From Making
The Cat Laugh: One Woman's Journal of Single Life on the
Margins
No Valentines from the
cats again. Sometimes I wonder whether they are working as hard at this
relationship as I am. Few other pets, I imagine, were lucky enough to find
their Valentine’s day breakfasts laid out on heart-shaped trays, with the words
‘From Guess Who’ artfully arranged in Kitbits around the edge. But what do I
get in return? Not even a single rose. Not even a ‘Charming thought, dear. Must
rush.’ Just the usual unceremonious leap through the cat-flap; the usual
glimpse of the flourished furry backside, with its ‘Eat my shorts’ connotation.
Wearily I sweep up the Kitbits with a dustpan and brush, and try to remember
whether King Lear was talking about pets when he coined the phrase about the
serpent’s tooth.
Of course, the world
would be a distinctly different place if cats suddenly comprehended the concept
of give and take—if every time you struggled home with a hundredweight of cat
food and said accusingly, ‘This is all for you, you know,’ the kitties
accordingly hung their heads and felt embarrassed. Imagine the scene on the
garden wall: ‘Honestly, guys, I’d love to come out. But the old lady gave me
Sheba this morning, and I kind of feel obligated to stay home.’ ‘She gave you Sheba?’ ‘Yeah. But don’t go
on about it. I feel bad enough that I can never remember to wipe my feet when I
come in from the garden. When I think of how much she does for me . . .’ (breaks
down in sobs).
Instead, one takes one’s
thanks in other ways. For example, take the Valentine’s present I bought them:
a new cat-nip toy, shaped like a stick of dynamite. This has gone down
gratifyingly well, even though the joke misfired slightly. You see, I had fancied
the idea of a cat streaking through doorways with a stick of dynamite between
its jaws, looking as though it had heroically dived into a threatened
mine-shaft and recovered the explosive just in time to save countless lives. In
this Lassie Come Home fantasy, however, I was disappointed. Instead, cat number
one reacted to the dynamite by drooling an alarming quantity of gooey stuff all
over it (as though producing ectoplasm), and then hugging it to his chest and
trying to kick it to death with his back paws.
Yet all is not lost. If
the cat chooses to reject the heroic image, I can still make the best of it.
With a few subtle adjustments to my original plan, I can now play a highly
amusing game with the other cat which involves shouting, ‘Quick! Take cover!
Buster’s got a stick of dynamite, and we’ll all be blown sky-high!’ And I dive
behind the sofa.
I suppose all this
gratitude stuff has been brought to mind because I recently purchased a very
expensive cat-accessory, which has somehow failed to elicit huzzahs of
appreciation. In fact, it has been completely cold-shouldered. Called a ‘cat’s
cradle’, it is a special fleecy-covered cat-hammock which hooks on to a
radiator. The cat is suspended in a cocoon of warmth. A brilliant invention,
you might think. Any rational cat would jump straight into it. Too stupid to
appreciate the full glory of my gift, however, my own cats sleep underneath it
(as though it shelters them from rain), and I begin to lose patience.
‘Come on, kitties,’ I
trilled (at first). ‘Mmmm,’ I rubbed my cheek on the fleecy stuff. ‘Isn’t this
lovely? Wouldn’t this make you feel like a—well, er, like an Eastern potentate,
or a genie on a magic carpet, or a very fortunate cat having a nice lie-down
suspended from a radiator?’ However, I stopped this approach after a week of
failure. Now I pull on my thick gardening gloves, grab a wriggling cat by the
waist, and hold it firmly on its new bed for about forty-five seconds until it
breaks away.
I am reminded of a
rather inadequate thing that men sometimes say to women, in an attempt to
reassure them. The woman says, ‘I never know if you love me, Jonathan,’ and the
man replies smoothly, ‘Well, I’m here, aren’t I?’ The sub-text to this corny evasion
(which fools nobody) is a very interesting cheat—it suggests that, should the
slightest thing be wrong with this man’s affections, he would of course push
off immediately into the wintry night, rather than spend another minute
compromising his integrity at the nice fireside with cups of tea.
Having a cat, I find,
makes you susceptible to this line of reasoning—perhaps because it is your only
direct line of consolation. ‘I wonder if he loves me,’ you think occasionally
(perhaps as you search the doormat in vain for Valentines with paw-prints on
them). And then you gently lift the can-opener from its velvet cushion in the
soundproofed kitchen, and with a loud ker-chunk-chunk a cat comes cannoning
through the cat-flap, and skids backwards across the lino on its bum. And you
think cheerfully, ‘Well, of course he does. I mean, he’s here, isn’t he?’
* * *
Having now worked at
home for just over three weeks, I realize I have broken the longest-ever-period-in-my-life-away-from-the-office
barrier, thus confirming that I am definitely not on holiday. So I felt this
would be a good time to give any would-be freelancers the benefits of my
experience.
1. Advantages:
a) The main advantage of
working at home is that you get to find out what cats really do all day. This
means they can never again expect you to fall for their
‘heavens-what-a-hard-day-I’ve-had’ routine.
b) Also important, you
rapidly disabuse yourself of the notion that a novel waits to be written about
the fascinating diurnal rhythms of a South London postal district.
c) There is a lot of
excitement generated by the arrival of the postman, who delivers lots of press
releases and books. Sometimes he chooses not to put a package through the
specially enlarged letter-box, but thoughtfully leaves a note telling you to
trek three miles to the sorting office to pick it up. Glad of the fresh air,
you give thanks for the opportunity to spend a whole morning on a fool’s
errand. Luckily, the postman never delivers cheques, otherwise you would have
to waste a lot of time making boring trips to the bank as well.
d) Where you used to
miss good bits on Start the Week because you had crashed the car into a BMW on
Hyde Park Corner, now you can listen to the whole programme from underneath the
duvet. Then you can hear Money Box, Morning Story and the Daily
Service.
A good programme to get out of bed to is The World at One. Within a week, the
metaphorical lark gives up waiting for you, and rises unaccompanied.
e) Where you used to do
the shopping once a month, and buy 10lb bags of frozen rissoles, now you learn
that you can visit the same corner-shop five times in a single day before the
proprietor gets suspicious and starts following you around.
2. Disadvantages:
a) Cats don’t talk very
much, and if you ask one to ‘copy-taste’ a piece you have written, he will
probably sit on it with his back to you.
b) Whenever serious work
is contemplated, the words ‘Time for a little something’ spring immediately to
mind; ditto the words ‘There’s no point carrying on when you’re tired, is
there?’, and ‘They can probably wait another day for this, actually.’
c) When you read your
pieces in print, the key sentence has always been cut, and the best joke ruined
by a misprint. But when you run along to the newsagent’s to amend all remaining
copies, the shopkeeper—recognizing you from 1(e)—is unsympathetic. ‘Why don’t
you get yourself a proper job?’ he says. ‘The trouble with you is you’ve too
much time on your hands.’
Single Bananas
An old friend of mine,
who five years ago migrated to the country with her husband to propagate
children and rear a garden, recently sent me a card which I didn’t know quite
how to take. ‘Wishing you all good luck’, she wrote, ‘on your chosen path.’ I
sat looking at it with my fingers in my mouth. What did she mean, exactly, by
this notion of the ‘chosen path’? I assumed she meant it kindly, but it made me
feel suddenly exposed and distant. Hey, where did everybody go? Supposing that
she imagined herself on a path radically divergent from mine, I instantly
pictured myself labouring alone up a narrow, steep, dusty, brambly trail with a
determined look on my face, as though illustrating a modern-day parable about
the grim sacrifices of feminism.
