My old home,
where I grew up, is finally being sold. The house was brand new in 1954 when my
parents moved in. It was home to three children, but my sister died at just 5
years old, before I knew her. My paternal gran (Nana) lived with us, as did my
maternal grandfather.
It has been
an epic journey sorting out 50 years of ‘stuff’. My father was a hoarder of
note, buying just one of something was not an option for him.
He had two
workshops and a workroom, and all were filled to overflowing. There is still so
much to sell, dump and get rid of, and I’m finding it both painful and
cathartic.
Sitting in
the lounge on a plastic chair, I think of how it was. How the Bluff was when I
was a child and how our house was filled with things and love and arguments and
some hard times, and how, when I was very young, I thought that what was just a
middle class home, was actually a palace. My mother was always there to calm the
storms and keep us together. She sewed, and cleaned and would give me
the last piece of crackling from her Sunday lunch. She is 90 now and I
take care of her instead.
My oldest
friend comes into my thoughts. I can see her clearly in my mind’s eye, her dark
shining hair in a bob and her beautiful eyes. I recall our first meeting, she
just four years old, and I five. I stood on the little verandah at the back of
my house and she stood below in her driveway. I was stricken and painfully shy,
and she was relentless in her greeting. Eventually I managed a “hello” and the
rest is our history. We ran and hid and swung high on swings, had tea parties at
a little table and chairs made by Zulu craftsmen. We drank Oros out of tiny
cups and laughed until it spilled over like our joy. We made mud pies in my driveway
with Bougainvillea flowers, that sat like butterflies on their tops.
This one's for you Z, decorated with the flowers from the shrub at the gate, it's still there.
We sat on
the pavement and ate ice-creams that dripped down our chins and between our
toes. She would run over to my house to play and her Ouma would scream for her
until she returned home, but my friend always won in the end and as soon as
Ouma looked the other way she would come back and we would play until we
disagreed, enemies until the morning. We fought and played daily, but it is the
play and the uncontrollable giggling and just knowing she was there, that I
recall.
It is
bitter-sweet sitting here in the silent lounge, imagining shouts and laughter
and jazz on New Year’s Eves. Those New Year’s parties were legendary. I can see
my father with his arms around his double bass, he would sweat from both effort
and joy and the heat of our Durban
summer, and by the end of the evening his fingers were all in plasters, not
used to the strings that were a daily part of him in his youth. At midnight we
would go out onto the lawn and form a circle, arms interlinked and sing Auld Lang Syne, and standing between two
adults my small arms would be stretched to the limit. The ships and tug boats on
the bay would sound their horns, and they bellowed and sighed mournfully for
half an hour after midnight, calling in the new year and all it had in store.
I recall so clearly, my father, on
a whim, decided he wanted a grand piano, and once decided it was a sealed deal.
I look over to where it stood, an achingly empty space. It had to be sold as
there was no space for it in my home. My daughter (the musician) cried to see
it go. She had grown up knowing it well, practising on it and passing her piano
exams with distinctions, and the “Grand” was always there for her. It was part
of her grandpa and his dreams for her. I remember all those times that my father’s friend, a master of the
Fats Waller’s slide piano style, rocked the house with “Your
Feet’s too big”. Oh, for just one more time.
The old
sofa is still here and I look at the worn fabric. I remember sitting on it with
my late husband when I was just 14 years old and he 18. He would run up from
the Naval camp (Salisbury
Island) to see me. We
would hold hands and kiss and listen to the clock ticking and striking until
way past midnight, because it was just too hard to say goodnight.
I remember
so much of the pain and joy of growing up there. Sometimes feeling like an
outsider, not quite fitting in, other times at home in my skin and in my little
world. I remember cycling all over the Bluff, taking buses into town and walking
home from Bluff Road.
I remember the canal and the bay, and the smell of death from the whaling
station. I remember chameleons and legless skinks and the warm sand in my hands
as I tried to capture ant lions at the bottom of their little sand funnels, teasing
them with blades of grass. I remember dogs I loved and lost and my friend’s dog
who had a “J & Z” haircut, very short and in steps, produced by little
hands and blunt scissors on a workbench in my Dad’s workshop. I remember two
little girls who were in big trouble. Ticky didn’t seem to mind though, and it
all grew back.
