
Amy
Annie
Antonio
Beatnheart
Betty (Liz)
Bill
Cre8tivesoul
ingeeklove (Don't know your real name - sorry)!
Julius
Jenniefire
John
Jo Ross
Katie
Kimberly
Kyna
Laura
Lyn
Marian
Marjorie
Mary
N E Avery
ournest
RayV
Sarah
Sewshootme
Sheilagh
Sophie Li
Sue
Thumber
Tracey
Traquir

If by any chance I missed anyone - it's purely because this is the second time I've had to type it as the first disappeared - and it's now 2:15am, my hand is killing me and I just want to sleep - The burglar alarm next door has gone off and I'm waiting for the cops to arrive. Why can't life be simple???

Must just add another 'Maddyism' - The burglar alarm next door woke her up and she came outside to see what the noise was all about - She found me already out there and said, "If there are burglars Rory and they have guns - will you stand in front of me and if you get shot I'll let you fall on me and I'll pretend I'm dead"
"Err yeah okay Maddy - but wouldn't it be safer and easier just to go indoors now and let me deal with it?"
"No way!!! This is gonna be so awesome to tell everyone at school on Tuesday."

Kids  :)


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Sunday, 5 June 2011

The Lies that Bind...

Ok, I gotta stay upbeat - got to keep on going lest I slump into being a misery guts - and to that end I was thinking over some old events earlier. Thinking of the times when I got it right - and inevitably, the times when I got it wrong. Lies came to mind. You know when you tell an out and out 'whopper' and boy (or girl) it comes back to haunt you ten-fold? Apart from 'No Mum - I swear it was the dog took the biscuits out of the cupboard and ate them' I think the first ever lie which really dropped me in it was the following;

I was only 18 and I'd just joined the Police Force in Glasgow. Every morning we'd be put on parade, inspected, and woe betide anyone who didn't appear absolutely pristine. One of the odd rules back then was that you could only have a 'full set' where facial hair was concerned (A full set being beard and moustache - not one or the other), and even then they had to be grown during leave as 'stubble' wasn't permitted.

I'd overslept and running my hand across my chin decided 'Yeah that'll pass' - Fail.

The Chief Inspector walked along the ranks peering closely at every uniform, every pair of shoes, every face - he came to me and stopped in his tracks. He nodded at the wee Sergeant who always scurried along behind him. I watched as the Sergeant scribbled in his notebook in big letters PC Rory Grant. "My office after Parade!" The Chief Inspector roared.

I hadn't quite mastered the art of appearing in a senior officer's office. There's a way it has to be done, a way you salute, remove your cap, step forward and jump up and down with your legs and feet crashing back down in some kind of unison. I did it as though I owned four legs, six arms and had just been electrocuted.
He shook his head and said with a disapproving scowl 'Your facial hair! It lowers the standards of this great force!'
I imagined masked robbers passing the word to one another 'Grant's got facial hair. Police force in disarray, we do the job today'.
I stood there silent.
'Well?' He bellowed.
'Sir?'
'If it's possible to have an excuse for such a disgraceful exhibition then I want to hear it and I want to hear it now - Why haven't you shaved?!'

At this point I should have said 'Slept in Sir. Won't happen again', taken whatever punishment was coming and forgotten about it, but no, I was stupid, I lied.
'I don't know how to sir!'
This clearly hit him from left field. He sat bolt upright in his chair and stared at me. Stunned he slowly repeated 'Don't...know...how to?'
'Yes Sir'
'Hasn't your father ever shown you?'
'Sir, no sir'
He gave a pained expression before standing up. Stepping out from behind his desk he stood at my side and patted my shoulder. 'You poor boy. You poor, poor boy. If this force does nothing else it will make a man of you.'

Rather worryingly, making a 'man of me' involved meeting him half an hour early in the gents bathroom every morning for the next week. There I was shown how to 'sweep upwards' and 'glide down' my chin with the razor. I was taught how to remove nasal hair with tweezers, I was shown how to stem blood loss with toilet paper when I inevitably cut myself. I was shown how to extract hairs from the tricky corners of one's mouth by angling the razor at 45 degrees - 'no more, no less!'

It was mind numbingly dull and got me out of bed a whole hour earlier than I should have had to. I learned a valuable lesson that week and it had nothing to do with shaving.


