What remains when symbols are stolen

Are you patriotic? What does being patriotic mean to you?

I envy the ease with which the Scottish, Irish, Welsh, and Cornish lift their flags ~ symbols of heritage carried without suspicion.

For many of us in England, the St George’s Cross has been burdened by years of appropriation, its meaning bent out of shape by people I don’t stand with. And so the question comes: am I patriotic? Not in the loud, performative sense. But in the quieter ways ~in wanting fairness, in caring about the land beneath my feet, in feeling protective of the humour, the contradictions, the decency that still runs through this place ~perhaps I am.

And if patriotism includes affection for your own people, then yes, I feel that, too. I’m especially fond of my fellow Brummies: their warmth, their wit, their refusal to take themselves too seriously.

I’m grateful as well for the small mercies of this island ~even our weather. We have our floods and our wildfires, of course, but not with the ferocity some countries endure; there’s a gentleness to our climate that mirrors the quieter loyalties I carry.

Yet I can’t pretend there isn’t a shadow side. I’m often ashamed of how many of the titled and entitled make the headlines for all the wrong reasons, as though their behaviour stands in for the rest of us. It doesn’t ~but it still stings.

And perhaps that’s the heart of it. My patriotism isn’t blind. It isn’t boastful. It isn’t borrowed from flags or slogans. It’s a kind of stewardship ~loving a place enough to see its flaws clearly and still wanting better for it. A loyalty that doesn’t shout but stays. A loyalty that hopes.

You’re nicked!

Have you ever unintentionally broken the law?

It was mostly to have been a Wednesday, the day they lurk at the side of the road, waiting for you to come along at speed.

The country road coming out of town has a multitude of speed change signs. A ridiculous amount.

I saw the police van ahead and approached the village with caution. You’d be hard pushed to knock someone down there as the pavements are wide and the houses set back. A one horse kinda place.

I drove past at a snail’s pace and could see the new speed sign to my left as I drove out of the place. Because there was an incline, I put my foot down a bit. And that was me, toast!

 

A week or so, the fine comes through the post. Points on my licence and an insurance hike for something like 3-4 miles over the limit. Great!

What’s in a title?

If there were a biography about you, what would the title be?

Hmm. Interesting, WP. You state biography, not autobiography. Suggesting the title would have been chosen by someone else? In which case maybe SailingClose to the Wind.

My choice? I’m Still Standing. Many thanks to Sir Elton John for that.

Words by Philip Larkin

What were your parents doing at your age?

They f*ck you up, your mum and dad.  
    They may not mean to, but they do.  
They fill you with the faults they had
    And add some extra, just for you.

But they were f*cked up in their turn
    By fools in old-style hats and coats,  
Who half the time were soppy-stern
    And half at one another’s throats.

Man hands on misery to man.
    It deepens like a coastal shelf.
Get out as early as you can,
    And don’t have any kids yourself.

Philip Larkin (1922~1985)

The dictatorship

If you had the power to change one law, what would it be and why?

The heavy hand of the supermarkets needs addressing. They dictate to the farmers on buying prices, quality, packaging, and delivery.

Plus payment terms, demands to fund promotional costs, and forced return of unsold merchandise across the board.

Despite not drinking milk or eating meat, it’s impossible not to see the injustice  here and empathise with the farmers who struggle to keep their heads above water. They have so many factors to take into consideration to earn an honest crust. Whilst the Suits at supermarkets sit at their desks and rake it in.

Dream on,dream on

Write about your dream home.

And so we get another chance to write about our dream home. Last time, I may have said a converted chapel or old school house on the edge of a market town in England. I thought and still do think it would be amazing to leave your front door and walk to the beach one way or the shops another. Bliss.

Another time did I say a little house in the woods. The sun dappled through the trees? A porch to sit out on with a cat and a dog. All manner of wildlife would live in close proximity. Another state of bliss.

This time I would like to think my dream place would be a townhouse in central London. I love the vibe, the parks, and so much to do if it pleases you. Yes, there you have three shades of bliss.

Words by W.H.Davies

You get some great, amazingly fantastic news. What’s the first thing you do?

Great, amazingly fantastic news? I imagine I would cry.

And now, with the DP answered and a lovely empty page below, I will put Nature’s Friend a poem by one of my favourite peeps, W.H. Davies.

Say what you like,
All things love me!
I pick no flowers –
That wins the Bee.

The Summer’s Moths
Think my hand one –
To touch their wings –
With Wind and Sun.

The garden Mouse
Comes near to play;
Indeed, he turns
His eyes away.

The Wren knows well
I rob no nest;
When I look in.
She still will rest.

The hedge stops Cows,
Or they would come
After my voice
Right to my home.

The Horse can tell,
Straight from my lip.
My hand could not
Hold any whip.

Say what you like,
All things love me!
Horse, Cow, and Mouse,
Bird, Moth and Bee.


by William Henry Davies (1871 ~ 1940)

Jeff, my Happiness Engineer

Becareful what you wish for, lest it come true’

This was suggested to us by Aesop in the sixth century. Have I learnt nothing?

To cut a long story short, I was a bit miffed with the repeated Daily Posts, so put in a query about it, twice.

Jeff, a Happiness Engineer, understood where I was coming from, or so I thought. Now, someone in their wisdom on the team has left me unable to answer, said Daily Posts, by marking them ‘answered’ two days running.

And of course, now I want back in and be able to answer those repeated DP’s. 🤣

Enough already

Do you need a break? From what?

A little break from the ageing process would be cool.

All those formative years aching to be older, like it was a superpower. Then you get there, and maybe it’s not so magical after all?

I’m enjoying slow living now, absolutely loving it, but it’s going far too quickly. I had no idea! I thought being older would give me all this free time. The days would be endless, maybe to the extent of having time on my hands. Not a chance.

Bam and another day has gone. Pretty damn freaky tbh.