So vivid was this
picture, in fact, that I could feel the stinging nettles brushing against my
legs. It was awful. I felt thirsty; my head swam; the sun scorched my
shoulders. Looking down, I observed my friend ambling happily in the sunshine
on a broad level path with a pram and husband, while small apple-cheeked
children ran off to right and left, frolicking with lambs. I would have watched
for longer, but a bloke called Bunyan came along and told me to hop it.
But I was definitely
confused by the notion of the chosen path, and dwelt on it for days. Did I choose this, then? And if so,
why couldn’t I remember doing it? Hadn’t I always thought, rather naÔvely, that
there was still time to make these decisions about wife-and-motherhood in the
future—that the crossroads were just over the horizon? But it turns out that
the last exit was miles back, and I am a person whose chosen path speaks for
itself. The hardest part was realizing I can never be a teenage tennis
phenomenon. How on earth did I let things drift so badly?
For some reason I
thought of the careers mistress at school—perhaps because she represents the
single point in my life when I recognized a T-junction and made a definite
choice. She wanted us all to be nurses, you see; and I refused. Brainy sixth-formers
would queue at the careers office with fancy ideas about Oxford and Cambridge
and archaeology, and come out again 15 seconds later, waving nursing
application forms and looking baffled. ‘You have to have A-levels to be a nurse
now, you know, Miss Hoity-Toity!’ she would bark after them, twitching.
At my age, women are
supposed to hear the loud ticking of a biological clock, but I think I must
have bought the wrong battery for mine. The only time I experienced the classic
symptoms was when I desperately wanted a car. It was weird. If I spotted
another woman driving a Peugeot 205, I would burst into tears. In the end,
friends tactfully stopped mentioning their cars in my presence (‘My Volvo did such a funny thing the other
day—oh Lynne, how awful. I didn’t see you’). And there was that one shameful
occasion when I lurked outside a supermarket half-considering snatching a
Metro. ‘What a lovely bonnet you’ve got,’ I whispered, fingering it lightly. But
then a woman shouted ‘Oi!’, so I picked up my string bag and scarpered.
Now I realize that what
I want is a book. So much do I want to give birth to a book that I experience
‘false alarms’—when I think I am ‘with book’, but am not really. Once a month I
phone up my agent and say, ‘It’s happening!’ And she says, ‘How marvellous!’
And then I have to ring again a week later and say, ‘Bad news,’ and she says,
‘Never mind, conception is a mysterious thing.’ I suddenly realize that a book
would be a comfort in my old age, and I try to ignore the argument that there are
already too many books in the world competing for the available shelf-space.
Mine, of course, will be a poor fatherless mite, but I shall love it all the
more for that.
Perhaps the image of the
paths and crossroads is just the wrong one. Perhaps I did always know where I
wanted to go, but just walked backwards with my eyes closed, pretending there
was no act of will involved. Because I do recall from early youth that while
other children pleaded with their mums for miniature bridal outfits and little
dolls that went wee-wees, I was campaigning for a brick-built Wendy House in
the garden where I could lock the door and sit at an enormous typewriter. My
only imaginary friends were phantom insurance collectors, a person from Porlock
and the printer’s boy.
My idea of a Wendy House
was a rather grandiose one, I suppose. It involved guttering and utilities and
a mantelpiece where I could put the rent money, not to mention trouble with the
drains. I remember when a little friend told me she had acquired a Wendy House,
and I was wild with envy. But when I went to see it, it was just a canvas job
with painted-on windows. Fancy telling a gullible kid that this was a Wendy
House. Sometimes I wonder what happened when she eventually uncovered the
deception. Probably she married somebody with a big house and had lots of kids
in double-quick time, to establish a sense of security. In which case, I wish
her all good luck on her chosen path.
* * *
The prevailing notion of
the lone woman traveller seems to have been fixed about a century ago, and
entails such heart-stopping intrepidity and pluck that there is not much in our
banal modern lives to touch it. I mean, compared with the achievement of
striding across the Andes armed only with a pocket bible and a big stick, the
modern-day purchase of an air ticket to Los Angeles is going to look rather
paltry, isn’t it? And compared with Amelia Earhart flying solo across the
Atlantic in a rattling crate with nothing but a soup Thermos and a star-map,
the modern woman’s stout-hearted endurance of an eleven-hour scheduled flight
(complete with movies and drinks) is emphatically nothing to write home about.
Intrepidity is relative,
however. To me, the acme of being brave is catching a bus in central London
after 9pm, or enduring a whole instalment of Just a Minute on Radio 4. So it was
only natural that when I booked my single ticket to la before Christmas I was
so transported by my own pluckiness that for a moment I thought I smelled
quinine and hartshorn in the air. Sod Amelia Earhart’s soup, I thought; this
feels great.
How brave and adventurous I am, to travel alone! I nearly phoned up Maria
Aitken to suggest she make a documentary.
This was the first thing
I learnt about solitary travel, by the way: that the habit of tiresome (and
bogus) self-congratulation starts at the ticket desk and never wears off. ‘Hey,
I made it!’ you say proudly, as you step off the plane, having done nothing
more heroic during the flight than stumble to the loo a couple of times. ‘Wow,
I collected my luggage from the carousel! I found my hotel! I had some M&Ms
from the mini-bar! I turned on the tv and it worked!’ This exclamatory tone is
a bit relentless, I’m afraid. ‘I hired a car! I looked someone up in the
telephone directory! I ate a bagel in Santa Barbara!’ And so on.
Travelling ý deux does not encompass this
splendid sense of perpetual infantile achievement; I don’t know why. Travelling ý deux, in fact, is generally
a much more sober and grown-up affair, with precision map-reading not only its
greatest measure of success but also (alas) its highest goal.
‘Nicely map-read, dear,’
says the driver, calmly applying the handbrake.
‘Well, thanks very much.
It got a bit tricky around Nuneaton, but I think I kept my head.’
‘We didn’t get lost at
all, did we?’
‘No, we didn’t.’
The advantages to
travelling alone are many, as I discovered. For one thing, you can listen to
old Beach Boys hits on the car radio without your passenger huffily twiddling
with fm to find something else. Secondly, you can take art galleries at your
own pace (at a brisk roller-skating speed, if preferred) without feeling
guilty. Thirdly, you can browse in shops without first devising an hour’s
alternative entertainment for your companion (who will otherwise stand next to
the door looking helpless, like a tethered puppy). And fourthly, you can choose
a route for your journey without your companion suddenly spotting a scenic
wiggly detour just a few miles short of your destination.
The main disadvantage—as
I also discovered—is that when travelling on fast roads at night it is
impossible to drive and navigate at the same time. Something to do with the
number of hands, I think. Consequently, on a simple trip across town to
Pasadena, you can get so deeply lost on the freeway system that you think the night
will swallow you up (just like poor old Amelia Earhart) and that your cats at
home will die of broken hearts waiting for your return. Such terrors are
feeble, no doubt, compared with those of the stout Victorian lady wandering
lost in the deserts of Arabia, describing huge ragged circles in the shifting
sands. But I can assure you that the cry ‘I don’t want to go to Glendale!’
represents the nearest I have ever got to a nervous breakdown.
