jmgoyder

wings and things

Common sense

Over the years I have developed a sense for when I may need a little psychiatric counselling. Here is an example-

When, on seeing a pink toenailed foot hanging out of someone’s boot/trunk, and the car with the foot is just in front of you at the fast food drive-through, you get out of your own car, go to the passenger side of the possible psycho’s car, open the door, ask him to turn his music down for a moment, get told to F#$##$%#%#$% off, shout to him, “I think you have a body in your boot,” go back your own car and quickly write down the licence plate of the psycho’s car, tell the fast food people (and order food), get home, ring the police who laugh and say it’s the latest craze – buying plastic body parts and sticking them out of car boots.

Okay this happened a few years ago when I was young and naive but I have never forgotten Anthony’s response when I got home all traumatized.

Anthony: So you thought there was a dead body in the guy’s boot so he must be a murderer but you still got out of your car and asked him to turn his music down so that you could tell him there was a foot hanging out of his boot?

Me: Yes.

Anthony: This reminds me a bit of when you went all the way into town to buy something to unblock the sink when it was just that you left the plug in.

Me: And?

Anthony: Well you don’t seem to have a lot of common sense.

He was right – am still struggling with common sense – argh!

65 Comments »

A combinational post

I thought I’d try something new today and combine two completely different things into the one post.

Above: From left to right – Daffy, Ola, Woodroffe, Seli, Diamond, Pearl, Godfrey, Zaruma.

Below: From left to right – the ‘End of Life Requests’ form that I have been asked to fill out and return to the nursing lodge. I am supposed to discuss this with Anthony I think but not sure if I can. Anyway, I haven’t been able to find a pen.

69 Comments »

Love story 61 – 65

Love story 61 – He loves me, he loves me not….

We were meeting Andrew, my Anglican priest friend, to discuss our wedding service.

“Why do we have to do this?” Anthony said grumpily, pulling his car into Andrew’s driveway.

“I think it’s just part of the deal,” I tried to quip, sensing Anthony’s unease.

He didn’t laugh.

During the meeting, Anthony was tense with reluctance and I was embarrassed.

After the meeting, Anthony dropped me back at my flat then he headed back to the farm.

Inside my flat, I felt tears of confusion creep into my eyes. A few minutes later, Andrew rang.

“Well, that went well,” he said with kind sarcasm. “Are you sure he wants to get married?”

“What’s wrong with him?” I asked Andrew.

“I’ve seen it before,” said Andrew.

“And….?”

“It’s called ‘cold feet’ and your Anthony has a very bad case.”

“Well if his feet are cold, then mine are now frozen,” I said, trying to laugh.

But I didn’t laugh.

Love story 62 – ‘What is wrong?’

Anthony’s cold feet episode lasted long enough for me to finally say to him, “Enough!”

“What is wrong?” I asked him on the phone. “Getting married was your idea, not mine!”

“It’s complicated,” he said miserably.

“Let’s just forget it then,” I said miserably.

“I’ll come up tomorrow and explain,” he said.

“Fine,” I said, sarcastically, ”I can’t wait.”

After our phone conversation I rang my Guinness buddies and they joined me down at the local pub.

A pint of Guinness can do wonders for a wounded soul!

Love story 63 – Giving up

Anthony’s cold feet episode seemed to last forever and I wanted very much to talk to my dad and to Inna who, of course, were both dead. I didn’t want to tell my mother about the latest situation because she had only just come to terms with the fact that I would soon be marrying a man old enough to be my father. I couldn’t tell my female friends because they were still wondering if Anthony even existed in the first place. I told my Guinness buddies but they just shrugged and bought me another pint.

My fantastic friend, Andrew, the priest who was going to marry us, knew though. Even if Anthony hadn’t stuck his cold feet into Andrew’s face (metaphorically speaking), Andrew would have sensed that something was badly wrong and, because he loved me, he counselled me to give up. I don’t think Andrew phrased it like that – he was far too tactful – but, yeah, I got the gist.

So, in my thoughts, I said to my dad that I was doing okay, and I told Inna that I had tried to fulfill my promise to her to look after her son, and had done my best.

And I gave up.

