You can be gorgeous at 30, charming at 40 and irresistible for the rest of your life. Coco Chanel
Showing posts with label boarding school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boarding school. Show all posts
Tuesday, 7 May 2013
Diversions
Here's a list of things that I don't miss from UK.........
This was going to be the opening sentence of today's blog but before I could get stuck in to my 2000 words (ha!), daughter sent me this photo of the the most beautiful Spring day in the UK.
Which is ironic - because The Weather was going to head my list of UK pet-hates.......
So - look at this and see what you think.
There is surely no better place to be than the UK on a day like today.
We're having a sandstorm here - 36 degrees and poor visibility.
Like this;
No contest.
Miss home sometimes.
Wednesday, 1 May 2013
Really Miss You Too
If my daughter is not struck down by measles or rampant hay fever, or 'flu or any other pathology running riot in the UK streets she will be starting her IB exams tomorrow - yes, the real thing is finally upon us, a cantering rearguard action come the day.
The exams started yesterday, I understand. I thought they started tomorrow - with English - but no, yesterday was the day - Politics, apparently. Hope it all went well for the Politics students - my daughter is not one of those, although Politics is part of the Uni Course for which she's applied. There is undoubtedly some incomprehensible reason why Politics is not currently on her agenda for IB although she will be taking A Level Politics in June.
But perhaps she is as confused as I, as she thinks there are no exams today - a day off for everyone? surely not - but maybe it's something obscure today like 'Atom Splitting for Beginners' - being taken by someone in Norway and someone else in Chile. Perhaps.
So, this morning she was not good. Her iMessage ran;
'Morning. Skype 3.35 your time? Really miss you. Love you. x'
I'd offered to fly over for the exams but she'd been calmer then, and logical, saying that she wouldn't really be able to spend any time with me so it would be a waste of time. Agreed.
But I should have gone anyway, shouldn't I? I should have foreseen the final countdown ending with potential meltdown and arranged a touchdown.
'Really miss you.'
Says so much.
So I called her and we didn't say that much; I was treading carefully and she was holding it together. The agenda for today is final, final, final revision for English, followed by Philosophy for which exam on Monday. She's eating because she must. She's keeping out of the way of the students with head colds/extreme breakdowns/extreme confidence. She'll catch up at lunchtime - her time. She catches her breath. So do I.
Now I can't wait for the exams to get underway - let's get this show on the road, fast-forward two weeks to the anticlimactic, post-exams, pre-result limbo.
I can't wait to see my daughter without bags under her eyes and books in her arms and quotations on her lips.
But meanwhile,Waitrose are sending in the cavalry; no military might, just a floral bouquet with my thoughts as reinforcements on the card.
'With you every step of the way.'
As ever.
Wednesday, 24 June 2009
How Wrong Can You Be?

As we approach the final breathless - and airless - days of this Summer Term, I am delighted that this academic year is drawing to a close.
I recall how breathless we were, daughter and I, last September, as we made a very sad journey back to the UK where she would stay to start boarding school life, full time, all girls, from Year 9 through to Upper Sixth. We would be apart for the first time since her birth - give or take a day or two.
I remember how convinced I was that this was the right thing for her for a multitude of reasons; I also knew that it was not what she wanted, that she would be homesick, that she was 'making a fist of it', 'putting on a brave face', 'putting her best foot forward' and any other physical action necessary to see this through.
It must be said, although I had her best interests in mind, this was a perverse decision on my part. Having spent the whole of her fourteen-year life trying to ensure her happiness and security, I had decided to entrust her to the care of strangers in an unfamiliar environment, to leave her in a country which she remembered only from her early childhood.
On the scale of wrong decisions this one was simply off the scale. How wrong is it necessary to be before skies fall and chaos reigns?
All the 'wrong' indicators were flashing, ringing, even screaming - I blindly, deafly and stupidly pursued this course of action.
The reality of the first three weeks was indescribable both for her and for me. I think she was crying for all of her waking hours - she cried uncontrollably through numerous, lengthy and expensive phone calls. She cried silently during lessons and sobbed relentlessly whilst attempting to eat the revolting food. When talking to me she would be crying while laughing - her grief overwhelming, all-embracing. She cried for home, for me, for the weather, from loneliness, from hunger. Desperate, desperate stuff.
I too cried, for my loss, my inability to comfort her, my helplessness. My grief was akin to bereavement. I missed her in every corner of the house and found myself unable to enter her bedroom without taking a deep breath first. Although never a noisy child, her absence was in the absolute silence - as if the house was holding its breath until her return.
I didn't want all the 'free' time - I didn't know what to do with it. Would I have known what to do with it were she happy? Who knows.
But the ending is happy. I pulled her out of boarding school at the end of the Easter Term. She is at school here now - not boarding, not all girls, not many things which I had in mind for her; but she is happy.
So the hot Summer months beckon. We are going to sweat, swim and enjoy.
The skies are back where they should be - high, wide, and oh, so very blue. To paraphrase my daughter, nothing that life can throw at us will ever be as bad as those weeks. Nothing.
This blog was written at the end of the Summer Term 2009.
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