Perhaps map-reading
really is
what holidays are about—strenuously mastering streetplans, so that one can
always find the route back to the bus station. I admit that maps obsess me; as
a founder member of Cartomaniacs Anonymous, I resent and refute the theory that
women are genetically incapable of reading maps (although I rather like the
notion of dangling a copy of the London A‚Z over a pregnant woman,
to determine the gender of the unborn child. If the foetus shrugs and turns its
back, murmuring ‘Ach, I’m sure you’ll find it,’ it is probably a boy.)
So no wonder my night of
terror in Los Angeles made such an impression on me: every time I braked
abruptly at the sight of yet another freeway approach, all my maps slid off the
passenger seat on to the floor. Moreover, when I reached inside the glove compartment
for hartshorn, there was never any there. Alone and Disoriented Without a
Smelling Bottle in Glendale. Perhaps I should make the call to Maria Aitken, after all.
* * *
An old chum, newly
spliced, recently invited me to dinner in his new marital home. Ordinarily I
would have said yes automatically, but this time I heard myself imposing
conditions.
‘Is it a nice house?’ I
asked.
‘Yes, very nice.’
‘And you and your new
wife are really happy there?’
‘Yes, we are.’
‘With a nice
well-organized kitchen, and a big fireplace, and a patio for barbecues, and a
little room suitable for Baby?’
‘Yeah, sort of.’
‘Well, in that case the
answer’s no.’
There was an awkward
pause.
‘Did you say no?’
‘That’s right,’ I said
briskly. ‘Not in a million years. Let’s meet at Leicester Square for a pizza or
something instead. Then we can eat and talk just the same, but afterwards I can
come home feeling quite all right and not mysteriously depressed because your
home life is so lovely. All right?’
If he was surprised by
this outburst, so was I. I had no idea I felt so strongly. All I knew was that
sometimes, after a delightful evening spent with perfect hosts in a full,
groaning family house, a single person spends the next few days dumb with
misery, hating everybody, and bursting into unexpected tears during
heart-warming re-runs of Flipper. I confessed my ‘Not in a million years’ speech
to a friend, who said she understood, and who mentioned that at least I had
been assertive without being aggressive. Which made me bloody annoyed. ‘What’s
the point of that?’ I yelled. Damn. Next time, I shall shout ‘Sod your fancy
house with its bloody patio and its baby room, you make me sick, you people.’
Because there are times when a sub-text simply won’t do.
The alternative
strategies to an outright No Thanks—though possibly better etiquette in the
strict sense—are too wearisome to contemplate. For example, you can accept the
invitation, and then half an hour before arrival phone up with a fabricated
story about a last-minute mercy-dash (‘I’m so sorry, but if I don’t deliver
this jar of rollmop herrings to the Foreign Office in the next hour, we could
find ourselves at war with Finland!’). But is this less rude than explaining
your true feelings? I think not. Worst of all, surely, is to agree to come,
turn up punctually, make perfect-guest ‘Ooh lovely’ noises at the wallpaper,
and then sever your wrist quietly in their nice big kitchen while pretending to
help with the puddings.
Don’t get me wrong.
Things get better for single people every day. Oh yes. How cheerful to reflect,
for example, that Sainsburys now sells ‘Single Bananas’ in a special bag. But
we are not the norm, despite our bananas. We are seen as something akin to the
rogue animals in wildlife films, the ones that are tolerated by the herd but
don’t fit in, and are photographed sulking hundreds of yards off, snuffling in
long white grass. When lone dolphins turn up in British harbours (clearly
enjoying a walloping good time eating fresh salmon and frolicking with the
boats), the British public invariably feels sorry for them, and worries about
finding them a suitable mate. It is the same benevolent but mistaken instinct
that makes married people invite you to their new house.
What nobody appreciates,
of course, is that the poor old dolphin fields invitations all day, through his
ultrasonic mindwaves. ‘Come to dinner, we haven’t seen you in ages,’ he hears
from a happy nuclear dolphin family five miles out to sea. ‘Bugger,’ thinks the
dolphin, wishing he had remembered to switch on his answering machine. How can
he say he moved five miles (and risked having to swim with New Age poets in
wet-suits) just to escape all this? Treading water for a minute, he programs
his super-brain to run through the available strategies, and instantly feels
doubly depressed. Pizzas in Leicester Square is not a viable option for a
dolphin; and the rollmop herrings routine cuts no ice whatever in a marine
context.
He is caught all ways
actually, because he can’t be assertive or aggressive, since neither is in his
nature. And he always finds Flipper depressing. What a bind. So in the end, he
agrees to visit, swims miles, has a marvellous time, adores the kids, applauds
the bold choice of murky green throughout, gets home late, and flops out
exhausted with a smile on his face. And then, for about a week later, he mopes
miserably in the water, and everyone says it must be because he misses the
company of other dolphins.
Perhaps it is a phase
you go through, this ugly envy stuff. I hope so, certainly. I know one woman
who is perfectly all right most of the time, but who bursts into tears every
time she gets a wedding invitation, so that we have to rush out and have a
pizza at Leicester Square, where we talk bravely about single bananas. Edna
Ferber said that single life, like drowning, is a delightful sensation once you
cease to struggle—but is this comforting, or isn’t it? The analogy isn’t bad,
certainly: your whole life unfolds before your eyes, and you entertain strange
dreamy consoling thoughts such as ‘I shall never have to wash my hair again,
anyway.’ Meanwhile, however, you can’t help wishing that those nice married
people on the bank would stop chucking you lifebelts, so that you can just get
on with it.
* * *
I went to see Batman
Returns
last week. A man-friend had dropped the offhand remark that the Michelle
Pfeiffer character had reminded him of me, so naturally I couldn’t wait to find
out what he meant. After all, Michelle Pfeiffer and I are seldom mentioned in
the same breath; and on the evidence of the publicity shots of Catwoman—the
sexy patent leather cat-suit, the high heels, whip, and hood with little black
ears—I have to admit I was chuffed and flattered.
As I stood in the ticket
queue at Leicester Square I preened myself by licking the back of my hand and
rubbing my forehead with it. I flexed my painted claws. Meeeeow, I thought. How
perceptive of this male acquaintance to realize that while I portray myself in
this column as a frowzy, spinsterish stay-at-home, in reality I am a lithe,
crazy, dangerous feline-type animal who prowls the moonlit rooftops after dark,
purring to the sounds of the night-time city.
But alas, no sooner was
I embarked on my second vat of popcorn than I noticed that the Michelle
Pfeiffer character in Batman Returns is a frowzy, spinsterish stay-at-home,
instantly recognizable as Single Life material at its most abject and pitiable.
Damn. Her name is Selina. Each evening she bursts into her apartment with a
ritualistic shout of ‘Honey, I’m home!’ followed by ‘Oh I forgot, I’m not
married.’ She kicks off her shoes, listens to the answering machine, pours milk
for the cat, talks aimlessly to herself. Evidently it was Selina, not Catwoman,
that my friend had been talking about. I put my head in my popcorn tub for a
moment, and screamed with the minimum disruption.
No wonder Selina escapes
this paltry existence by assuming the identity of Catwoman (‘I am Catwoman,
hear me roar’). It is a sensible decision. The only problem is that, before it
can happen, she must suffer a brutal death from defenestration—which gives
pause to all the would-be Catwomen in the audience who are fed up with shouting
‘Honey, I’m home’ to an empty flat. I mean, is it worth chucking yourself off
the Shell building on the remote chance it might turn you into Catwoman? Well,
it’s tricky. I am still weighing it up.
