Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 399.

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Easy As Getting A Good Report.
by Angharad (could do better)
part: 399.

Breakfast was late, it took us a little while to clear up the feathers from one of the pillows, which had haemorrhaged all over the place. Stella, giggling scooped up as many of the curled feathers and duck down as she could, shoving her collection into a plastic bag, whilst I chased down the others with the vacuum cleaner.

“We used to have pillow fights in the dorms when I was at school,” said Stella, “only once did we have a pillow burst, and the whole dorm was put on detention for a week.”

“Serves you right,” I said, emptying the vacuum cleaner into a bin bag. “I think maybe I need to get some new pillows. These could be getting a bit ripe.”

“Are you giving them a ticking off?” asked Stella.

“What? What are you on about?”

“Ticking, pillows.”

“Stella it’s clocks that tick, pillows don’t say much at all, in my experience.”

“Pillows do tick.”

“Don’t be daft. How can they tick…oh, bugger. You pig, you got me again.” She had pointed to the fabric the pillow was in, a pillow tick. Grrrr!

I said that breakfast was late, it could well have been that lunch was early. We ate brunch, as our cousins across the pond call it. It proved to be heavier than a normal breakfast but possibly not as much as typical lunch could be. Either way we had some bacon sarnies, with grilled tomatoes and mushrooms. They were delicious, especially washed down with copious amounts of tea.

“Right, lets go and get these new pillows.”

“Stella, I am so full, I can hardly move.”

“Typical of today’s youth, gratuitous self indulgence and idleness.”

“Gee thanks, remind me to contact you if I need a reference.”

“Yes, ‘Could do better, except in dormouse juggling,’ that would be a good one.”

“I’ve probably had worse, especially at school.”

“Oh I had some crackers from school, ‘Lady Cameron, would do well to pay more attention to the laws of the land with a view to maintaining them, not transgressing them.’

“Oh, I don’t think I can beat that, but my sports master possibly second guessed me. ‘As a rugby player, Watts may find it useful to join the netball team.’ My dad was furious, when he confronted the games master, the bloke said , he meant it with regard to a sense of timing and balance, which he thought netball would encourage.”

“Did they ever let you find out?”

“No, sadly. My friends thought it was hilarious. Whenever we played rugger or soccer, they suggested I should play, ‘goal defender’.”

“Oh, that good eh?”

“Yep. Hence the cycling, I was useless at that too.”

“That makes me feel a whole lot better.”

“Why?”

“Well if you were useless, and have got better, then there is hope for me too.”

“Yeah, I asked to do cycling instead of soccer.”

“And?”

“I was accused of trying to skive off, besides my dad wouldn’t buy me the sort of bike I wanted until it was too late.”

“Pity.”

“He played football and rugby for his school, but was twice my size and weight. He was built like a bull, I was like a gazelle, one with poor hand eye coordination.”

“What about tennis?”

“We did a bit of it, I wasn’t very good, but at least the ball was softer than it was in cricket.”

“Oh, I played ladies cricket, great fun.”

“Maybe I’d have enjoyed that more than I did the men’s variety. I couldn’t bat for toffee and my bowling was mediocre, although I wasn’t a bad slip fielder. However, not good enough to get in the team, so Daddy was not impressed with me.”

“So what else do you recall from your school reports? I had, ‘Stella would be a good listener if ever she stopped talking.’”

“Nothing new there then,” I said, dodging her swipe. “I had, Watts has a rare talent, he is the only person in this school who can plane scalloped wood with a box plane.’”

“Explain, ex-plain–ha ha,” she laughed at her own joke. No seriously, I don’t get that.”

“A box plane is designed to strip the wood in straight lines. I could give it a regular undulating surface instead of flat. As a woodworker, I made a good rugby player.”

“That bad, eh?”

“Oh yeah, but the one I got for metal work, well, “Charles has a wonderful action with the hammer on the anvil, unfortunately, he has yet to make contact with the metal he’s supposed to be drawing.”

“Drawing?”

“Yeah, the object is to heat the iron and work it with a hammer to draw it out. I never actually managed to hit it.”

“Did you need glasses or something?”

“No my sight was fine, I did hit it once or twice, but it was such a heavy hammer, I couldn’t lift it properly, so his remark was doubly sarcastic.”

“Oh, you were a real girly then?”

“I wanted to be, I used to watch the girls going into their school and dream what it would be like to be there.”

“Much the same as the boys I should think, boring and a waste of time. I mean, why did they teach us to type? None of us were likely to be secretaries unless it was as a way of marrying our bosses. What parent in their right mind paid several thousand pounds a year to have their daughters learn to type?”

