Posted in Posts and podcasts

Emer

Illustration of Cuchulainn and Emer by H.R.Millar, published in Celtic Myth and Legend by Charles Squire (1905
Illustration of Cuchulainn and Emer by H.R.Millar, published in Celtic Myth and Legend by Charles Squire (1905
Emer is a name from ancient Celtic mythology. She was the wife of Cu Chulainn, renowned for her beauty, wisdom, wit and the art of needlework. Her father, Forgall Monach, did want want her to marry Cu Chulainn and tried to prevent the match – so, in keeping with the times Cu Chulainn abducted Emer and made her his wife – but only when he proved himself worthy.

The only jealousy of Emer was Fand – a beautiful spirit who seduced Cu Chulainn and tried to coax him away with her. Fand was unsuccessful.
Emer is featured in the Ulster Cycle of Irish Mythology. My mum put a poster of her in our kitchen, just behind my chair. She was amazing … my mum – and Emer.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

Daily Prompt – Fandom

As a gold medal winner in our local egg and spoon race sometime during the last millennium (aged 6) I feel I have the experience and authority to comment on sports. I think many have lost their shine. Once upon a time the spirit of competition included good sportsmanship, fair play, dignity, nobility, generosity, integrity, teamwork, co-operation, compromise. These attributes were displayed in victory and in defeat.
This does not seem to be the case anymore. In fact, when a sportsperson displays any or all of the above on the field, or in sporting competitions, he/she makes headlines. It is a sad indication of how little we expect and how much lower our standards have become. I’m going back to my egg and spoon.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

The Artist’s Eye

https://widgetworld3.wordpress.com/2013/06/28/the-artists-eye/
Art “…like morality, (it) consists of drawing the line somewhere”, G. K. Chesterton.

Reflections, refractions, repose – Student Lodging – the installation

Vincent van Gogh Self-portrait Detail from the Venus (Botticelli) Temple lion, Japanese porcelain Chokwesculpture Wikipedia.org
Vincent van Gogh Self-portrait
Detail from the Venus (Botticelli)
Temple lion, Japanese porcelain
Chokwesculpture
Wikipedia.org

Student lodging can seem like the ultimate unmade bed, and evoke strong responses by virtue of its laissez faire approach to everyday life. But that is its attraction – the power inherent in the image. It juxtaposes the desire to ignore with the horror of seeing – albeit accidentally. It is natural, organic. It is visceral. It is based on the immediate, the contradictory, a melding of the conscious with the unconscious, suggesting the possibilities and potentialities of its creator(s).

The result is an incredibly imaginative utilisation of everyday items. Items specifically chosen to highlight the charged environment in which they live and an expression of life lived on the fringe and on a budget. From your first step inside the hallway, to your circumnavigation of mop heads, bin lids and extraneous street signs in the back yard on departure, every cubic inch beckons, unfolds and informs. One visit is just not enough simply because highlights are hard to pick from such masterful crafting of chaos. Full immersion is vital to appreciate the whole experience and this can only be achieved through a series of visits. The viewer must commit themselves, totally and without reservation otherwise questions such as ‘Did I just see what I think I saw? Did that bag move? Is that even possible? Why?’ will forever remain unanswered. Like, dislike, accept, reject – it’s your choice – but you will question and analyse despite your best effort not to. Among the highlights……

‘Haven’t seen him for a week’ – Dirty sheets/beercans/ashtrays/dead insects/animal carcasses/marine life – anything goes and in some cases, nothing is spared.

‘Your turn’ – cigarette butts impaled on cocktail sticks, painted with tiny faces – adorning the tops of old milk cartons – life meets death – and smiles…

‘Good for the brain’ – Prawn shells spoon along sink/cooker and worktop – all paying homage to a large tuna head in a strategically placed basin (very short lived and quite smelly installation in the later stages – but worth the viewing)

‘RB & C’ – Empty toilet rolls neatly cut and covering every bannister of a stairwell. A felt tip pen provided for notes, dedications and reminesences from stairwell users.

‘Never again’ – Empty rolls 2 – tile/streak/stain and mould. All combine to express the visceral reality of an attempt to cleanse, to purify and restore the body corporeal – at the expense of all else..

Flesh fly, (Sarcophagidae), Austin's Ferry, Tasmania, Australia  JJ Harrison
Flesh fly, (Sarcophagidae), Austin’s Ferry, Tasmania, Australia
JJ Harrison

… and further down the hall – the void aka the hotpress – empty – untraversed and unexplored. This installation is supported by audio, soft scratchings, barely audible squeaks, a polarisation of neglect, destain and the transferral of responsibility denied by all. If you experience one of these installations, all else pales..Dead cows (standard in any butcher shop window until health regulations became more stringent), are passe. Dead butterflies, equally so (check your windowsill in Autumn for them, if you prefer bluebottles – check attic in winter). Dead sharks – absolutely banal in comparison to six fish fingers installed in the salad compartment of a fridge for nine weeks – menthol tissues recommended throughout viewing.

A large proportion of these installations inspire healthy competition among and between students. This occasionally results in refreshingly unique collaborations. At one of these installations I was particularly drawn to a faux Christmas tree decorated with toilet paper, bottle caps, a rolling pin and foil from takeaways, carefully manipulated and hung. To me they seemed a harmonious combination of belief, tradition and reality tinged with a pang of post Christmas regret. The party’s over – it left by the back door and got lost in the shed.

