Saturday, 30 November 2019

Something Special in my "Study"


Something Special in my “Study”


Do you have a spare bedroom which might be called a “multi-purpose room”?  I have a little one which is only occasionally used as a bedroom.  I go there to work on my computer, or practise music on my keyboard, or – let’s be honest! – use it as a “glory hole” where, before a guest arrives, I hastily deposit all sorts of items which have been cluttering up my living-room.  So, I hesitate to give it the grand title of “my Study”!   However, when I discovered this wooden plaque in the local Shelter shop, I bought it, thinking that it would lend an element of dignity to this somewhat messy little room.



The plaque shows the crest of Glasgow University, where I studied for my degree.  That was in the days when blazers were still worn by students of both sexes.  I loved my black blazer with this crest stitched in gold thread on the breast pocket.  On Saturday mornings I would wear it when I met my friends, Jinty and Senga – Jinty in her navy blue Jordanhill Teacher Training College blazer, and Senga in her purple Domestic Science College (‘Dough School’!) blazer.  On cold days we added the matching scarves and felt very smart!


The University crest contains four items which also appear on the city of Glasgow’s coat-of-arms: a bird, a tree, a bell and a fish.  All four refer to legends about Glasgow’s patron saint, St Mungo who, in the 6th century, founded many Christian churches and monasteries in the West of Scotland. 


The bird.  When jealous classmates, trying to get the clever Mungo into trouble, killed their teacher’s pet robin, it is said that he miraculously brought the bird back to life.


The tree.  Mungo was meant to be looking after the fire, the monastery’s all-important source of heat, but he fell asleep and the fire went out.  He is said to have rekindled the dead ashes, using only some branches from a nearby tree.


The bell. We are told that Mungo brought this back from Rome, where he had gone to meet the Pope.


The fish. (This is the most impressive item!)  The king of one of the Scottish kingdoms suspected his queen of having an affair with a young soldier.  He claimed that she had presented her lover with a ring which he, the king, had given her.  He invited the soldier to go hunting with him, then when the young man fell asleep, he took the ring off his finger and threw it into the River Clyde. He then demanded that the queen show him the ring.  Because she couldn’t do this, he had her imprisoned and condemned to death.  In desperation, she sent a letter to Mungo, begging for his help.  Mungo sent the messenger to fish in the Clyde, telling him to bring back the first fish that he caught.  When the salmon was cut open – there was the ring!  On seeing it, the king pardoned his wife - probably because he was both amazed and alarmed!   (The queen promised the saint that she would sin no more!)


In fact, Mungo himself was the result of an illicit affair.  His father, Owain, was already married to someone else when his mother conceived him. When her violent father abused her, she and her baby took refuge in her brother’s home.  The baby’s real name was Kentigern, but his uncle gave him the affectionate pet name of Mungo, which means ‘Beloved one.’  (I like that!  Try saying, “Come here, Kentigern!” which is quite spiky to pronounce, then say, “Come here, Mungo!” and feel how much softer and friendlier that sounds!)


In the middle of the University crest is a pointed mace, a symbol of academic authority, granted to the new university in1465.  Above it is an open book, symbol of learning.  The University’s motto, Via Veritas, Vita is the Latin for Christ’s words: (”I am) the Way, the Truth and the Life.”  At the time when the University was founded, Latin was the common language (‘lingua franca’) in all universities throughout Europe.  As a result, students could travel to a university of their choice, and understand the lectures, no matter which country they were in.


On my “Study” wall, to the right of this plaque, I have a collection of family photographs.  Here is one of my two grandsons, taken on the important day that Ciaran, the younger one, first went to school.


By way of contrast, I have this one of my elder grandson, in formal attire, taken in the spring of 2019.  A fourth-year student at Glasgow University, he is a keen member of the G.U. Union debating society.


His parents and brother had come over from Belfast to hear him make his ‘Prime Ministerial speech’ at the final Parliamentary debate of the academic year.  (By a nice coincidence his name, like that of St Mungo’s father, is Owain!)


I have no idea who donated my plaque to Shelter, nor where it was originally hung.  With its dark wood, it looks like part of a wood-panelled room, perhaps in one of the old university buildings.  By the way, having recently published a blog post about robins, I was amused to realise that the dark bird on top of the tree is meant to be a robin redbreast.  Maybe I should give him a dab of red nail varnish!



