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The city did not collapse in a shudder

January 1, 2012 Leave a comment

“The city did not collapse in a shudder
The rain it never came
At least my confessions made you laugh
I know it’s a little crazed
But these dreams
They seem
So real to me”

REM – Sing for the Submarine (Accelerate, 2008)

Well, 2012 is here and so am I

[and, I guess, you]

and, as far as I can tell, the world outside is continuing pretty much the same as it was yesterday.

Which was 2011.

Yup, we’ve crossed another man-made rubicon, a date point defined by international agreements

[only, of course, my family in the UK, crossed it five hours earlier than I, and eight hours earlier than my family and friends on the west coast]

and folk are posting their reflections on the year just passed, and their hopes and commitments for the year to come.

This is a good thing; a small chance for self-reflection in a world that would steal oxygen from the pursuit of alignment.

I’ve written before about the importance of now and how I don’t look back in regret – so there’ll be no resolutions here, no prescriptions for how I will be a better person than I was last year. Every day is a resolution; every waking moment an opportunity for transcendence and redemption.

2011 was the year when I stopped trying, stopped denying, and simply accepted my story-telling self. 12 lunar cycles came and went, bringing me 2 novels, Family Rules and Escalation, 2 screenplays, Team Building and Inventing Kenny, and a collection of poetry, Garbled Glittering Glamours; bringing me friendship with James and Timmy, my screen-writing partners on Inventing Kenny; bringing me the joy of making music with Pete and Tony in Monkey68 and, every so often, wailing a few leads with The Rivergods.

2011 came and went in calm, busy tranquility, with me flowing into the cracks and rendering life smoother in the sailing.

And who knows what is to come in this story-telling life? After all, I’m the guy who was surprised by the initial idea for Escalation in April of last year and who’d finished the first draft by August, publishing in December. I’m the guy who has these weird dreams that just demand to be written.

I’m the guy who’s already laid the structure of the next project out on a restaurant table last week with James.

That’s me… Telling stories.

So, roll on 2012 – in every breath and beat of my heart, I’ll be resolving to be more of what I have the potential to be. In each moment, I’ll be loving my friends, family and the world we share. With each word, I am a commitment to tell the story as it should be told; honest, clear and true to my muse.

Roll on 2012… this world is not ending, it’s just becoming what it’ll be next.

Memento: 2001- My own time and space oddity

December 6, 2010 Leave a comment

Memento 1: Snapshots and Tattoos

As we draw to the close of the year, I want to tell the story of my 2010. And I will. But first, I need to share 2001, the first year when life truly held up the mirror and said “stop.”

Loudly.

In 2000, my team at work had won a national award for innovation in recruitment and retention. There was love and connectedness in this small group of people who had come together to achieve something magnificent. I had been in corporate life for a decade, and my natural home – Talent and Organization Capability – for 6 years. And though young compared to my peers – I was 32 in 2000 – had been recognized for my own talent, earning my position on our local HR leadership team. With that promotion, I’d also entered the management ranks, where additional incentives kicked in, including bonus, share-options and company car.

In the common view of most in corporate life, my career was rocketing and I had ‘arrived’. My young self felt justified through my performance. I was proud. Others read that pride as arrogance – not my intent, but I can understand how my behaviour implied that.

But all of this is preamble to help set context for 2001.

In late December 2000, I was coming down with flu. From the Christmas shutdown, I looked towards an early January 2-day leadership team off-site to be held at a hotel about 12 miles away. My transport at the time was a 600cc sportsbike and, looking at the wintry conditions and how I was feeling, I booked an overnight room between the two days so that I didn’t have to make the risky journey home and back. I even said to Jane that I didn’t know whether I should be riding at all.

The off-site happened – full of the usual naval-gazing, planning, hope and resignation; promises to do things differently that lacked the commitment to be remembered beyond the flip-charts upon which they were captured. With my developing flu, I hardly had the energy to become my usual frustrated self. The meeting ended and I wrapped myself up in my biking protective gear, heading out into the cold night, conscious of the slushy rain that was falling, leaving a slick coating on the road. As luck and irony would have it, the local Audi garage was a mile away from the hotel and I stopped off there to look at my prospective company car, which would help me not have to ride during the winter. Then, once again, out into the night and its treacherous road conditions.

