I am on an
assignment: to work out what I want with what’s left of my life and how
I can ensure that I am stable, perhaps even happy, with whatever I choose. Those
most affected by this, and others who know my condition well, have counselled
that I need to focus on myself in working this out. Only I can save myself. My own
sanity has to be my priority, just as those I love must prioritise their own sanity too. Paradoxically
perhaps, this may both require more isolation and more support mechanisms. It’s
another fork in the road and I cannot, this time, plough down the middle. With
these ideas in mind, on Wednesday I opted to turn my back on my future and go
exploring for more remnants of my dead past.... in Penge. I am at a loss as to how
I got there. Figuratively speaking that is, as my dissociation is generally of
the willful kind, not strange blanks where I am totally disconnected.
I had actually
reached a rare calm the night before. Perhaps this was an unexpected reaction
to the existential sanity of late period Mike Peterson in the utterly
compelling court room-based Netflix documentary ‘The Staircase’. Peterson had served
eight years in prison after having been found guilty of killing his wife whose
death was actually apparently the result of a tragic accident. In keeping with the limited
capabilities of the US legal system to entirely exonerate someone falsely
accused, I was never entirely reconciled to his innocence. However, as
presented by the end of the series, an elderly innocent man had come to accept that he couldn’t get that
time back, nor fully clear his name, but that what mattered was acceptance
and to make the most of what remained of his life.
Closing
down the i-Pad I stood and marvelled at the panoramic neon beauty of London, as
viewed from the top of a Leyton tower block. The vast visual sweep provided a
calming almost soporific effect. I cannot remember ever standing in this 10th
floor flat and feeling so relaxed in the still, almost silent urban beauty of
it all. I sabotaged this soon enough though in what I told myself was simply a
conscious choice to just be me and to see where that notion might go if I
imagined myself living alone with just virtual friends and a confessional
keyboard for company. In the middle of the night self-disgust fought for
control with a range of self-calming techniques. A couple of hours later the
imagined tight rein on the exercise addiction had gone very slack and, in the
almost light, I pounded the pavement en route to the Walthamstow filter
beds via a quick spot of self-flagellation at the public exercise machines in
an adjacent park. Running up the ten flights of stairs in a ball of sweat I
hurried back to bed in the hope of more sleep. A planned day of facing the
future by facing the computer screen, possibly punctuated by an overdue
haircut and an online discussion on Bahrain, didn’t help to relax me. The
thought of taking my push bike for an overland train journey to Penge seemed
a more appealing option.
The past is
never dead. In fact it is always present. In George Orwell's '1984', O’Brien, the senior official who eventually re-programmes Winston Smith, gets him to incant: 'Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.' Winston Smith's successful treatment was for the alteration of memory.
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Memories aren't free |
I don’t know if my half dozen visits in recent years to my early
childhood hometown are an attempt at controlling my past in order to re-shape
my future. I just know that the attraction of revisiting Penge's remembered
combination of freedom and claustrophobic conformity doesn’t fade, and that it
especially grows when the present, let alone the future, seems far too
difficult to contemplate. In the night I had remembered what it felt like as a
boy to cycle away from home and to feel free, alone, on the roads and in the parks
of the area. It was a strange sensation to be doing the same thing, at
presumably greater speed, 45 years later. It wasn’t quite my childhood flashing
back before my eyes, but I felt a peculiar rush as I raced past various monuments
from my first 12 years. For the first time since I’d left Penge in 1976 I found
that St John’s Parish Church, via which I had received something of a Christian
education, was actually open. While not officially open to the public, the friendly female
minister I spoke to outside and the welcoming Church volunteers inside encouraged me to
take a look around, highly responsive to my expressed and seemingly open and honest desire
to revisit the place that had evidently had a major imprint on me. |
Temperance & Hope, designed by the William Morris Co. |
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Chancel of St John's Church |
It was not
like the emotion generated on my last visit to Penge when I had stumbled
through a dark alley behind where we used to live. Nor was it like an earlier revisit when I felt child-like glee at once again seeing the
dinosaurs ('Dinos') of Crystal Palace Park. Being inside St John’s Parish Church was
to witness that the large, dark, almost foreboding chamber, full of stiff
reverence and austere pews, had given way to a largely white space stripped of
its rigid, hierarchical regimentation. What's more, the primary space of communal
worship was now obviously much more accessible in both the literal and
metaphorical sense. The imposing brass eagle whose spread wings had formed
a lectern encasing a huge Bible was now unceremoniously parked in one corner of the seemingly unused altar. Pride of place though, under the stained glass of St John The Evangelist, remains the wood carving depicting The Last Supper.
