A stream of personable, competent and energetic women known as carers help me look after VR, my wife. At least half of them carry tattoos. "Is it mandatory for carers?" I ask. They shake their heads. I'd like to ask "Why?" but I fear pursuing a true answer might be thought intrusive. The halfway-house answer would be tattoos are presently popular (among men and women) and tattoo parlours have sprung up in the High Streets; fashion is being followed.
● Plus my novels, stories, verse, vulgar interests, apologies, and singing.
● Most posts are 300 words. I respond to all comments/re-comments.
● See Tone Deaf in New blogger.
Sunday, 14 September 2025
Something to hide behind?
Saturday, 30 August 2025
The corpse speaks
Our recent celebrations were muted, what mattered were the family groupings. I found myself taking a back seat, reflecting rather than yapping. Thinking about the way things had turned out over the years, when bad times had evolved into good times and then into unexpectedly even better times. With flaws of course.
A slow process which cannot be caught in the brevity of a
celebration. Worse still is how the language of celebration undermines the
good that is being celebrated. Ah, that tired vocabulary, unimaginative syntax
and vain attempts to emphasise phrases that have long since lost their ability
to connect with people. The pathetically dried-out husk known as cliché, in
short: dead language.
Theoretically dead language is no threat. “But we knew what
he was trying to say,” is the cry of those who see no harm in the cliché. Arguing
that the speaker had tried to articulate no doubt genuine feelings, had failed
and was simply “making do”. But if those feelings were truly genuine shouldn’t
we be ashamed of under-selling them? After all this might be the only occasion
we will have to express an important sentiment. And yet we’ve sent our listener
away with the echoes of a fifty-year-old ad slogan.
No doubt the first person to say he was “over the moon” got
a laugh. These days not an eyebrow rises. Unsurprising since the phrase dates
back to the 1700s. Unlike cheese and decent Bordeaux jokes don’t mature with
age.
But clichés may hide another grievous shortcoming: laziness.
People who believe themselves to be reasonably literate often resort to their
equivalent of the bovine lunar leap. It is, of course, difficult to put words
to feelings of sorrow or joy. Fact is, many don’t try. Or only as far as coming
up with a single word, usually an adjective, less desirably an adverb, most
abominably the catch-all “very”. Take heed: all the single-word solutions were
used up at about the time we went from BC to AD.
Significant happenings deserve effort, especially when
addressing, say, a recently bereaved widow or a five-year-old who has come last
in the sack race. Internally we may want to gush but gushing doesn’t parse
well. You could always try the initially unexpected:
To the widow: Jack
was hopelessly wrong saying no one would mourn. I, for one, am completely
gutted.
To the five-year-old:
I’m not at all surprised. Billy may have won but I overheard his parents say he
has a third leg. Hides it up his bum.
At my post-mortem
piss-up: That should shut him up.
Monday, 28 July 2025
Cleanliness is next to godliness, I'm told
Extreme old age, post-triple-surgery and a blindspot regarding domestic skills have conspired to prove I cannot - alone - attend to VR, my unwell wife of 65 years. Carers are filling in the gaps.
Virtually all are women, working long long hours for (I suspect) low pay. They are uniformed, brisk, adaptable to the peculiarities of our house and - despite regulations to prevent coercion - expert at getting VR to do what she believes she cannot do. And won't do for me.
Carer: You going out?
RR: Just to pick up The Guardian.
Carer: In that shirt?
RR: Wha...?
Carer: It's not clean.
Meekly I changed the shirt I'd worn for no more than a week. And laughed delightedly all the way to the filling station. VR's the patient and is treated with sympathy. I'm the inefficient dogsbody with impossibly low standards of personal hygiene. But I believe commitment to a cause outweighs politeness.
Sunday, 20 July 2025
Ou sont les neiges d'antan?
The photo was taken by daughter Occasional Speeder. She captioned it: "What a place."
I seem at peace with the world, ignorant of the ill-health that lay ahead for V and me. There are hints I am in France; the village of Montypeyroux to be exact, sitting outside a restaurant which we reserved for occasions when we felt deserved a treat.
At the time the prospect of a last visit to France was far from my mind. It has now occcurred (actually, a year ago) and I am left to ponder. What was it that took me back year after year?
I'd like to say it was the language but that's not strictly true. Rather it was the use of language and to that end I took weekly lessons continuously from mid-1973 to late 2017. Read about fifty French novels. Followed radio transmissions from France Inter. Wrestled with the ultra-demanding slangy prose of L'Equipe, a daily newspaper devoted to sport. Some people say they loved French but I'm not among them. It's a real bastard of a language and there were great holes in my knowledge of everyday conversation.
But what I did know endowed me with the enormous gift of confidence. I relished all opportunities to wade in and grab French attention. The point being I overcame my lack of idiom by planning what I had to say and coming up with the unexpected. The punchline reserved for the final sentence. My rewards consisted of watching facial reactions change: at first alarm, then attention, then the suppression of laughter. For to have laughed out loud would have been to admit that I had shown dominion over them. A Brit? Jamais.
One other thing: the huge middle of France is high level, under-populated and known as the Massif Central. It tickles my fancy turning an adjective into a noun. Also, the two words call out to you
Sunday, 22 June 2025
Tears out of step?
