THE LOLA BOYS ABROAD !

The trails and tribulations of a dodgy duo!

One Final Salute!

Was it egotistical to write of oneโ€™s own experiences? What else was there to write about? Even if an author took on the feelings of others or wrote fictionally about characters theyโ€™d invented it was still through the prism of their own imagination.

A biography was still seen through the writerโ€™s lense. What to include. Which details to omit. Oneโ€™s perception of the world and the description of a universe which others inhabited always emanated from oneโ€™s own mind. We cannot, it seems, escape the bars of our own mental cell, however hard we try.

Paul knew he was meant to ditch the ego. And surely writing about himself was only re-enforcing it.

And realising that he was strengthening the ego and still talking about it made it grow even larger.

And writing sentences like the last one made it enormous.

He couldnโ€™t bloody win.

He thought he was so amusing when he coined the phrase –

โ€˜Wherever โ€˜ee goes – I go!โ€™

But when reading it back it only seemed pretentious.

But then he was often accused of that.

That was him all over.

Self congratulatory.

Over-dependant on the kindness of strangers. He often likened himself to a tragic Tennessee Williams character, revelling in the misfortunes of his life. Not seeing it for the utter tragedy it really was. Not recognising how truly sad he was beneath the performance. He sailed on a savage ocean of stormy emotions pulled by the surge of a turbulent current over which he had no control. Or so it seemed.

He had no real sense of direction.

No inner compass.

Heโ€™d been drowning since birth only he never knew it.

Heโ€™d struggled to the surface now and then, even managed a bit of synchronised swimming at his most buoyant. But invariably he was pulled by the undertow into the murky depths of despair and confusion. Struggling in the Sargasso Sea of life which held him like an aquatic prisoner amid its wily weeds.

He gasped for oxygen on so many occasions momentarily dragging those around him down too. Sometimes he wondered why there was still any ship mates left on board his craft.

In some ways he knew there werenโ€™t.

He was on a solo trip. All those who sailed aboard the planet were.

One was extremely fortunate if there were a crew to help them navigate lifeโ€™s course, but ultimately a person had to put the wind into their own sails.

And Paul now realised he wasnโ€™t gonna do that with a โ€˜yo ho ho and another bottle of rum!โ€™ It was finally time to bid adieu to the drunken sailor that had rocked his boat for as long as he could remember and take the helm. He was well aware he was sailing into uncharted waters but that was one pastime he still enjoyed.

Adventure.

The unknown.

It was the only aspect of his worldly voyage that seemed to hold any fascination for him in his current state. Ill winds prevailed and all his usual passions seemed lost at sea.

Heโ€™d heard it described as โ€˜Anhedoniaโ€™. A state defined in the dictionary, a book heโ€™d once read for pleasure as a child, as a lack of just that.

An inability to feel or experience the stuff.

What a pleasure!

He felt much like Hamlet – the Shakespearean misery guts not the cigar.

His shipping forecast was not good. The earth seemed to him like that stale promontory the dour Dane described in one of the famous soliloquies in that play.

Paul had sung those very words once. High – literally. Stood proudly on a rostrum twenty feet above the famous stage of The Old Vic theatre playing the lead in the musical โ€˜Hair.โ€™ Now those triumphant times seemed like such stuff as dreams are made of.

Or nightmares.

What a piece of work he was!

He remembered as a child walking along a long hospital corridor with his father by his side feeling horribly nervous regarding whatever procedure he was to undergo. His dad had told him off for walking in a particular manner. Paul had been entirely unconscious of the way he was moving towards the ward until his father had helpfully said,

โ€˜Donโ€™t walk like that!โ€™

โ€˜Like what?โ€™ heโ€™d responded innocently as the rather green eleven year old boy heโ€™d once been.

โ€˜Like thatโ€™, repeated his father, illustrating with a camp hand movement to what he was referring, โ€˜thatโ€™s how poofs walk!โ€™

Paul had always been aware since that moment of how he moved.

Heโ€™d never felt entirely free again.

At โ€˜The London Nautical Schoolโ€™, to which heโ€™d doubtless been sent to straighten out his stride, he was constantly reminded of the lightness of his feet. Everything about him seemed to offend the other boys.

The way he spoke.

His manner.

His breathing!

Those years had not been plain sailing.

