Pleasant, in a Race-you-to-Retirement kind of way.
Bins lined up for the bi-weekly collection. Adequate parking.
Hedges, lawns, sensible trees. The houses distinguishable by number only, or
the colour of the front door. The street you’d want to illustrate your article: Caught in the nets: Love and death in a
typical English street..
We trawl along the street, looking for a white Fiat Panda, and a crying
woman.
‘There!’
Rae parks just beyond the car. We walk right and left of it, cops in
a bad movie.
The woman is sitting behind the wheel, a handkerchief pressed to her
face. She doesn’t acknowledge us at all, so Rae raps gently on the window. The
woman frees up a hand to wind it down.
‘Hello’ says Rae. ‘It’s the ambulance.’
The woman gives a hurried little nod, like she knew all along.
‘How can we help?’
The woman presses the handkerchief harder.
‘Are you hurt at all? Do you have any pain?’
The woman gives a splutter like a cynical laugh, then briefly holds
out the handkerchief like that was evidence of pain in itself, then carries on
crying.
‘Okay. I tell you what. How about you come on to the ambulance with
us? We can talk a bit more privately there. We’re not going to drive off or do
anything you don’t want to do. How does that sound?’
The woman nods again, gives a shuddering sigh, then collects her bag
and phone and steps out of the car. I go on ahead to prep the cabin; the two of
them step on board a moment later.
‘Great. There you go – some more tissue for you. Now then. My name’s
Rae. This is Spence. I’m afraid we haven’t been told all that much. Just that
you might be having some kind of crisis. Is that right?’
Slowly, with enormous patience, Rae teases the story out of the
woman. Her name is Judith. She’s a mature student, a trainee teacher. Things
have been getting difficult lately. The stresses of her new job, fights at home
with her eldest son, her mother falling ill, her boyfriend going cold on the
relationship. She’d had problems with depression before. She thought she had it
beat. She’d been off the medication for a couple of years at least. But then
driving back from school today – thinking of all the things she had to do that
evening, the lesson plans, what they were going to have for dinner, how she was
going to fit in a visit to her mum, whether to phone Kevin or not – she suddenly
felt so overwhelmed she put the radio on to take her mind off it all. They were
playing an old Gilbert O’Sullivan song: Alone
again, naturally. Her eyes started to fill, so she pulled over to get her
breath. But then she started crying hard, and couldn’t stop. After half an hour
she didn’t know what to do. She phoned a helpline. They must have called the
ambulance. She was sorry about it. She was embarrassed.
Rae talks things through. Gently does a few checks, just to make
sure there was nothing else going on. When it comes to deciding what to do, she
goes through the options. Judith has stopped crying now. We phone her surgery
and make an appointment for that evening. She thanks us. We see her back to her
car.
In the cab again. Rae turns the engine over and we sit there a while,
finishing the paperwork. We watch Judith drive away. There’s no other sign of
life in the street. It wouldn’t surprise me if the sky suddenly snapped out and
a voice called out over an intercom: Clear
the set please. Studio closing.
‘I don’t know the song she mentioned’ says Rae. ‘Do you?’
‘Yep. I certainly do.’
‘How does it go?’
‘Did you ever see that horror film, The Ring?’
‘Yeah. Especially the original. That was pretty intense.’
‘Well Alone Again, Naturally’s
the musical equivalent. You can’t ever, ever
listen to it.’
4 comments:
I used to actually enjoy the song musically. I knew it was a sad number, but I liked how the music itself fit together.
Until I lost my mom.
Then I suddenly learned the power of those lyrics to send you into a depressive tailspin.
Seriously, a couple of months after she died, I listened to a bit of it on the radio, and I started crying and just couldn't stop. A good half hour of sobbing.
Entirely believable to me.
Greg
So sorry to hear about the death of your mum, Greg.
Music can really trip you up.
My dad was never into music. The joke was that whenever he was asked about music he'd end up talking about Matt Munro, not because he was a particular fan, more because he liked the fact he'd been a London bus driver who'd made good. I remember hearing From Russia with Love on the radio one time and really tearing up - it felt more to do with lost opportunity, a failure of mine to really communicate with him, to find out what he really thought about music and everything else. And all that happening a moment!
Thanks for the comment, Greg. Very much appreciated.
Music and emotions are often quite closely linked.We all have songs that remind us of good and bad things.
For example Gilbert O'Sullivan always makes me think of tank-tops.
There are some things you wonder how they were ever fashionable. Ruffs, stovepipe hats, tank-tops...
God - how old am I?
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