I don’t recall the accident. All I remember are flashbacks in the ambulance. In those flashbacks, I appear/wake-up

[I'm pretty sure I passed out with the flu while riding]

in a gentle corner, realize I’m too fast for the conditions and weigh up front-brake or back-brake. For those who don’t know bikes, a back-brake skid would slip the back wheel out from under me, dropping me under the bike and into a skid (towards the wall). A front-brake lock-up would stand the bike up, with the possibility of flipping me into the air in the direction of the skid. In the flashback I make the (wrong) choice to try and feather the front brake.

From my injuries and the damage to my helmet, I must have flown through the air, landing on my left side, chin, shoulder and hip. Two bones in my hand shattered, everything else was very bad bruising – my protective gear had saved me from much worse damage.

I woke up on a gurney, with my legs aching

[my friend Terry had broken his neck a decade earlier and when we were with him in hospital, we had to keep asking him to try and wiggle his toes - I had been wiggling my toes so much to prove that my neck wasn't broken that my calf muscles were cramping]

unable to move. Doctors were looking at x-rays, one of which I noticed had a cigarette lighter that I’d had in my inner pocket. I disappeared again.

When I came back, Jane was sitting by the gurney. I still couldn’t move. I told her to take the cigarette lighter out of my pocket; that it was confusing the doctors. I disappeared again.

Throughout the next few days I disappeared and came back again with regularity – a symptom of my need to recover and the heavy, morphine-based sedation that had been applied. People visited, some of them real, some of them imagined. I only learnt of their presence through discussion once I’d recovered.

In those days, I experienced vivid hallucinations, mostly played out on the ceiling as I lay immobilised on the bed. In one, a rotting pile of meat in an empty warehouse, replete with flies and maggots; in another, a reformation priest climbing into his hiding hole by the fireplace, looking back over his shoulder and asking me to be quiet while the soldiers hammered at the door. These were not dreams – these were real events playing out in front of me – and I could not get away from them.

At one point, I awoke in floods of tears, and could not move to wipe them away, just as I could not remove their source.

“Why are you so unhappy?” I asked myself, “life’s going great. You’ve got the career, you’re being recognized. Why are you so unhappy?”

The answer was simple, and had been in front of me all along. Work had become the big thing and everything about life that I loved – Jane, music, writing – had taken on the role of potential escape routes. If only I got a recording contract I wouldn’t have to work, if only I got a publishing deal, if only… if only… if only…

In my period of forced meditation, I had no choice but to contemplate how I had got here, how I had chosen to be this person, and I decided that from that point on I would be the person I am, a plate juggler, a renaissance man, I would do everything I’m made to do and never again let anything become the one big thing that excluded all else.

I came out of hospital having made a deal with myself.

In the next few months, I revisited and finished ‘Do Sparrows Eat Butterflies?’, my shattered hand was recovering so I made only a small amount of music.

Besides, my working life was falling apart.

It started with the team which began, literally, to physically disintegrate. Within 2 months of my accident in our team of 11 people, we had 5 pregnancies, 2 miscarriages, 1 case of ME, 1 undiagnosed acute gastric illness and a terminal diagnosis of bone cancer. Here was I with my own post-traumatic baggage, trying to manage, care for and lead this team that was falling apart.

Alongside this physical stress, the company went into a pre-merger recruitment slow-down and the team was reassigned to wider duties. We had gone from a 12 people to 4, with the understanding that the team would regather when recruitment took off again. Little did I know the knives were being sharpened.

In March, at the height of the team’s crisis, the recruitment faucet came back on at full-force-plus, the workload would have taken 14 people to process. We had 4. Performance suffered. And all those who had resented our previous success took the knives from their sheaths. I and the remaining members of the team were working 15-hour days 6 days a week, and other members of the function were double-checking work just in the hope of finding an error they could take glee in correcting. When the work outstrips available resource by 300%, such errors happen. At just the point where we could have united, I was trapped in a game of cat-and-mouse with people who had previously been trusted colleagues.

