Categories
Twenties

You Are Your Own Best Friend

Back in England again I had three difficult years before me: the final two years at university and having to live with my mother again in between and for nearly another year before I finally left England to join Bob in Venezuela. These were hard times for me. I thought that when I left home and went to university I had put my worst fears behind me. I had made the assumption that having a degree would put me on the path to success and money. But things rarely turn out as we expect. External circumstances get in the way. Those of us who always do what we want to do, not what other people want us to do, live adventurous lives, as I have always done. However we change as we grow older and begin to understand our life’s needs better. We unexpectedly have experiences that send us in a different direction.

I thought I wanted a great career and I achieved success enough in three major ways but that was not the most important thing in my life as you will see later. I often cannot believe that I have passed eighty years on this planet. Since Bob died three years ago I am still working on my books and intend to take up my painting again. I am reading more about philosophy and any other interesting book that comes my way, usually through new friends. I have gone over my life several times and I find that there is nothing that I wanted to do that I have not tackled. Living on the right lines I have still more to add to my research about people and how strange we all are. We are such complex beings that the search for self-understanding is endless. I can still be surprised by something new I recognise in myself and in others who are close to me. When people ask me if I am retired I say “Unless I am non compus mentis I shall retire on the day I die.”

I have read many books about people who have done what they wanted to do. I have not come across any of them who have not lived and suffered their way through two extremes, failure and success. Rudyard Kipling wrote a poem “If” on this same theme. People who take risks that most of us would not dare to, must accept greater diversity in life; such as good luck and bad luck. In fact it is a mistake to think that good luck is going to drop from the heavens, although it rarely happens. Most luck, good and bad, is the direct result of what we ourselves have done, out of our own efforts. There are certain qualities without which no-one can follow his or her own star. They are patience, bravery and persistence. Throughout my life many people have asked me “How did you do this?” I had to reply “Only you [ie. Oneself – ed] can know”. The world is full of envy because there are many people who do not rely on themselves and their own efforts.

When I was young I did not want to be old, but that was so far off it did not bother me. Now I live in a community of flats for old people who have done many different things in the world. We all have our privacy and some of us, including myself, still drive. I have been surprised by how well most of them manage their lives. There are enough of us here that we can find a few people with whom to share ideas. I am considering writing a short book for people nearing the end of their lives about how we can pass our time in an interesting way, if we want to, without relying too much on our friends and families. However, if we still value our own lives and pursue what we like to do they will still enjoy coming to see us.

Categories
Autobiography Twenties

A Difficult Time

Bob and I wanted to go to South America. His friend, Jim, whom he had met when he was twelve years old and who also read Spanish at Liverpool University, was already settled in Maracaibo in Venezuela with his wife. He had a job with Royal Dutch Shell. He sent glowing accounts of their life there. When Bob graduated, two years before me, he took a job in a London bank that wanted someone who knew French and Spanish. His intention was to apply to Shell after a while, because it wasn’t easy to be accepted by this company. In fact it was more than two years before he was offered a post with Shell.

I missed him very much as I had to stay in Liverpool for two more years to get my degree. I spent long periods on my own in the library reading literature with occasional visits to London. My enthusiasm for studying was waning. I found it hard to concentrate. I still felt I must go back to Mother in the holidays and that was always very depressing. The strain of all this had a psychosomatic effect on me. My hair began to come out in handfuls every time I washed it. Some nasty- smelling thick ointment was prescribed for me by the hospital. I had to massage it into my scalp, leave it for a while and then shampoo my hair. It actually worked. At that time we never heard about psychosomatic illness. Yet we now know how common it is when we are under severe stress.

I went to Spain in my last two summer holidays as part of my course. First to Santander with the other people in my year for two weeks. It was quite enjoyable except for our attendance at a bull-fight. All of us felt utterly disgusted by such cruelty.

