Friday 18 May 2007

Daydreams and Ruby Slippers


18 May


This week was going to be all about living in the now. You know the kind of thing – recognising the moment, accepting the present, not letting a single moment of life’s rich tapestry pass me by. I was going to really listen when my son speculates – again – on the likely plot of the next Dr Who episode, and not do my own mental time-travelling and wander off into the past. I would really pay attention to my daughter’s games and readily accept the subservient role as patient/café visitor/pupil that is usually assigned to me. I wasn’t going to gaze off into the distance when the small ferocious café lady tells me I can’t have any of my chosen food preferences, but can have cake with an egg on and hot chocolate, except there isn’t any chocolate. I won’t be somewhere else in my mind when the people I love the most are chatting to me, or let my mind form endless associations so that I inevitably leave to long a pause and give too blank a stare before answering a question. But why is it that everything these days reminds me of something else? What will it be like when I’m eighty, when there’s a whole lifetime of connections and memories to assail me, when the dramas of human experience seem to be permanently on rewind? Naturally, my good intentions fell by the wayside this week. There I go again; what lovely imaginings spring to mind as I write the word wayside. Verges rich with scarlet poppies, with campions and cornflowers. Old men with sticks in days gone by, tramping in the moonlight down lanes filled with traveller’s joy. Words of a hymn I thought I’d left behind in early childhood “He paints the wayside flowers, He lights the evening star”.

Yesterday my son told me about his science lesson, and how they’d learnt about oxygen. No helpful discussions about gases, no pouring over the encyclopaedia together for my poor child; just a mother who’d mentally absconded, again, and was trying to remember who’s sung that late seventies hit ‘Love is Like Oxygen’ (got it in the middle of the night – The Sweet). My daughter is currently obsessed with ‘The Wizard of Oz’ and is nursing a huge grudge that we didn’t name her either Dorothy or Glinda. She asked me to find her special ruby slippers this morning, and I was gone again, hit by a powerful memory as I searched fruitlessly under her bed. I remembered working in a company which was headed up by a terrifying and all-powerful boss. (Yes, she was a woman, but no, that wasn’t why we had trouble with her – I’ve loved many of my female bosses). A whole crowd of us young 20-somethings worked there, the social life was brilliant, the office banter exceptional. A new man joined one day. He was Asian and hadn’t been in the country long; quiet and shy by nature, he seemed to struggle sometimes with our colloquialisms and humour. I remember him having to attend an appraisal with the terrifying boss, and the rest of us crowding around him in the office kitchen when he reappeared. “What was it like, what did she say?” we all wanted to know. “Oh, I think it was something like: Gimme the ruby slippers!” he replied in his soft shy voice, giving the most perfect imitation of the wicked witch of the west. He broke through his shyness that day and I like to think he liked working with us. He died a month or so later, killed in a road accident while on holiday in Spain. So in memory of a quiet man I barely knew who really made me laugh one day, in homage to Eden (of Under an Eastern Sky blog) and her red mary-jane’s, and for all of us daydreamers who can never get anything done, I’ve enclosed a picture of my girl’s ruby slippers, scuffed and worn, but still magic to her (and found, luckily, before she left for pre-school). Buying them gave a little girl her heart’s desire, and she didn’t even have to click the heels. Who say’s dreaming is a waste of time?

23 comments:

Fennie said...

Awww Shucks!!! Could get all weepy. Lovely, SM. But what was it that the Wicked Witch really said - 'Get me your payslip Rs?' Or something.

Elizabeth Musgrave said...

a lovely blog as always. It's not as easy as it sounds this living in the moment is it? your daughter seems to have it taped.

bodran... said...

We all clicked our heels today the heels of our muddy boot's, and chanted "the caravans in place" "the caravans in place" it didnt work..xx we needed ruby slippers.

Faith said...

Oh gorgeous! and your photo of the ruby slippers reminded me of a photo I took once when Cee was tiny of her baby red shoes next to her dad's big boots! Your girl's shoes don't look scuffed at all - they almost shimmer they are so nice!