“I wish they’d taught me to, I’d have found that rather useful, more so than trying to make paint scrapers or letter openers.”

“Didn’t you have to do some sewing as well as woodwork?”

“Yeah, I was actually quite good at that, although I managed to lose my demo piece so it wouldn’t show in my report.”

“Maybe your mother would have been more sympathetic to you if you had let them mark it.”

“I doubt it. We had to do a bit of homework and she saw me, she laughed at me, though she did correct what I was doing wrong.”

“Sometimes people have to take these things on board at their own pace?”

“Someday never.” I felt my sadness rise again. I had never managed to talk to my mother rationally about my feelings. I liked to hope that if she’d lived things might have been different, but I wasn’t holding my breath.

“We’ll never know now, so you might as well feel positive as negative about it.”

“If wishes were horses then beggars would ride, that’s what my mum used to say.”

“My Gran used to say, ‘If ifs and ans were pots and pans, there’d be no need for tinkers.”

“What’s a tinker?”

“According to my Gran, they were like gypsies who repaired pots and pans and dealt in scrap metal. You know, itinerants moving around the place, in the days when pots and pans obviously weren’t made of stainless steel and were too valuable to discard.”

“Gosh, I never thought of that, I wonder how they repaired them?”

“Soldered, I suppose. Couldn’t really see them having facilities for welding.”

“Welding?” I was amazed, “Can you weld saucepans, then?”

“Not stainless ones, the old cast iron ones possibly, but they could solder them. Haven’t you ever tried it?”

“A bit, but only in the garage when I was a kid and trying to repair a brake mounting. It didn’t work, too soft.”

“I made some jewellery while I was at school, you see, Millfield did teach me something, as well as breaking and entering.”

“What?”

“Yeah, getting in after lights out, or getting out again.”

“Thankfully, I was at home not sent away to a concentration camp. Having said that, Daddy was pretty strict, so you might have had more freedom.”

“Probably, I didn’t let the school stop me doing anything, and I even let them teach me the odd thing.”

“Yeah, I suppose I must have allowed that to happen too, or enough to have Sussex accept me and then give me a degree.”

“London, did the same for me, only in nursing. They liked Simon so much they gave him a master’s.”

“What, an old master’s?”

“Oh yeah, I like it. I’ll have to tell him that. Hey, you’ve got one too, haven’t you?”

“Yeah, from Portsmouth. Sometimes, I think I miss the place.”

“Come back with me tomorrow then.”

“No, I have commitments here, and besides, I’m not ready to see Tom just yet and maybe he feels the same?”

“One way to find out.”

“Come on, let’s go buy my new pillows,” I said changing the subject.

05Dolce_Red_l_0.jpg

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Comments

Angharad shows…

…considerable ingenuity in her creative writing. Her persistance and sticking to the task in hand is to be applauded.

The dialogue between her characters is admirable, especially when they are trying to score off one another.

Great banter, Ang,

Gabi

Gabi.


“It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.” Thomas Hardy—Far from the Madding Crowd.

Stella And Cathy

Are really having fun in their bantering. And we are learning a bit more about both too. I wonder if Tom will show up now and if so will have some news to floor Cathy? Perhaps her neighbors or Simon will show up too.

May Your Light Forever Shine

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Ah yes

kristina l s's picture

How many of us I wonder got the, should apply himself more, or could do better's? Nice change of pace Ang, the last few chapters have been thoughtfully introspective. A bit of sit and think time is good now and then. Nice

Kristina

Just Continue it's great - Niw almost 400

Angharad: Did ever think you be writing 400+ chapters to this story? But, please keep it going were all enjoying it! Richard

Richard

And quoting...

Gabi, who said it so very well

Angharad shows considerable ingenuity in her creative writing. Her persistance and sticking to the task in hand is to be applauded.

The dialogue between her characters is admirable, especially when they are trying to score of one another.

Great banter, Ang,

Why try to come up with something original, when it's already been said so well. :-)

I am glad I wasn't involved with THAT pillow fight... I might not have survived. (Feather pillows tend to give me a VERY stuffy nose. I'm trying to imagine what a cloud full would have done.)

Thanks for something enjoyable to read, Angharad.

Annette

Learning about school days

I love these chapters where we get to know Cathy and Stella. I thought that all students are taught to type as part of a computer class sometime. When I was in school some students complained that its pointless since they'd learned from chatting already. I can see Stella in on her computer chatting with friends while Simon was in his room playing Winning Eleven. I bet she was texting in class all the time. Sometimes I wish I could enter into their conversation to ask questions.

you forget

kristina l s's picture

Back only a few years mobiles were rather exotic things and certainly not seen in classrooms. Computers would have been somewhat rare too, though perhaps at a posh school like Stella and Simon went to.