The next year I went on my own for nine weeks in Barcelona. I was the only one studying Catalan, an extremely difficult language that I only partly mastered. The other six fellow students in my year all chose to learn Portuguese, which is much easier, so they were sent to Portugal. I have never felt so alone in my life when I stepped off the train at Barcelona. I had been given the address of a boarding-house by another student who had stayed there the year before. It was very cheap. It had to be. My grant was only £90 for 9 weeks

I have always been very susceptible to atmospheres. Barcelona had a particularly depressed aura, partly caused by the soldiers in uniform who guarded mounted machine guns outside every bank. The atmosphere of the civil war was still there. The boarding house I had booked into was dark, untidy and full of rough-looking working-class men. The food was the worst I have ever seen before or after. I didn’t feel safe there. Within a week I found somewhere else , I can’t remember where, but it was a godsend to me. I met a lady called Doris. She spoke upper-class English and had come some time ago to live in Spain. She was a painter and she lived in an attic where only a painter could live. It had big windows letting in the light, lots of room with pictures and easels all over the place. One picture dominated all the rest. A portrait of the ballerina in the film “The Red Shoes”. She had one small spare room and she offered it to me. She asked for a very small rent, one I could manage. Her only proviso was that I move out occasionally when her tall, handsome Spanish lover came who was also a painter and spent his time travelling all around the country.

Doris was always short of money. She only sold a painting occasionally. She lived on the money she got from teaching Spaniards English in a nearby building. She suggested that I apply for a temporary job there. They were pleased to take me on. I was very Spanish-looking with my black hair and dark eyes and I was good-looking, although I didn’t yet know that. Most of the students were men, so the owner liked to employ women who were not only educated but looked good.

Doris and I got on well. We were both outsiders. Like me she wanted to make her own money. One day she asked me if I would like to go to Majorca to visit the writer Robert Graves, another ex-patriot who was a friend of hers. Of course I would! There was one drawback, neither of us had the money for the trip. Nor did we up to the time I went back to England. What a pity that I missed such an opportunity.

Ostensibly I was supposed to visit university libraries, find something that interested me and write about it. I only went a few times, made a few pages and notes and that was all.

When I got back no-one asked to see them to my great relief.

Bob met me at the station when I got back. “How thin you’ve got!” he said. We’ll go out tonight and feed you up.” I have never enjoyed a meal as much ever.

Categories
Autobiography Twenties

Two Families

In my first year at university I discovered the work of Sigmund Freud through a student who was reading psychology. I had never heard of him. I read one of his books and I was hooked. I wished I had changed over at that time. First, because I could have a greater number of lectures in a new and exciting subject that would help me to understand myself and my own peculiar parents and second, because the only lectures I enjoyed were those delivered by my Professor, Allison Peers, who could bring the past history and literature of South America to life.

My relationship with Bob grew stronger. For the first time in my life I felt I was supported and loved by a man very different from my father, in spite of the many things that we did not share. I expected far too much from him. I now know that if we do not get a good enough childhood, we expect perfection.

I had a lot to learn. I was more grown up in some ways than most other young people, but in other ways I was not.

Bob and I settled into what we now call a relationship, which relieved us of frustration, but we had to be very careful. We did not particularly want children. Thus our constant thoughts of “How far can we go”reminded us all the time. Bob asked me to marry him and I refused. However, when I had thought things over, I changed my mind and he accepted me. I still felt fragile emotionally and he had most of the qualities I needed. I thought I might never again find someone whose background and forebears were so similar to my own. For instance:

We both had grandfathers who were drowned before our own fathers were born. Although I was not a single child, I felt like one, and Bob had no siblings. We both had parents who quarrelled in front of us. Both of our fathers treated us like adults after we reached about seven years old. We were both responsible and could be trusted to look after ourselves. Each of us had one parent with which we clashed. Bob’s was his mother and mine was my father. Both of them died from cancer when we were both about twenty. Since Bob was seven years older than I, I never met his mother. Bob never mentioned her unless I asked. He never said anything about missing her, but it took his father many years to get over it. Bob was fond of his father, but I was not. They looked alike but they were very different. I felt that there was much unfinished business in the effect his mother had on him. I was right but it took me decades to find out what it was all about.