Sally Townsend said...

You describe so well the gazing into the middle distance syndrome ! love your blogs.

Inthemud said...

I know exactly what you mean. I do what you do when playing games with the children, then tell myself off and try harder next time, but we are the sum of all our past as well as the present and things will always remind us of things gone by, I've been reminiscing since i was quite young! I'll do it till I die, but that doesn't stop us living for the moment too, I'm here now this minute talking to you!

muddyboots said...

l do love your ruby slippers, l have a pair of R & B sequined ones that lock so good with jeans. l'm always, not exactly daydreaming, but not listening to what people are saying, but l do live for now not yesterday or tomorrow.

Maggie Christie said...

I know exactly what you mean about living in the moment - I try every day! What a lovely blog!

Un Peu Loufoque said...

Nothing wrong with dreaming it keeps you sane!

Kitty said...

From one daydreamer to another. There's no place like home, there's no place like home.

Pig in the Kitchen said...

Feel most comforted that I'm not the only one to do the distracted, 'hmmmm? oh yes' interaction with my children.

Ace post!
Pigx

Cait O'Connor said...

Another really lovely blog.
I live in my red (energy and power!) shoes and I even have red slippers a bit like those in your photo. We have so many similar tastes.
I know what you mean about 'drifting off' but your children will grow up so quickly, enjoy them and savour each moment if you can. Sorry if I sound like an old granny!

Pondside said...

If onley we all wore ruby slippers! Living in the moment is so hard - there's something about having a baby in the house that makes it easier, but as they grow we more often leave the moment and go to the "I should be...." and the "next, I have to..."
Enjoy your young ones - you seem to be doing so - and don't forget to put on your ruby slippers.

@themill said...

Is there any other way to live?

Exmoorjane said...

Oh I am SO with you on this.....try so hard to do the 'in the moment' stuff but always wander off......
I want a pair of ruby slippers too! A friend got married wearing a pair....totally fabulous..
jxxx

@themill said...

Re my blog today. Never feel in a hurry to return to work because they will grow up sooo quickly. I'm so glad I didn't. (I'm a bit empty nest today, I think!) A mountain of paperwork glares at me and I'm blogging!!!

Equus said...

So you have Dr Who fiends too! I'm afraid I switch off a bit when it comes to daleks especially because I have an autistic son who knows it all inside out, upside down and back to front! He taught me to live in the present moment (along with my horses) because when he was little if you weren't with him 100%, he was somewhere else entirely. He is now nearly 11 and his autism is barely noticeable. He is one of the greatest gifts I have ever received. Enjoyed reading your blog.

Jane said...

"Mummy are you really listening or just pretending to?" is a constant refrain in our house. It is my worst fault (joint first place with abismal untidiness) and something I would love to change.

But then I used to play a lot of "hairdressers" and "on the bus" with the girls when they were toddlers because I got to read a book as part of my role play.

Bad mother,
J
x

Cait O'Connor said...

Me again.
Regarding Patrick Kavanagh books. I suggest you get his books from the local library, they will probably have to get them from elsewhere as an inter-library loan (it's £2 here per book). Pick one or two titles from Amazon for example and then at least you can see before you buy. I suppose a complete works would be the best. Failing that do what I do and copy poems from the Internet and make a file of your favourites.

Sally Townsend said...

Your guess was spot on, but I can't say can I ??

Eden said...

Oh lovely lovely blog suffolkmum. Of course I LOVE the ruby slippers, in fact am wearing red shoes of my own this minute as I type. Not Mary Jane's alas, but cute little slip ons. The present is of course the only moment we have and I let it slip by too often too. so love how your blogs often capture it.

DevonLife said...

oh SM, you have inspired me to wear totally unsuitable ruby red suede very high christian louboutin slingbacks to London tomorrow.

MaidofKent said...

I was with you right the way through. I, too, have a body living in 2007, but a mind which could be ANYWHERE, but to grant a wish, or to fulfil a dream of any little girl has got to be the best day of all - no matter which century it happened!