My father, my husband, Bob, and I all studied at Glasgow University.  How glad I am that Owain, born and brought up in Northern Ireland, has formed this strong new family connection with Scotland’s second oldest university!



Deo gratias
















Saturday, 23 November 2019

Three Jewels from my Treasure Store


Three Jewels from my Treasure Store 



“Aha, Kathleen!  I think you’ve got something to tell us!”  exclaimed Helen, who was sitting at the opposite end of the table from me.  It was teatime at the Guild meeting in the church hall.  The other four ladies paused as they passed round the plate of home-made cakes, and looked at me enquiringly.  Helen gave me a knowing smile.  “Go on, tell us the good news!”                                                                              


Puzzled, I replied, “I would if I knew what you mean!”  Helen lifted her left hand and wiggled her ring finger.  I looked down at my own ring finger, where the diamonds on my engagement ring were twinkling brightly, as if new.  Helen, knowing that I was a widow, must have noticed that I was no longer wearing my wedding ring, and seeing the diamond ring, must have assumed that I had recently got engaged to a ‘new man’.


“Sorry to disappoint you, but I have no nice romantic tale to tell!” I said with a chuckle.  


However, the following day I found myself writing a little note to Helen, telling her of a ‘follow-up’ coincidence!  When I woke up that morning I had smiled down at my left hand, remembering Helen’s assumption about the ring.  As soon as I left my bedroom I had, as usual, gone straight to the bookcase opposite, to change the date on the French 365-day calendar.  To my astonishment, this is what I saw!  





I couldn’t resist telling Helen about this delicious coincidence – even though I suspected that, as a retired nursing sister known for her forthright, no-nonsense opinions, she would possibly dismiss it as mere fantasy. But to me it was a precious reminder of another, earlier coincidence concerning a ring plus the French calendar.


 Bob, my dear husband, had died on the 26th of June, the day before our 23rd wedding anniversary.  Every year since, I have felt very sad on June 26, but then, on the next day, 27 June, I have gratefully thanked God for the joy of our wedding day! However, this has been more difficult on the special anniversaries which we would have been celebrating along with our contemporaries.  I discovered that two years after his death, when we would have been enjoying our Silver Wedding day together.


Fifteen years later I was bracing myself to face the date of our Ruby Wedding when, very early in the morning of 21st June (Midsummer!) I awoke to ‘hear’ a mysterious instruction: “Take off your wedding ring!”


This was something which I had never wanted to do.  Moreover, taking it off was by now more or less impossible because my ring finger had swollen over the forty years since our wedding day.  I knew that the ring could probably be enlarged, but I feared that the jeweller might cut through the inscription on the inside:  RB – KIH. 31.1.64 (the official date of our engagement.)  However, after ‘hearing’ the instruction, I thought that, given the constriction on that finger, it was probably now time to take the risk, and to have the ring made bigger.  But I still hesitated.                                                                                                           

“Maybe I’ll do it later, when I get up”, I thought.  But then it was somehow impressed on me: “No, do it NOW!”  So, I sleepily fetched soap, a damp cloth and some Vaseline, and after several minutes of struggle, eventually managed to pull off my precious gold wedding ring.


Carefully I held it up between my right thumb and my index finger, in the light of the bedside lamp, trying to see if the inscription was still legible.  (It was, fortunately).  Before I went back to sleep, I tenderly placed the ring in the little box containing Bob’s wedding ring, a bigger version of mine – the ring which he had always insisted on wearing, even in hospital during his operations to have cancer cells removed.


When I got up a few hours later I went, as usual, to change the date on the French calendar – and was amazed to see another woman holding a ring between her right thumb and index finger!  The picture, which dates from the Middle Ages, was taken from a prayer book created for the Duc de Berry.  The young woman has just received the betrothal ring (alliance), which will be her wedding ring, from her princely suitor.                                      


The joy of this astonishing ‘coincidence’ carried me through the next few days of our Ruby Wedding week, and I humbly thanked God for that blessing.


Our two wedding rings lay together in their little box for almost ten years.  Every day I put on my engagement ring as a replacement for the wedding ring.  As the date of our Golden Wedding drew near, I finally had my ring enlarged to fit my finger.  The inscription remained intact.  (I should have trusted the jeweller’s skill!)