I remember
walking to the corner tearoom and buying so many sweet treasures with my 20
cents. I also remember ‘whites only’ entrances at bottle stores and ‘whites
only’ bus benches and buses, and I am so sorry things couldn’t have been
different for South Africa
right from the start.
I recall
stories from the neighbourhood, some tragedies and some scandals, friends
living there and then leaving. There were the boys who broke my heart, and
those close friends, made in both childhood and in adulthood, who are always
with me. None of those I grew up with are there now, all of them re-invented
and fitting into their adult skins with all the pain and loss and great joy
that comes with the growing years. Although they are no longer in my
neighbourhood, the few I’ve kept contact with are strong, courageous and
compassionate women, and I love them all.
I thought
I’d take a drive around the Bluff and take some photos of the homes of a few of the friends
who have left, their homes now in far off places that I know I’ll never visit.
Fiona's house
I feel their memories are in some way held in those homes where they lived and loved and fought their wars. They lived in neighbourhoods like mine, and their neighbours also had secrets and stories and real lives lived or lost.
I feel their memories are in some way held in those homes where they lived and loved and fought their wars. They lived in neighbourhoods like mine, and their neighbours also had secrets and stories and real lives lived or lost.
View of the lighthouse from Gray Park Road, a butterfly popped in, he looks as big as the lighthouse top!
Lieutenant King Crescent, I know it as "the circle"
I go out to my car, locking the back door, out through the gate with the 'beware of the dog' sign that hangs rusted from just one hook. This empty
house is a little tired and in need of young laughter. My thoughts and all
those young dreams that were so much bigger than I will ever be, will no longer
be held here, it is as though it is waiting, breathless, for a new family who will
begin their journey here.
“Everything flows, nothing stays still.” – Heraclitus
“Everything flows, nothing stays still.” – Heraclitus
8 comments:
Oh Janet :) you brought back so many memories of my own childhood, the mud cakes,ant lions,whaling station,family pets and our piano that also stood in the corner with my moms wedding icing rose proudly displayed ontop (which i always took a sneeky lick of) never wearing shoes and that majestic avo tree in our front garden that i think i spent most of my childhood up or swinging from. Woofa and Sandy and Nicci ...Did you know that Marilyn Monroe found and bought back her moms baby grand piano and it was the only thing she hung onto her whole life .It is now owned by Mariah kerry.
I think every family has a wonderful piano, my Mom's from when she was a little girl (She is now 79) was returned to my daughter Robyn for Kenzie my Grandaughter by my brother who had it for his son while he was growing up recently - no one had the heart to sell it. My mom still lives on the Bluff in my family home and has for 53 years. My husband Louis and I still live on the Bluff as well he just cannot move away from the Sea. Both my daughters also lived on the Bluff since leaving School, Candice has only recently moved to Secunda with her Engineering husband - we all still love the Bluff and have some amazing & beautiful memories and friendships which have lasted a lifetime. Thanks once again for sharing your lovely memories with us all Janet.
Thank-you both for such lovely comments and beautiful memories of your own to share. I love knowing we share similar memories. xx
Thank you for that wonderful walk down memory lane - I am going to share these memories with my dad - cannot believe Lieutenant King Crescent doesnt look much different from when we lived there all that time ago.....my grandparents had the big house near there with a HUGE sunroom and a pool that the boys used to jump off the verandah into.....amazing memories that no one can ever take away from us - once again, thank you for sharing Love Dawny
your writing flows like a beautiful river. Delicate and real. wow wow wow
Wow, thanks Cindy what a big compliment!
Janet
What a delight to stop my busyness and wander down memory lane for a while.
You create special connections with and for people through your words and photos. What a wonderful talent to have.
Cindy was right ... "your writing flows like a beautiful river. Delicate and real"
Thank you for a lovely "time out"
God Bless
Robin
I agree with CIndy. You writing is wnderful. Short comment cause i am using an android pad and its not easy while riding a bike but i cant stop reading.
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