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Friday, 3 June 2011

The Braes O' Killiecrankie

Sorry, I just don't have the heart to write today - so I've dusted off something I wrote 6 or so years ago ...please be brutally blunt about it  from a critique point of view - It's a style that just might not work...


The Braes of Killiecrankie

Killiecrankie is a special place. Hidden between Perthshire mountains and blanketed by tall Scottish Pine and Aspen; it takes a bit of finding. Find it I did though, and making my way through the clearing to 'the leap' - I settled on one of the imposing rocks which skirt and overlook the sometimes slow, sometimes raging river Garry. The sun beat down and the rock was warm, little beads of sweat ran from my hands and I could feel the handles of my Guitar and Mandolin cases were moist.

In 1769 Thomas Pennant had been to this exact spot and described the scene as one of 'Horrible Grandeur'. He spoke of “high mountains” and a river that “raged and ran wild in a seething cauldron of foam through the narrow pass”. 
My mind wandered further back through well remembered history books to July 1689 when the impossible happened...and right there, right then, I wanted it to have happened - in the name of love.

On that day in 1689 gunfire raged throughout the gorge, on that day the Flower of Scotland blossomed and rose to attack the Government forces of King William's army. The dreaded Redcoats of King William's led by Mackay, were in Scotland, and the Scots (Jacobites) rose to repel them. Outnumbered, out-gunned, half starved and poorly clothed, the Jacobites stood side by side on the mountainside at Killiecrankie and vowed 'justice this day will be done'.

The Jacobite rebels had started out with but fifty men when the Viscount of Dundee - 'Iain Dubh nan Cath' - (Black John of the Battles) raised aloft the proud standard of the Jacobite rebellion in Edinburgh. The Scots Jacobites rallied to his call and as his little band of men weaved their way through towns and villages, so the flag of freedom drew more and more men determined to rid Scotland of oppression and injustice and give it back its rightful King. The brave Highlanders were amongst the first to rise and heed the call, then Dunfermline, then three hundred Irish warriors sailed over to join Black John, Viscount of Dundee.

From my vantage point I could see where the little army had assembled on the mountainside at Craig Eallaich and I wondered what it must have felt like that day, waiting for the moment to strike. I took my guitar from its case and leaning into the rock, started the first refrains of  ‘The Braes O’ Killiecrankie...’



Scots

Whare hae ye been sae braw, lad? 
Whare hae ye been sae brankie, O? 
Whare hae ye been sae braw, lad? 
Cam ye by Killiecrankie, O?'

An ye had been whare I hae been, 
Ye wad na been sae cantie, O! 
An ye had seen what I hae seen 
On the braes o' Killiecrankie, O!  

I faught at land, I faught at sea, 
At hame I faught my auntie, O; 
But I met the Devil and Dundee 
On the braes o' Killiecrankie, O! 

'The bauld Pitcur fell in a furr, 
An' Clavers gat a clankie, O, 
Or I had fed an Athole gled 
On the braes o' Killiecrankie, O!

O fie Mackay, what gart you lie
I’ the bush ayont the brankie-o
Ye’d better kiss’d King Willies loof
Thank come to Killiecrankie-O



English

Where have you been so fine, lad?
Where have you been so jolly, O?
Where have you been so fine, lad?
Came you by Killiecrankie, O?'

If you had been where I have been,
You would not have been so jolly, O!
If you had seen what I have seen
On the hill sides of Killiecrankie, O!

I fought at land, I fought at sea,
At home I fought my auntie, O;
But I met the Devil and Dundee
On the hillsides of Killiecrankie, O!

The bold Pitcur fell in a furrow,
And Clavers got a knock, O,
Else I had fed an Athole hawk
On the hill sides of Killiecrankie, O!

Oh wild Mackay in the field you lie
In the bush beyond the splendour
You’d better to have kissed King William’s hand
Than come to Killiecrankie-O

One thousand nine hundred Scottish Jacobite rebels took the field that day, headlong they charged King William's elite army led by Mackay which was four thousand strong. Black John, Viscount of Dundee, leading from the front was fatally wounded by a gunshot piercing his side, but the brave Jacobites never faltered. Carrying their heroic leader from the battlefield they returned with the Jacobite standard flying high and split the Government army in two, then split them again, before hand to hand fighting commenced along the riverside. The Jacobites, fired by injustice, routed the Government army. So furiously did they fight, the song itself tells of how the Government troops thought Black John must have been the Devil himself.