Love story 64 – Warm feet

When Anthony got over his cold feet episode and told me it was to do with the farm, his brother, finances, their partnership, it was a relief! I had begun to think that maybe I was too fat, or too skinny, or too tall, or too short, or maybe it was my freckles, our age difference, his memory of me letting the grapefruit marmalade boil over on his precious Aga, my religious upbringing. I only wondered about these thing for a couple of days before realizing it was nothing to do with me, but I was still mystified.

So when Anthony came up to Perth and told me about his ‘he ain’t heavy, he’s my brother’ anxiety, I just said, “Is that all?” and in that blinkingly beautiful moment, he grabbed me in a huge hug and we both started laughing.

“What would I do without you, Jules!” Anthony said, once our laughing subsided.

“I don’t need you, Ants, okay,” I said more seriously as he took his boots off.

“What are you doing?” he said as I put my hands on his feet.

“Your feet are warm!” I said.

“What are you talking about?” he said, getting up to fetch a bottle of wine and grinning his fantastic grin.

“You wouldn’t understand,” I said.

He poured us a glass each and sat down next to me at my tiny kitchen table. “I need you, Julie, I need you.”

“Yeah, whatever,” I said, sipping my wine nonchalantly while the joy gradually seeped back into my freezing feet.

And the rest, as they say, is history!

Love story 65 – Bliss

Once we got over the cold feet episode, our warm feet kept colliding in ways that were both funny and significant.

We were going to get married and Anthony and I both allowed the droplets of bliss fall into our open smiles.

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My silent husband

Against all advice from friends and family, and against my own decision not to bring Anthony home anymore, I did so anyway today.

I couldn’t not. I couldn’t not.

During the drive home Anthony was utterly silent. It then took awhile to get him from the car onto the front veranda, even with the new walker the nursing lodge let me borrow.

It was sunny to begin with, so I brought Anthony a drink, sat with him for awhile, then went inside to heat up the chicken soup I’d made him. When it got cloudy outside, I had to bring Anthony into the kitchen which took ages because his meds hadn’t kicked in. I put the heater on because he gets so cold all the time. All of this was silent except for me saying, “1, 2. 3” to help him walk.

I served Anthony the soup but couldn’t eat any myself because I was feeling weirdly nauseous, and terrified I wouldn’t be able to get him back from inside the house to the car to take him back to the nursing lodge in time for his next meds, and in time to pick Ming up from his music school.

The day was filled to the brim with silence. I kept saying, “Why don’t you talk to me anymore?” and Anthony kept trying to, but couldn’t.

Little snatches of conversation happened, but I had to instigate them all because Anthony seems to have forgotten how to converse.

Anthony only uttered one beautiful sentence as I was getting him into the car to go back the nursing lodge, and that was about his guinnea fowl who seem to congregate close to him when he is home, even when he is silent; they seem to sense his presence. “Look at them, Jules,” he said, with his new quarter-smile.

They were our first birds and they are very noisy, just like Anthony used to be – loud and laughing and utterly lovable.

Otherwise, it was all pretty quiet today because Anthony’s silence was deafening.

64 Comments »

Love story 56 – 60

Love story 56 – Despair

A million poems, songs, novels and diaries have been written about unrequited love. For many years, my love for Husband-to-be, Anthony, was seemingly unrequited and the tragedy is that it wasn’t unrequited, it was just restrained by some sort of weird leash borne of fear, workaholicism (yes, he was a workaholic), of our 23 year age difference and of his respect for me.

I sometimes wonder why it didn’t happy-end itself sooner. Would we have had more children? Would we have loved each other with the same intensity? Would we have gotten sick of each other? Would we be the same people we are now?

I remember once, in deep despair, riding my bicycle down a long hill in Perth and deliberately ignoring all of the stop signs, hoping a car would hit and kill me. That was the closest I ever got to suicide. Instead of being hit, I rode through over ten stop signs unscathed and had to slowly walk my bicycle back up the hill to the little flat where I was living.

Living.

Love story 57 – Elation

We would meet at a pub/restaurant called ‘Henry Africa’s’.

Anthony would travel up from the farm and I would walk down from my little flat. Sometimes he would be there first and sometimes I would be. Whoever was first would be sitting at the bar with two beers.

I tried hard not to be the first one there because I got a kick out of walking into the pub, and watching Anthony’s grin happen.

Love story 58 – Turntable

I sometimes felt a bit embarrassed at the turn my relationship with Anthony took because it seemed too much like one of those women’s magazine romances. The difference was, of course, that, instead of the tall, dark, handsome lord-of-the-manor turning the petite, blonde, beautiful maidservant into the love of his life in a few pages, our story took a bit longer to get to the first chapter!