But if it boils down to
clothes, I am sunk. You see, in order to become Catwoman it is important that
you can rummage in your wardrobe for an old patent leather coat; you then rip
its seams and magically re-fashion it into the appropriate figure-hugging
costume. Imagine your disappointment, then, if having flung yourself from a
high roof (and become a glassy-eyed un-dead) you opened your closet, snapping
your expectant pinking shears, to find only a brown calf-length fun-fur, with
no patent leather in sight. You would have to become Teddywoman instead, and it
would not be the same.
‘I am Teddywoman, hear
me not make any aggressive noise,’ you would say lamely, as you sat with your
arms out in front of you, unable to bend your elbows. It would be dreadful.
While chaos overtook your city, you would just sit there looking stiff and
fluffy and hoping that your eyeballs didn’t fall out. There would be no
opportunity for Batman to fall in love with you during exciting bouts of single
combat, either. At best, he might pick you up by the ear and trail you on the
ground behind him. And admit it, this would make you feel quite stupid.
I don’t suppose Batman’s
creators needed to think very hard about the animal identity of his female
counterpart. Dogwoman would not draw much male interest. Spiderwoman has been
done before. Elephantwoman would look like a rip-off. And Ferretwoman is too
suggestive. So Catwoman was the obvious answer. However, lots of potential
kitty-joke plot-devices were disappointingly left untapped by Batman Returns. For example, just as
Batman is summoned across Gotham City by a special Bat-design searchlight shone
on to solid cloud, couldn’t Catwoman have been summoned from miles distant by
the shaking of a little box of Miaow-mix?
I liked Batman
Returns.
The one thing that really worried me, though, was the role of the Gotham City
populace, who are required repeatedly to turn up in grey hats and coats for
Yuletide speeches outside the City Hall. Each time they do this, a dastardly
attack is launched against them, entailing multiple explosions, car chases,
punch-ups and deaths. At one point, this passive crowd is sprayed with
machine-gun fire from a trick umbrella. So why on earth do they keep turning
out, these people? Imagine, if you lived in Gotham City, and somebody said ‘Are
you coming to hear the new mayor address us this evening?’, wouldn’t you pause
momentarily before limping off to another apocalyptic pasting? A twinge of pain
from your latest shrapnel wounds would surely nudge your decision one way or
the other.
I suppose one should not
be surprised. Only a city of fools relies on a man in a bat-costume to protect
it from evil. But perhaps the Gothamites deliberately expose themselves to
extreme danger in the hope that they will be transformed, like Michelle
Pfeiffer, into a new superhuman chimera. In which case, you have to admire
their pluck. The only trouble is, you can’t imagine a movie called Lemmingman, can you?
* * *
The bit that always
stops me dead is where it says ‘Photo appreciated’. Up to then I am fine,
almost excited. I can even entertain the pathetic notion that I am being
singled out personally.
‘Intellectual Andre
Agassi lookalike with steady job’ (it says) ‘seeks lonely cat-fixated
Teddywoman for evenings of mutual squeaks. Extensive knowledge of EastEnders an advantage. My dream
lady has clean tv licence, an interest in the fashion potential of household
fluff, and a Jeff Bridges video collection. Please write to Box 213. Oh, and I
nearly forgot. Photo appreciated.’
‘Damn,’ I yell, and
head-butt the bath-taps. Bleeding from the brow, I stab wildly at the Lonely
Hearts column, speechless with frustration. There he is! Mister Dreamboat
himself! But he wants a photo! And now we can never meet because I don’t have
any pictures. What a personal disaster. ‘Perhaps you could send your Single
Life picture?’ ventures a passing cat, sort-of telepathically. ‘Hah!’ I shout.
‘How can I send a newspaper clipping, you fur-faced poltroon! Besides, this
picture gives most people the impression I am 93!’
I clamber from the bath,
press a towel to my head, and go through the usual frantic motions of searching
the flat for a suitable picture. But while I rifle my home with all the gusto
of the professional burglar, I know there is no chance whatever of success. In
the end, in desperation, I grab my passport and some pinking shears and tussle
with the temptation to cut out the picture forthwith. But luckily I remember in
the nick of time that a) it was taken seven years ago; and b) some of the
proffered squeaking might take place abroad.
Sinking on the debris, I
sob quietly. If I say I always look lousy in photographs, there is one large,
obvious inference which I would naturally rather not contemplate. But there is
another reason, honestly, for my despondence. It is that I find it really hard
to pose. In front of a camera I just smile in a ‘this is it, there’s no more’
kind of way, and trust that ‘being myself’ will do the job. This is utterly
wrong-headed, of course, because for a successful photo you must seize the
moment, choose your statement, and go for it. Whereas I invariably look as
though the statement I have chosen is ‘I am simple-minded. Please don’t mind
me. Children are safe.’
For this reason, book
jackets depress me. I am amazed by the intensely serious faces adopted by
authors on the backs of books. It is as though they have been subjected to some
weird voodoo practice, where all the personality and humour has been pulled out
in strings through their nostrils. Look at the pictures of the Booker shortlist
people (the men, anyway) and you will see they seem to have memorized a list of
permitted authorial qualities—a list that is unfortunately rather short. It
goes: Brainy, Moody, Mad, Sincere, Sensitive, Anxious, Supercilious, Dangerous,
Grumpy. On this list, you will observe, Harmless is notable by its absence.
Evidently authors may
choose three (not more) of these qualities and put them together in subtle
combinations. Thus, taking a random selection from the bookshelves, one finds
that the Ian McEwan of Black Dogs, say, has opted for brainy, anxious and mad;
that Martin Amis, formerly brainy, supercilious and dangerous (London Fields), has now daringly
regrouped as brainy, sincere and anxious (Time’s Arrow). And Nigel Williams (They
Came from sw19) has achieved an
amazing triple—of brainily sensitive, sincerely sensitive and sensitively
grumpy.
For women the range is
smaller and doesn’t include Brainy. That’s just the way it is. Traditionally
women could choose from Clever, Nice, Shiny, Well Made-up and Pet-owning, but
usually said to hell with it and took the lot. To this list a few new elements
have been added recently. For example, Jeanette Winterson (famously
self-effacing author of Written on the Body) has added Challenging,
Bloody-Minded and Eyes that Follow You Around the Room. Pictures of women
authors sometimes have a verge-of-tears quality, reminiscent of Julia Margaret
Cameron’s famous picture Despair, which was achieved by locking the juvenile
sitter in a cupboard for a couple of hours beforehand. Jeanette Winterson does
not look like someone recently emerged from a cupboard. She does, however,
resemble a person who has just locked someone else in a cupboard, and put the
key down the lav.
Meanwhile, what do I do
about the Andre Agassi man? If I don’t send a picture, he will smell a rat.
Perhaps I should get a heap of coins and take residence in a Photo-Me booth for
the afternoon, trying out statements. Think moody. Think mad. Think grumpy. But
what I don’t understand is this. Given that the mad, brainy, sincere look is
only a pretence, why not go for something a bit more dramatic? Such as Livid,
Amnesiac, Paranoid, or Escaping from Wolves? Unfortunately I shall have to
settle for Concussed by Bathroom Appliance. Which probably means that my photo
won’t be appreciated very much, after all.
