}

June 28, 2026

Tina's memories


I recorded Tina recalling memories of her early life and ChatGPT turned it into a mini-memoir


A Life Shaped by Books, Art, and Courage

I was born in England in 1934, and some of my earliest memories are of war.

When the Second World War began, I was only five years old. We lived in Norfolk in a two-storey house, and German bombers would fly directly overhead. I can still see them in my mind's eye. The planes were low enough that you could make out the lights and even glimpse the pilot. Whenever the air-raid sirens sounded, my mother would scramble to get her five children into the shelter at the bottom of the garden. It was a rough earthen bunker reached by steep, uneven steps.

Oddly enough, I was never terrified. While my mother desperately tried to hurry us to safety, I would often stop and stare upward, fascinated by the sight of those aircraft floating through the night sky. Children experience the world differently. I did not fully understand war, devastation, or death. I was simply captivated by what I saw.

My father was a journalist and was exempt from military service because his work was considered essential. My mother carried the enormous burden of raising five children during wartime. Looking back, I can only marvel at how she managed.

The war was only one part of my childhood. Home itself was not an especially happy place.

I was the second of five children, and there was a great deal of competition among us. It often felt like a scramble for existence. Some children seemed more favoured than others, and children are acutely sensitive to those things. I developed very low self-esteem and spent many years carrying the feeling that I somehow mattered less.

My family was Catholic, and religion shaped every aspect of our lives. I grew up believing in sin, divine judgment, and eternal damnation. Confession was a regular part of life. As a child, I dreaded it. You were expected to confess your sins honestly because God was always watching. There was no hiding from Him. The fear was real and deeply ingrained.

As I grew older and became aware of sexuality, confession became even more uncomfortable. Desire itself seemed wrapped in guilt. Looking back now, I find it hard to understand how children could grow up under such a burden of fear and shame.

Neither home nor school felt particularly warm. The convent school I attended was strict, austere, and surrounded by rules. Love and affirmation were not things I encountered often. My father was intelligent and highly articulate, but he was not affectionate. My mother had moments of tenderness, but with five children and endless responsibilities, those moments were fleeting.

Yet there was one memory that has stayed with me all my life.

I was about six years old and ill at home while the other children were at school. My mother sat beside me and showed me genuine affection. It sounds like such a small thing, but it felt extraordinary. I remember realizing, with surprise, that she loved me. It is a rather pitiful thing to treasure, perhaps, but that moment revealed how hungry I was for love and reassurance.

Fortunately, two great gifts entered my life and changed everything: books and art.

At about seven years old, I discovered books. From that moment on, life became much more manageable. Books were my refuge, my escape, and my salvation. I adored Enid Blyton. The Famous Five, The Secret Seven, Mallory Towers—I devoured them all. Through those stories I entered worlds full of adventure, friendship, and possibility.

Books became more than entertainment. They became companions. They opened the door to language, imagination, and creativity. They gave me a place where I could disappear when the real world felt difficult.

At the same time, I discovered that I could draw.

In a class of more than thirty children, I was known as the artist. Drawing came naturally to me. Nobody had to teach me. While I struggled with confidence in almost every other area of life, art gave me something precious: competence. I knew I was good at it.

Looking back, books and art were the twin lights that illuminated an otherwise bleak landscape. Thank goodness for both.

Animals also played an important role in my childhood. I had beautiful white rabbits and a dachshund, and I developed a lifelong love of animals. Later, as a teenager, I longed to ride horses. I never had the opportunity. Money simply wasn't available for such luxuries when you were one of five children in a journalist's household. But my fascination with horses never left me.

I was a shy child, but I was also rebellious. I broke rules and frequently got into trouble. Beneath my shyness was a fiercely independent streak that would remain with me throughout my life.

After school I attended art school, which felt like the first real doorway into the life I wanted. Although I was nervous and painfully shy, art school was a revelation. I discovered a world filled with creative people, ideas, and possibilities.

I remember sitting in life-drawing classes, sketching nude models, and realizing how much larger the world was than the narrow confines of my childhood. We worked mostly in realistic styles then. The abstract work came much later.

At art school I met Peter.

Peter came from a very different background. His father was a farm labourer, but Peter was intelligent, ambitious, creative, and charismatic. We fell in love and eventually moved together to London.

London was exciting. I worked in advertising, using my drawing skills professionally for the first time. Compared with the agencies I had known in Norwich, London felt sophisticated and alive. We lived near Hyde Park and became part of the creative world that flourished there.

Eventually Peter and I married, and life took another turn.

We moved to Ireland and began our family. Motherhood became my new vocation. It was exhausting, all-consuming, and deeply rewarding. With young children, there was little room left for professional work. My creative life had to take a back seat while I poured my energy into raising a family.

By then I had already begun distancing myself from Catholicism. Leaving behind the strict rules and fears of my upbringing was one of the best decisions I ever made. The Church had shaped my childhood profoundly, but eventually I needed a wider, freer understanding of life.

For years Peter and I dreamed of moving somewhere sunnier. We were tired of the grey skies, cold weather, and endless gloom of Britain and Ireland. Australia held a powerful attraction.

So we made the leap.

With children in tow and little money, we boarded a ship and sailed to Australia. It was a huge adventure. Looking back, it seems astonishingly brave.