He always lunched alone in the depths of the aging vessel of a building on Stamford Street in central London. Eschewing the mess the other pupils used and ate. He avoided any form of contact with any of his fellow crew and stared out of the portholes during lessons gazing at the London skyline. Longing to jump ship.

At lunchtime heโ€™d walk onto the South Bank and meander the concrete maze of the National Theatre, marvelling at the huge black and white photos of puzzling productions like the classic Greek play โ€˜The Oresteiaโ€™ or the controversial โ€˜The Romans In Britainโ€™, which had included a male rape. Something Paul underwent daily at his place of education, mentally and spiritually, if not physically.

Well not totally.

Heโ€™d also bunk off from class and sit conversing with murky men in St Jamesโ€™ Park. Sometimes sharing their refreshment and resisting their obvious advances with red-faced teenage embarrassment.

At classtimes heโ€™d find himself inexplicably in Whitehall and Downing Street. During the dark days of the Falklands war, after heโ€™d stood on parade and listened to the headmaster speak of former pupils recently sunk, heโ€™d escape the naval gloom and stand for hours spectating as Mrs Thatcher came and went through the famous black door of number ten. He felt as though he was witnessing history. It was far better than attempting to study it with Captain Daniels back on Stamford Street. That period was always a riot.

Literally!

The aforementioned master would sit behind his desk reading a book on knots and occasionally gulping from a thermos flask as his class fought, threw chairs at one another and spat.

Paul learnt nothing.

Except how to expectorate!

And he was so keen on history.

And geography.

And literature.

And life.

Even though it was knocked out of him every bloody day.

Or slippered.

Or caned.

Or worse!

In fact he had garnered no education in the entire time he was at โ€˜The London Nautical School.โ€™ Heโ€™d been forced instead to engage in years of simply just navel gazing.

The place was a joke. Worse than a borstal.

A fraud masquerading in an impressive uniform.

In fact that was the single aspect of the establishment Paul had liked. He wore his navy beret with pride even though he was continually mocked for doing so. He thought it possessed style. Despite the institution which forced him to wear it having none of that quality.

Even the address was fake. Blackfriars was its official locale.

Blackfriars S.E.1. !

One didnโ€™t need to be a London cabby to possess the knowledge that such a location was a geographic impossibility, as that more upmarket district was north of the river.

The clue was in the โ€˜Sโ€™ of the postcode.

It stood for shit!

No – the dump where Paul battled daily was aptly positioned in Waterloo.

Still is.

It was years before Paul could even pass the place.

When he eventually did, whilst inadvertently stumbling onto Stamford Street on route back from a particularly rough audition, the place seemed so small and inconsequential. Not half as Orwellian as heโ€™d remembered when heโ€™d been held prisoner there. Heโ€™d even gone aboard illegally and toured the decks, returning to his old lunch spot in the hull of the building. There had been a room there, open and no longer padlocked. It was still dark and damp but there was a piano inside. Paul sat in the dank and airless brig and played a bad version of โ€˜The Moonlight Sonataโ€™, the one tune he knew.

It was pathetic. He cried. Then left.

It hadnโ€™t helped!

Now, far too many years later, on an equally uneven keel in boozeless Bali, these dark and not so distant memories were flooding back.

A tsunami of childhood angst threatening to drown him if he let it wash him away. But he wasnโ€™t about to.

Instead he was going to examine it.

After all, the unexamined life wasnโ€™t worth living – he knew someone far cleverer than him had said that.

He knew he would be pushing Descartes before the horse but he didnโ€™t care.

He wasnโ€™t going to worry if he was being pretentious or not.

Or whether people found him funny.

Or attractive.

Or talented.

Or anything.

Actually.

And most importantly he was going to walk in the way he wanted.

In his own manner.

In his own shoes.

He was only just learning after so many years of mis-education that there was really no other way.

He made a mental note to walk exactly like a poof back to Stamford Street some day very soon.

Stand at ease outside โ€˜The London Nautical Schoolโ€™ and give the decrepit old admiral one final salute.

Only this time using just one finger!

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19 responses to “One Final Salute!”