Also, I don’t think Anthony and I ever fit into the stereotypical character types. He was never tall or dark or particularly handsome and I was never petite, blonde or particularly beautiful. And he was never a lord and I was never a servant, however ….

The table turning event was exactly like one of those romance stories in many ways. The only difference is that when the frog turned into the prince, I didn’t recognize him – not for ages. And when I did recognize him, I thought he was a bit of a dag and would throw my long, gorgeous hair over my shoulder, blink my beautiful, heavily eyelashed eyes and frown (in a way that doesn’t produce a line in your forehead), and say, “May I help you?”

Love story 59 – Joe

I was living in a bedsit, studying at a university and working in a nursing home when Anthony proposed marriage.

By then, of course I was more like vegemite than butter and I did not want to leave my bedsit, or my studies, but most of all I did not want to leave Joe, an elderly man in the nursing home where I worked, who had become my mentor and my muse.

I told Anthony that I could not leave Joe.

Love story 60 – Cold feet

After Joe died I felt okay about resigning from my job at the nursing home, not renewing my bedsit lease agreement and arranging with my PhD supervisor to commute from the country from now on (the farm was 200 kms from Perth).

I did none of these things, however, in a hurry because I loved living in Perth. As I gradually let my friends know I was now engaged to the elusive farmer who none of them had ever met, there were mixed reactions. My best friend, Andrew, the Anglican priest who we had chosen to marry us, wasn’t sure if Anthony was ready (ha!); my Guinness buddies didn’t want me to abandon them; my female friends were delighted but cynical.

Despite the beautiful antique engagement ring on my finger, I still didn’t trust Anthony and kept anticipating that he would renege, so when he suddenly got cold feet one day I wasn’t surprised.

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The snarl of Parkinson’s Disease

I remember the day that Parkinson’s Disease first snarled its way into our lives. We were going to the doctor’s for a regular appointment for skin cancers on Anthony’s face and I was extremely annoyed that he wouldn’t drive himself into town (this is nearly a decade ago).

Me: Why the hell won’t you go anywhere by yourself anymore? I feel like a chauffer. It’s my day off and I wanted to do other stuff and now I’m stuck driving you into the doctor’s because you were stupid enough to not wear a hat all your life.

Anthony: I just like your company.

Me: Well, I like your company too but I just don’t get why you always want me to drive and be with you every time you have to go somewhere. I don’t get it! I’m sick of it!

Anthony: Jules, I don’t think I can drive anymore.

Me: What? Since when? What are you talking about? Of course you can drive!

Anthony: Something’s gone wrong with my reflexes so I need you to drive me.

Me: But you’re not that old yet, Ants. Come on, you can drive. What is it? Have you lost your confidence or what?

Anthony: Ever since that time we went to Perth and I went up a one-way street and you screamed – remember?

Me: Oh, so it’s my fault is it – that’s just great – thanks for the accolade.

Anthony: Jules, please don’t cry.

Me: Do you think something else is wrong with you then?

Anthony: Yes.

An hour later, our doctor determined that Anthony probably had Parkinson’s Disease and I swallowed my snarl.

45 Comments »

Love story 51 – 55

Love story 51 – Love and hate

There is no rhyme or reason behind the haphazard cruelty of life. Bad things happen to good people all the time, and good things happen to bad people, but it is also the case that good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people.

Over time, before and during my marriage to Anthony, right up to now, I have wondered and pondered and wrestled with all of those whys and whatifs to no avail, deciding, instead to simply accept it – to accept everything that came our way, no regrets – none. It is also a fact that many people have much worse problems and that is something I am always aware of.

Of course it seems cruel that, having just discovered this amazing love – a bit like finding a hidden treasure in an old chest of drawers – Anthony would get cancer and the journey into illness would begin. I don’t have enough fingers to count the various illnesses that plagued him over the first few years of our marriage – the kidney cancer, diabetes, lung clot, liver disease, melanomic and squamous skin cancers, hypertension, ankolosing spondylitis, Parkinson’s disease and prostate cancer. By the time Son was 12, Anthony had all of these diseases.

Son said to me the other day that he had no memory of having a healthy father.

“So what?” I said. “You have a father who loves you and that’s all that counts.”