I cried early this afternoon; did so four or five days ago and for the same reason. A powerful reason but I don't intend to explain.
The crying had a strange leathery quality and was unnatural in that it didn't flow; there were times when I seemed to be forcing myself to cry. But the need was there, no doubt about that. And tears.
The sound seemed alien, quite unlike the crying I did as a child and in early adolescence. Might the noise I made today be affected by eight years of singing lessons? I simply don't know. But the mind-state was the same despite the passage of time; crying being the only way of expressing a very real sadness.
My next birthday will be my ninetieth; are nonagenarians prone to crying? I have to confess to a certain degree of self-awareness as I cried but in the end it may have worked A psychosomatic diminuendo, perhaps.
Can one cry to order? An interesting question.
Tuesday, 15 April 2025
Infuriating verse
Skype’s dying fall
These words ring out a Hallmark note for you,
Not too egregious, that five-dollar term;
Not claiming amity which wasn’t there;
But if I fail then pardon me toute suite
Cars, faces, house facades, offspring, pet dogs,
And how you manicure your nails, must be
Forever blurred to me. Distorted
As they are through long electric links
And mobilise the power of thought. Let’s say
We’ve met on Chichester, that urban route
I walk each day to buy the fruity stuff
That spills its juice and keeps my love alive
The horrors of the presidential cloud.
Our wit. The whys and wherefores of bad health,
The songs we sung so plangently. And how
Our histories do inform on us. (Good quote)
Seemed haunted by a vague-ish entity
Coming and going, only partly seen.
Raising questions you did not dare to put.
A matter of suburban delicacy.
Ten feet behind him and his shopping bag?
Comprising mist yet reeking with overt.
Significance. A threat? A prophet with
A view of what the future might portend?
I bid goodbye, devoid of friendliness.
I’d recognised your faint distress, but felt
It better that your doubts should rest
As now, in unresolv-ed ignorance.
Are eggs – he will return. He must return.
Once was a babe, arms waved in protest
In his pram. Went soccer-mad in youth,
Then Grand Theft Auto brought insanity.
Shrugged off with an improving adult tome
Took a job because it promised empathy.
Sought those in need in other quadrispheres.
Succeeded, after which he travelled west
To take up station at my ageing side.
We met; since then, in time, he’s passed me by
But I’m OK with that, it is his job
To surf the future’s waves on my behalf
And stay erect where I’d be lost in foam
Was/is a fraction older than I am;
The same but saner, more experience.
Less angered by surrounding politics,
More able to engage with life to come
If asked, he could convey new news to me.
When will it rain? The hell with that. Horse wins,
Who cares? Yet there’s a knot’s to be untied.
The biggest question anyone may ask.
My ailments coalesce within my frame;
See cleverness dissolve, arch words turn dust,
The urge to write be deadened by the dark;
Wisdom – if it exists - be foul and crass.
Losing its song and beat, becomes mere noise,
I’ll be alone, mute, deaf and unsustained,
I’ll sense the nothingness as tangible,
Departure finalised with no return.
Will shine light on my former, wordy trade.
A scoop of answers gifted by my twin,
Brings understanding at the price of pain.
It’s why I named him: Curiosity
Monday, 31 March 2025
Awfulness, by the back door
Have you ever been betrayed? Let down; expecting something – a mundane matter, even a regular routine – and it not happening? Being left confused and self-pitying.
No?
Here’s “betray”: to be a traitor to; to deliver (somebody or
something) by treachery; to deceive or be disloyal to…
Still no? It is, after all (and thankfully), a fairly rare
experience. This morning, I was betrayed and it was horrible.
An hour ago the world changed. From a deep sleep I woke up,
rolled over to inspect the digital clock: 08.34. And I knew! Immediately! Hair
frowzled, still in my PJs, I stumbled out of bed, crossed the landing into my
study, turned on the PC, and there was V – my singing teacher – telling me it
was no big deal, the hour had “gone on” the previous day, to go back to bed and,
and we’d re-schedule for Wednesday.
Comforting words but it was a big deal. I’d been betrayed by
my body and this shouldn’t have been a surprise. In five months’ time I’ll be ninety. No felicitations, please. In extreme old age the unexpected changes are the killers.
On Monday, January 4 2016 I had my first private singing
lesson and halfway through I burst into tears at the sense of revelation. Subsequently I’ve bored the pants off Tone Deaf followers detailing
this ongoing process that – I suppose – was, and is, ultimately incommunicable.
As with this present post.
Back then weekly lessons were at the piano in V’s living
room. The pandemic forced us to use the indirect system of Skype, V moved
house, and the lessons have continued, always on Mondays, always at 8.30 AM.
But always I was awake well before, two hours in fact. Time
enough to shave, get dressed, raise the blinds, comfort the other V, my wife,
in the aftermath of her illness, ease myself into the world of classical music
via performances on YouTube, and afterwards off to the supermarket, preparation
of meals and the etceteras.
There’s a further irony. My previous trade – journalism –
was framed by deadlines. Never previously have I overslept, either professionally
or socially. Ever!
Will I wake up in time next Wednesday? Now there’s apprehension...
YEAH: The obvious solution: an alarm clock. That's worked in the past - I've spent the whole night awake, waiting for the thing to go off. Infallible.