Mop Arnoldius Wikipedia.org
Mop
Arnoldius
Wikipedia.org

These works, though intriguing, rarely reach their full potential, purely through lack of funding. Grants are insufficient for students to do little more than exist. Others barely get by on part time employment. For the vast majority, parents are not an option – their minimalist lifestyle is unable to sustain – anything.

A large proportion of these students are absorbed into multinational companies on completion of their degrees – wouldn’t it be nice if these companies supported them more during their academic and artistic development?<
NOTE

Most installations are seasonal. Access is rarely problematic if based on some form of relationship with a student or students (ie parent, brother, sisters, girlfriend/boyfriend etc). A generous donation may allow the uninitiated entry. The optimum time to visit is eight weeks after college has started as by that time all household rosters have been forgotten and resolutions abandoned.

Enough said.

Detail from "A Thousand Li of River and Mountains" (千里江山) hand scroll in ink and color on silk. 11.91 meters x 55.8 cm. (3d part) Located in Palace Museum, Beijing. Date 1096 - 1119 Wang Ximeng (王希孟)
Detail from “A Thousand Li of River and Mountains” (千里江山) hand scroll in ink and color on silk. 11.91 meters x 55.8 cm. (3d part) Located in Palace Museum, Beijing.
Date 1096 – 1119
Wang Ximeng (王希孟)
Posted in Posts and podcasts

Cross Country

I_COMM~1I was on the Galway to Dublin train, departing Ceannt Station at 7.30 am. Stopping at Athenry, Ballinasloe, Athlone, Tullamore, Portarlington, Sallins and finally, Heuston Station in Dublin.
I wasn’t happy. I had a nice week at home, met the girls, went out, slept late, did nothing. Got fed, fussed over and shown off.
And to think, seven short days ago I was beside myself with bad mind. I didn’t want to waste my holidays at home. I wanted to head somewhere, anywhere as long as it was hot – and not home. But I was broke as usual and I had to take the days. The boss told me to. Now I was sorry to leave.
“Oh, you’re back!” said Mrs Fallon when I went down for the milk.
“Well, look who’s here!” said Ger Collins when I popped in for some wool.
“Well, the dead arose and appeared to many,” said Elizabeth Ward. I only passed her on the street.
“How’s the big smoke treating you?” asked Mr Hynes at the corner.
I swear, you can’t escape notice, comment or question at home, but you know I wasn’t too put out. It was nice to be a name as well as a face. Now it was back to the big smoke.
IMG_8254There were only a couple of people on the train. T’was quiet thank God. I really wasn’t in the mood for anything. Didn’t go to bed until 3 am trying to stretch out my final hours. I got myself settled and watched the station walls meld into gravel, grass and farmland. The rhythm was nice. I counted the cars heading to work along the old Oranmore road. It would be nice to be closer to home. I’m tragic – imagine – only a week ago I was like a demon at the thought of being home.
They got on at Athenry. First stop. 7.44 am. Six of them all female. Three young girls. They were teenagers but different ages. One looked about thirteen, the other, fifteen, the third, eighteen? Nineteen? They couldn’t have been friends heading to Dublin for the day. Too much of an age gap there. Didn’t look like sisters either. The other three followed in their wake.  At first glance I knew the teenagers were cousins.  Cousins most definitely. Each of them resembled one of the older women and the three women resembled each other.  Those women had to be sisters. They had the look. IE_MK4Similar but different if you know what I mean. The tallest one was very smartly dressed. An expensive white shirt with some lovely detail around the collar. When she sat beside me I could see it was embroidered with a soft green vine that ran just around the rim. Her coat was beige. Her scarf was woven. A green thread amidst the beige background made the embroidered collar pop, co-ordinating the entire ensemble beautifully. Subtle and elegant. Naturally, when the coat came off the cardigan also matched.
The next one was glamorous. Shoulder length hair, perfect makeup, a long leather coat that billowed behind her purposeful walk. Her top was grey, cut on a bias, flowing, eye-catching. She smiled and nodded at me, as did her sister before her. I smiled back and pretended I was settling for a nap. Then came the third – the antithesis of the other two. Denim jeans, slightly too big, stripy shirt – slightly too big, matching cardigan – slightly too big, matching coat and scarf – slightly too big (the coat that is). The overall effect was slightly ruffled. Another grin, another returned.  The elegant one spoke first.

Julius Schorzman
Julius Schorzman

“Where are you sitting? Ladies.”  She swung round and gestured to the teens

“Sit back there will ye? All together. We’ll get something to eat when she comes with the food. I’d shoot my mother for a coffee?”
“Move your backside, I can’t get past”. The leather coat had an equally large and glamorous handbag.
“Maeve did you bring the cards?”  Her name was Maeve.
“I thought you had them Finola. Feck. Hold on I’ll check my bag.” The elegant one was Finola.
“We can’t go without cards. Who has the cards? Have ye the cards back there?”
“No.”
“Mum, can I have my ipod?”
“Wait a minute, I haven’t even my coat off.”  The ruffled one was divesting herself with a flourish, heedless of Maeve who had to dodge the onslaught and sit at the same time.
“Jeez  Emer!  You nearly had my eye out. Will you hurry up and sit down before we get moving. You can take your coat off then.”Emer was the ruffled one.
“I have to do it now. I’m melting. Hot flush! Hot flush!”
” We’re moving,” said Finola.
” Sit, quick. Emer, you’ll survive ten more seconds for God’s sake.  Will you sit!”
The train lurched throwing Maeve and Emer together opposite me. Finola plopped down beside me, carefully.
“Hello again,” she smiled.
“Take no notice,” she nodded in the direction of the other two.
“They don’t get out often.”
“Speak for yourself!”
Maeve leant across and grinned.
“You poor thing, this could be the longest journey of your life!”
“Offer it up to the Holy Souls,” chirped Emer.
And off we went.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