These unnecessary, wasteful, pointless political games. Colleagues so frustrated by their own day-to-day that lashing out at me was easier than confronting their truth.

Betrayal is a bitter taste.

I wish I could have helped them.

I found myself by the summer once more buried in work, which was trying hard once again to become the big thing.

But Sparrows was finished. And I had managed to keep focus upon my hospital bed deal. I was exhausted.

The world became about days and moments. Make the right decision, catch the error, fix it, deal with the fall-out, shrug and move on. Swallow down the frustration and hurt into a small, molten ball at my core.

All the time, my own mantra: “Don’t let work become the big thing.”

In September, we launched a global approach to defining single, common career ladders and the kick-off meeting was held via video-conference. That Tuesday morning, I sat alone in a video-conference room in the UK, with everyone else gathered in Groton, CT. As ever, it was a difficult meeting, frustrating to be on the end of video-conference with folk who really didn’t know how to run virtual meetings; doing my best to participate, though hampered by technology and behavior.

I stepped out at one point to go to the bathroom. And someone said, “something’s happening in New York”. When I got back to the video-con and my laptop, I scanned the BBC website. A plane had hit the World Trade Center.

I watched the drama of the 9/11 attacks happen via the web, telling the people at the other end to finish the meeting, that they needed to be with family and friends. Not until there was an announcement at their end did they stop the meeting. By this time, all three planes had hit and the twin towers were burning.

I left the meeting room in a daze, stunned as many were on that day. I passed Adam in the corridor – “It’s like Kennedy,” he said, “everyone will remember where they were when this happened.” Plasma screens in our café showed events playing out, the collapsing towers.

Numb, all I could think of were the thousands of people who compromised their lives to go to work that day – who didn’t kiss their partners, who shouted at the kids for disturbing their emailing, who didn’t take a vacation because there was a short notice deadline. My deal had never been more in focus or visceral as it was walking back to my desk that morning.

In the next few days, we moved into crisis mode at work, monitoring colleagues who were travelling in the US at the time of the attacks and who couldn’t get home. The crisis team really came through, and did a job of which to be highly proud. On that team, all of us who had been at political loggerheads just weeks earlier, gathered to deliver what needed to be delivered.

At one point I was chatting with Dermott, my colleague and mentor, who had once told me everything is learning if you’re open to the lesson. Here I was, reeling from 9/11, the disintegration of our team, my good friend Jo facing a terminal cancer.

“I get it,” I said, “what more is there to learn?”

He urged me to stay open.

3 weeks later, Jane and I learned that she was pregnant with our first child, Elise.

And I knew what lesson I could draw from these brutal, brutal events.

At the end of the year, Jane and I travelled to Florida and Louisiana to rest and recuperate, spend time with well-loved friends. I waved goodbye to 2001 changed – a year that started with my nearly losing my life, and ended with a new life to love. Of all the turning points in my life, this was the most profound and fundamental.

Love-peace-trust,

Vince

Words: Sunday Morning at the Ice Rink

November 9, 2010 Leave a comment

Cold white noise
hissing
Punctuated by
rattle of skates
whistling coach
clatter and tap
stick to ice

She bumps into the wall
no master of the stop
Still learning
to bend her knees
to harry
chase
sprint
on this ice
where standing
once proved
tough
Where
calamitous tumbles
brought the bruise

Round she goes
A little faster
Each time she passes
she smiles
A quick thumbs up
and she’s off
A little faster
Revolutions
This smiling
sliding
skating girl

[For Elise]   