  1. Rita Scott Avatar
    Rita Scott

    Paul You have touched a nerve, you have washed up thoughts of my own childhood, my gosh not really a place I had wanted to visit, you are a wonderful human being and Iโ€™m proud to know you – just keep walking your own way xx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      I’m sorry I inspired you to visit somewhere dark Rita. But shining a light on those horrible recesses can help us to see clearer and to rid ourselves of the clutter! I hope you can do that. And thank you – gonna walk my way from now on. Or at least try! X

      Like

      1. Rita Scott Avatar
        Rita Scott

        We all need to visit the past occasionally so no need for concern, so happy youโ€™re going to walk the way that suits you love you sweetie xx๐Ÿ˜˜

        Like

  2. Stuart Harvey Avatar

    Beautifully written, a wonderfully crafted piece that I read over twice and was moved differently each time. I will, one day, try it for a third time and I fully expect to see something I didn’t see during earlier readings. Keep this going, stay strong and keep waving that finger!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      Thank you Stu – I am thrilled it touched you as a proper reader. Honoured in fact. I think I’m on the way to being a writer now. I’m gonna be waving more than just one finger!!! X

      Like

    2. Lewendon Marion Avatar
      Lewendon Marion

      Walk your own way โ€œin those shoesโ€ ๐Ÿ‘  yesโ€ฆ I think so!
      Lots of love & thankx for the memories & for being you ๐Ÿ’™

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Yvette Avatar
    Yvette

    I absolutely loved it. Thank you for telling us a bit about your story โค๏ธ

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      Thank you Yvette. It helps to tell stories- I’m enjoying the catharsis x

      Like

  4. Mitchell Hawkins Avatar
    Mitchell Hawkins

    Get that book and the sequel done! I think everyone enjoys reading whatever you write. I think all us poofs had a weird and or difficult time at school. Kingston Grammar wasn’t very homo friendly back in 1979! – but unlike you, I remember enjoying the cane.. or slipper

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      Thanks for your encouragement. I imagine we all went through difficult shit back then but we survived and became the level headed well balanced gentlemen we are now! I was obviously a late developer when it came to enjoying corporal punishment – but I’m on top of it now. It’s all about perspective! ๐Ÿ˜‰๐Ÿ˜…๐Ÿ˜˜

      Like

  5. Paul Avatar

    Thanks for that encouragement love. Yes all of us back then had a difficult time of it I’m sure. But we survived and are so incredibly well balanced because of it! I was obviously a late learner when it came to enjoying the cane – but I’m on top of it now – it’s all about perspective!๐Ÿ˜‰๐Ÿ˜…๐Ÿ˜˜

    Like

  6. Mieke Tysma Avatar
    Mieke Tysma

    Absolutely fabulously done! ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿฅฐ

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Lisa Kiernan Avatar
    Lisa Kiernan

    Wow powerful read . Made me stop,sit and think. You write with such beauty . Your audience need a book. Loved it . ๐Ÿ’™

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      Thank you Lisa – better do something else with my finger and write one! X

      Like

  8. Maureen Avatar

    Loved reading that. My dad (being an ex Royal Navy Man) sent my two younger brothers there. The elder hated it and rebelled. Played truant regularly and one day nicked something small from the localstreet market. They asked my father to remove him. Consequently my dad took the younger brother out too. I always resented that and felt Bob had a rough deal. I always thought that the RNC was a good school and that Bob had missed out by being sent to the local comprehensive through no fault of his own. Reading your blog, I now think he had a lucky escape! Thanks Paul. Please do finish that book. Xxx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Paul Avatar

      Thanks Maureen – I will write a book/books now I’m seeing life clearer. And I am so glad your brothers got out- a lot of the time a comprehensive education is just that! And prepares you more fully for life. X

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Deborah Cummins Avatar
    Deborah Cummins

    Wow heavy shit that was Paul! but hey itโ€™s the boy that maketh the man! Your one of the nicest men Iโ€™ve ever metโ€ฆyou got this๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ˜‰

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Peggy Avatar
    Peggy

    One finger, guess which one ๐Ÿ™‚ haha
    Great blog
    Don’t understand a few words but can quess
    xoxoxo
    enjoy Bangkok on the way back
    Loves
    Rics and Pegs

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Jacqueline Booth Avatar
    Jacqueline Booth

    Love reading this, you write with an addictive flair. I was disappointed to get to the end. Write your book. I would read it cover to cover. I have missed so much of your incredible life! More importantly, when we finally meet up again, I want to hear it! With your hypnotic voice you should make it a podcast xxxx

    Liked by 1 person

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