Zebedee

320px-SanBernardo_Newton
Wikipedia.org

https://widgetworld3.wordpress.com/podcasts/
If I was a dog, I’d like to be one of those big ones, like a Saint Bernard, or a Doberman or something. Those lads are their own bosses. They might pretend to do what they’re told, but when push comes to shove they decide what direction to walk or what tree to piss on. They’re handsome too. The odd one can be afflicted with a bad hip or a bad back. That’s not cheap. You’d damn near have to mortgage the house to pay vet’s bills these days.
Josie Trainer’s Zebedee had a host of problems. He was a water dog, a Springer spaniel if memory serves. A lot of issues there. Brain damage was among them, I’m sure of that. Josie hadn’t a moment’s peace from the day she got him. She wore a track to the vets with the egit. The name Zebedee did him no favours either. What was she thinking? It only amplified his stupidity. The second I clapped eyes on him I told her straight up the creature hadn’t a brain to speak of, just an empty hollow. He wasn’t long filling it with food and fornication. That dog was a sex addict, and true to form, the gombeen wasn’t even normal when it came to that. No bitch in heat would ever turn his head. No. His forte was in pleasing himself.

Photo:wikipedia.org
Photo:wikipedia.org

All dogs lick themselves. That’s what they do. But Zebedee had a particular affinity for the activity. ‘Twas a wonder he didn’t lick his lad clean off. My God, he never stopped. It was his thing, his prime obsession. His modus operandi. He was gold medal standard at it. Not only was he a natural, he consistently honed his skill. He was a true professional, and like any professional Zebedee reached and attainted his remarkable standard through constant practice. He trained daily, damn near on the hour every hour. And, like all professional athletes he selected his training ground with due care and diligence. Mornings, he’d stroll to the primary school and work out while all the kids were being dropped off for the day. Half the mothers of the parish were scandalised, the other half said ’twas a shame their husbands wouldn’t take a leaf from Zebedee’s book. It might keep them quiet.
Evening times he chose the driveway of the convent when the nuns and the boarders were going for their evening walk. The nuns would nearly burst into flames from the shock while the girls would stare and giggle and discuss Zebedee’s remarkable attributes in the dorm that night. At weekends, when the primary school was closed Zebedee paid added attention to secondary school its, boarders and its nuns.

 Wikipedia.org  Peter Morgan

Wikipedia.org
Peter Morgan

While those spots may have been perfect from the dog’s point of view they were entirely inappropriate from a human perspective. Josie was informed accordingly. She was visited by the Principal of the primary school and a deputation of nuns in as many days. Righteous indignation was taken on board; an apology proffered and promises made. There wasn’t time for tea and biscuits. Besides no one had the appetite for them, mostly because the perpetrator, Zebedee, sat to one side with his lad proudly displayed, as he watched the proceedings. Poor old Josie.
Apart from the embarrassment of it all, it cost her a pretty penny.
She had to get Mikey Collins from down the road to put up a new fence all around the house to keep Zebedee in. Then she had to buy strong new gates for it so she could get her bins out. Mikey was a fast worker, and a good one. He wasn’t cheap but the end result was great. An attractive solution to an inconvenient and antisocial problem, we both agreed. Indeed the back yard looked better than the house after a week of Zebedee. There wasn’t a cushion left that the clown hadn’t shredded or done worse to. Josie bleached and boil-washed to the point where she was rambling in her mind from the strength of the fumes. Finally, for the first time in nearly two weeks she was up for hosting me for a cup of tea. She had been coming to me up to that point as the sight of Zebedee and his lad would put anyone off their digestives. Anyway, I called around and brought the biscuits and we left the dirty article of a dog out in the yard to do whatever he wanted to do with himself. Lord save us, we hardly had the biscuits open when he had absconded. He dug clean under the fence in a matter of minutes and off he went like the clappers down the road.

Transferred from en.wikipedia; JohnnyMrNinja
Transferred from en.wikipedia; JohnnyMrNinja

“The curse of hell on him,” muttered Josie.
“And then some,” says I.
“I’ll rinse the cups while you get his lead,” says I. And I did.
I walked her as far as the end of the road and said my goodbyes as she headed for the primary school. I didn’t offer to join her and she didn’t expect me to. Who wants to be associated with that sort of behaviour? Josie had a fine chat with the school principal that evening.
The following day she called Mikey back. After some consultation under Zebedee’s watchful eye it was decided to dig down a foot or two all around the perimeter and fill the gaps with stone in the hope it would cramp his style. And so it came to pass, but only after ten days solid work. Shrubs had to be cut back, roots removed, topsoil taken, stones carted in and all of the above replaced, to varying extent. Indeed Mikey himself noted that it took the Good Lord less time to create the heavens and the earth.
Josie didn’t appreciate the observation.
For a while it seemed to work. We managed a couple of cups of tea the following week and Zebedee seemed to enjoy exploring his newly renovated surroundings.
“My poor feckin’ hydrangeas,” says Josie.
“They’ll never recover.”
“Ah why wouldn’t they?” says I.

