. . . Removal Van.

 

 

 The day I moved in there were no carpets, no curtains, no

electricity, and the telephone had yet to be connected. However,

until the builders, who incidentally had become my first friends in

Oxford left that evening, I was euphoric. All day I boiled saucepans of

water to make cups of tea and I made jokes. The unreality of

dreaming of a house of my own had become a reality. Unbelievably,

this small part of the universe belonged to me, somewhere to root

myself. Ken and Eddy left at 5 o’clock wishing me goodnight and

hoping that I would enjoy the first evening alone in house. But, as

with most anticipated events that fall short of expectations, this was

no exception. The much sought-after silence in the house seemed

oppressive rather than peaceful. Putting away china, hanging the

pictures, and generally straightening the muddle, lost its appeal as a

solitary pursuit. The excitement of being solitary, of being free (that

freedom so sought after, so much discussed, so often) and the single

life for which I had fought and now attained, diminished, it seemed

on acquaintance. I thought of the Schopenhauer quote: “He who

does not enjoy solitude does not love freedom”, and decided that

solitude equalling freedom would be an acquired taste, arrived at in

time, with much planning, effort and thought. As it was, I had

forgotten to buy any food. So hungry, cold, and feeling less

courageous than I expected, I burst into tears. Until that evening I did

not realize exactly what it would be like to be totally alone:

something which is perhaps not possible to know until experienced.

In the midst of noisy families women dream of endless peace and

quiet on their own, sure that they would be entirely happy in

isolation. But in truth they might be no such thing. An hour or two

maybe…. But real solitude, though aspired to by many, is in practice

only really enjoyed by a few.

 

Anyway, I made pots of tea, and cheered myself up reading

Persuasion by candlelight. Jane Austin, was, after all, single, and she

seemed to have managed all right. (My reliable friends out of books

are as one would wish, human friends to be, constant, predictable,

and peaceful. Peaceful, perhaps, because they are constant and

predictable). That first night I went to bed with mixed feelings, many

apprehensions and a constantly re-occurring thought. Had I been

extremely foolish in my desire for independence?

In the weeks that followed, before I decided what I was going to

do with my life, I discovered some very important facts about single

living. Planning a structured day, and sticking to the plan, was vital.

The radio provided my mealtimes admirably; I had breakfast with

lovely Terry Wogan until he misguidedly left his large adoring

audience to prostitute himself on the terrible television. I had lunch

with Robin Day to acquaint myself briefly with news of the outside

world, and at 7.07pm had supper with the Archers who have now

become an integral part of my life. Perfect entertainment at the end

of the day, Shula’s love life or lack of it, Nigel Pargiter’s

misdemeanours, Brian’s affair with Caroline, Eddy Grundy touching

up the girl sent to Grange Farm by the Council for experience as a

nursery nurse (but not that experience) and every evening I silently

thanked God that the most irritating woman ever invented, Peggy

Archer was no relation of mine. Many mock the Archers. They see

the series as unrealistic in the modern world. But man is not

supposed to be able to bear too much reality, and life in Ambridge

can provide a continuity missing from real life, a sense of security

and safety brought about by a proper order of things. And, of course,

the radio provides the sound of a human voice. A necessity to

solitary people, who buy canaries, sticklebacks, cats or whatever as

an excuse to converse out loud with something. I bought a large

brown Teddy bear and called him Aristotle to share my bed, but so

far have baulked at talking to him, although he would, I feel,

understand as much or as little as the canary, stickleback, cat or

whatever.

 

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