My father fell sick at the end of my first year away. It was an unusual cancer that began under his left eye. It was very close to his brain so he died in six months. Bob never saw him. I found the whole thing very traumatic. It took me several years to get over it. It wasn’t because of my missing him, rather for the wasted years when we had not formed much kind of communion together. I can still click my magic camera and see my father lying in hospital in Manchester having radiology treatment. The roof was high and made of glass. The sunshine was coming in. He looked unusually happy, kissed me and said “Isn’t it wonderful in here! It’s just like fairyland!” This was a favourite phrase of his.

I didn’t know just how ill he was. I regret not seeing him again because I did not want to miss an exam. I missed him by one day.

My mother showed very little feelings. She just went on as usual. In those days she received a sum of money, £500, Father’s salary for one year. It doesn’t sound like much today, but then it was a very good income. Needless to say she went through it in no time. Then she had nothing. But she still lived in the house and took in lodgers. She had great charm and could always find people to do things for her.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

Putting Our Feet In Water

Bob didn’t ask about me and I didn’t ask about him. The first two or three times we went out together I realised that neither of us had learned the art of conversation with new people. He told me long details of a film he saw and I chattered about Spanish literature. On the third time we met he asked me what I wanted to do. I thought for a minute and told him I liked classical music. He booked two tickets and we duly met at the entrance to the Hall.

It began with one of my favourite Beethoven symphony, number 7. Half way through I was overcome with emotion and turned to look at him. To my amazement his face was expressionless. He was clearly very bored. “Didn’t you like it?” I said. His answer was “No”. “Don’t you like classical music?”. Another negative response. “Why didn’t you tell me before?” I said. “I wanted you to enjoy yourself”.

That was the first thing I learned about him. He wanted to please me. I was bitterly disappointed. I wanted us both to enjoy ourselves.

Over a drink afterwards I asked him what he liked to do. He had to think for a while. “I like the cinema” he said. “What kind of films do you like?”

“Those that make me laugh” he said. Well I had to agree about that. There had been very little to laugh about so far in my life. I had always been deadly serious and I was fed up with it. I thought I had no sense of humour. I was wrong. It was buried deep inside me and later I realised I had repressed it. Once I dared to let it out, it worked overtime, but at first only with those I allowed to get close to me. I was still very wary of other people. We were both in the same boat. Bob thoroughly enjoyed his time in the army. He liked the camaraderie of men and knew how to lead them as an officer, but he was an only child who had no experience with women and because I was the eldest with a father and brother I had not felt close to, I did not then know how to relate to men.

We went to a cinema one afternoon in a seedy area of Liverpool. The film we saw was “The Paleface” with Bob Hope, an auspicious name. Is their hope for me with Bob and vice versa? The cinema was only half-full. There were some rough looking blokes sitting a few rows ahead of us.

It wasn’t long before Bob began to giggle. As the film proceeded it turned into the heartiest guffaws I

could ever have imagined. His whole body shook, his arms and legs were all over the place. I had never seen, nor heard, such hilarious and whole-hearted explosions of laughter. Tears poured down all over his face. There was one thing wrong. Not one other person present was laughing at all. After a while the rough blokes in front of us began to complain in no uncertaim way, using words I had never heard before. Bob took no notice of them whatsoever. I felt quite frightened for him and for myself. But Bob went on in full flow.