We settled first in Manly, one of the most beautiful places imaginable. Peter freelanced in advertising, and we built a new life from scratch. The children thrived in the sunshine and outdoor lifestyle. Every day Peter would catch the ferry across Sydney Harbour to work. It felt like a fresh beginning.

I never regretted the decision.

Australia gave us light, space, freedom, and possibility. It became home.

Looking back over my life now, I can see how much of it was shaped by the things that sustained me when I was young: books, art, imagination, and the determination to keep moving forward despite fear.

I was not raised in an especially loving environment. I often felt unseen. I carried self-doubt for many years. Yet creativity gave me a voice. Books gave me companionship. Art gave me identity. And courage—sometimes quiet courage, sometimes desperate courage—carried me across oceans and through the many chapters of a long life.

In the end, those things became the threads that stitched my story together.


June 25, 2026

My wonderful friend Dom at work!

Dom, Tina's son, who I have become great friends with, is an amazing actor.
 

June 25, 2026

Helping Shushann with her conscious aging presentation

Shushann is starting a series of presentations on conscious aging and I helped her with her presentation. I believe so strongly in this topic. Shushann has so much priceless wisdom to share with the world around this.



June 25, 2026

Celebrating Michal's 40th birthday

Michal had his 40th birthday while Gavin and I were overseas. So we had a surprise birthday for him last night as Anusha and Ashesh. It was a lovely evening. I love our group so much.

 





What a legend Michal is




June 24, 2026

My friends really make me laugh sometimes

My friends had to transfer me money for movie tickets. My accountant (if I had one) would think I'm a real pervert 😆 


From Michal


From Gavin.  If you're not sure what a vajankle is, you'll have to Google it. But be warned!



June 24, 2026

The Rocks with my Photography Meetup

 A fun morning shooting black and white with my Photography Meetup.  The perfect location for this kind of photography.
































June 23, 2026

Dee Why with Chris after watching pickleball

 Chris and I went to watch a pickleball competition. We then went to a cafe in Dee Why for a lovely bowl of pumpkin soup. It was a beautiful winter's day.








Beautiful art in the cafe





June 22, 2026

Memorable moments: The Newlands dilemma

During my twenties, I shared a house in Newlands, Cape Town, with three housemates. Among them was Dane—a really lovely, generally friendly person who also possessed a fierce temper if provoked. Her ultimate trigger was simple: anyone touching her food without asking.

One afternoon, I found myself alone in the kitchen making a sandwich. I assembled the ingredients, only to realize with disappointment that I was completely out of lettuce. Scanning the fridge, my eyes landed on Dane’s shelf. There, sitting inside a pristine Tupperware container, was a large, crisp head of lettuce.

She’ll never notice a single leaf, I thought, letting hunger override my better judgment.

I surreptitiously cracked open the lid and began peeling a piece away. Suddenly, I stopped. The leaf wasn't just textured—it was alive. The entire thing was wriggling with a miniature army of worms. Feeling a wave of disgust, I put it back, snapped the lid shut, and settled for a leaf-free sandwich.

The real complication, however, arrived the following day.

I walked into the lounge to find Dane happily relaxing on the couch, halfway through eating a massive sandwich of her own. To my horror, a large piece of lettuce was protruding from the crusts. I stood there, completely convinced I could see the edges of the green leaf subtly moving.

I wanted to tell her, but the calculus of the situation was brutal. If I spoke up, she would instantly realize I had been into her private Tupperware. The fierce Newlands temper would be unleashed on me.

Feeling extremely guilty, I chose to stay quiet. I left her to finish her meal in blissful, oblivious peace, keeping the secret of the kitchen fridge entirely to myself.

June 21, 2026

Memorable moments: The orthodontic awakening

When I was thirteen, I went through the standard teenage rite of passage: getting orthodontic braces. Periodically, I had to visit the clinic to have them tightened. For most teenagers, this is a dreaded chore, notorious for causing days of dull ache and intense discomfort.

Naturally, my parents were utterly baffled by my reaction to these appointments. Instead of dreading them, I always got incredibly excited. I counted down the days, practically leaping into the car when it was time to go. They probably thought they had raised the most resilient, stoic teenager in South Africa.

They wouldn't have been surprised if they had known the truth.

My mum would drop me off outside the clinic, and I would head upstairs with an uncharacteristic spring in my step. The magic began the moment the orthodontic nurse came to fetch me from the waiting room. She was a gorgeous, friendly blonde who always made a point of asking me how school was going, treating me with a warmth that completely disarmed my thirteen-year-old self.

The highlight, however, was the actual procedure. I would lie back in the chair, and she would lean closely over me with her tightening tool to adjust the wires, her ample bosom just inches from my dazzled gaze. For a teenager right at the precipice of waking up to the world of romance and attraction, having this lovely woman so close  was absolute heaven.

To her, it was just a routine, innocent Tuesday morning at the office. To me, it was a profound, thrilling introduction to the opposite sex. The physical discomfort of the tightening didn't matter at all; the scenery more than made up for it. It remains one of my funniest memories of growing up—a time when a painful dental adjustment somehow became the most anticipated event on my social calendar.

June 17, 2026

A walk through central Sydney

It was lovely to go back to my Photography Meetup after so much time away. A lovely morning strolling around the city near Central Station followed by our usual pub lunch.
























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