Kristina

We had computers

I'm older than Stella is by a couple years. In my small private school in a rural village, half the students had mobile phones and even more had internet access. Ten years ago, Stella certainly had one.

Sadly, not all schools TEACH...

typing - even if they have computers for the kids & require them to use them. They figure (they'll pick up what they need on their own.

Typing is a valuable skill. (And, it let me earn a living for a good while - as a "Kelly Girl" - I think they're Kelly Temporary Servies" these days... And don't call all their employees "Kelly Girls".) Back in the days - we had typing classes - where your grade was based on your rate. 40+ words a minute gave you an A. Now, that's for typing an entire page of text... You lost one word per minute, for every typo on the page, so accuracy was as important as speed.

Today, the most schools in my area have for the kids is a "keyboarding" class. In this, they mostly learn to use (barely - an overview) Word & Excel... They really area not TAUGHT to TYPE. The typing is by "osmosis" - most kids have to look at their fingers to type.

*sighs*
Annette
(Okay, I'll cimb off of my soap box now.)

typing experence

I think schools have stopped teaching typing because the kids get there first. I don't know huge numbers of teenagers, but I know quite a few and, at sixteen or seventeen, they all can type much better than I could at that age (and I had a typing class).

They don't all start with there fingers on asdf;lkj, and they don't always hit the same key with the same finger, but those fingers move fast, and some only use the left hand on the keyboard. They are very adaptable.

They pick it up by chatting and in MMORP and the like, video games might ever help some.

They are all very good with the double key strokes (shift, ctrl, alt) because more than one finger knows where to find each key (mine don't). And they can type and scroll or mouse around the screen at the same time, which I sure can't, and think few over 35 can.

Joy; Jan

Learning to type

When I was a teenager at boarding school I had atrocious handwriting and the letters I wrote home each week (this was a regular "Sunday Task") were virtually unreadable. Because of this my Gran bought me (for my 14th birthday) an "almost new" Remington office portable—which came in a strong case and weighed a ton (to my flimsy biceps)—so at least my weekly letter would be decipherable.

My Mum, bless her, insisted that I should learn to touch-type and taught me to feel for the keys from what she called the "home position". My hands were covered by a cloth so I couldn't see the keys, only what I was typing on the paper. I am forever grateful to her. I still have that typewriter (and a few more including an electric IBM) although the touch it requires is massive compared to a Mac keyboard (which sometimes ruuuuuuunnsss away with me!).

Gabi

Gabi.


“It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.” Thomas Hardy—Far from the Madding Crowd.

I woludn't bthoer to leanr.

Angharad's picture

I fnid I gte by in my wrod professssing, just wiht tow fnigers! I do maek the dod mtsiake when I tripe at spede.

Gush,

Angharad 8)

Angharad

Bonzi, stop making fun of Ang

Just because your typing is all paws doesn't mean you should impersonate your human and make fun of them.

Joh in Wauwatosa

John in Wauwatosa

Nothing to say, really

except my admiration at your ability to keep my interest after all this time. Wonderful.

"Could do better?" If that's the case, I might as well go home now. Wait a minute; I am home! Oh......

Susie

Bike.

Oh Gosh so Tom's 1st daughter was a transexual. So it's not exactly a coincidence that Tom felt sympathy for Cathy and took her under his wing. As we get older there are many things we have to unlearn and re-learn and it becomes theraputic for those who are prepared to do so.
If we are lucky to have a chance in later years to put right stuff we got wrong then it's a huge relief to do it before it's too late.
Tom must be grieving hugely for his daughter so I hope that a reconciliation betwixt him and Cathy is forthcoming. It'll be tremendous therapy for both of them provided it is strictly a private reconciliation between the two of them alone. Please don't let Stella get too much involved, after 63 years I have found that most repair work is more successful if the two participants first sort stuff out on their own. If then there are other issues for example, with other family members then it's best to address those later before stepping out and trying to mend too many fences too quickly.
People need time to make reconciliationms especially if some of the perceived offenders are dead.
Sometimes there is no requittal and that hurts most of all.
This is a brilliant soap insofar as it touches upon so many of the heartaches surrounding transgendered issues.
Keep writing cos I'll kepp reading,
Beverly.

Several Pillows

Several Pillows were harmed in the making of this story. Several others were thrown away. All in all, not a good day for the pillows.

PUNS

Really great back and forth

Cefin