Categories: Family, Poems Tags: ,

Words: The word is fuck and it means…

October 6, 2010 Leave a comment

Blog posts of morality
Parental logic
and hand-me-down
dictats

Do this do that
What I say, not
what you see me do
Be who I am  

Your free expression
is constrained
from day one unless
until

You realize
the words you choose
to place in your mouth
are yours

So if you want
to say ‘Fuck’
whenever the moment
feels right

Go ahead and sing
Shout it
from roof-tops
through megaphones

Your words are yours
Use them how you will
humour or anger
sadness or boredom

But never in laziness
You lower yourself
when you choose easy-outs
avoidance

Speak, yes speak
and do me a favour
Watch close for reactions
raised eyebrows, clenched jaw

If the words you choose
upset another
be willing to consider
alteration

Be willing to consider
though not your aim
that your expression
can hurt someone

though it’s often a matter
of impact
over intent
some words can cut

Your words are yours
Use them as you will
They are more than words
Your words are you

They are your act
your decision
Your choices
You in the world

They are who you are
In the practices
speaking, writing
be yourself

Know what you’re saying
Know what is heard
Know what you mean
Know you’re your words

Then if it’s still OK
Say ‘Fuck’ all you want
I’ll love you for caring
to care what you say

[For E&K - A little reminder to myself, that they will
discover the world for themselves and not
through my own filtered experience]

Categories: Family, Poems Tags: , , , ,

It’s all been said and done before

August 20, 2010 Leave a comment
Love is real, real is love,
Love is feeling, feeling love,
Love is wanting to be loved.
Love is touch, touch is love,
Love is reaching, reaching love,
Love is asking to be loved.
Love is you,
You and me,
Love is knowing,
We can be.
Love is free, free is love,
Love is living, living love,
Love is needing to be loved.

[Lennon]

And though it’s all been said and done before, living it for yourself can be such a joy.

Love-peace-trust

Vince

Categories: Possibilities Tags: , ,

Words: Gramps

August 13, 2010 Leave a comment

When I look at me
I see all the things
I’ve once been
I was proud to say
I was young
then
But now my bones ache
and I don’t see too well
and you’ll have to say that again

Sit me down
Yes, it’s comfy like that
Please don’t worry
I don’t need another cushion
I’d much prefer
you to just listen
to my stories
I’ve lived a life
Full enough to share with you

Now the morning’s gone
and the afternoon sun
is fading
I am old now
but my soul is that
of the young man I was
And I would lay you flat
If I thought
you’d let your pity
overcome your love for me

Evening’s come
Close the curtains
Listen closely
for there’s something I have to say
before I go to bed
I’ve always loved you my child
From your first breath
to this last conversation
It’s time to say
Goodnight

(for Horace Coleman Underwood)

Categories: Poems Tags: , ,

Travel, hospitals and all the time in the world

July 28, 2010 Leave a comment

So, here I am back in the UK on a short-notice trip to see my Dad in hospital, support my Mum as she in turn supports him and give my sister the chance to take a vacation and get away (as much as she can).

Dad continues to recover from two major surgeries – the second a complication of the first – and we all have months of recuperation to look forward to, set against the backdrop that a significant compromise to his condition (from an infection or similar) could take him suddenly. This brutal situation is where love comes home.

I’m sat in Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge, Dad’s home for the last ten weeks and for months to come, drinking a coffee in the food court just inside the hospital entrance, waiting for a little while before I can go up and see him.

This could be a small shopping mall, with its collection of eateries and shops, were it not for the haunted look on the faces surrounding me – these are not shoppers, these are people – family, friends, colleagues – killing time before the next visiting hour or doctors’ briefing. These are people waiting to see whether the news is bad or good, whether the worst imaginable has happened, is happening, will happen. These are people waiting.

We are all waiting.

Like in the airport the other day, sitting in some ho-hum restaurant, eating too much food that I didn’t really feel like eating, biding my time while waiting for the flight. Waiting.

I offered the couple at the next table some of my over-sized appetizer – they laughed and, as Brits, we shared an easy, shallow joke about American portion sizes – a brief connection while we waited.

