Tell the invisible man I can’t see him

There was a joke shop in Tooting which was the ideal destination for anyone who was an aspiring Dennis the Menace or Beryl the Peril.

Because everyone likes to scare their grandparents with a pretend severed finger or plastic tarantula casually placed next to their February 1965 edition of the Reader’s Digest and glass of Complan.  Or create a smell which really couldn’t be blamed on the dog (whether you had a dog or not) and that, after you’d created the accompanying noise with a whoopee cushion placed under an aged relative.

For me, the best thing in the shop was invisible ink.

Watching Dangerman (like Danger Mouse only with less cheese) in the sixties, I wanted to be John Drake – or anyone on TV who was a spy.

I would leave notes, written in invisible ink, for the cleaners of our Balham flats (they were my nemesis and I knew, while on their fag break, they’d automatically reveal my messages).

Having run out of the shop-bought invisible ink, I’d create my own, using lemon juice.  My mother would often wonder why her bottles of Jif ran out so quickly.

I left messages for my mum, but these always backfired because a. her reading skills weren’t very good and b. her lighter was modelled on a make that Red Adair wouldn’t have recommended.  So, rather than knowing I was going to be late for my tea, my mother was busy ringing the Fire Brigade.  To be fair, she did like a man in uniform.

Strike a Bakelite

Growing up in Sixties London, I remember having a Bakelite telephone; it would double as a stage weight should the local Am Dram troupe ever need it.

I was nine in 1966 when the change from letters to numbers began.  Overnight, Balham became 673 (Patrick McGoohan would have been horrified).

It was at this point that people thought about getting a novelty phone.  Having a Mickey Mouse phone was very popular.  I desperately wanted one so I didn’t have to say “Balham 0557” and could – quite legitimately – answer, “Hello, Mickey”.

Having had a phone which took up half the sideboard, smaller phones were suddenly the rage. Trimphones, with their distinct ring, was one such model.

I had a friend at school who could mimic the ringing of these phones.  I often went plane spotting with him and he’d cause havoc at Heathrow making his sound and seeing all the people working on the customer services desks answering their phones wondering why no one was at the other end.

Some people would regress and buy phones which existed at the beginning of the century.  The only problem with that was that you felt obliged, when answering the phone, to sound like you’re narrating a Pathé News story.  

Whatever phone you had, it was better than waiting for the party line to finish, pop next door or go to a public phone box.  Never did get those French lessons.

Ushering in the New Year

Going to London cinemas in the ‘60s and ‘70s, I always admired the many talents of the usherettes.

I secretly wanted to be one, but never had the upper-body strength and didn’t suit a hat.

Holding a very steady torch was imperative for the usherettes; strong wrists were needed, as was the ability to wave it like King Arthur’s sword.  The proficiency to say “don’t!” was paramount in the usherettes’ armoury.  Don’t spill ice cream; don’t throw Kia-Ora over the balcony and, if you were sitting near the back, don’t touch that, you don’t know where it’s been.

During the B-film or travelogue, the usherettes would be training their neck muscles to support their intermission wares.  Several hundredweight of tubs can play havoc on your spine.

Having multiplication skills were also key; tubs were very expensive.  You’d needed to be an economist to work out what four raspberry ripple tubs would cost – and have a mortgage adviser on hand.

I cried a lot as a kid in the cinema (the Balham Odeon heard more wailing than the walls in Jerusalem) – I blame Dumbo.  It wasn’t helpful having a giant torch shone at me, as if I were escaping from Colditz, with a strict woman on the other end of it saying “don’t cry, it’s not real” – although I felt it harsh my mother had to treat me like every other audience member.

Hop, skip and a broken ankle

I realised from an early age I’d never make it as a top-class athlete.

This didn’t stop me holding my own Olympics.

I was incapable of walking like a normal person as a kid.  I’d run everywhere – forever trying to improve my leg-break bowling action, while whistling the theme from Patton or The Big Country.  I’m sure Richie Benaud did the same.  Whistling was the sixties equivalent of wearing headphones

For me, the whole of Balham High Road was mentally a cricket and/or football pitch; the pavement, my own Olympic Stadium running track.

If I was walking to school in Tooting or skipping to the Balham ABC for a cup of tea poured from the height of a small diving board, I’d pretend people in front of me were part of my race.  I’d set myself a challenge to overtake a set number of people before I’d get to the Balham Ritz cinema.  My prize being an imaginary Kia Ora.

As I walked, so I perfected my David Coleman impression.  

I’d use the cracks in the pavement for hopping, skipping and jumping as I emulated a triple jumper.   There was never much sand lying around; I invariably ended up in St James’ Hospital with twisted  ankles.  Still, I was a winner, as I never saw another pedestrian trying the same thing.  In my head, they were automatically disqualified. 

And it was the things in my head which fascinated the psychiatrists at St James’.

Bubbling over

It is thought to be unlucky having decorations still up after Twelfth Night. 

But, with all the paperchains; miniature mangers and Christmas tree fairies back in the loft/garage/recycling bin, all potential curses can vanish and normal service can be restored; although possibly not mealtimes.

As a kid growing up in the “Gateway to the South” I questioned if it was deemed to be tempting fate by still serving some form of cold meat, so frequently, up to and well after January 5th – and also, whether my mother had been sponsored by the creators of bubble & squeak?

I assumed she had been given Mrs Beeton’s “A million and one things to do with cold meat” for Christmas, as this seemed to be a daily serving (in various guises) at mealtimes before I returned to school.  I often wondered if my school books smelled of bubble & squeak due to its constant preparation throughout my holidays?