I was amazed that the other men did not do what they threatened to do. Bob just ignored them and soon after, they walked out. Needless to say I didn’t find it funny at all. But it was good to see him expressing himself in such an exhilarant way. He, too, was able to express his emotions just as I could, but for different reasons. After that afternoon we were much more relaxed with each other.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

Fate Steps In

The University of Liverpool was housed in The Victoria Building which was completed in 1892. It was a red brick building that my Professor Allison Peers named The Redbrick University, because it was the first of its kind. The Department of Hispanic Studies was very small. It trained students for an honours degree in The Faculty of Arts which took four years to complete.

When I went up in 1947 the total number of students in all four years was about forty. Our lecture rooms were at the very top of the building. We all had to climb a spiral staircase. The steps were made of stone and very hard on the legs and feet. Young as we were, few of us could get to the top without at least one pause to take breath.

I was in the first year; one woman with seven men. Did I make friends with them? No. Not really. I had not yet learned the art of getting to know other people. Not only that, we did not share the same interests despite the fact that we were doing the same course. I was back to my situation at school.

I had some doubts that I had chosen the right subject. It was possible to change it after the first year, but I could not think of anything else I wanted to do.

At all universities there were lots of groups to join. I tried one or two of them and turned them all down except The Spanish Society. We met occasionally for social purposes and sometimes a visit and short talk by someone associated with our subject. For one year I was the one who made the sandwiches and tea and welcomed the visitor in Spanish.

The Students’ Union arranged all sorts of diversions, dances and day-trips out, usually into Wales which was so close and full of beautiful landscapes. I went to most of them. Right from the first day I had noticed one particular man who was in the third year. He was one of those who had completed one year at university and had returned to finish his degree after five years in the army. He reached the rank of Captain. I was impressed by his kindness and courtesy when we had our meetings together, especially to several old people who were parents of some of the students.

At the top of the stairs there were always a few people leaning against the steel rail, chatting together and watching other students appearing, taking a breather as they waited for their lecturers to arrive. Robert Pain was often there on his own. There was something about this young man that intrigued me. He seemed to be more like me than like most of the rest. It took a while before the penny dropped. I suddenly realised that when I got to the top of the stairs he was always there. He was interested in me. At last he spoke.

“Would you like to come out to dinner with me?”

I was astounded. This was the first time such a question had been posed to me. Would I like to have dinner with him? What could I say but “Yes”. I would love to be taken out to dinner for the first time. Never did I think for a moment that he would be my husband. I was still at the stage when I was doubtful whether or not I should marry. But I also wanted to have an intelligent boyfriend.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

To Marry Or Not To

two doves by Catherine PainIn 1947 the male students were almost all considerably older than the women. The reason is simple. Those men who were ready for university when the war started were allowed to complete their first year before being called up. They had mostly been in The Officers’ Training Corps, so they usually became officers very early. By the time the war was over, they had served anything up to six or seven years with the heavy responsibility of command. With such grave experiences they returned as exceptionally mature, and were naturally given priority for university places. Healthy men who were ready for the next stage of education after the war were obliged to do a two-year stint in The National Service before they could move on to university. Some of the women had also served in the forces and had the chance to go to university with exceptionally good grants.

However the vast majority of women went up straight from school. At that time they still regarded marriage as important and university was clearly the best hunting ground for it because there was no other place where they would have such a good chance to find husbands whose intelligence and education matched their own. Nevertheless, many of us women were anxious to have careers as well. Society was changing. It had to be a daring couple to decide to live together before or without marrying.

It isn’t easy for men and women who are busy working hard to do as well as they can with their chosen studies to manage their boy and girl friendships with ease, especially when the natural inclination for mating begins to impress itself. Most of the women came from girls’ schools and most of the boys from boys’ schools. Therefore they had had little experience of each other. Moreover those men who had fought in the war were much too busy to think about the lack of female colleagues. University then served as a playground for making up for lost time by getting the chance to mix with the opposite sex for pleasure and for work.

Our fellow animals who cannot speak have no problems with mating. They don’t have to get married. All they have to do is follow their instincts when they are old enough. We humans are physically complete when we are in our early ‘teens but we have to wait until we are much older before we can go through the rites of marriage. This has always been a problem for civilised societies who do things differently from all our fellow animals.