* * *
A man friend who lives
in California recently phoned me at great expense from a Santa Barbara call-box
and asked me what clothes I had on. Not having read any fashionable American
novels about sex-by-phone, I found this rather unsettling. It came out of the
blue. I mean, we observed the usual preliminary greetings, such as ‘What time
is it where you are?’ and ‘Have you seen The Player yet, isn’t it great?’
But we had barely touched on the elections and the earthquake forecasts before
he posed this extraordinary question about my attire, leaving me all perplexed
and wrong-footed.
Was this a dirty
phone-call, I thought, or was he simply concerned to conjure up an innocent
mental picture of his faraway pal? Should I give him the benefit of the doubt?
Playing for time (and angling for clues) I asked what he was wearing, but his
answer didn’t help. Evidently his outfit consisted of a T-shirt and trousers,
some trainers and a beany hat. ‘Sounds very nice,’ I said non-committally,
wondering whether the beany hat was a code for something. Either way, I was
still completely in the dark about whether to confess to the old grey army
socks and the jumbo dungarees.
Fran Lebowitz once said
that the telephone is a good way to talk to people without having to offer them
a drink. Personally, I see it as a good way of talking to people without having
to dress up in a high-cut Kim Basinger costume, or apologize for your paltry
wardrobe of seductive gear. In the end, I decided to ignore the overtones, and
acted dumb. I said that actually my clothes were so thickly matted with
cat-hair and household fluff that I could no longer identify them with any
confidence. A smart evasion, which seemed to do the trick, because the subject
turned to the Richter scale forthwith.
I was more disturbed by
this conversation than it really merited, perhaps. But I hold the telephone in
reverence as an instrument of pure verbal communication, and I don’t like to
see it messed about. Surely this is the only form of talk in which you can
convince yourself that the other person is really engaged in a flow of words
entirely undistracted by the extraneous. Which is precisely why it always comes
as a shock to discover that for the past ten minutes the other person has been
keeping an eye on Northern Exposure, or marking exams, fitting a new flea-collar on
a resistant pet, or reading a funny bit from Tristram Shandy.
Saying ‘Have I caught
you at a bad time?’ does not eliminate this problem, I find.
you: Have I caught you at a
bad time?
them: No, not at all. How are
things? (Tap, tap, tap.)
you: Are you sure you’re not
busy?
them: (Tap, tap, tap.) What?
you: Listen, I’ll phone
another time.
them: No, really. This is
lovely. (Tap, tap, tap.)
you: Look, are you typing,
or something?
them: Just the radio play. (Tap,
tap, tap.)
The one about existential despair. (Tap, tap, tap.) I’m doing this big
speech about the black void of silence and the sensation (tap, tap, tap) that nobody is
listening, anywhere in the universe (tap, tap, tap) to anyone else. I
don’t mind if you want to talk, though. (Tap, tap, tap.) It doesn’t bother me.
you: I’m surprised you can
write and talk at the same time.
them: Perhaps you’re right.
I’ll stop for a while. (Clank, clatter, tinkle.)
you: What’s that?
them: Nothing much. I thought
I’d start dinner.
The worst thing is when
they don’t mention they have guests. You chatter away for twenty minutes or so,
and then hear them whisper, ‘Go ahead without me. I think she just needed
someone to talk to. Sorry.’ That’s the other illusion of the telephone, of
course: that the other person is on their own, just as you are. There is a
woman I know who answers the phone in your presence and signals at you to wait;
and then she talks animatedly for thirty minutes without giving a single
indication to the person on the other end that there is any reason not to.
Meanwhile she pulls faces at you, mimes ‘nearly finished’ repeatedly, and makes
exaggerated comic pleading gestures when you make embarrassed efforts to leave.
Imagine how awkward one feels phoning her up, after witnessing all that.
Perhaps I worried too
much about my American friend’s innocent question. He only asked what I was
wearing, after all. He didn’t ask if I was entertaining a coach party from the
Midlands, or examining A-levels, or making a casserole; whereas in fact I was
doing all three, as well as finishing my script for the epic Night of the
Living Teddywomen
and practising bird-calls.
Funny he didn’t remark
on the array of sound effects, really—Shsh, tick, chop, tap, cuckoo—(something like a
jaunty clock repair shop in a Disney cartoon). But then perhaps he was simply
transported by the unbearably erotic notion of a woman, six thousand miles
away, dressed up to resemble the inside of a Hoover bag.
* * *
When you are a single
person, the world is full of happy couples. That’s the idea, anyway; the tragic
little myth we have all picked up from somewhere. In this version of events,
life is a couples-only ceilidh in which the single person is the perpetual
wallflower; she leans over the bridge in St James’s Park in her lonely anorak,
crooning the plaintive country song from Starlight Express (‘I’ve been
U-n-c-o-u-p-l-e-d’), while happy newlyweds chuck beach-balls about, and giggle
together at the ducks.
This is all rubbish, of
course. It rubs no salt in my wound to see people happily paired off; they
could waltz around the concourse at Waterloo in their dozens, and I wouldn’t
care. No, what single life means to me (strangely enough) is that I can’t stand
to hear couples bickering about where to park the car; or stalking off in a
huff at the supermarket. It seems terrible. The other day I saw a man in the
street trying repeatedly to take his wife’s hand, and she kept snatching it
away again. It made my blood run cold, like watching somebody kick a dog.
I wonder whether people
parade their marital misery because they are proud of it. At traffic lights,
you can always see couples in cars staring out in different directions with
their mouths set rectangular like letter-boxes, and with a small thundercloud
visible above their heads. You will have noticed also how those cheerful ‘Bob
and Sandy’ windscreen stickers have largely disappeared, which is something I
take personal credit for. I kept knocking on the glass and saying, ‘Hey, cheer
up, Bob, you’ve got Sandy,’ and ‘Cheer up, Sandy, you’ve got Bob,’ until they
took the stupid things down and cut them in half.
So if I tend to avoid
dinner parties, it is not because I am afraid the couples will canoodle in
front of me, but because the couplesome strangers Derek and Jo need only
exchange a private hostile glance over the sage derby and I start to panic on
their behalf. It is not happy, this Derek-and-Jo; it will split up; its
Derek-and-Jo kiddies will suffer. I turn into a kind of Cassandra, prophesying
the sooner-or-later catastrophe of Derek-and-Jo with a forlorn certainty,
usually even before they have reached the front gate and started arguing.
It is a heavy burden: to
see the inevitable with such clarity. ‘See the cracks!’ I moan inwardly (after
some ritual ‘who’s driving?’ fracas after pudding). ‘Oh, woe! Hear the marital
fabric split and rend, stitch by stitch verily from top to bottom! Weep, ye
marrieds! Weep!’ It is an odd way to behave in a Crouch End dining room, but of
course nobody listens anyway. Or if they do, they probably put it down to
personal disappointment.
This fatalism seems to
be the worst aspect of being single; it gives you a cranky view of the world.
You have heard of ex-hippies who advocate trepanning as the answer to
everything (drill a hole in your skull to let off steam)? Well, I am quite
similar, only I think everyone must tear up the marriage lines or sell the
double bed, or for heaven’s sake quit moaning. As you can imagine,
this makes me pretty useless as an adviser when relationships hit stormy seas,
since my suggestions are always equally radical and precisely the same.
