This month's task for writers' group was to write something from a child's perspective. This is what came out.
If I were a grownup I’d stay up all night drinking whisky and watching naughty films on the blue channel on the television that needs a PIN code to get into it (I know, I’ve tried) and I’d travel round the world in a yacht, single-handed and only have a job for a while until I had enough money to be on holiday all the time and I’d live in a big house on the top of a hill with three televisions and a big bathroom and lots of pets - a dog, no two dogs and a cat and a hamster and a goldfish and a guinea pig and a rabbit. And maybe a horse. Or a donkey. And I’d drive a big black car and go wherever I wanted – to the beach mostly, not to boring castles or gardens or garden centres or the supermarket. And I’d have ice cream every day and never have soup and have spaghetti bolognese for tea every night, well maybe pizza sometimes and only eat mangoes and grapes and never boring bananas or apples and I’d have a cupboard full of sweets and nothing else. Just for me and my friends.
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I have been asked a few times recently, what I paint. I have happily told the questioners that boats feature a lot in my paintings at the moment; ones from both the east and west coasts of Scotland. And then I mention the sheds, and they look slightly bemused and I feel rather apologetic. I'm not sure why this is, so I have spent some time thinking about it, as I suppose there really should be some underlying reason as to why I feel drawn to sheds, particularly ones with corrugated iron roofs. This is the conclusion I have drawn. It all goes back to summer holidays spent in Lochcarron, in Wester Ross, in what had been my paternal granny's house. Not just summer holidays, when we would spend hours on the shore turning over rocks looking for butterfish and crabs, or digging very fast to try and outwit clams which scooted down into the sand, or for lugworms, beneath their telltale casts, to use as bait on fishing expeditions. No, we were often there at Easter too, and in the winter as well. There are diaries of those holidays somewhere. One day I'll look them out. At the back of my granny's house were a couple of wooden sheds, where the garden tools and coal (I think) were kept. They were quite well-maintained, these sheds; wooden slats with sloping corrugated iron roofs. They were of no particular interest to me. It was my job in the summertime to clip the long grass away from the outer walls of the shed, so the wood would not become damp and rot. This job was done with an old pair of sheep-shearing shears. I loved using them. I learned to scythe in those summers too, when the grass was thigh-high when we arrived, and had to be cut down before it got trampled flat. There is a rhythm required for scything - enough speed is required to cut the tough grass stalks, but go too fast and you get tired very quickly and the grass is not properly cut. But the shed I liked best was the one away up at the back of the plot or land (part of a croft at some time, I suppose). It had no door, but the doorway faced away from the prevailing wind, so it was always sheltered and warm. I think it even had a little window, grimy and cobwebbed. I set up a wooden table and a stool, made from logs and planks of wood that I found. It was my den. I swept it, tidied it, put a jam jar filled with wild flowers on the table. And then I had a visitor. I think he lived in the shed next door, or under a nearby pile of branches. A hedgehog. I provided a saucer of milk, sat in the corner, barely breathing, watching, listening, drinking him in. I was in love. In my shed. |
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