Ziggy Photo: Norma Scheibe
Ziggy
Photo: Norma Scheibe

“Sure aren’t they plants? Give them a good feed of fertiliser and they’ll settle themselves in again”.
I lied.
Her lovely garden was shot to hell and back. I doubted if it would ever recover. But what can you do, it would be cruel to say otherwise.
Poor old Josie.
We had another cup of tea and talked about the tomato plants she had germinating in her sun room. Zebedee wasn’t mentioned, nor was there reason to mention him. Weren’t we all sick to the teeth of his foibles? Anyway, wouldn’t it be like drawing misfortune on yourself if you did? What do they say? Don’t mention the war.
In hindsight, you’d swear he’d planned to lull us into a false sense of security. Two days later Josie got a call from the school.
Zebedee was back.
Not only did he manage to circumnavigate the shaggin’ stones and the fence, he did do so in a careful and timely fashion, arriving at his designated post within school hours to continue sharing his hobby with adult and child alike. His visit coincided with the School Inspector doing his annual rounds, the Doctor, doing his immunisations and Alice Costello, the Public Health Nurse, there to assist. T’was high drama to say the least.
On the advice of the Doctor, fully supported by Principal, School Inspector and Alice, Josie took him to the vet to be neutered. It wasn’t an easy decision for her. She held that no one should mess with the Good Lord’s design, be it human or animal.
“I just feel so bad for the poor creature,” she says.
“But Josie,” says I.

Photo: Norma Scheibe
Photo: Norma Scheibe

“It might be an ease to him. Forget about the parish being scandalised, Zebedee must have himself driven demented at this stage. That level of enthusiasm is not natural at all not in any creature. I’ve never seen the like and I grew up on a farm”.
“I know, I know,” says Josie.
“I just wish there was another way. But in fairness I’m sick to the teeth of going up and down like a yoyo to that feckin’ school! I’ve seen more of it in the last six months than I did when I went there as a child, I swear!”
I convinced her by saying that it was quite likely the Good Lord might have had a bad day during Zebedee’s creation and he may have dropped the ball, no pun intended. I laboured the idea that it would be an ease to the poor creature, not least his back, as it would give him a break from himself. He’d have time to smell the roses as it were. And pee on them. Josie herself would be able to go to her clothes line again without being blinded by visions best left unsaid. She was convinced. And so Zebedee was hauled off to the vet.
When she went to collect him the following day the vet told her that Zebedee didn’t go quietly. The vet reckoned that the amount of tranquillers he had to put in him would have brought down an elephant and what’s more, the bauld Zebedee hardly stayed asleep long enough for the job to be done. The vet was seriously impressed.

Photo: Deirdre Johnston
Photo: Deirdre Johnston

Josie paid the bill and called me over for a cuppa and a post-mortem of the whole event.
“I have antibiotics for him just in case,” says Josie.
“Oh, isn’t he young and healthy Josie. He won’t have need for them,” says I.
“You’re probably right, but it’s no harm to have them anyway. I made sure they gave me the best painkillers going. You don’t want an animal to be in pain,” Josie nodded fervently at me. Zebedee sat at her side, a tad bewildered. No change there.
“Let me tell you now Josie,” says I.
“That is the luckiest dog in the parish, to have an owner like you”. And this time round, every word out of my mouth was God’s honest truth.
Zebedee was quiet for a few days. Surprisingly one of Josie’s Hydrangeas’s seemed to come round as well. The following Tuesday we were out her back yard examining them and discussing the possibility of taking cuttings when I had the misfortune to throw a glance Zebedee’s way. Jesus! I was nearly blinded by the vision. The bauld Zebedee, quite possibly through trial and error, had found out that the absence of his crown jewels had left him with more room to manoeuvre, as it were. The sight wasn’t for the faint hearted, let me tell you. Blinded by the sight myself and Josie fled inside, oblivious to the small quantity of rubble lying slightly to the left of her bedroom window. What we didn’t realise was that not only had Zebedee worked on enhancing his flexibility, he had spent his few spare moments looking for a way to escape. And he succeeded. Mikey Collins fortifications were not enough. By Wednesday morning Zebedee had cleared a new escape hatch under the fence.

Photo: Deirdre Johnston
Photo: Deirdre Johnston

Within minutes he was gone to share his old skills and his new found flexibility with the education system.
Words were said, fingers again pointed. This time round there was no more room for apologies. The principal stressed in no uncertain terms that as the school had no intention of relocating, Zebedee had to go. Repeat performances would henceforth not be tolerated, under any circumstances. The dog pound was mentioned.
God help Josie, the only choice she was left with was keep Zebedee inside the house or on a chain outside when she wasn’t walking him. In theory that sounded like an amicable solution. Practice proved otherwise.
Zebedee repaid her by filling the few spare moments he had left in his life with incessant barking, and he had a bark that could crack concrete. The neighbours formed another deputation. There was a new baby two doors down and the mother, already with two others under three, appeared at the door screaming like a banshee about her nerves. The lad on the other side worked night shifts and he quietly informed Josie that if the banshee didn’t end Zebedee, he would. Josie was suitably horrified, but that didn’t matter to Zebedee. Deprived of his outings and his captive audiences barking was all he had left, the neighbours could go to hell. He would only quiet when Josie walked him and when it came to walking, quite surprisingly and despite his ministrations; Zebedee had a lot of latent energy. Not only could he go for miles, it was a power-walk every step of the way. There was no hope of slowing the pace because anything other than a slow jog gave the fecker time and opportunity to set to with his willy. You’d have to admire his dedication, and Josie’s. She must have lost two stone on her patrols. That was all well and good but the poor woman couldn’t afford to lose a

