Today is Bigsister’s 80th birthday, and we are all just as surprised as her that she has now reached the age our Grampa was when I first remember him.
Fifteen years ago I posted this blog on the Newcastle Journal website.
SISTERS
One of the perks of being involved in a Parents Teachers Association is that you get your pick of stuff left over after the summer fayre or Christmas bazaar. This summer I picked up a copy of TheAccidental Time Traveller (by Sharon Griffiths) at Woodlawn Summer Fayre and enjoyed it so much I passed it on to my Big Sister.
This autumn Bigsister and her husband were invited to a wedding in India and decided to make a holiday of it. Just before flying she rang me to ask if I wanted the book back as she wanted something to read that she could leave there when it was finished so save weight coming home. I said fine, no doubt someone in India might pick it up and enjoy it too.
When she got back last weekend she rang to tell me all about the trip.
She lives in East Finchley, they do things like that there.
Big Sister (just turned 65) was particularly impressed at how evocative of life in the 1950s the book was.
We discussed how it was the little details that made all the difference. Like putting the kettle directly onto the coals on the fire; a kettle singing on the grate was the background music to my childhood. Or using the fire to make toast using the long toasting fork; toast under the grill or from a toaster just doesn’t taste the same.
"And there were things I’d forgotten all about” she said “like the Gibbs toothpaste in the little pink box you had to rub the brush on."
Bigsister turned 12 about three weeks after I was born and she was just the right age to be besotted and make a huge fuss over a new baby sister.
I remember Bigsister singing to me in my cot; my favourites being The Ugly Duckling (she made a great squawk noise) and What do you want if you don't want money? (Adam Faith). She also read The Wind in the Willows and Black Beauty to me well before I was five and could read for myself (I cried at both and still do).
Bigbrother, 'The Baby', Bigsister, Middlesister 1957 RAF Netheravon | |
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