We young women students wanted to have our cakes and eat them. Unlike the rest of the female race who left school earlier and usually married earlier at that time, more and more of us were planning lifelong careers. We were born at a time when many of the unwritten rules for man/women relationships were hangovers from Victorian times. We were at the threshold of much more freedom for women when they could choose whether to have children or not.

The result of all this was that we would get together at night with our cups of cocoa, having endless discussions of “How Far Can we Go?”. Meaning, of course, how could we avoid getting pregnant and still enjoy what some people call “making love” and others “having sex”.

Women’s Lib was hovering on the threshold. This is a subject about which I have much to say. I intend to write my own ideas about what has gone wrong with it and how it can be improved for everyone’s benefit. I might start it on this blog soon, or I might wait till I have finished this book about my life.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

A New World

In my last year at school, my teachers suggested that I would stand a good chance of getting a scholarship to Oxford or Cambridge if I stayed on for a third year. I would have loved that because having tutorials with some of the best teachers in the country appealed to me strongly. BUT, the thought of having to stay at home for another year was definitely not desirable. I was at the end of my tether. I had had enough. So I was accepted at Liverpool in the Spanish Department with Professor Allison Peers, one of the best known of dons for his books about Spain.

I finished my exams and wondered what I should do for the long summer holidays, whilst I was waiting to see if I had won a scholarhip. I was very short of money as usual. I always had to earn it for myself. I managed to get a job making sandwiches and worrying what I would do if I didn’t get the scholarship.

At last the day arrived when I got the letter that gave me the good news. I was overjoyed. My headmistress wrote to tell me that I had earned the highest marks ever for my French scholarship paper. I was to receive a generous grant, the equivalent of a secretary’s salary in those days. My father, after some twenty years, received his first promotion. He was very happy but he did not offer to help me. My mother had a talk with him and suggested that he lend me some money. He grudgingly handed over a five pound note which then was white and the size of a small tablecloth. I had never held one in my hands before. I was not given the first payment of my grant until nearly the end of the autumn term.

I repaid Father and at last I was secure.

I arrived at The Women’s Hall of Residence on my own. To my astonishment, most of the new students were accompanied by their father or mother or both. I was to share a room with a girl from my school who was going to read social sciences, which was a very new subject. She had a large suitcase full of brand new clothes. I had an old battered case with not much more than one of everything. My father had given me strict orders to return the case immediately as it was the only one he had. I asked him to make sure he sent it back before the end of term but he did not. I had to wrap up my few belongings in carrier bags. Like Scarlett O’Hara I made an oath that I would never be poor again. My room-mate’s mouth dropped open when I took up the lid. “Is that all you’ve got?” she said. I was filled with mortification and hatred. But I said nothing. I had not yet discovered how to respond to such insensitive people. I very soon decided that we must change rooms as soon as possible. I thought I should be alright with a medical student, but again we didn’t get on. And in the third term I had a room to myself.

It took me a long, long time to learn how to talk with these people who seemed to come from a different planet than I. All the girls were dressed up to the nines with smart suits, new shoes, many of them with high heels, nylon stockings and New Look dresses. The war had been over for two years. We were still rationed but good clothes were beginning to trickle into the shops. We had ration cards for them but they soon died away. The black market was still rife so most people with money could get all kinds of extras.

We had no idea that the tables would turn in the sixties when it was the done thing for students to wear torn jeans and the sloppiest of trainers or tennis shoes. I would have had no dressing problems then. In close proximity with young women from all over the place and living together in a sort of hotel gave me the opportunity to study all kinds of them and why they behaved and spoke as they did. I came from the stone ages.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

First Boyfriend

I met my first boy-friend when I was in the sixth form. I saw an advertisement for four hours work on Saturday afternoon. I applied and was taken on. I earned ten shillings for four hours work. It was good money in those days. I had some typing lessons but no knowledge of book keeping. Sam ran a small advertising agency for boarding houses. He was attracted to me from the start but I did not know this for the first two months. We were very formal with each other. He was divorced and had custody of his two little boys.