Photo: Deirdre Johnston
Photo: Deirdre Johnston

pound. She was as thin as a lat to begin with. By July she had the physique of a Ugandan marathon runner. Her legs were nearly worn to stumps too with the distances involved. You’d see her pelting past the window, ramrod straight, tilted slightly off the perpendicular as she tried to counter Zebedee’s forward projection and speed. I could never see himself, my wall being too high, just Josie and a bit of the lead. But as she sped by she looked for the entire world like one of those carved figures rising from the prow of a ship as it sliced its way through high seas. I told her she had the cut of your one in the Titanic movie about her. All she needed was the dress and a young lad swinging at her rear. In fact, she could set up a business for herself as she walked. We could hang a few sheets off her and they’d be dry by the time she came back from her gallop. We had a laugh about that.
Hard as it was, the walking worked. After a few weeks without drama it finally seemed that the tide was turning in Josie’s favour. She was in great form too. Fit as a fiddle, with a pair of legs on her Michael Flatley would have been proud of. I told her I was jealous of the fine legs she had acquired. Then didn’t she offer me Zebedee for a walk.
“Feck that, a girleen,” says I.
“I’m not walking that lunatic. I’d never keep up. Either tie him to a sled or buy me a pair of skates. Otherwise, I’ll stick with my saggy arse, thank you very much!”
We all began to relax, except for Zebedee.
He did it again.
The fecker lulled us all into a false sense of security and then made yet another dash for freedom, to express himself, as it were.

Photo; Deirdre Johnston
Photo; Deirdre Johnston

Well, that great escape proved to be his final one.
It was a fine Sunday morning in August. Due credit to him, it was a grand hurrah indeed, worthy of a dog who had the town persecuted with his perversion. He went out with a bang.
It was his own fault really, because for the first time in his life, Zebedee varied his routine. That in itself was the result of a series of unfortunate events.
Zebedee had escaped on Sundays before, and on every other day of the week for that matter. But he quickly learned that escaping Sundays had its limitations. For one, the primary school is always closed. His audience was dispersed. Now any thespian will tell you that you can’t have a performance without an audience. Where’s the challenge in that? Why would you even bother to rehearse? Zebedee was of the same mind, but he was a smart dog. After a little research the empty school proved a minor inconvenience. In fact, it hardly fazed him. As soon as he saw the school was empty, onward he would bound with renewed vigour. He had the nuns and boarders on standby and the nuns were mighty walkers at the weekends. Indeed, Zebedee or no Zebedee, the nuns had little choice in the matter. Who in their right mind would confine fifty young girls with rampant hormones in a confined space for two days straight? Those girleens had to be walked, and well walked; otherwise all hell could break loose in the dorm at night. Zebedee’s audience was assured, until that fateful day.
mayo deirNot only was it Sunday, it was August. August is smack in the middle of school holidays. This, of course, meant no boarders and as there were only a handful of nuns, his audience was critically compromised. Not only that, with no boarders to fracture their nerves, the nuns were completely unreliable when it came leaving the convent at all. He could be there for the day waiting for them to pop out, with no success.
Other options had to be considered and consider them he did.
So on that particular Sunday, Zedebee, the auld clown decided to test a new venue.
He chose it well.
It had light, space, room for movement and, most importantly, a captive audience. Though the setting could be described as sectarian in nature, Zebedee compensated for this shortfall by ensuring that all genders and age groups were catered
for. Music was even provided.
His appearance was close to miraculous because, to get where he got to without being spotted or caught required strategy worthy of Churchill. He had to pass a dozen young lads clustered by the door, and another shower of latchicos hanging at the back wall who spent every waking moment minding everybody’s business but their own. Then there were the kids, scattered all over the place like confetti, bored, twitchy, not known for sitting still or looking straight. Not even the choir, perched under the roof in the optimum position to survey the landscape was aware of Zebedee’s entrance. These facts I know. I know because they were outlined, discussed and analysed in considerable detail after the incident. That dog had skills of ninja-like proportions. Among a crowd of a hundred and fifty souls not one person saw that dog until he performed his grand swansong.

Zebedee’s last stand was beside the communion rail in St Joseph’s during Sunday mass; in full view of the entire congregation, including Josie and myself.

There wasn’t a prayer said in church that day, we were all too busy laughing into our missals. I felt particularly sorry for the altar boys, they nearly had to have their surplus and soutan surgically removed from their gullets after mass, so far down their throat they’d shoved them in an effort to stifle their laughter. Fr McCarthy was scandalised in the extreme.

Come Monday, Zebedee had been dispatched to doggie heaven. No one saw sign or light of Josie either for at least a month. She went to mass in the next parish.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

A moment of kindness – daily prompt

320px-Monarch_Butterfly_Danaus_plexippus_on_Echinacea_purpurea_2800pxMake that moment last a lifetime – treat others as you would like to be treated – with respect, dignity and compassion.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

Tagline

https://widgetworld3.wordpress.com/podcasts/
My day begins in dazed confusion, punctuated by short bouts of chaotic organisation, interspersed with moments of calm. This is followed by fluctuating outbursts of creative activity, sustained by manic determination, culminating in a brief collapse that coincides with tea time. Following refreshment cycle is then repeated until exhaustion ensues. Effects are mitigated by family and pets. Tags vary according to date, time, diet, season, external influences, weather, age, influence etc. Pick a tag, any tag.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