One morning, in the last week of June, I awoke to another silent ‘message’.  This time it was in French!  I ‘heard’ “Je brede le tapis”. As I visualised how I would write this, it was impressed on me that the first ‘e’ in brede would require a grave accent, (in accordance with the rule that this vowel has to be strengthened in a single syllable word ending in a silent ‘e’!  As I’m sure you know, dear reader!!)  So, the word would be pronounced ’’b-red”, but I didn’t know what it meant!  I had never seen this word before.  ‘Le tapis’ means ‘the carpet or rug or mat’.  Perhaps there was a connection with ‘embroidery’? I thought.  Could it mean ‘I embroider the rug’?  But, if so, why? And anyway, I remembered that the French for ‘to embroider’ is ‘broder, with the letter ‘o’!  As I puzzled over this verbal conundrum, it was again impressed on me that the second word had to have “red” in it.  Time to consult my splendid big Larousse dictionary! No sign of a verb ‘breder’, so I turned to the word ‘tapis’ – and TING! – I saw the picture I just knew that I was meant to see!








On the same page as the picture of a beautiful ‘tapis’ there was one illustrating a medieval tapestry.  Entitled ‘L’offrande du coeur’ (The offering of the heart), it shows a man in princely costume (note the shoes!) offering something to the lady of his choice.  Between his right thumb and index finger he is holding out a red heart!



Jesus said: “How blest are the sorrowful; they shall find consolation.”  (Matt 6,v 4)  


and “Dwell in my love.  If you heed my commands, you will dwell in my love, as I have heeded my Father’s commands and dwell in his love.  I have spoken thus to you, so that my joy may be in you, and your joy complete.”  (John 15, vv 10, 11)



Deo gratias






Saturday, 16 November 2019

Organs and Robins


Organs and Robins!


Does the Holy Spirit have a sense of humour?  Do members of my ‘dear departed’ sometimes try to make me smile?   Does my guardian angel enjoy word play?  These are some of the questions I ask myself when I feel that a funny little coincidence has somehow been organised.  How?  By whom? I don’t claim to know the answers - but I have learned just to enjoy it and then to murmur ”Thank you!”  I remind myself of Paul’s words in 1st Corinthians, chapter 13,verse12: For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.





This picture shows the River Ayr with two of its bridges, the Auld Brig in the foreground, and the New Bridge, over which the main road leads to Ayr Town Hall with its tall spire.  (Don’t be alarmed by the sinister hand apparently rising out of the water! That’s just the reflection of my fingers – seen through the glass, darkly!)    From April to November, I attend the Monday organ recitals in the Town Hall. After parking my car near the Auld Brig, I make my way on foot to the main road, then cross to the other side of the river.


One Monday as I approached the New Bridge, I noticed a large bird perched on a tree trunk in the river. “Oh, there’s a gannet!” I thought, but then, realising my mistake, “No, that’s a cormorant, not a gannet.  Immediately after that I heard a man exclaiming to his little son, “Oh look!  That’s an air rescue helicopter from HMS Gannet” (a Royal Navy land base at nearby Prestwick Airport).  Smiling at this unexpected coincidence, I thought to myself as I crossed the bridge, “That’s funny to hear GANnet twice like that, just when I’m on my way to an orGAN recital!  It would be a strange coincidence if the programme includes something with GAN in the title!”  I tried to think of any piece by Bach, or any other of the usual composers, which had those three letters, but without success.


Just then the Town Hall clock struck twelve noon.  The recital would have started. I would have to enter the hall as quietly as possible.  Tiptoeing in, I saw Michael, the organiser of the recitals, beckon to me to sit beside him.  He silently handed me a copy of the programme.  To my surprise I saw that, for the first time ever, it included some songs.  The organist’s wife, a professional singer, was going to perform for us.  I almost disgraced myself by bursting out laughing when I saw that she had chosen the Welsh lullaby Suo GAN!




The Town Hall’s Lewis organ is a magnificent three-manual instrument.  The recitals, now in their 11th year, attract organists from all over the UK as well as from other countries, such as Germany and Italy.  There is even a waiting list of organists who wish to play it!


Just after I retired from teaching, I was delighted to have the chance to participate in a project which aimed to enable pianists to become ‘supply organists’, whenever their church organist was ill or on holiday.  My lessons took place in a church with another three-manual organ.  I found that a big challenge, especially when trying to play with my feet as well as with my hands!  However, I eventually became proficient enough to play occasionally for church services – something which I greatly enjoy.