‘I think he’s seeing
another woman, but I can’t believe it’s true,’ sobs a friend, desperate for
support. ‘Split up,’ I advise, promptly, ‘and make sure you get the tumble
drier.’ ‘I am in such turmoil,’ says another. ‘My wife wants to have a baby and
the idea makes me dream about being eaten alive by a big hairy mouth with teeth
in it.’ ‘Mmm,’ I say thoughtfully. ‘Have you considered going your separate
ways?’ On Radio 4’s comedy news programme On the Hour the other day, I heard:
‘A palace spokesman has today confirmed that Prince Harry is to split up,’ and
I automatically thought ‘Good idea; best thing’ before seeing the joke.
The thing is, coupledom
is a bit like childbirth; a week after it’s finished, you can’t imagine what it
was like, or how you got into it. This is the gulf between single people and
couples, and between the different bits of one’s own life. One minute you are
Derek-and-Jo; the next you are Derek or Jo. And in each state you can’t imagine
the other. I have spent about 80 per cent of my adult life in proper committed
long-term relationships, yet at the moment all I can clearly remember is that I
once startled my boyfriend by asking, out of the blue: ‘Why aren’t you a pony?’
This ‘Why don’t they
split up?’ syndrome is not sour grapes, I promise. It is not even cynicism. It
is just an unanswerable point of view, similar to a religious conviction. The
only trouble with this particular panacea (like trepanning) is that once you
have done it, you can’t do it again. Consequently its evangelists cannot follow
their own advice. What do trepanners do when they are depressed? If they kept
drilling holes in their heads, they would risk being mistaken for patio
strawberry-planters.
Similarly, once you have
split up you can’t keep doing it, unless of course you are a simple organism
like an amoeba. So it is quite ironic, really. Here I am, advocating the new
revolutionary pluck-it-out, cut-and-run approach to personal happiness, while
at home I am gradually learning how to patch things up.
* * *
One of the more
difficult things to accept about being newly single is that there is no one to
strike chore-bargains with. You know the sort of thing: ‘If you do the
breakfast, I’ll take the bin out’; ‘I’ll get the milk, you get the papers.’
Make such fair’s-fair suggestions to a cat, I find, and it will just look
preoccupied, and suddenly remember an urgent appointment outside.
The beauty of efficient
teamwork is that it cuts through the grease and grime of household activity
with a brisk one-two, reminiscent of the old telly adverts for Flash. Wisshh,
woossshh, all done. ‘You make a cup of tea, while I lie full-out on this sofa,
preventing it from bucking up and killing somebody.’
Jobs that can’t be
tackled simultaneously stretch out instead in long miserable single file, like
prisoners on a chain-gang, and are dealt with on the weary principle of
one-damn-thing-after-another. The plodding linear quality is depressing.
Sometimes you forget, of course, and glance optimistically at the bin,
fleetingly wondering whether someone else has taken out the rubbish. But they
usually have not. The cheerful midnight pixie with bucket and mop is a sweet
and potent myth, but it is cruelly misleading.
Looking on the bright
side, however, there is great consolation in the knowledge that the Mr Nobody
who takes out the bin is also the Mr Nobody who moves things around so that you
can’t find them. Take the tv remote control, for example. In my old cohabiting
days, how many times did I search frantically among sofa cushions for it,
knowing in my heavy heart that it was probably travelling anti-clockwise on the
M25 by now, snug in a coat pocket on the back seat of the boyfriend’s car?
Living alone, then, it is no wonder you rejoice that things remain precisely
where you left them. You feel a great warmth inside on the day you realize that
if you haven’t finished the marmalade, there is still some marmalade left. The only interference I
have experienced since living alone was when I emerged from the bath one day to
discover the word ‘trhjwqxz’ on my otherwise blank word-processor screen. I
gulped, and stood stock still for a minute, feeling the pulse race in my neck.
And then I realized that a cat had made a dash across the keyboard.
I mention all this
because last week I left a friend alone in my flat for a couple of hours, and
when I came back I realized I could retrace virtually every moment of his stay,
just by observing all the things he had moved from their usual places. The loo
seat was up. A plate with toast crumbs awaited me on the draining-board, along
with a knife tinged with Marmite. A couple of inches of wine had gone from an
opened bottle, and a glass with dregs in it was rolling on the living-room
floor. A book had been replaced in the wrong position on a shelf, a window
opened (and not closed again), the backdoor key hidden so successfully it took
me two hours to find it. I moved stealthily around the flat, feeling a bit like
Sherlock Holmes on the trail of exotic cigar-ash. ‘He’s been here, too!’ I whispered
excitedly. ‘See, he has moved these cassettes!’ Thank goodness I didn’t have a
magnifying-glass, or I would have been down on the carpet, observing the pile
for footprints.
I felt proud and
irritated in equal measure: proud that I can now (like Holmes himself) detect
the tiniest variation in the depth of dust on a pile of Radio Times; irritated for obvious
reasons (mainly to do with washing up). But there was something rather macabre
about this Do Your Own Forensics activity, and eventually I stopped thinking
about it. The idea of living alone is somehow quite closely associated with the
idea of dying alone, too; and I didn’t want to think about the giveaway clues
packed into my own day-to-day life. ‘We found a half-eaten jar of pickled
onions next to the bath. She had fed the cats but not washed the spoon. A
little Post-It note was attached to the bin, with the mysterious words "I
suppose it’s my turn again?" written on it in big wobbly capital letters,
underlined.’
If this sounds
self-pitying and morbid, it is nevertheless something that single people very
often joke about; the collective single mind contains a whole sub-section
labelled: ‘What if I died?’ ‘Thanks for the present,’ they say, ‘but what if I
died, and somebody found the room stacked to shoulder height with twenty-five
years’ worth of Pet Fish Monthly?’ I remember a woman once proudly describing to
me how she had rescued herself from acute self-consciousness by assembling a
library of pop psychology books, with titles such as 101 Ways Not To Care
What Other People Think. The effect of these books had been miraculous she said;
she had been transformed into someone who did not give a damn. I was impressed,
and asked her to check the publishing details. ‘Oh, but I threw them all out,
in the end,’ she said in a lowered voice. ‘I mean, what if I died and people
came in and found a load of books with titles like those?’
* * *
The day that I became
single again—some time last August—I felt it was important to perform some
symbolic acts. After all, I reasoned, you never know when a social
anthropologist might be watching. I tried to picture what a newly single woman
would be expected to do, to mark the reclaiming of the living environment after
years of cohabitation. Washing the walls and beating the carpets sounded the
right kind of thing—but on the other hand it also sounded a bit strenuous, and
I didn’t want to alarm the cats.
So perhaps, instead, the
newly single woman might do a little light tidying? Form the old newspapers
into distinct new piles? Pick up the dusty used tissue that she always stared
at, mindlessly, through hour-long telephone conversations? This all seemed
manageable, given the emotional circumstances. Oh yes, and she might
ceremoniously replace the lavatory seat to its ‘down’ position, with an
exaggerated flourish and a round of applause. This was ample Coming of Age
in Samoa
stuff for a single afternoon.
But I remember that the
first evening I was also moved to root through a heap of books until I found
Anthony Storr’s Solitude. This was a book I had wanted to read for a very long time;
and I felt I should seize the moment. I read it avidly until 9.30pm, after
which I left it unopened on the coffee table for the next three months, hoping
that some of its inspiring message would miraculously buoy my spirit. I don’t
know why I stopped reading. People must have thought I was a real stoic,
savouring a book called Solitude over such a long period. Either that, of
course, or that I couldn’t read without moving my lips.