The Calling

Photo: Norma Scheibe
Photo: Norma Scheibe

https://widgetworld3.wordpress.com/2013/06/12/the-calling/
When she didn’t feel like reading ‘Grimm’s Fairy Tales’ Sr. Assumpta would tell us holy stories, mostly about the baby Jesus and how smart and wonderful he was. He seemed like a nice lad though I always felt sorry for him being an only child. When I was small a family with only two children was hardly worth the effort. God it makes me laugh when I think of the nonsense that went on in my young mind. The baby Jesus.
I often wondered if he started small, with his miracles. You know, before he did a big one in public.
Did he practice them in his bedroom or out the back yard where no one could see?
And if he did, what was his first miracle?
Maybe he fixed the strap of his sandal or magicked jam on his bread?
Would God have let him – put jam on his bread – or would he have been too holy for jam?
Feck.
I’ve slobbered my tea. If anyone saw me sitting here laughing to myself they’d have me committed.
Poor baby Jesus.
Married to Sr Assumpta, a shilling short of a pound.
God bless the mark.
Herself and The Calling.
She said it could happen overnight. The Calling. To join the nuns.
She said we could go to bed every night for years with no problem.
But one fine night, when we least expected it we could have a dream and wake up with a burning desire to serve Our Lord.
Once that happened there was no turning back.
No matter what we’d do or where we’d go, there’d be no avoiding it. Once you got the calling you had to answer and the only way to answer was to become a nun. And just in case we had any doubts about it she told us that’s exactly what happened to her.
“Sweet Jesus!” thought I.
“Is it as swift and as brutal as that? The Calling?”

My communion beads were nearly worn out with the exertion Photo;Daniel Tibi
My Communion Beads were nearly worn out with the exertion
Photo;Daniel Tibi

I had visions of waking up one morning at the ripe old age of six, dressed in a habit from head to toe, cross and all, and that would be the end of me. I’d have to leave home and head to the convent with nothing to do but pray all day. No running, no skipping, no nothing. Just praying.
I was rattled.
I went home from school that evening in a state of shock, punctuated by terror. Over the next few days I got quieter and quieter around the house, not a natural state for a six-year-old. If truth be known I was frantically praying that the Good Lord would pass me over and choose another girl to be a nun. My communion beads were nearly worn out from the exertion. They were under my pillow every night and in my schoolbag or my pocket every day.
I’d even hatched a plan.
I’d offer another in my place instead. Mary Theresa Hynes was the obvious choice.
It crossed my mind that she might not want to be a nun either, but I reasoned she had only herself to blame for the nomination. She always made it known she had all the mysteries of the rosary down pat and she was only the same age as me. Indeed she was ahead of us all at school, in everything. She was the pick of the crop as it were and God would hardly have to train her at all. She looked nunny too. Always had the top button of her shirt done, just like Sister Assumpta and she wore a silver Saint Christopher medal from Knock that she got when she was on a pilgrimage with her Mother.
I didn’t even know where Knock was.

The Romans were great at it. Statue of Aphrodite Courtesy Wikipedia.org
The Romans were great at it.
Statue of Aphrodite
Courtesy Wikipedia.org

Mary Theresa had done serious praying. Rumour had it she had a luminous rosary she used at home in bed at night. It glowed in the dark so she could practice her mysteries.
Oh yes, God already had a good grip on Mary Theresa with all her knowledge of the rosary and her goodness. She never put a foot wrong.
But that could be a problem in itself. There would be no effort involved on God’s behalf. What if God liked a challenge?
That merited some thought.
God never did things the easy way.
I mean, he could have just magicked us all to have sense and love him, but instead he sent Jesus down to earth to convert us. That was much harder because we were all pretty useless at the time. We were kissing golden calves and sacrificing things all over the place. There was a new religion for every day of the week and some of them were only excuses to do all sorts of sinful stuff. The Romans were great at it. When they weren’t killing and raping left, right and centre, they were lying on couches eating grapes until they nearly burst. And they had heaps of slaves – dozens of little pagans grabbed from their beds at night and sold like tea, or flour.
T’was terrible.
But what does God do to change our ways?
Instead of putting the fear of God into us by appearing himself, he goes and sends Jesus to ask us nicely. You’d have to admire his courage, not God’s – Jesus’ courage. No offence to God but Jesus was the one that ended up crucified. That must have hurt big time. He was tortured too with the lashes and the crown of thorns.
If someone did that to my brothers or even to Kate, there’d be skin and hair flying that’s for sure. Once I got Peteen Flynn straight between the two eyes with my pencil case when he knocked our Jo Jo over coming home from school. I broke the lid clean off it and Peteen ran down the road roaring like a cut cat. Served him right. Our Jo Jo was only half his size and doing no harm at all.

A person would be half afraid to cast aspersions photo: Wikipedia.org
A person would be half afraid to cast aspersions
photo: Wikipedia.org

A person would be half afraid to cast aspersions at God in case they got hit by a bolt of lightening or something, but in fairness, poor Jesus came out badly at the end of it all.
Even God must see that.
Dying was handy for Jesus because he was going home to his angels and stuff.
At the same time, it’s kind of mean that he got there by being tortured and killed and poor Jesus took an awful pounding before he died.
I think that if daddy was around at the time it might have gone easier for Jesus.
Daddy told me that there’s more than one way to skin a cat. That means there’s a few ways of doing the same thing. Like with Jesus.
Could they not have just crucified him, or just tortured him a little bit, to give him a break? Or even better, couldn’t he have died of a heart attack after the first torture? Then he wouldn’t have had too much pain, he’d have got home to heaven and everyone would have felt sorry for him dying anyway?
Or maybe God could have given him a Panadol before the torture so it wouldn’t hurt so much?

I was most definitely a challenge.