“Sorry, Mum,” he said when he saw my nostrils flaring – ha!

[For the next few chapters I will go back to the good times because, in amongst all of the above, we had some rip-roaringly good times].

Love story 52 – Inna’s tomatoes

Inna died over 30 years ago but almost nothing in this house has altered. When relatives and friends visit they all feel they have stepped into some kind of time warp because even her awful/quaint plastic tomatoes are still hanging in the kitchen on their original rope. Every time I look at them I think of her, so why get rid of them?

One day, after Inna’s shower, I discovered that a workman was repairing something in the kitchen so I stopped Inna from doing her usual sprint from the bathroom, down the hallway and into her bedroom because I didn’t want the workman to see her naked. But she didn’t heed my warning and, instead, she ran, squealing with evil delight, in full sight of the workman who looked at me in wonder that someone in their 80s could be so speedy.

It’s about time I dusted those tomatoes!

Love story 53 – Baz

Out of the myriad of Anthony’s friends, Baz was the best – the most loyal, the most fun, the most pragmatic. Anthony has known Baz since Baz was in nappies.

When I went to Sydney for my weekend with the other man, Anthony became so distressed that he actually rang Baz (a guy who is 26 years his junior) for advice and, even though I will never know exactly what they said to each other, I think Baz more or less told Anthony to grow up, to let himself love me, to propose marriage.

Knowing Baz, I am sure he didn’t say it quite like that; he probably said, “What the f%$^%$ is wrong with you, Tony?” He may also have said what an absolutely gorgeous creature I was (no, I’m sure he didn’t say that, but you never know!)

Fast forward around 20 years to last night when I took Ants and myself to Baz’s 50th birthday party. I’m very glad to have done so but in so many ways it was bittersweet because it soon became obvious that Anthony’s party days are well and truly over. Even though I know what Anthony’s Parkinson’s is like, his immobility shocked me because often he will somehow be able to rise to the occasion, and I thought he would do so for Baz and his beautiful wife, Julie.

I wanted so much to stay forever in the warmth of the wonderful party, but I had to take Anthony back to the nursing lodge.

The frolicking rollicking days of Ants and Baz are, alas, over.

Love story 54 – Guffaw

I am so glad I used the word ‘rollicking’ in the last post because, it has reminded me of things.

Until I met Inna and her son, Anthony (Husband-to-be) I had never had a rip-roaring, rollicking time. I was a relatively tame and timid teenager and I had no experience of loud, boisterous FUN. This is not to say I had never had fun; of course I had had fun and my upbringing was full of love and laugher but – put it this way – I had never guffawed.

Oh, I grinned a lot, like some sort of lost-in-space cheshire cat, but I had never laughed out loud, well not like I do now anyway.

I was at the university the other day, seeing one of my PhD students and a couple of my old friends joined us because they had heard my laugh and knew I was there. One of these friends said she was drawn to my ‘cackle’ and I was delighted.

Anthony taught me how to develop this rollicking guffaw and sometimes, like the stupid tears, it bursts out of me unexpectedly. Yes, indeed, Anthony invented LOL before it ever became an acronym!

Love story 55 – The milk!

When Inna was still alive, she would often send me over to the dairy to fetch a billy of milk straight from the vat (a ‘billy’ is like a big huge can).

The joy of her request for me to get milk is akin to the following:

  • seeing a boy you like from a distance, then accidentally      getting closer (between the cows and the vat);
  • having your first alcoholic drink (milk is better); and
  • making a bloody good salmon mornay (with lots of creamy milk).

Sometimes Inna sent me over to the dairy for more milk and, at the time, this mystified me. In retrospect, I see now that she was trying to encourage a relationship between her son, Anthony, and me, but at the time I didn’t get this. I just used to feel embarrassed at going over to the dairy yet again when he was so busy!

He would look at me as if I were mad, and I would say that his mum wanted more for the mornay. Sometimes he gave me a quizzical look and I would go straight back to the house and, before Inna saw me, drink a huge glass of fresh milk!

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Love story 46 – 50

Love story 46 – An Anthony kind of person

Questions:

What kind of person doesn’t let themselves adore the person they have adored more than anyone else?

What kind of person doesn’t allow themselves to love the person they have loved for over a decade?

What kind of person cries tears for the years lost?

What kind of person attempts to make up for the years lost with an avalanche of passion?

