12. |
There’s a guy – I can’t remember his name
right now, let’s call him Fred; his real name will come to me whilst I write.
We worked together at the factory before
the management and economies decided to lay off more than half the staff, I’m
not sure if Fred survived the cut; he was a specialist – an expert in super
conductors or coolants or something, but he was old enough to take an early
retirement and the offer would have been attractive.
I was employed elsewhere so it mattered
less.
Apart from super-somethings Fred loved all
things Scottish – he was planning a visit that summer with his wife – and so we
were talking about Mike Leigh’s film The Angel Share.
And that took us on to golf.
Fred asked me if I knew the origin of the
word.
“Golf?”
“Yes.”
“No”.
So Fred told me, that above the club
entrance at St Andrew’s there is a sign that says Gentlemen Only Ladies
Forbidden.
“Are you sure?”
“0ui!”
Fred is French.
Driving home I wondered about this,
something didn’t ring true. Maybe it had something to do with the fact that if
there was a club-house there must have already been a game.
Maybe it had something to do with Fred
being French and me thinking that I – an Englishman – should know more about my
own language than a Frenchman.
By the way
- another Frenchman whose name I can’t remember – told me he had learnt
some new vocabulary.
“Oh yes, what is it?”
“Brexit.”
Ho ho ho.
Christmas has of course slipped past, the
New Year has installed and I’m driving around thinking about the past and the
future.
And I’m thinking about belief and ……
Little kids believe in Father Christmas.
They believe in Fairies.
Elves too maybe.
Dragons?
Probably.
All these things exist.
How does it happen?
Are they born with these beliefs?
Sometimes maybe – but a lot of is down to
stories.
The stories we tell.
And the stories we write.
These stories are like this because the
writers want the world to be like this.
So they create one.
And other people agree.
They live the story too and the story
becomes real.
…..Something like this.
It’s exhausting.
When I got home after working with Fred,
whose name I still haven’t remembered, I was exhausted,
it had been a long day.
But before I lay down to sleep I did a bit
of research on golf.
A couple of weeks after I met Fred again.
“Hey, you remember that story you told me
about golf?”
“Fred smiled.
“Yes, I do.”
We had been looking at short form answers.
“Well, I did some research and it seems
that the story is completely untrue.”.
His eyes twinkled.
“Yes, but it’s a good story.”
Sorry, I still can’t remember his name.
5 comments:
Men love telling that GOLF story.
Happy Spring to you - my favourite time of the year!
and enjoy the vernal equinox, too.
Mx
Sorry to report its telling once again then... by the way - did you miss my reply to your reply in comments to number 10?
All good stories are true.
ANNE!!!
You're still with me - it's been yolks!
(english word possibly linked to the expression it's been donkey years- which it has).
Hope you're well, thanks for popping in.
er - not YOLKS but YONKS.
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