A person shouldn’t be thinking things like that about God. If they do, they should definitely make up for it by being good. I wasn’t.
Mother was always threatening me with death for talking during Mass.
Then there was the time I drew a moustache on the statue of St. Francis of Assisi that she had in the spare room. I even coloured in the bald spot on the top of his head.
In my defence, my intentions were honourable. I thought it’d make him look more like Jesus, with the beard and all. And the long hair was sure to keep his head warm.
I still copped a belt across the arse, despite my tearful explanations.
I was no saint.
Feck.
As for my age. Six years old was the perfect age. Didn’t God love young ones? That was an unmistakable fact.
“Suffer little children to come unto me” was his catch-cry. Everyone knew that. He said it so often they put to music and we had to sing it at mass.
“Suffer little children to come unto me
For theirs is the kingdom of Heaven.
Suffer little children to come unto me
For theirs is the kingdom of the Lord”.

And they did. The little children came from everywhere. We had a picture of them over the blackboard at school to prove it. There was Jesus in the middle, all dressed in white and he surrounded by children. Half of them were black babies and the other half had the arse falling out of their trousers.
I fitted right in.

All the boxes were ticked for me. Photo: wikipedia.org
All the boxes were ticked for me.
Photo: wikipedia.org

I might not have been black but I was young and there were patches on the knees and elbows of every stitch of clothes I wore.
As for suffering, there was room for little else in my life at that moment. Tortured was my middle name.
Oh yes, all the boxes were ticked for me.
I hadn’t a hope.
Some fine morning I would wake up, a nun.
I was ruined.
Shite.
To put the tin hat on it, Sr Assumpta, the curse of hell on her, said The Calling came at night. Jesus! Wasn’t that worse than being told the bogeyman was coming for you? In point of fact a bogeyman would have been sweet relief. I was going to be inflicted with a veritable swarm of auld wrinkly nuns, in the flesh no less, most likely from the Poor Clare’s down the road, smack in the middle of the night. And nuns don’t make noise, I’m a witness to that. They can be up on top of you in the blink of an eye, battering dents into your head with their holy ring, before a body knew they were coming. Being nuns God would probably tell them that the third step up our stairs and the one just before the landing were the creaky ones. They’d be prepared. Mother or daddy would never hear them coming. If they did it wouldn’t matter anyway because God was calling the shots. The nuns could haul me away without as much as a ‘by your leave’.
I wasn’t having any of that.

I resolved never to close an eye again. Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri 1893  oil on cardboard  Wikipedia.org
I resolved never to close an eye again.
Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri 1893 oil on cardboard
Wikipedia.org

I tried not to think about God for a couple of hours while I hatched a plan, just so he wouldn’t know about it. I wasn’t sure if that would work, him being God and all, but I thought it was worth a shot.
It came to me like a bolt from the blue.
I decided sleep was for the weak so I resolved never to close an eye again. That way The Calling wouldn’t get me.
I put that plan into action straight away. That night and for the rest of the week I wouldn’t go to bed until I was threatened with a walloping. When I did I moved as far away from Kate as possible in the bed so the heat out of her wouldn’t make me drowsy. If I felt any hint of tiredness I’d hop back out and stand on the lino in my bare feet until I was nearly frozen to the floor.
I soon found out that the human body is completely useless.
Inevitably, and despite my best efforts to avoid it, sleep always came and when it did, the nightmares began. I’d scream the house down as I ran from the nuns in my dreams, until Mother came in and calmed me. That left me with no energy for the day. But I kept persisting, every single night and so it continued for four days, the lack of sleep, the broken sleep and the nightmares bringing another host of problems down on my head. By the end of the week I was half-dead with it all.

I didn't get to clean the blackboard Masae Wikipedia.org
I didn’t get to clean the blackboard
Masae
Wikipedia.org

I forgot my four times tables at school and had to stand in the corner.
Worse still, I didn’t get to clean the blackboard. You don’t get a shot at it if you missed your tables. I was ‘it’ for the whole lunch hour doing ‘chasey’ because I didn’t have the energy for a good run. When I got home I left my copybook on the kitchen table and Jo-Jo sucked the corner off it. His mouth ended up all red too, from the dye, and Mother roared at me. Then Mother Enda took the head off me with a clout for letting him near my homework.
My life was going to hell in a hand basket.
Finally, Mother noticed something was up. She took her sweet time. A blind person could have seen that I was driven to distraction. In fairness though, Jo Jo was teething all that week so maybe she was a bit tired. Anyway one night she checked in on me about an hour after we were all supposed to be asleep, and where was I? Down on my knees praying, in the cold, in the dark, by the bed I shared with my sister, Catherine.
Kate.
I had to spill the beans. I told her about the Calling.
All Mother all did was laugh.
I thought it entirely an inappropriate reaction, given the circumstances. It seemed to me that the gravity of the situation was entirely lost on her. But I didn’t say so. No one ever gave lip to Mother. If they did, they’d be very sorry.
“Is that all it is, you oinseach?” she said.
“Is that all that’s bothering you? Mother of God and I worried you were sickening for something or your mind had gone soft.”
Then she took me close, looked into my eyes and said,
“You’re only an infant, Joanie. Why would God want you at this stage of your life? Sur’ you can hardly collect the eggs without breaking one and believe you me, souls are far more delicate. The Lord will find a use for you when you’re good and ready.”
“Mammy, are you sure?” I snorted between tears.
“Of course peteen. I wouldn’t let you off to a convent in a month of Sundays. God knows that so he wouldn’t ask you to go. Now into bed, good girl and don’t believe everything that’s told you.”
And she tucked me in.
I’d say I was asleep before she left the room and that was the best night’s sleep I got in a week.
The following day I thought about what she said. I was glad she offered to stand between the religious life and me. Daddy always said she could take on the Pope when she got mad.
She’d probably scare God too if he tried to make her change her mind.
I was safe.
‘Twas a relief and a disappointment at the same time.
I was pleased to be off the hook but to think I might not have been up for consideration at all was a little unfair.
I let that notion go, very fast.
There was no point in tempting fate. God could well change his mind.
I put down the rosary beads and from then on they only saw the light of day at Sunday Mass. Besides, Mammy always said ‘too much of anything is good for nothing’.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

Take Care

Rowland Morris 1896
Rowland Morris 1896

Daily Prompt: Take Care

When you’re unwell, do you allow others to take care of you, or do you prefer to soldier on alone? What does it take for you to ask for help?