As a contrast, I also learned to play something much easier: the ocarina, which is a little wind instrument.  I had been looking for a small lightweight instrument to take with me on my travels.  The lady in a local music shop suggested the ocarina when I told her that I was about to leave for France, to visit my musical friend, Pascal.  He and I had enjoyed playing duets when he was in Scotland – Pascal on guitar, and myself on piano or cello.  The little ocarina is limited in its range – just over an octave – but I soon found tunes which suited it and, for the first time, was pleased that I could play from memory, without any need of sheet music.  So, Pascal and I had good fun with our new-found ‘wind duets’, as he is very proficient on ‘la flute irlandaise’ i.e. the penny whistle!


Pascal’s surname Is ROBIN, so I was very amused when, sometime later, I found myself playing a duet with another Robin – but this one had wings and a red breast!  My cousin Fiona and I had stopped for a picnic at a quiet spot in a Country Park when I suddenly felt the urge to play my ocarina.  I had played only a few notes when I heard a loud burst of birdsong nearby.  A little robin had hopped along the path until he stood near me, and was singing his heart out – perhaps as a fierce declaration of his territorial rights!  Fiona quietly took this photograph of us both.  You will see him if you look for his tiny shadow on the path!



I was privileged and delighted to play the organ at the wedding of Pascal and his bride, Soizic.  The marriage took place at the village church in Iffendic, in the heart of Brittany. (Fortunately, the organ was relatively small and not too complicated!)

The following year Pascal brought Soizic on a little tour of Scotland, including a couple of days with me in Prestwick.  In a local park we stopped, to let me take a photograph of the happy couple.  To our delight, a little robin hopped up on to a branch between them.  Three ROBINS in a row!


Shortly afterwards I received a message from Pascal to say that a few days later, when in Edinburgh, they had discovered that there was another little Robin on the way!  At the end of the following May they were blessed with a lovely little son, to whom they gave the name Laouenan ROBIN.

Deo gratias

Saturday, 9 November 2019

Angelic Help

Angelic Help

Last week I wrote about the first of two unexpected presents which I had just received: the picture of a Hallowe’en witch and her cat.  The second was a birthday present from Mairi and Bill, two friends who live in Linlithgow, not far from Edinburgh.  Mairi apologised for not sending it sooner, but in actual fact I was delighted when I opened the parcel to see how timeous its arrival was!  It contained these two items: a lovely silver pendant and a little 
notebook, both showing the spiky sculpture on top of Saint Michael’s church, Linlithgow.



The sculptor, Geoffrey Clarke, was asked to create a new aluminium replacement for the previous stone sculpture of a crown. (The church is beside the former royal palace.)  To me, it looks more like a collection of weapons, with a tall spear in the middle.                          



That would be appropriate, because Saint Michael is an unusual saint – not a holy person who was canonised by the Pope, but an angel, in fact an Archangel, who is referred to as the leader of all the other angels in God’s army, in the fight against evil.  So, having recently written my post Protection Needed, I was glad to wear my Saint Michael pendant at Hallowe’en!

Now, in this age of rapid advances in technology, many people would, I dare say, scoff at the very idea of angels.  And yet research has shown that there are many who do believe in angels, even if they would hesitate to admit it in public. I remember being very surprised to hear my practical down-to-earth mother tell me, one summer evening at dusk (a good time for confidences!), that she had once seen an angel.  It was when she was expecting my sister, Freda, who is nine years younger than me.  Having lost three premature babies, Mum was very anxious about this pregnancy.  But one night she suddenly saw a golden angel at the foot of the bed, with the reassuring message that this time all would be well.

The word ‘angel’ means ‘messenger’ – specifically one bearing a message from God.  The most famous case is the Annunciation, when the Archangel Gabriel told a young virgin, Mary, that she would have a son – Jesus.  The Italian artist Fra Angelico painted several variations on this theme.  I love how he depicted Gabriel in various colour schemes, each with wings matching his different robes!  I have a copy of one on my bedroom wall, just above my bed.


However, angels don’t necessarily have wings.  Sometimes they appear suddenly, in ordinary human form, then, having provided help and/or reassurance to someone in need, they disappear again just as suddenly.  This once happened to me at a very challenging time, when I was fervently praying for help.

It was early on a Saturday morning and I had just wakened up at the sound of the teamaker alarm clock beside the bed.  After yet another operation to remove cancerous cells from his bladder, Bob was still in pain and passing blood, so I was upstairs in Sally’s single bed.  (She was then at university.) Bob, Linda, Michael and Bob’s mother - who now lived with us because of her Parkinson’s disease – were all still asleep.  I poured out a cup of tea and sat up straight, cradling its warmth and marshalling my thoughts.