What kind of person banishes a lifelong fear of love in a single moment of clarity?

What kind of person reveals a hidden heart so huge with generosity that it shocks him?

What kind of person is honest enough to express the guilt and remorse of not having expressed these things before?

What kind of person can wipe all of the tears, fears and years away with the single sentence: “I am in love with you”?

Answer:

An Anthony kind of person.

Love story 47 – Past and present

I have come to a point in this love story where I feel I should go back and fill in the details in previous chapters.

I have come to a point in this love story where the joy of ‘happily ever after’ was tainted by some unexpected contingencies.

I have come to a point in this love story where the past and present are about to have a head-on collision.

Last night, when I rang Anthony in the nursing lodge, he wasn’t sure where he was and he asked me to pick him up soon because there was a storm. But he thought he was in the past and so, instead of the usual, “I love you, Ants”, I decided to say, “I am in love with you, Ants.”

“Me too,” he said, his new, quiet voice louder than usual.

I have come to a point in this love story….

Love story 48 – Engagement troubles

Our engagement announcement was met with a mixture of reactions with 99.9% of our friends and family ecstatically happy for us.

Of course there was surprise all around because, by now, Anthony was 56 and I was 33. We had told a few people but we hadn’t yet told Anthony’s brother (the one who lived across the road with the beautiful blonde-haired children who were now young adults, and his wife, who I regarded as an older sister figure).

I didn’t understand why Anthony felt it necessary to take a carton of champagne over to their house to tell them the good news. After all, they were my very good friends and their youngest son was my godson. They had always adored me for the way I had cared for Inna, so we had a very strong relationship and I didn’t understand why Anthony was so nervous. He later revealed that his anxiety about various potential repercussions had prevented him from contemplating marriage years before but at the time I didn’t understand this at all.

Well, our good news was greeted with great mirth and congratulations and we all drank a lot of champagne and everyone was smiling, especially the beautiful blond teenagers and their mother. It didn’t register with me at the time that the brother had gone pale and withdrawn from the room, and we went back to the farm very merry – relieved that it was now out in the open. We had even set a wedding date for the following year.

I didn’t realize then that the next decade would be so fraught with heartache, because I didn’t understand the politics of Anthony’s partnership with his brother and that our marriage, for this brother, was devastating. It had always been assumed, I guess, that Anthony would never get married and that his side of the farm would be their legacy. I was so naive.

The brother and his wife didn’t speak to me for years, not even at our wedding, and, even though the brother demanded a dissolution of his partnership with Anthony the day after our engagement announcement, he wouldn’t sign off on this for eight years. This broke Anthony’s heart and hardened my own and, soon after, Anthony developed the first of his diseases – kidney cancer. He had to undergo two operations before the bad kidney was removed and then he was told he could never ride a motorbike again (and he loved riding).

In retrospect, this was the beginning of the end of Anthony’s good health. From then on, despite the birth and joy of Son, Anthony just got sicker and sicker with what I now know was the onset of Parkinson’s disease and prostate cancer.

These first years of our marriage were laced with what I will, from now on, call ‘the troubles’. Son’s entrance into the world made everything okay and I discovered, within myself, a feistiness I didn’t know I possessed. So I tried to become a kind of shield to protect my boys -’mother bear’ is probably a more apt metaphor.

When Anthony and I got married and had Son (exactly 9 months later – how embarrassing!) we had no idea that our heaven would soon be pierced by sharp little arrows from hell. The troubles entered our world.

Love story 49 – Roast chicken

After we were engaged, I would get the train down from Perth some weekends and Anthony would pick me up from the station and we’d go back to the farm. Every time we saw each other it was as if we’d just discovered something brand new and the joy was neon, blinking surprise, like a double moon.

He always cooked me a roast chicken and I was always ravenous because I was still a rather poor student. So we ate, drank and were merry, sometimes with visitors and sometime without. These were the best days of my life so far – the very best.

Love story 50 – The three of us

Everyone adored Anthony – all of his many nephews and nieces, the local butcher, postmistress and shop keeper, the neighbouring farmers, his young buddies with their Toranas, his old boarding school friends, the cows, the dogs – everyone!

When Son was born (the worst 48 hours of pain I have ever experienced – yes, isn’t childbirth wonderful!) I watched Anthony’s face as he held our little midget in his arms and I felt a little blanket of comfort settle on the three of us.