JOANIE

Only for I caught the banisters I’d have been down on my head. ‘Twas my own fault for not being careful.
Nearly killed stone dead by an empty teacup.
I always bring a cup of tea to bed with me at night. It helps me sleep and now since there’s antioxidants in it it’s only good for me. Bring it down with me when I get up in the morning, usually around 6. They’re all off to work around me at that time. With all the cars going there’s no hope of a lie in. Not that I’d would, the joints would seize for the day if I did that.
Wasn’t I holding the teacup in my left hand last Friday, as I always do, leaning against the banisters to guide myself down, as I always do, when it happened.
I felt for the first step with my foot but got caught short on the second. I thought it was wider. You’d think I’d know better and I going up and down the same steps for the last fifty years. But no. Fool here was thinking of other things and not paying attention.
It frightened the life out of me.
I let out a bit of a shout too, but only a little one.
It was down to the cup or me.
It was a nice cup too. I had it nearly three decades, part of a set I bought with the Green Shield Stamps. Maybe it’s older than that, they haven’t done the Green Shields for God knows. It had primroses front and back. Inside the rim was a little yellow bud with two leaves. You could see it every time you tilted the cup to take a sip. I was very fond of it. Last of a set.
Charles, God rest the shite, put paid to the rest of them, saucers and all, many years ago.

I’m still picking up bits of china. That’s always the way when something breaks, bits everywhere for weeks it seems. You have to be careful clearing up too. Fine bone china sticks in the skin if you try to do it in a hurry.
My hand is all cut where the cup caught it as it shattered.
Feck.
I took a fine bit chunk out of my little finger but with the fright I didn’t feel it until I saw the blood. It’s a right mess. You’d swear I’d grabbed the blade of a knife. In hindsight it probably could have used a stitch but who’d be bothering doctors at that hour of the morning? I’m not going to be one of those old cronies that run in and out to doctors and hospitals at the drop of a hat. It’ll heal.
In time.
I have it wrapped up nice and tight and there’s no more blood coming through the bandages. Unless I hit it off something, which I’m careful not to do.
It’s hurting like billyo but I have the Panadol for it.
And Marie, across the road, if I only let the poor child help me.
Jesus, no Panadol is strong enough for the pain in the arse I was last Friday. I’m rightly ashamed. Between the hurt and the fright I was like the Antichrist and poor little Marie got a bit of my bad mind. I must go over later with a biscuit and apologise. That sweet little girl only trying to help.
She caught me putting out the bin, not an hour after it happened.
“Oh Joan I see a bandage, did you hurt yourself?” she asks.
“Is she stupid? Why else would I be wearing a bandage?” says ‘Biddy bad-mind’ here to herself.
I told her nothing.
“Only a scratch” I said.
“From the roses”.
I left it at that, but she continued.
“Roses?” said she.
“Oh they can give you awful infections”.
“Have you had a tetanus recently?”
“I don’t need a tetanus”, says I.
“’Tis only a scratch”.
She couldn’t leave well enough alone. No.
“Will we pop down to the doctor?” she says.
“I’d be happy to bring you”.
“Pop my hole. If I needed a doctor I’d go myself and without any help from her”, I think to myself. Isn’t that shocking but that’s the way my mind was working. I’m putting it down to the fright. Either that or I need a personality transplant.
“No thank you”, says I.
“I’ll be fine”
Then I hit the sore part off the bin.
It lit the hand off me so I went inside again, fast. I had to run it under the tap for five minutes to cool it down, and all the while I’m bitching about the poor child, out loud, to the empty kitchen.
“I’m going to be persecuted with her again this winter. I just know it. Every second day, knock, knock.
“Here’s soup”
“Here’s stew”
“Here’s all sorts of shite”
“Do you need anything?”
“Do you want anything?”
“Can I do anything?”
Can you just feck off to hell!
Jesus!
Only for the dog I wouldn’t answer the door to her at all”.
I was rightly ashamed of myself when I calmed down.

Posted in Posts and podcasts

Glass shattered in kitchen – Daily Prompt

Photo posed by model Wikipedia.org
Photo posed by model
Wikipedia.org

Today’s Daily Prompt is to write about something that happened over the weekend as though it’s the top story on your local paper!!

GLASS SHATTERED IN PRIVATE RESIDENCE

A large glass was shattered on Sunday near Galway . Lila a four-year-old domestic feline caused the collision when she leapt from a windowsill to the kitchen table in an act that has been described as complete insanity. She struck a glass of water placed on there by owner, Norma. No injuries resulted from the collision. Preliminary investigations suggest that Lila’s take off was insufficient to maintain the angle and level of projection necessary to complete the manoeuvre.  Norma stated that she was traumatised by the incident, and questioned her cat’s level of intelligence. “How could she not have seen it? The Clown. I mean it was a large glass, and one of a set.”
Lila was not available for comment. She absconded through the kitchen window and is currently residing in the rhododendron bushes out back.