What did I have to do today?  The usual Saturday jobs: at least two loads of washing; tidying and cleaning the house.  Linda and Michael would help – but would there be time to cook extra stew for the freezer? or to weed the garden?  The ironing could wait until tomorrow evening, but I urgently needed to drive to the supermarket for next week’s supplies. After that I would like to take the car to the car wash – but I’d better not stay away from home too long, just in case Bob might once again need emergency post-operative care at the hospital. And in any case, I remembered that I had a pile of exam papers to correct!  Somehow or other I would have to find a couple of hours before bedtime tomorrow to mark the French Listening Test so as to have the results ready for my colleagues on Monday morning.  I made a determined effort to calm my over-active mind as, holding the still-warm cup, I prayed for strength.

But suddenly I found that I did not need to go through my usual relaxation routine.  With lightning speed, I ‘saw’ myself – that is, my conscious self – leave my body and soar outside.  Up, up I was rising, over the tall cypresses in our garden, swiftly down the nearby street to join the main road into the town, then, gathering momentum, down Ayr High Street to the harbour.  A swift left turn, and I was following the River Ayr to the sea.  Soaring across the Firth of Clyde then over the mountainous island of Arran, I ‘reached’ the Kilbrannan Sound between the south end of Arran and the Mull of Kintyre.  Ah, what an exhilarating sense of weightlessness and freedom!

All at once I was aware that I was no longer alone.  Three or four beings of light surrounded me.  Using a silent means of communication, they imparted a message of comfort: that I was never alone or without support.  They had come to remind me that my present difficulties were all part of the challenges which I had agreed to face so that my soul could progress.  They were my friends, and were supporting me.  I was filled with a wonderful sense of love and belonging.

Then, their message delivered, they sped off again and I also swiftly returned by the way I had come, until my inner self was back in my body, and I found myself sitting up in bed, still holding my cup of tea.  That proved to me that this powerful vision had not been a mere dream.  If I had fallen asleep, even for a second, my fingers would have relaxed, letting the cup drop and spilling the tea, as had happened on several previous occasions…

So that, dear blog readers, is why I believe in angels - because of my own experience!  Some of you may have read the above account already, in my book, Joyful Witness, but I make no apology for repeating it, because I think it could be an important source of comfort to anyone in deep distress.

Jesus once said of a child, “Never despise one of these little ones; I tell you, they have their guardian angels in heaven.” (Matthew 18, v10) He did not say that children’s guardian angels left them as the children grew older!

William Wordsworth gave this a lot of thought.  As we leave childhood behind, we become engrossed in material, rather than spiritual, matters, and are less open to angelic messages.  In his Ode: Intimations of Immortality, he wrote: 

Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting … Heaven lies about us in our infancy!  Shades of the prison-house begin to close upon the growing Boy, but he beholds the light, and whence it flows, he sees it in his joy … At length the Man perceives it die away, and fade into the light of common day.

Another quotation which I have loved since my teen-age years is from Francis Thompson’s poem The Kingdom of God (In no Strange Land):
                                                                                                                                                              The angels keep their ancient places; Turn but a stone, and start a wing!  'Tis ye, 'tis your estranged faces that miss the many-splendoured thing.                                                                                                                                   
But I have found that even people who say they don’t believe in angels are willing to make an exception when it comes to the Parking Angel!  They agree that sometimes, in desperation to find a parking place, they have muttered, “Oh, God, where am I to park?” whereupon they see another car pull out from a nearby space, immediately solving the problem!  However, they usually admit that this happened when they were on some kind of mission to help somebody!  When I told my French friend Pascal about this, he looked at me incredulously – almost pityingly!  But a few weeks later, he wrote to me, saying that he now believed in the Parking Angel!

Try it for yourself, the next time you are looking for a parking space when you are trying to help/visit someone in need!
Deo gratias

                                                                                                                                                                                  

Saturday, 2 November 2019

Spooky?


Spooky?



Last weekend I received two unexpected presents.  Here is one of them: a coloured-in picture from my church friend June.





On seeing her eagerly waving it at me, the minister exclaimed, “Well done, June – there’s a remarkable similarity to Kathleen!”   Mmm… well, I hope not!  But I must admit that I have a fondness for bats!  On summer evenings I used to love standing in the garden of my former home where, at twilight, the bats flew down from our tall trees and flitted around, catching flies.