Now we were 3.

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A turkey called ‘Bubble’

Yes, I am over-posting, sorry. I am wide awake with anxiety for a friend who has been in a car accident and for the people in Colorado. I don’t know what to say about any of this so I revert to talking turkey trivia….

In the forefront, you can see Bubble approaching me for a hug.

Now, Bubble is right next to me on the table, looking very huggable.

Bubble was rather cute when he was little.

It was Anthony who wanted turkeys and here is a picture of our first Bubble who didn’t survive. And, a few months later, Anthony began living in the nursing lodge.

43 Comments »

Love story 43 – 45

Love story 43 – The Sydney trip

To have to spend the first few days, of knowing that Anthony loved me, in a luxurious penthouse motel room with a man who showered me with gifts, dinners and adoration was, to say the least, a bit strange. At the end of the first day with the Sydney man I had had enough of his futile amorous attempts and told him the truth and he cried! I had never had men crying over me before so to have two of them in the space of 48 hours was extraordinary.

I have to hand it to the Sydney man; he ended up accepting that even though he thought I was ‘the one’ for him, I most definitely didn’t. So, instead of doing all the romantic stuff he had probably planned, we went on pub crawls, to outside concerts, to fancy restaurants, to art galleries and museums, and even to visit some of his friends. He took me to his nearly renovated house in a fancy suburb and then showed me a cute little flat he had wanted to buy me because he knew I wanted to be a full-time writer. He was obviously wealthy and, no matter how much I insisted, he wouldn’t let me pay for a single thing.

In the evenings, I would sleep in the enormous king-sized bed and, after giving me a chaste kiss (or two!) he would retire to the couch in the other room and watch television. For three nights I went to sleep, counting the hours until my flight back to Western Australia.

When the Sydney man saw me off at the airport, he cried again quite publically which I found extremely embarrassing. Giving me a bearhug, he whispered, “I’ll never see you again, will I,” and, once I’d extricated myself from his embrace, I nodded, thanked him profusely and he left the airport and went back to his life.

On the plane, I got the yellow envelope out of its hiding place in my handbag and stared at all of the things Anthony had said to me just a few days previous. As the plane lifted, so did my exhausted heart.

Love story 44 – ‘I am in love with you, Jules’

I have very little recollection of how I got back to my flat after arriving at Perth airport but, the relief of entering the tinyness of my home overwhelmed me and I sat down and took a breath.

The phone rang repeatedly for the next hour until I finally answered it. It was Anthony.

“Jules?” he said, his big, booming voice somehow diminished by what I now realize was uncertainty.

“Hi Ants. I’m home.”

“I don’t love you, Jules,” he said, but I was so tired I almost didn’t register the devastation of this remark.

“Oh,” I said.

“I am in love with you, Julie. I always have been.”

I paused, unable to find the right words.

“Did you hear me, Jules?”

“Yes.”

“So….?”

“That’s nice,” I said, trying to scramble out of the fog of my exhaustion. “I’m happy for you.”

The feeling of power was rather lovely!

Love story 45 – A ‘new’ Anthony

It was strange getting used to this ‘new’ Anthony, who rushed up to Perth the very day I returned from Sydney and arrived on my doorstep exactly two hours after our phone conversation. He must have broken all the speed limits.

The loud knocking on my door woke me from a deep sleep because my flight back from Perth was during the night, so I was a bit disorientated when I answered the door. You see, I didn’t know Anthony was coming up to Perth, so I assumed it was either Andrew, my best friend, or Neville and Robbo, my Guinness buddies, or else one of my girlfriends.

“Just a minute,” I called, tidying myself up a bit in my teensy bathroom.

The knocking grew alarmingly loud, and then I heard his voice: “JULES!” and I got a terrible shock.

I took my time answering the door, trying to compose myself, wanting to appear nonchalant, but my heart was galloping like a herd of wild buffalo.

Well, it was just like in the movies! A reunion made in heaven. He embraced me with such fervor that I had to push him away, laughing, and then we talked and talked and talked, or, rather, he talked. I listened with fascination to his story of love for me over coffee, then a bottle of wine he’d brought, and then we went out for lunch.

He stayed with me for two days and then asked me to come back to the farm with him for the remainder of the week. So I took a week off work (I was working in a nursing home), and off my university studies, and entered, not without some trepidation, a new chapter – a brand new chapter – of life.

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