Storr thinks that
solitude has much to recommend it. He says it promotes creativity—making people
write novels, and so forth. Look at Anita Brookner, Edward Gibbon and, er,
many, many others. Interestingly, a large proportion of our philosophers turn
out to have been lonely miserable gits who walked about wearing buckets on
their heads.
There was something
wrong with the appeal of this argument, but I couldn’t put my finger on it.
Months later, however, I do still hold out hope that the novel-writing and
world-class philosophy stage will bounce along nicely when the time is right. I
have bought a few note-pads, just in case. And a cardigan. The only trouble is
that at the moment I can’t seem to pass a rather more mundane stage in the
experience of solitude. I can’t seem to overcome my excitement at being able
(at long last) to listen to The Archers without having to do it in the shed.
I never accepted the
idea that ‘love means never having to say you’re sorry’. In my own case, love
invariably means never being allowed to listen to The Archers—and in fact saying
‘Oops, sorry, I’ll turn it off then, shall I?’ when discovered in the guilty
act. I kept faith with The Archers during three solid years of strict prohibition,
just waiting for the day when I could again turn the theme tune up to maximum
volume, as a statement: ‘Yes, I love The Archers, and I’m proud.’
My fanaticism may have
been forced underground, but it remained resilient, like the French Resistance.
I take this as living proof that inside every cohabiting person there is a
single person humming ‘Dum de dum de dum de dum’ waiting to get out.
The more I think about
it, the more I impress myself—the clever ways I found to mask my addiction. I
remember those Sunday mornings when I would grab the car-keys at around
10.13am, saying, ‘Just popping down to Croydon for the Sunday papers, dear. I
shouldn’t be more than, oooh, let’s say an hour.’ And I would dash off and sit
in the car with dark glasses on, agog to the omnibus edition on the car radio.
I don’t suppose the boyfriend ever suspected anything—although he did say: ‘Why
are you taking a flask of cocoa?’ and ‘What’s wrong with buying them from the
man on the corner?’
I expect the Archers euphoria stage was
something Wittgenstein went through, too—and Edward Gibbon, I shouldn’t wonder.
The other novelties certainly wore off, in time. The tidying of newspapers, for
example, started to look like a mug’s game, so I ditched it. I expect I can
call in a specialist with a fork-lift truck when I can’t kick a path to the
window any more.
For a while, too, I made
a point of playing records with significant words—‘I’m Gonna Wash That Man
Right Out of My Hair’; also ‘I’m Still Standing’ by Elton John—and lectured
friends on the potency of cheap music.
But now the flat is
sometimes eerily quiet, and I rattle around in it, like a lone Malteser in a
shoebox. It is an odd thing, this single life. And Gloria Steinem’s famous
feminist axiom—that a woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle—has
been of strangely little comfort. I agree with the sentiment, but I wish she
had chosen a different image. Unfortunately I find it very easy to imagine a
sardine on a mountain-bike joyfully bowling along country lanes; or a tuna in a
yellow jersey winning the Tour de France on the happiest day of its life.
* * *
One of the consolations
of getting older is that one day you look in your address book and find you
have acquired a list of specialists (hairdresser, mechanic, hypnotherapist,
carpet-layer) whom you can mention in conversation and pass on to your friends.
‘Try my Ear, Nose and Throat man,’ you say, offhandedly. Or, ‘My acupuncturist
knows an aromatherapist who recommends a plumber who could really help you with
that!’ Gosh, it makes you feel sophisticated. And at the same time, of course,
it helps you fill the rather big address book (with pussy-cats on) that
somebody gave you for Christmas.
I now have a builder, a
carpenter, a gas man, and a painter and decorator. Most exciting of all,
however, is the handsome ‘24-hour emergency gardener’, whose services I
unfortunately rarely need. I sometimes think of him in the small hours, though,
and picture him trouble-shooting in a dark garden somewhere, lashing daffs to
splints in a high wind, looking Lawrentian. Should I call up with a bogus
middle-of-the-night problem? ‘Thank God you’re there!’ I might say, feigning a
verge-of-tears voice. ‘It’s—er, a 24-hour emergency! And here I am, clothed
only in these—er, diaphanous jim-jams, unequal to the struggle with the
elements!’
The only glaring hole in
my list of blokes is under ‘window cleaner’, because the local chap simply
refuses to clean my windows, on the grounds (I think) that I didn’t register
with him in 1948. ‘Excuse me,’ I say periodically, pretending that the idea is
quite a new one, and that we have never had the conversation before. ‘You
wouldn’t do my
windows, would you?’ He looks down at me from his position on the ladder, and
just says ‘No’, but he packs the word with an impressive degree of hostility
and affront. My question seems to offend him; I don’t know why. I mean, he is a window cleaner.
I mention all this
because it is a great advantage of the single life to be able to say ‘There is
something wrong with the heating; I think I’ll get a man in,’ without having to
negotiate with the boyfriend first. Boyfriends, I find, tend to reply ‘No, let
me take a look, I’m sure it’s straightforward,’ and end up emptying the S-bend
on to their shoes at three in the morning. However competent the boyfriend, the
sight of him with his head in the gas cupboard and the sound of
bang!-clink!-Oops! is enough to make my blood run cold. ‘What do you mean,
Oops?’ I say, dancing about in panic. ‘Nothing.’ ‘You said Oops!’ ‘No I
didn’t.’ ‘You did.’
The trouble is that you
start to identify with the boyfriend’s tussle with his ego, which is getting
out of hand. And strangely, no amount of hand-wringing or helpful
why-don’t-you-call-it-a-day noises make his tussle any easier. ‘It’s just this
last hole,’ he says grimly, after a day of constant drilling, and you peek
aghast into a room filled with brick dust and a wall that has been drilled so
many times it resembles pegboard. The helpful suggestion, ‘Hey, let’s forget
those silly old shelves, and give the books to the Russians!’ fails to lift the
gloom.
Which is why I prefer
the professional option. This is a simple business arrangement. If the bloke
has problems with the job, his ego is his own affair. Recently, a rather
lugubrious gas engineer came to remove the old pump from my central heating,
and when he said ‘Oh dear, oh dear, it won’t budge an inch,’ and ‘Do you know,
when you can get one side to come loose, the other side always sticks,’ I just
said ‘Really?’ and carried on watching daytime tv. Afterwards, when he
discovered his car had been towed away from outside my house, I did not
identify with his wounded pride. I drove him to the car pound and told him the
fine was usually about eighty quid.
Left to my own
resources, I admit I do sometimes ‘get a man in’ when it is not strictly
necessary. I once called a heating engineer when the only problem was that I
had turned the thermostat the wrong way; similarly I recently called out a
bemused Zanussi man merely to clean the filter on my washing machine. A live-in
partner might have stopped me, perhaps; but on the other hand, I might equally
have come home to find bits of washing machine all over the floor, and a
scribbled note ‘Don’t use water. Have gone to Zanussi spare parts centre in
Cornwall,’ while the culprit filter sat unnoticed, cocooned in soggy fluff.
