Saturday, 1 June 2019

Where do we go now?

Nothing is the same. Except me. I, as a general collection of cells, (mostly) endure but in all other aspects, everything is new. I read back to myself some of the posts from my Old Life and there is a strange ambiguity to them. As I sat on aeroplanes, pitching up in airports in Germany, Norway, China, the life that had seemingly constructed itself for me seemed like a kind of fortress: Its complete all-worked-outness seemed eternal, as constant as the continents. The house, the marriage, the kids, the job, all smoothly in place and there in the middle of it, me. We should never forget the shifting of tectonic plates however.

So now, just a few years later, everything that comprised that life has been replaced. Divorced, new partner, different (and eye-wateringly expensive though smaller) house in a different county, job gone, salary and professional status a mere memory, kids grown up and flown. Psychosomatic illnesses all disappeared.

And now I am a gardener. Whereas for over thirty years I made my living using my intellect, my technical knowledge and my affability, now I use my body. I mow lawns, I weed borders, I make raised beds. And all the mathematics and engineering I set about learning to ensure a prosperous future, back when I was young and not quite so cynical, all superfluous. And I almost never sit at a computer. Except to do my book-keeping - a necessary and tedious evil of being self-employed.

I confess, sometimes I shake my head in disbelief. I take my hand fork and jab the back of my arms as a surrogate for pinching myself (which would be difficult with gardening gloves on), just to make sure I am not dreaming. I am not, as far as I can tell. This is the reality. And I am happy.
Mostly. Oh, there are times I wake in the night and can't get back to sleep for the strangeness of it all. How such a complete life could, like the Roman Empire, be so all-encompassing, so perfectly administered, so well constructed and yet topple and disintegrate into a fact of history. But though life is incredibly financially precarious, I no longer have to deal with idiot Texan managers and their aggression, their self-important failure to grasp their own insignificance and mediocrity.
I grasp mine and am the better for it I think.

So, no longer will I write about being in a pressurised cabin 37000 above Russia, or hotels in Paderborn. I will write about my life as a relatively menial service-sector worker and the experiences of what I encounter as I go about maintaining order and careful disorder in the gardens of Gloucestershire. I may have left a profession behind, with all the trappings, but I take largely the same mind with me into this new venture. Observation is still just as possible. As Xavier Le Maistre catalogued his voyage round the confines of his room in autour de ma chambre so shall I remark upon the prosaic happenings in horticulture. I have no idea how interesting it will be, and I shall not do it here, because I feel a hiatus is required to mark the monumental transition. But I shall do it somewhere. Words need to flow if the mind is to be retained in a form I am comfortable inhabiting.

5 comments:

Kay G. said...

Very happy to see your post here and glad that YOU are happy. Regarding your remark about Texan managers, I have found that people from Texas are somewhat different from other Americans, perhaps it is because Texas is so big? Not sure, but if you get the chance, be sure to watch Texas Rising, it stars Bill Paxton playing San Houston, his own ancestor! It might be interesting for you to watch that and see if it gives you insight into what you know about Texans! Now regarding the garden, there are many intelligent men who have written of their gardens, Thomas Jefferson is the American that comes to my mind. The Englishmen who came to America and took back specimens to the botanical gardens to England are fascinating too. Your last sentence, I do so much agree with...I just wish my words could flow like yours!

Librarian said...

Let me pick out this sentence: "I have no idea how interesting it will be, and I shall not do it here". First part: Of course it will be interesting! Second part: Please do not move to some strange platform where we'd have to sign up; I am already signed up with enough platforms as it is.

Yes, life changes, and in your case, those changes were not subtle; everything at once, and rather dramatically. I suppose a lot happened in connection with how you felt after your haemorrage. That truly was a life-changing event (and could have easily beoome not just life-changing, but life-ending - I am glad it didn't!).

Perlnumquist said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Perlnumquist said...

Let's try that again...
Thank you both for your kind comments. I am sure not all Texan managers are like the ones I had. That may have been partly down to company culture too. But the aggression, the Rule-by-Fear, the finger pointing and not very veiled threats are something I struggled to deal with and it made me ill. Perhaps it is better there now, but I am glad to be out of it.
Perhaps my BH was implicated. I wonder sometimes if my decision making equipment is flawed and given the self-regarding nature of the broken machine, I might just not know. My not-so-recent changes might have been disastrous and ill-advised and I might not be able to tell. But we are where we are and must now make the best of it, even using flawed processes.
I shall write on another Blogger page because although Wordpress seems slightly better, I know how this works here. Obviously I can't divulge aspects of my clients or their gardens which are identifiable. Potentially, from here, they could could be so I shall start another blog under a different name using a new ID. But some of what occurs in my daily work life is funny or remarkable and deserves writing about, even if the identities of the individuals or locations cannot be named or alluded to. I will let you know where I go, though it would be pointless to state it here.

And now I have to go and mow some lawns and remove some ivy. Luckily I have Mary Shelley's Frankenstein on talking book so I wont get bored.

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