The lofty pulpit
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A more democratic space for worship |
The intricate stone of the original pulpit is now essentially a well-preserved
reminder, to me at least, of a fast-fading past. I wasn’t saddened, nor exactly
disappointed by what I witnessed though. I didn’t imagine St John’s Parish Church Penge would have
the grand sweep of yesteryear. After all I am, physically and experientially speaking at least,
much grown since I last entered here, even if I often still reside in my child.
I had perhaps a greater appreciation for the stained-glasses than as a boy, noting their 'modern' beauty, and could freshly appreciate some other church features. The high-vaulted wooden ceilings, the
beautiful arched doors, and the design of the baptismal font in which I had surely
been dipped. This was incongruously located close to the exit where money-changing had once attracted me in the subtly-lit but long gone Church ‘book
shop’. It didn’t look as if the baptismal font was still in use, surrounded as it was by dozens of folded chairs. That said, I am
sure there are still Christenings at St John’s, so maybe.
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Baptismal font at St John's Church, Penge |
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The St John The Evangelist stained-glass |
Walking
around the outside of the Church I was reminded of where my brother and me once
rode our home-made go-cart, and of a surprising (even to me then) Church fireworks
display hidden round the back. More poignantly, I recalled a never-forgotten
dream experienced soon after we’d left Penge when I was flying around the church
grounds like a large bird (an eagle perhaps?). Briefly revisiting the Rec for
the inevitable cheese sandwich, I pushed my tired legs to carry me up, once
again, to Crystal Palace Park. Sleepless the previous night I had had the idea
that the resumption of my childhood mode of transport would connect me with
something visceral from my past life.
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Fly like an eagle? |
Being back
here again may have been an avoidance of necessary work on planning my future,
but I continue to hope that returning will somehow reveal some deeper, and less
dark, mystery from the past. Cycling up to the highest point of what had once
been an exciting racetrack for motorbikes of a certain vintage, I prepared to
revisit the high-speed childhood thrill of freewheeling home on a bike. For a
brief period it felt the same as I once again raced down through the park, zipping
past the now rusting splendour of the Crystal Palace Bowl, until sadly
a cluster of walkers, some with barely controlled small children and even
smaller dogs, necessitated me braking before taking a wrong turn and ending up in the Sports Centre car park. Perhaps as a boy I just didn’t care about
interrupting the danger of racing round tight bends, getting a speed buzz at 10
that a man approaching 60 fears to do when so many other grown-ups are present. That said, continuing down the High Street at speed on a push bike still has its
moments. An urge to scream as I careened down the street was, inevitably,
repressed. I’d earlier once again tried to be gain access to our former flat
above the High Street shop, but, 'Surprise, surprise, surprise, there
was nobody home.' I didn’t try again.
I peddled
on past the old Police Station and The Pawleyne Arms, past the former secondary
modern, Kentwood School, and found, more or less, the location of a record shop
that, aged 9-10, I used to hang out in, pestering the sometimes indulgent staff
to play LPs by Paul McCartney and Hudson-Ford. The Clock House Station shops
are now the usual café, nail bar, tattoo parlour, hairdresser variety, and
quite a few are boarded up too. I couldn’t work out exactly where the record
shop had been. There was no point asking the people on the street in their ‘20s
or ‘30s if they had any idea. It might have been the site of the bizarrely
named and seemingly moribund ‘Geek School’.
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Site of Clock House bridge record store?
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Or here? (Clock House bridge, Beckenham) |
I peddled
further and came upon Beckenham Library, an attractive 1930s facility threatened by the local council, located in front of the hideously
ostentatious 'Spa' erected on the site of Beckenham Public Baths. I remembered
nervously trying to swim there, watched from afar by my father. I needed a
place of rest, of inner calm. Inside the library I picked up a book on the psychoanalyst
Carl Jung. A section on dreams argued that these were different states of mind and not to be dismissed as just what happens when we're asleep. These could be revelations of
a different reality, of perhaps another version of ourselves.
I then found
a shrine to local boy, David Bowie, including a well-made bust of the
man. Underneath that part of the Perspex
box dedicated to the global musical and cultural legend, were notes about the
present-day threat to Crystal Palace Park’s ‘Dinos’, a recognised UK heritage site
dating back to 1851. Next to the Bowie bust was pinned a black and white press
photo of a hippy-era David playing an acoustic guitar, presumably in Beckenham’s
Croydon Road Recreational Ground, evoking ‘memories’ of the free festival that he would soon immortalise in song. A little later I cycled furiously around
the same park, unaware that this was the location of the event that inspired
Bowie’s beautiful elegy to being… unchained. I was simply searching for a sunny
park where I used to escape to.
