As the years have passed me by,
and the crows have walked across the corners of my eyes with their heavy feet,
I have learnt a lot about life, and loss, and about how immeasurably tough it
can be to hold on to hope in times of trouble.
I met up by accident recently
with friends of mine from my post-Matric days.
We jumped up with excitement when we saw each other, and what surprised
me the most was how little we all seemed to have changed. We made a plan to meet up for dinner the
following week, exchanged numbers which after twenty-odd years had changed, and
moved on to our respective dinners. Seven sleeps later, we found ourselves
sitting around a table together, reminiscing about our salad days, and
shrieking with laughter as we recalled our fun, mad and completely care-free evenings
of yester-decade.
One of my friends had his parents
there, who were up from the coast for the weekend, and who were able to join
us. One of the many benefits of hitting
forty is in knowing that it is not going to adversely affect your reputation to
be seen with your parents, or those of your friends. And indeed, it was this particular father who
made me laugh the most that evening. We were
on (about) bottle number two, talking about how we used to park our cars in
Rosebank and walk to all our respective favourite bars (oh, the freedom!), and
how we used to light Sambuca and attach the tot glasses to various parts of our
bodies (oh, the maturity!), when this dad said loudly at the table, “you know
Philippa, I will never forget meeting you for the first time!” Unsurprisingly, I did not recall this
particular encounter, so I had to enquire as to the details. Mr. Moore proceeded to tell me how he was in
Johannesburg on business, some twenty one years ago, and how he had telephoned
his son to find out his whereabouts, only to be pointed in the direction of a
local bar.
Mr. Moore recounted to the table
how he had walked into this establishment and seen his son, and three other
young men all huddled around a bar top, drinks in hand, listening intently to
one lone nubile lass, who was talking loudly and telling jokes, wine glass in
hand, to these four then fixated lads, who were apparently completely taken in
by the story of the minute… Mr. Moore’s exact words were, “and there you were
Philippa, drinking with the boys and telling jokes!”
The entire social congregation
erupted with laughter, including myself, as I could just picture that scene,
and nothing surprised me less… twenty one years have passed, and so many things
have changed, but to be frank, that scenario could be happening right now, in
this decade, with different lads, but the same, more weathered-looking lass –
in fact, truth be told – this is a sort-of regular occurrence.
The evening progressed, and the
stories grew more and more risqué as the minutes marched on. We then got onto the serious discussions, and
the chatter died down as the tone grew more serious. I was asked what had happened in my life in
the past two decades, and I found that the honesty bubbled out of my glossed
lips much like an over boiled pasta pot.
As I recounted one story after another, my friend’s eyes grew wider and
wider, and the sauvignon blanc got better and better.
Mr. Moore was of course the most
fascinated by all the life events, and he offered by far the most profound
advice of the evening. He said, very
simply, “Philippa, as long as you don’t lose hope… promise me, you will never
lose hope.” Of course I promised;
sauvignon makes me promise all sorts of things, and we moved on from the
evening happily and with old memories now freshly recounted.
Some days went by, and quite by
chance, I read the following quote which took me instantly back to that
sentence of Mr. Moore’s. It read as
follows:-
Faith
is a bird that feels dawn breaking and sings while it is still dark.
– Rabindranath Tagore
– Rabindranath Tagore
This truly hit home for me. We are all older now, and we have all been
battered and somewhat bruised by life events along the way. There have been some absolutely incredible
moments of elation, and yet also, some absolute moments of deep despair. I believe the trick, however, is to keep the
faith. Like the bird that sings knowing
that the sun is yet to rise, so do I, as the somewhat plump grey pigeon, need
to feel the dawn breaking, the tide turning, the sun rising… and sing (not
literally) in the dark, knowing that the best, is yet to come.
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