Well, it’s happening. We’re here in Teddington. Been living
in our new home for one whole week. It’s not quite back to my roots as I was
brought up in Fulham, schooled in Battersea, and after living in Birmingham and
several years abroad, lived back in Battersea before spending 37 years in the
Taff Valley, South Wales. Well, that is with the exception of a year spent in
Shetland. It seems unbelievable that
given my restless personality I could have sustained a life and been happy in
the one place for so long.
‘Most people do it the other way-leave London for the
country in retirement,’ ‘That must be very expensive,’ ‘You don’t sound Welsh,’
(to me)’You’ve only been here just a week and you’re coming to Pilates/Country
Dancing/Welsh Choir, ‘ You want to shake up your life, eh?’ are a few of
the reactive comments we’ve had to our
coming to live here.
People nod sweetly when we mention a daughter and a
grandchild but we know that they are also wondering how we can afford to move
into the wealthiest borough of London-Richmond-Upon Thames (RUT), where 69.8%
of the population between 16 and 74 are in paid work. Unemployment is just 3%. You’d have to be well off to survive here,
life is expensive-no local Aldi or Lidl and until we get our Freedom passes for
London transport, travelling by train up
to Waterloo costs us each around £9 return.
Our intention is to have a year to 18 months out from our old life while
we try and sell our house back in Taffs Well. To those of you wondering, we’re
financing this year from our illicit earnings.
According to an article, ‘Getting to know your Borough’ in TW11, an independent magazine for
Teddington, inhabitants in RUT live a long and healthy life, nationally rated
amongst the highest. ‘Affluence is cited
as a major contributor, with wealthy inhabitants being less likely to smoke,
drink and be overweight.’
In
Rhondda Cynon Taff (RCT), one of the most deprived areas in the UK, people die
young for the opposite reasons-inhabitants are more likely to smoke, drink and
be overweight. I don’t know what the employment/unemployment figures are for
RCT but they are probably one of polar opposites to RUT. I guess it’s going to take a bit of time to
adjust to this new identity and environment. Perhaps by the end of our time here I’ll have lose weight,
given up drinking, and Rhys’ various ailments including plantar fasciitis, a
painful foot condition may have gone away.
We learnt from our year in Shetland that if you want to get
to know people the first place to start is with the neighbours. But this isn’t
Shetland, when on our first Saturday morning we knocked on doors people did open them and say ‘Hello’.
Some said ‘Welcome’ and two neighbours even said, ‘Come on in, let me tell you
where to get the bus and by the way here’s my life story while we’re at it.’
When we knocked on the doors of the five other flats in this
block nobody opened their door. We’ve tried several times now. We know there
are people living here cos we can here the front door slam and we’ve spied people
going out from our front window. The guy
opposite leaves his trainers outside his door to fool us. When I told my oldest school friend, who lives
in Hackney,’ she said that knocking on people’s doors in London is a no-no.
Last Friday we heard
voices down below our sitting room and twitched the curtain to see two young
men drinking large glasses of red wine and smoking at the edge of the communal
garden. One of the young men had his shirt off to show off his angel and snake
tattoos. He turned to look up and I saw
a tattooed gun on his upper arm. I quickly untwitched the curtain and got Rhys
up from his chair to look at the loose wires hanging from below our flat. We’ve
decided not to pursue door knocking as our main way to meet the neighbours. Instead we’re going to try hanging out in the garbage
room the night before the recycling is collected.
The next lesson from Shetland if you want to meet people
when you don’t work is to join clubs or do courses. As we’re on a budget we’re
looking for cheap/free clubs and courses, so I did research into The University
of the Third Age and Age UK and came up with a variety of activities that might
interest us.
When I called the class leaders, they all answered
with,’Hellooo???’ as if nobody ever phoned them. The lady leading country
dancing asked me how I’d got her number. When I told her it was on-line, she
said,’ Oh, am I on-line? I didn’t know that.’ She then asked me if I’d done any
folk dancing since school and I was thrown back to Miss Fournier, my PE teacher
who was always reminding me to point my toes gracefully when I galloped down
the line of my friends urging me on to mess up the dance. The lady had never
heard of Circle Dancing. Shirley, my
circle dancing teacher would be quite hurt. She’s spent a lifetime getting
people to dance in circles.
In another
phone call, the line went silent, and I said,’Hellooo???’ ‘Sorry,’ the chap said.’ I put the phone down
while I was thinking what play we’re reading next session.’ ‘Who wrote Laburnham Grove?’ As if I knew. I’m
sure he’ll remember by next month. When I enquired if I need to read the play
beforehand, he assured me that the members like the surprise of reading the
play afresh. Anyway, I’m sure he’ll remember the author by next month or the librarian will remind him. He’s
ordered several copies from the local library for us.
Rhys was somewhat disappointed by his visit to the London
Welsh Centre. We’d met by chance and the
charms of our grandson a member on a birthday cruise up the Thames, and he
suggested Rhys come along to join the choir. When he went into the lounge full
of older people and greeted them in Welsh, they looked blank, and then one man
said that he didn’t speak Welsh. Just like Taffs Well. He was advised to go to the bar and there he
found a lovely young Welsh speaker who he chatted up. Then he met the choir
master who made it clear that Rhys’s inability to read music would be held
against him and membership was by audition.
’ I never wanted to wear a red
blazer anyway,’ he said arriving back home late and £15 poorer (cost of
overland and tube). He’s trying ‘Singing for Pleasure,’ with a U3A group in Kew
on Thursday where he won’t need to read music or wear a red blazer. He hopes.