On acquiring a
boyfriend, then, it is important to know that a chap who says enthusiastically
‘Why don’t we knock the two rooms into one?’ is not necessarily an expert with
a sledgehammer. He has just always fancied the idea of knocking down a wall. A
friend of mine was married to a chap possessed of this spirit of enquiry, who
carried a Swiss Army penknife at all times, and would offer to make new holes
in watch-straps (sometimes when you didn’t want one). At dinner parties he was
noted for telling stories of fast-thinking chaps with Swiss Army penknives who
had saved lives by performing emergency tracheotomies. Understandably,
everybody kept quite quiet after this, and chewed very carefully. The slightest
choke, and you knew he was likely to leap from his seat and cut your throat. To
him, it was the ultimate Do It Yourself.
* * *
‘You want to meet Vic,’
said Jonathan a few months ago, when I was having a therapeutic snivel one
evening after a movie.
‘Why?’ I sobbed.
‘Because he’s a great
bloke,’ he said, heartily. ‘Don’t be so suspicious all the time, Lynne. Loosen
up. Vic is a real free spirit, with marvellous ideas, and funnily enough his
last girlfriend just threw him out so he’s available. Some sort of bust-up over
money, I think. Anyway, I’ll introduce you.’
‘What does he do?’ I
sniffed.
‘He’s very young at
heart. Ha ha good old Vic.’
‘What does he do,
though?’
‘Well, he’s very
artistic, and he’s promised himself that if he doesn’t get into something by
the time he’s forty-eight, he’ll get a proper job.’
I thought about it. The
distinct odour of rat whiffled past my nostrils, unignorably.
‘Does he like cats?’ I
asked at last.
‘No, he’s allergic, I
think.’
‘Thank goodness for
that, then,’ I sighed with relief. ‘I had an awful feeling for a moment that he
was exactly my type.’
I hate to be the bearer
of bad news, but Vic is a phenomenon of our times. I used to think I was
unlucky, but then I found out I was just single and averagely tolerant of
failure, which made me a pushover for layabouts. It is possible that married
readers are unfamiliar with the world of Vic, but each single woman discovers
him for herself in a very short while. The telltale clue is when you find
yourself paying for both dinners, but pretending not to notice. ‘Did I? Never
mind, it’s only money. Tell me again about this project for knitting old
cassette tape into lightweight blankets for the homeless, and charging them ten
quid each. It sounds fascinating.’
Feminists, of course,
are not supposed to admit that there is a man shortage. We have this horrible
feeling that it will give ammunition to the backlash, who will jump up and down
saying ‘Tee hee! Told you! Only yourselves to blame!’ But if there were a man shortage,
hypothetically speaking, and it stretched out arid and flat to the far horizon,
then you see that little shimmering dot in the distance? The one coming
steadily towards you, like Omar Sharif in Lawrence of Arabia, getting slowly bigger
and bigger and more sinister, as the only sign of available life? It’s Vic.
‘Tinker, tailor,
soldier, sailor, Vic,’ goes the prune-counting of the wised-up single woman
each morning. ‘Rich man, poor man, Vic, beggar man, thief, Vic.’ Vic ought to
be more substantially represented in this litany, really; but you get the gist.
The really interesting thing, however, is not that single women are eating too
many prunes. It is that Vic, like the devil, is everywhere, yet always comes as
a surprise. When he’s somebody else’s Vic, you can identify him at once.
Whereas when he is your own, and he is blatantly using your mains electricity
to recharge his car battery again, you can’t.
‘Ooh, so when will I get
to meet him?’ you say to a friend who recently went out with Vic on a first
date.
‘Soon, I expect. He’s
moved in.’
There is a short pause,
while you tell yourself it’s none of your business.
‘Really?’ you say,
non-committally.
‘It’s working out quite
well, actually. I mean, being home all day he can take in the milk.’
‘Great.’
‘And he cooks meals and
things, and above all he trusts me with his problems.’
‘What does he do, then,
exactly?’
‘He’s such a free
spirit. Ha ha good old Vic.’
‘No, but what does he
do?’
‘He used to be a disc
jockey. And he’s got so many schemes he doesn’t know where to start. He reckons
he needs a mobile phone and some headed notepaper before he can really get
going. But unfortunately he hasn’t got either at the moment.’
‘He sounds—er, laid
back.’
‘Yes! Sometimes we laugh
about it. I say he’s so laid back he’ll fall off and hurt himself.’
‘Ho ho,’ you say,
politely.
They are not all called
Vic, incidentally. It would make things too easy if they were. But I do feel it
is worthwhile to list a few of the obvious warning signs, so that more women
can be spared the misery of asking Vic, on some fateful day, ‘Did you only love
me for my free battery-charging facilities?’ and then waiting for five
agonizing minutes while he seriously weighs up the pros and cons. The term
‘free spirit’ ought to set alarm bells clanging; also Vic’s habit of abruptly
crossing the road to avoid walking past his bank. Watch out, too, for his
suggestion (curious for a free spirit, after all) that you take out wills in
one another’s favour after only a brief acquaintance.
The really clever thing
about Vic is that he feels most comfortable with women who are independent, for
reasons beyond the obvious. To an independent woman, you see, the notion of
sponging is so unthinkable that she can’t bring herself to accuse anybody else
of doing it. But the sad fact is, there are people in the world who consider
themselves perfectly eligible for relationships yet whose personal motto is the
same as New Hampshire’s: ‘Live Free or Die’. And unfortunately they don’t all
wear it on a T-shirt.
* * *
They will sack me when
they read this. But how can I keep pretending to be single when I have recently
entered a rather serious relationship? Ho hum, another nice job down the drain.
Of course, I didn’t mean to get into anything so heavy. In fact, I struggled
quite hard against it.
‘Don’t you understand?’
I moaned, sinking dramatically to my knees, and hammering my fist on the
Axminster. ‘I just can’t afford to get into this. I mean, literally. I can’t
afford
to get into this.’
It all started in June,
when I took a few days’ holiday at a hotel on the north Norfolk coast, all by
myself. I had envisioned a carefree time, joining boat-trip excursions to
blustery sand-spit nesting grounds, pedalling my nice bike down poppy-lined B roads,
and enjoying solitary meals in the hotel dining room with just a book for
company. For of course (ha ha) I thought of it as ‘just a book’, then.
‘I’m taking Possession, by A.S. Byatt,’ I
breezily informed the cats while I packed (hoping they would be impressed).
‘You know Possession, kitties: big one, really literary, Booker Prize-winner,
everybody’s read it already, bit of a mouthful so they say.’ And I slung it in
with the socks. None of us guessed what the future would hold—that after six
warm days and nights of intimate contact with Possession, we would be locked in
a tight stranglehold of book-and-woman relationship that would probably last
for the rest of my literate life.
It is peculiar. I feel
as though I have been married for forty years to the same book. Possession and I are not on the
same wavelength, yet somehow I can’t break free, and there is no literary
equivalent to Relate.
Last week, when somebody
asked me to a dinner party, I said automatically: ‘Do you mind if I bring my
book?’ And they said, er, no, of course not.
But they didn’t
anticipate the change in me. We turned up at 7.30 (Possession and I) and sat quietly
in a corner; and then we left together at about 10. ‘Are you sure everything is
all right?’ whispered my host in the hall, as he showed us out. And I shrugged
and raised my eyes to the ceiling, as if to say: ‘What I have to put up with.’
I got in the car and put
Possession
on the passenger seat, and thought back to our early days at the hotel, where
my fellow diners often drew attention to my book at meal times.
I had thought it was
funny, then, the way their friendly comments would have sounded frankly
presumptuous had I been sea |