From the rock I thought on the ‘impossibility’ which had brought me here. Was it the impossibility of a rag tag army of men routing an elite Government army? No. The Scots are at their best when the odds are stacked against them. Was it to view the scene for myself? No, I knew the land well enough and the story of the Battle of Killiecrankie just as well. Was it to get a feel of the place for myself? No, it wasn't that either. 
It was the name of one soldier and the thought of one woman which brought me here.

Donald Macbean, the soldier who did the impossible. He’d stood exactly on the spot where I sat with my Guitar in hand. On that day he’d been separated from his fellow troops and was now being sighted by enemy muskets. Trapped on the same side of the gorge as the enemy - they were now taking aim at him from the trees. A raging river and an impossible expanse of it prevented his escape. Donald Macbean then did the impossible - he stepped back, ran, and made a jump of such length across the gorge that no man has ever replicated it, none have even dared try.

For him it was a leap of faith. He should have tumbled headlong into the gorge and perished on the rocks or in the raging river below.  Yet he made the leap and landed safely on the other side. To this day that rock marks the spot known as 'The Soldiers leap' of Killiecrankie. I like to think that as he jumped, he called upon, or at least thought of his love whilst doing so. Because surely, no power on earth other than love - could have carried him to safety. Donald Macbean had brought me here - and the woman? Ah, she was in Australia.

Not every leap of faith is made from rocks...I wanted to see where the impossible happens, before trying it for myself.




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Thursday, 2 June 2011

No More Echoes...

I enjoy dancing in and out of other people's blogs, and to most observers I've probably gathered an absurdly high number of blog writers to 'follow'. Hell I even follow someone because they dislike 'cheap doors'. I follow each one for a very good reason however and it's a reason which unites them all.
Is it the skill of the writer I hear you ask?
'Can be, but not necessarily'  Is my reply.
Is it the content then?
Given that I follow blogs with content as diverse as 'girlie haircuts' and the latest in ladies underwear to 'Let's have a violent revolution and change the world'...no, it's not necessarily the content either.
So what is it?
Well for that to be made clear, we need to go back to a man of whom I was reminded of this very week - Ralph Waldo Emerson.



I like Emerson, always have done. More so because at times he infuriates me with his choppy, disjointed, fragmented and downright clumsy sentences, then just as you're about to toss his work to one side - out he comes with a revelation so startlingly simple, so glaringly true, so exquisitely moving, that any prior literary sins are forgiven.

I also like him, because he visited Scotland. Bias I know, but there you are - there's no such thing as true objectivity.

When Emerson set foot on Scottish soil it was to come and pay homage to a man tucked away in a wee cottage known as Craigenputtock Cottage (See below) - Thomas Carlyle.



Emerson was unknown in Britain when he 'popped in' to say hello to Carlyle - but by all accounts he caused quite a stir causing Carlyle to later write;


"Our third happiness was the arrival of a certain young unknown friend named Emerson, from Boston, in the United States, who turned aside so far from his British, French, and Italian travels to see me here! He had an introduction from Mill and a Frenchman (Baron d'Eichthal's nephew) whom John knew at Rome. Of course, we could do no other than welcome him; the rather as he seemed to be one of the most lovable creatures in himself we had ever looked on. He stayed till next day with us, and talked and heard to his heart's content, and left us all really sad to part with him."


'BUT WHAT'S THAT GOT TO DO WITH FOLLOWING BLOGGERS?' You are no doubt now screaming...

Well, it's got everything to do with something Carlyle wrote as a consequence of being introduced to Emerson. In 1841 Carlyle wrote to a friend...


"I love Emerson's book, not for its detached opinions, not even for the scheme of the general world he has framed for himself, or any eminence of talent he has expressed that with, but simply because it is his own book; because there is a tone of veracity, an unmistakable air of its being his, and a real utterance of a human soul, not a mere echo of such. I consider it, in that sense, highly remarkable, rare, very rare, in these days of ours. Ach Gott! It is frightful to live among echoes. The few that read the book, I imagine, will get benefit of it. To America, I sometimes say that Emerson, such as he is, seems to me like a kind of New Era."


And there you have it...Every blog I follow, I do so because there are few or no echoes in it. It's really you talking - it's a 'real utterance of  a human soul, not a mere echo of such.'