Every Hallowe’en we would prepare for small visitors by filling bowls with sweets and nuts, and placing apples in a basin of water, ready for the ‘guisers’ to ‘dook’ for them.  One year, supplies nearly ran out when thirty-five ‘guisers’ turned up in quick succession!  Before the ‘dooking’ and the handing out of sweets, they each had to earn their treats by reciting a poem, singing a song or telling a joke.  All the children, including our three, loved dressing up for Hallowe’en, trying to look as ‘spooky’ as possible!  (Except the fairies!)





But I can remember an occasion when somebody exclaimed “Ooh, that’s spooky!” when they caught sight of me – even though I was just wearing my ordinary clothes!  This amused me so much that I wrote the following account of what led up to that startling moment.  Here it is…

Spooky!


 “You taught my son at Carrick Academy, Mrs Bates”, said the new member of Ayr Town Twinning Association, as we were introduced. 


“Oh dear!” I thought, “how am I supposed to remember her son?  It’s thirty years since I left Carrick Academy to have our first baby!”


But as soon as I heard her hyphenated surname (which I shall abbreviate to G-W) I immediately remembered Neil and the concern I had felt for him when he arrived in my class of thirteen-year-old boys.  Not only did he have a double-barrelled name   but he also spoke with a posh English accent.  Most of the pupils of this comprehensive school in the small town of Maybole spoke ‘broad Ayrshire’.  They would be almost certain to mimic him, perhaps even bully him.  But how wrong I was!  Within a week Neil had adopted the Ayrshire accent and had begun to use key words of the local dialect.


I asked Mrs G-W what had become of him.  He and his brother had both found good jobs, but, alas, both had inherited a kidney disease.  Their mother, now a widow, frequently travelled to the south of England to help the one who was on dialysis.  For that reason, she was unlikely to be able to visit St Germain-en-Laye, Ayr’s twin town near Paris.  However, having heard good reports of its social events, she had decided to join the Ayr association although she still lived in Maybole, ten miles away.


One evening I was sitting beside her at a slide show of the members’ recent visit to St Germain when she suddenly became violently ill, vomiting all over her smart clothes.  The presentation was stopped immediately, and an ambulance was sent for.  Once she was safely on board, I followed in my car to the hospital.


We waited together in the A and E reception area until Mrs G-W was admitted to a ward for overnight assessment.  She had been given a clean nightgown, and her stained outfit was now in a bag for removal.  Hoping to be sent home the next day, she asked me to go to Maybole in the morning to fetch some clean clothes from her bedroom.  Her next-door neighbour, who had a spare key, would show me where to find them.


The following morning, thanks to her directions, I managed to find her house. The man next door was mowing his lawn.  He stopped when I approached.  I told him about Mrs G-W’s dilemma and asked him for her key.  But then, realising that I was a complete stranger to him, I explained how I came to know her, mentioning that I had once taught her son Neil, at Carrick Academy.


“Oh, in that case you may know my wife!” he exclaimed.  “She used to work in the school office.”


I did not recognise her name however, so we concluded that she must have joined the staff after I had left the school.


“Just go straight into the house,” he went on.  “You’ll find her in the kitchen.”


As I entered, his wife was sitting at the kitchen table, sipping coffee and peering intently at a black and white photograph in a magazine, which I instantly realised was Maybole Past and Present.  (I had a copy at home.)  The photograph was of Carrick Academy staff, taken just after my colleague, Bob, and I had become engaged.  When I pointed out the two of us standing together, the lady turned pale.


“I was just saying to myself ‘That’s Bob Bates – but who is that standing beside him?’  when you walked into the kitchen!  Ooh, that’s so spooky!


“Don’t worry!”  I hastened to reassure her.  “It was just a case of ‘the right place at the right time!’”


For me too, of course, this powerful coincidence had been very startling – but not alarmingly ‘spooky’!  Instead, it filled me with delight, reminding me of the happy time, over thirty years before, when Bob and I had got together.  Once again, I silently thanked God for the comfort and joy which such so-called ‘coincidences’ can bring.  Nowadays, after experiencing so many of them, I simply think of it being another example of our mysterious Golden Network… 




(Here we are, in the second front row, second and third on the right of the teacher with the bow tie.)


Deo gratias