Monday, 18 March 2019

Away, ya chancer!

Bob Simmons is an advice worker in Craiglaw, Edinburgh.

“That’s your ten o’clock, Bob”

Denise, the volunteer receptionist, does the universal ‘supping glass’ genuflection to indicate that his ten o’clock, Tam Sullivan, might be ‘hauf-pished’.

Tam Sullivan is a wee squat fella: ‘Clyde-built’ you might say excepting that he very much hailed from the east coast. East coast/west coast still sublimated relations in lowland Scotland.

‘East is least, west is best’ as they said in Glasgow. ‘Fuck you, ken?’ was the retort from Edinburgh.

Tam had been a footballer of some note, a nippy wee winger in days long before his current shambling alcoholic persona. “Ah played fur Hong Kong Rangers, but I’m no’ a hun, I’m a tim” he’d proclaim before asking Bob to phone the Social Fund for a further loan on his behalf.

Craiglaw is a predominantly Catholic area and has a large traveller community. This is reflected in the names on the client list – McCallum, Doherty, O’Connell. In the central belt of Scotland, the poorest communities tended to be the Catholic ones like Coatbridge and Niddrie and the more prosperous, like Harthill and Uddingston, being Protestant which was evident by the number of unionist flags on show in such areas on bedroom windows and waving atop flagpoles like so many territorial markers.

Unionists hated the notion of Scottish independence, but mainly they hated the fact that it was the poor Catholic schemes that voted for it in 2014 and came scarily close to securing it. Scotland’s future decided by Irish Catholics? If you listened closely you could actually hear John Knox spinning in his tomb.

“What can I do for you, Tam?”

The waft of stale beer emanating from the wee man as he slumped down in the chair offered to him told Bob that Denise hadn’t been far off the mark. Several hairs of several dogs had been consumed even this early in the morning.

“Ach I’ve been away a few months up in Arbroath and when ahv come back the council have taken ma flat back and selt aw ma stuff in an auction”

This was not an unknown occurrence among the travelling community. They’d disappear for months on end off up to the Highlands or wherever where others of their kith and kin were gathered. They wouldn’t bother informing the council, no rent would be paid and the place would belying empty. The council by their own rules would evict then store the tenants possessions for a month before selling them off. All above board and nothing much folk like Bob or anyone else could do about it.

“Aye, well you know the score about that, Tam”

The wee man looked crest-fallen.

“Just got a new three-piece suite and a stereo anaw wi’ that money ye goat me fae the council fund, but it’s no’ that that’s pissin me aff. It’s ma Grandfather Clock!”

This last statement stopped Bob in his tracks. It was if something really quite incongruous and surreal had entered the conversation. Like Salvador Dali had begun collaborating with an amateur water-colourist painting some ducks in a pond.

“Did you say Grandfather Clock?”

“Aye, brand new tae. Always wanted one. Was wondering if there was anything you could do about it? Maybe they’ve known no’ to sell it?”

Bob had not often pondered the meaning or etymology of the word ‘flabbergasted’. It seemed an odd word when you looked at it close up. What exactly was a ‘flabber’ and how indeed was it ‘gasted’?

“So Tam, you’ve lost your flat and all your possessions; your fridge, your cooker, your carpets and, as you say, your new suite and stereo?”

“And ma wide-screen. Don’t forget that”

“And your wide-screen. But, you’re maist concerned about your Grandfather Clock?”

The man Sullivan looked at Bob warily. Was there some piss-taking going on here? Was the adviser chappie getting wide?

“Aye, that’s right” he offered cagily.

Bob could imagine the phone call he was about to make.


“Oh thank God you’ve phoned. Of course, we’ve kept Mr Sullivan's clock. We’ve kept it safe with all the rest!”

Friday, 1 March 2019

Fellow-feeling For a Dead Dad

I once read in a document ‘Poem For Dead Parents’ by my father that he had felt in his life that he was somehow ‘not real’ and I believe I have inherited the essence of this sense from him. ‘Not real’ is an unexpected surprise at other people ‘taking you seriously’. Taking notice of the words you say or even acknowledging your presence on earth as in being in some way significant.

I can see it in photographs him in which he smiles mock-boldly and shyly, self-aware and as if the photograph will turn out blank without his image. Or at the valedictory ceremony after he’d initiated the advocacy centre in Kilmarnock where he beams like a child because the audience laughs at his joke.

And yet alongside this ‘non-existence’ was ‘a good conceit of himself’ to use the Scots impression: smartly dressed in a casual way and quite elegantly groomed, clean-shaven or with clipped moustache or Trotsky-bearded (I have forever been ‘scruffy’. I think he owned more self-esteem in this area. He grew out of the smart Glegsa forties and fifties of ‘the dancin’’ and ‘lumbers’, I from the more slovenly seventies and the beginnings of personal alcohol abuse). My Da, in his incarnation as a factory worker, wore a shirt and tie to work and never ever took time off sick (his mantra as a shop stewards convener was ‘don’t let the bastards get anything on you’ although he did this very thing several times by leading his men out on wildcat strikes until they and their bosses finally said ‘fuck you, Boab Wylie’).

Every single thing in life has an equal and opposite and this is true of a person’s psychological make-up. Where there is disastrously low self-esteem there is also a preening ego hungry for praise and approbation: where one feels ‘of no consequence’ the other is adamant for glory.

So it was for my father! These two extremes fed off each other like a two-headed beast devouring itself. Even when my father appeared relaxed and smiling and gentle as a breeze in April you sensed there was a great tension underneath like a volcano about to erupt. On his deathbed, all the toes on his bare feet were at a rigid right-angle pointing towards his head. Raging, raging and tense against the dying of the light.


To feel of little or no worth yet to live so eloquently and expressively and in a more worthwhile and productive way than most (witness his abundant poetry and his ground-breaking social work) is indeed a conundrum. Though maybe not as strange as you’d think.