I had this irrational fear, usually during double chemistry, that the teacher might ask accusingly if anyone had brought sprouts or cabbage into the school?  While I knew bringing Player’s Number 6 in wasn’t permitted, had a sudden rule been introduced where no pupil could bring in anything which had been fried and several weeks old?

So, when someone says “bubble & squeak is not just for Christmas”  – they’re not lying.

Dear Diary…

It’s that time of year when you think about New Year’s resolutions.

It’s not unlike Lent, except the resolutions rarely last for 40-days (or nights).

Is this the year I give up chocolate (and make Bournville village a ghost town) and try and get that bikini body ready for the summer of 2024? 

Should I start adding semolina to my diet (having lived without it since an unfortunate episode during a lunch in my Balham primary school in the early ‘60s; this is unlikely – plus, I promised my then probation officer the incident would never happen again).

I’ve wondered about writing a diary?  The last time I wrote one was in the summer of ’76 and wrote the word “hot” for so many weeks I became bored.  I assume it was never continually hot for Samuel Pepys?

Last year, in the UK, the most popular New Year’s resolution was to exercise more. Should I get my Bullworker down from the loft?  Should I ask Charles Atlas for his promised set of muscles – and a duster for the Bullworker?

Or, I could combine several of the above and write in my new 2024 diary: “Have applied to Opportunity Knocks.”  I mean that most insincerely.

Mini bannister

Until my auntie Vera took me on a trolley bus from Wimbledon to Belmont (which seemed so far away from Balham, I could have been on Neptune), my second favourite mode of transport was bannisters.  (My first was the train, as I enjoyed climbing into the rope luggage rack.  I think I had been a monkey in a previous life).

In my Balham flats the cleaning ladies had done such a fine job with their tins of Pledge on the bannisters that, going down them, was like the bobsleigh at the winter Olympics.

Perhaps it’s a boy thing, but going down the flight of stairs from my fourth-floor flat, I’d slide down the set of bannisters rather than testing my multiplication skills by taking eight or nine steps at a time or take the lift.  

Oddly, I never did this on the stairs at Balham Tube station.  I think the metal studs fixed regularly on my potential downward “course” were off-putting.  “Vasectomy” was one of the first Latin words I learned.

A consequence of this constant sliding meant one side of my trousers became quite worn.  When questioned by my mother about this one-sided wear and tear, I said that one of my thighs was larger than the other and therefore rubbed.  Explaining why I’d drawn Olympic rings on her best tea tray was less convincing.  You win some, you luge some 😊

Antlers & Decking

It’s that time of year when you open your Christmas cards with apprehension.

Will they contain exploding glitter? Will it open to Away in a manger being played on a Stylophone (too soon)? Or will it contain a round-robin letter?  Personally, I’d prefer to have shards of glitter imbedded into my face rather than receive a letter from a frightful family I’d met on holiday in 1968.

Cards are more imaginative these days.  The actual card is certainly less flimsy. 

In the early ‘60s, deposited through my Balham flat letterbox, would be an envelope.  Inside was a card featuring a robin, covered in snow, chewing a sprig of holly; the card also felt like it could disintegrate at any moment.

I’ve friends in Germany and have received cards which, when opened, played oompah music to the tune of Jingle Bells

I felt like I was in a Bavarian beer house, especially as there was scratch ‘n’ sniff Glühwein on the envelope.

I’m lucky that I wear glasses as some cards open out with such force, it could have my eye out – and no one wants to be in A&E at Christmas asking for a pretend antler to be removed from both pupils.

And now I have to write to all my “friends” to tell them about how Melissa and Persephone are now doing Grade 4 castanets and the pet Labradoodle is nearly fluent in Esperanto. 

99 scary balloons

My paternal grandmother owned several Staffordshire figurines.

When I was quite young, the journey from Balham to Maida Vale would terrify me as I found the ornaments scary.

One was an old crone (probably about my age now) who had several balloons.  I envisaged that, aside from selling balloons, she would wait besides the Guillotine, cackling, smoking a small clay pipe and swearing in French.

There were also plates on the walls too.  This confused me – did my north London relatives stand up and eat – and eat sideways?

The plates mostly depicted hunting scenes – I assume my nan went out, after I’d left, to look for stags running wild up and down Baker Street?

None of my south London relatives had ornaments or plates defying gravity.  We had no hunting on Wandsworth Common so, if we had have had plates, they’d have shown a Black Maria; Princess Anne opening the new Balham Sainsbury’s or local lad, Mike Sarne, inviting EastEnders stars outside.

If I didn’t have a pathological fear of birds, I’d have loved three ducks hovering over my fireplace – readying themselves to dump something on balloon lady below.  Now, that would have made her swear!

Thriller minute

I was eight when I wrote my first novel.  It was called The Windy Night; it was a thriller and had nothing to do with cabbage.

I only wrote four-pages; and most of that were drawings (the sign of a good book is one which contains pictures).

One evening my dad brought home a few sheets of slightly used Letraset letter transfers.  My book suddenly had a very professional front cover, courtesy of these discarded sheets.

The book was never published.  My theory was the lack of semi-colons in the prose (or perhaps, too many?).  Sadly, there were no vowels left on the sheet, so the title became Th Wndy Nght – possibly many publishers rejected it as they thought it was written in Welsh or Shakespearean English?

There was a shop in Balham High Street which sold stationery.  They not only sold these transfer sheets with letters (including ones with all vowels still intact), but you could also buy a piece of card depicting landscapes where you could create your own scene.   I had sheets which had a beach showing the D-Day landings (with soldiers and tanks to manoeuvre) and a field, where you could place flora and fauna.

I mixed the two and had a giant caterpillar landing on Omaha beach and several Wehrmacht officers blowing dandelions.