The first time he took me out I felt very flattered. He was tall, good-looking and loved dancing. So did I but I had very little practice and no experience at all of men. He took me out to the Tower Ballroom which was very popular. He introduced me to gin- and- tonics and I found I quite liked them, but I never had more than one at a time. I was wary about alcohol, especially as I was under eighteen and therefore doing something illegal. By this time my skin and general appearance had improved and my black hair and dark eyes began to look attractive, even in my own eyes.

I did not know how old he was. I assumed he was about twenty-eight. One day when he was out I looked in his desk and found out that he was thirty-eight. I was astonished. That made him old enough to be my father! I told him I had found this out. My first thought was that I could tell the girls at school and shock them too. Those who had boy-friends were few and we all knew very little at all about the male of the species.

I told my father the first time Sam took me out. He said he wanted to see him the next time he came to the house. They had a short talk together and to my surprise they seemed to get on quite well. Father said afterwards that he seemed a decent sort of bloke. Dad was quite right. He was what mother called A Perfect Gentleman who Wouldn’t Take Advantage. I still knew very little about men and women relationships.

We went out together for a year and I continued to work for him. He had a little runabout car and he always drove me when we went out. It seemed a great luxury in those days. Of course I had no experience of men. The fact was that Sam badly wanted to marry again and have a mother for his sons. His ex-wife never took any interest in them and she had lost contact with them. He had been in the RAF and, like many other husbands his wife felt lonely and found someone else.

I knew he was quite besotted with me. He asked me to go away with him for a week-end but I refused. Above all else I wanted to go to university. I liked kissing and cuddling but I always felt very wary if matters got more intimate. He asked me to marry him and I said “No” several times.

Our friendship lasted little more than a year because I wanted to stop working for him and concentrate on studying hard enough to win a scholarship. I never put myself in a situation where I could not get away quickly: not because I didn’t trust him but because I didn’t trust myself. His longing for a whole family was so strong I felt he would soon find someone else. He did. He introduced me to her when they decided to marry. I liked both of them and wished them well with a sigh of relief, because I wanted him to be happy and he and I were poles apart. I settled back to my studies and thought of nothing else.

Categories
Autobiography Teens

Role Models

Like many other young women I was profoundly affected by the cinema: the films themselves and the glamorous film stars. When “Gone with the Wind” came to Blackpool the excitement was overwhelming. Some of us had to wait for hours, standing in all sorts of bad weather, to get in. The film was played over and over again, as much as they could fit into one day. It ran for a long time. Every time the theatre was emptied a new audience piled in. As soon as the last seats were filled the doors would be slammed in our faces and we had to wait another four hours.

The character of Scarlett O’Hara fascinated me. I liked her toughness and determination not to be beaten by misfortune. The scene that I remember best was when she came home to Tara after the war. The situation was very bad. Food was scarce and there were looters all over the place, helping themselves to anything they could lay their hands on as they made their journey back to the North.

Desperately trying to survive and take care of Melanie and her baby, Scarlett sees a vegetable still left in the arid ground, seizes it and stuffs it into her mouth. She retches. Raising her fisted hand against the crimson sunset she swears an oath. “As God is my witness, I shall never be hungry again.”

Most young women, whether they were at school or out in the world making their living, took as their models these film-stars. We copied hair-styles, make-up and intimate ways of moving and facial expressions. When we were in the sixth-form, influenced b y the sultry alure of Lauren Bacall, we took to smoking cigarettes, preferably in long holders at the week-ends, once we were well away from home.

I spent hours changing my hair-style every day, twisting my straight black hair into strange coils and twists with hair-pins.