The guy who had stood in line before me at the coffee shop is back in line again. He doesn’t look like he’s queuing to make a complaint, so I’ve got to presume that he’s after another coffee. I’ve only had two or three mouthfuls in the same time – he either drinks really quickly through an asbestos mouth, or someone has joined him. I hope it’s the latter. Hospitals have to be one of the most depressing places to sit alone.

There’s a meeting going on at a table over there, three women huddled over charts and powerpoint slides. Not medical, these look like administrative matters. They look pressured but not stressed – focused on the task in hand.

The couple who have just sat down at the table next to me pound down muffins, coffee and orange soda – they’re not saying anything, comfortable in silence in that way that old couples have. They, like me, scan the area, observe the wildlife.

It’s only a couple of months since I sat in this same hospital, nursing a coffee after having to decide whether we would turn the machines back on if Dad slid downhill. Even now, the memory of that time brings familiar tears to my eyes. What must it be like to continually support patients and families through such decision-making, through a roller-coaster which seems to have way more troughs than crests – the staff at this and other hospitals have my love for work they do for my Dad and every patient like him.

There is calm here in this human gathering. There is peace and there is love. There is fear, anxiety and comfort. There is caffeine and sugar, newspapers and flowers. The constant movement of people going here, there and every which other else place there can be. And there are those of us waiting, waiting, waiting, surrounded by the flow.

Thanks for waiting with me.

V

Categories: Family Tags: , , ,

The more things change… The more they… erm… evolve?

July 13, 2010 Leave a comment

I was just eating lunch and had one of those moments, which included a clear and happy memory of my dad – who is currently very ill in the UK.

Some background.

My mum and dad come from working class origins – my mum the daughter of a farm labourer and my dad from the roughest streets of Nottingham. The amount they have achieved in life – our burgeoning and spreading family, kids as far flung as the US and South Africa but most of all that close and abiding family – is a story in and of itself.

When I was growing up, whenever mum would roast meat, dad could be found after dinner in the kitchen, with a doorstop of bread, which he would dip into the still warm ‘drippings’ and savor like a connoisseur – and truly it is an experience and taste like no other, especially if the meat was lamb. Sweetness!

Different times, different times – the calorie-police wouldn’t condone such behavior now.

But there were good laughs with dad when we gathered about the dripping after dinner.

Today, I ate a light lunch of salmon and chicken with carrots and cucumber, dressed with olive oil, balsamic vinegar and ground black pepper. It doesn’t get much better and this is one of my staple meals as I’m cutting my weight healthily rather than through fad. Lovely. Afterwards, I ripped the end off a fresh-baked loaf of wholemeal bread

[can you tell we went to the supermarket yesterday?]

and wiped the olive-oil/balsamic/pepper mix up. It had the taste of the salmon to it. It was scrummy.

And I was suddenly back with my dad and his drippings.

Seeing myself behaving just as he did – the food being the only change – I felt oddly comforted, knowing that he’s here in my everyday.

So, while things change, some things don’t – and it’s nice to know that the presence of love can shape us and stay with us over years.

Heal well, dad.

Vince

Categories: Oddness Tags: , ,

Michael J. Fox’s Three-legged stool

July 12, 2010 Leave a comment

I’m reading Michael J. Fox’s ‘Always Looking Up’ at the moment and came across this paragraph:

“If optimism is a happy-go-lucky expectation that the odds are in my favor, that things are likely to break my way, and if hope is an informed optimism, facts converting desire into possibility, then faith is the third leg of the stool. Faith tells me that I’m not alone. And as my years with Parkinson’s disease have taught me, if any of those legs are missing, I’m gonna fall on my ass. When going to sleep at night, I’m optimistic that I won’t be awoken by a phone ringing with bad news. When the phone does ring, I hope it’s a wrong number. When it’s not and the caller has the worst news imaginable, it’s time for faith to kick in.”

Having experienced my own 3 am phone call a little while ago, and not being someone who ascribes the human act of faith to a deity or structured religious theocracy, my own was called into question. But I wasn’t alone, my family were with me.

Faith is ultimately an act of love.

Vince

Categories: Writing Tags: , ,
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