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Bowie at Beckenham Library |
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Bowie shrine, with a memory from a free festival |
In Beckenham’s
town centre I found a kind of genteel respectability that was I think always
there. The main roundabout is still dominated by the iconic Deco cinema
where the whole family had once been moved by ‘The Belstone Fox’.
I cycled on and spotted
a branch of WH Smith’s. What could be more mundane, if not borderline tacky?
However it was here in 1973, at a little under 9 years of age, that the front
page of The New Musical Express had screamed at me ‘Bowie quits’, reporting the ending of what later we’d realise was just one passing persona (Ziggy Stardust), as the end
of the man’s entire career. That headline certainly caught my eye. I was very
young, and the NME and David Bowie were probably more than a little forbidding.
However, the idea of someone, whom I understood was himself relatively young
and definitely out there, retiring had seemed amazing. Inside the dull almost
empty inertia of WH Smith’s today I unsurprisingly couldn’t connect very much with
that newspaper day of a half century earlier. I doubt if I knew then that he’d
lived close by or had played (guitar) in the local park.
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Breaking the news of Bowie's retirement |
I rode back
to Penge, going once more along the exciting fast
road under the railway bridge. I’d once been driven at speed in the freshly
clean white Ford Cortina Mark II GT that had been my Saturday
morning responsibility for a few weeks. Alan, its 19 year old owner, sporting the
hair cut of a Bay City Roller (or so I thought), incongruously combined with
the then de rigeur brown overall befitting of one who ran a hardware store, had
somehow agreed to let this 10 year old clean his pride and joy. It didn’t last
long – too many smears on the windscreen for his liking. I doubt if I had been sod-casting
via my Ferguson transistor radio, but I vividly remember one morning cleaning the
Cortina and thinking intently of how much I hated 'Seven Seas of Rhye', the new
single release by up and coming band, Queen.
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Fast road to freedom |
I stopped
at a still familiar parades of shops opposite the old Kentwood School on the approach to Penge. I don’t actually recall
seeing the stuffed teddy emporium 'Bearly Trading' in its heyday, but whenever it
was trading it had definitely long since past. Not Trading at all. Beautiful brickwork
though. Cycling on I remembered the site of a petrol station that as a boy I
had visited in search of the renowned hurdler Alan Pascoe. According to the local
newspaper his flat had been located above, or close by. It was given, in what
was a very different era, as No 2 Kenilworth Court. I spotted the steps to
the self-same flats and remembered nervously climbing them, thinking of what I
would say to a medal winning hero of the athletics track. He wasn’t in,
however. Another familiar church offered an enticing message (see below) as I parked up
for another furtive cheese sandwich.
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Not even barely trading |
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The worried cyclist approaches the path |
Detouring
down Green Lane, I headed up Parish Lane, then journeyed along Lennard Road, once
again searching for places of sweet childhood memory. A nursery school where I began learning to ride a bike, my Mum looking on happily. A playing
field where I’d blagged my way into a private weekend event, scooping up masses
of strawberries and cream before heading out. All gone now. However opposite the
imposing Holy Trinity Church, soon to be united with St. John's, I found the half-hidden semi-gated walkway that connected to a tiny street of Edwardian houses. In recent years I have frequently revisited this path in my mind. It too cropped up in a childhood dream, and has somehow come to represent a transition to a different realm. I think this pathway
had created real fear for me as a child, but somehow it also embodied excitement, as if I could cycle between different emotional states, or more simply escape
into a different reality. I rode along the pathway, then carried my bike over the familiar enclosed bridge at Penge East
station, as I’d done hundreds of times as a boy, and peddled on.
Conscious
that I didn’t want to be taking my bike across London on rush hour trains, I
peddled back up toward Crystal Palace Park and specifically Penge West station. In
minutes I was back into a different reality. The present, where the past is never
far behind, and the future is just one step beyond. I had probably come to Penge to
escape the future. My journey into the past had thrown up a lot of notions of
escape, alongside some fear and also a kind of bravery. Knocking on doors (then
and now), hassling to hear a record that I was never going to buy,
getting the best out of strangers. It’s so hard to believe this version of
events linking my past to my present, let alone perhaps linking to my future. I
have to though.