I was cursed with oily skin that erupted into unpleasant purple spots. I had to wash my hair every two days. I was full of despair. I spent my hard- earned money on ointments that did no good at all. I finally settled for calamine lotion with a dusting of powder on top. I looked paler than ever. Moreover, my body was thickening and I had longed to be slim and willowy. To top it all, I had severe period pains most months and I had to go to bed and miss school. My thirteenth year was the worst in my whole life. I was so sorry for myself but I knew that I alone had to find my way through.

I constructed scenarios in my head of suicide and a consequent funeral, surrounded by weeping people who had failed to recognise m y genius and great personality.

My nature was becoming more and more extreme. Either I was euphoric, my mind buzzing with ideas and vivid images or I was in the depth of despair. I felt there was no-one in my life who understood me. No-one I could share my thoughts with. No-one was there to guide me. I remember all this so clearly that when I became a psychotherapist I was able to give unhappy adolescents the support they needed to help them to take control of their own lives.

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Autobiography Teens

Life Gets Lighter

Mother’s condition was slowly getting worse. She went into hospital for an operation that might help the open ulcers to close. After she came home she had strict instructions that she must stay in bed. Mary and I took time off school to look after her and make sure that she didn’t get up. One day Mary had been out to do the shopping. When she got back Mother was pottering about on her legs. Mary was naturally cross with her. “I only thought I would make a bit of dinner for you.” This was typical of Mother. She knew that we were both taking valuable time our of school to give her the chance to get better and then she sabotaged us by not following doctor’s orders. At that time I was beginning to think that she did not want to get better. When she was ill she got attention and company, just as she received when, as a sickly child, she was sent for lovely holidays with the Lincolnshire cousins. Eventually she was provided with a very large and unwieldy mechanised wheel chair so that she could go out and do the shopping and we rarely had to take time off school. Yet her legs would still not get better. A long time after, when Mary and I were both married with children, she began to show signs of dementia. We found a good nursing home for her. She still retained her cheerful self and all the staff loved her. It is easy to be cheerful when we do not take responsibility for ourselves. At long last the ulcers closed completely. She got all the attention she had always wanted. I knew then that if people have a vested interest in being ill, nothing will make them better.

Once the war was over I slowly began to recover from my depression. My life was beginning to change. My time in the sixth form was the most rewarding because I was immersed in what I enjoyed: English, French and Spanish, both language and literature. I read English and Spanish metaphysical poetry and began to find some answers. John Donne, St. John of the Cross and Santa Teresa were my favourites. I found the concept of the dark night of the soul, when faith appears to vanish and a strong sense of meaninglessness overwhelms the soul. I wasn’t the only one. I felt comforted that some of the greatest poets had experienced this phenomenon and that it was another aspect of the life of the spirit.

I realised that I did not need to belong to an organised religion. We are part of a whole and have the powers within us to make the best of ourselves. If we want to feel secure we must all learn to understand ourselves and trust our own judgement. We should question whatever we are taught and decide for ourselves what we need. It is useless to ask people if they believe in God because we all have our own idea of what the word ‘god’ means to us. I developed a love for the golden age plays of Shakespeare and Calderon. I realised that the best of literature and philosophy can tell us all we need to know about the nature of mankind and spirituality.

My sister Mary and I became much closer because we both loved the theatre. Mary loved acting and I went to see her several times. I was astonished at her confidence to play parts that needed a lot of learning without drying up. At that time the best plays toured the provinces before they opened in London. We queued up at least twice a month at the Grand Theatre to get seats in the gods. We saw Edith Evans in “The Chalk Garden”, John Mills in “Five Finger Exercises”, Emlyn Williams in “Night must Fall” and many others. We attended our first operas, “La Boheme” and “Tosca” which remain my favourites. We both had a passion for jigsaw puzzles. To make it more fun we would take two or three, mix them up and finish them all.