Monday, 16 February 2026

100th Birthday in Heaven :)


My mother Barbara would have been 100 years old today, February 17th, though I doubt she would have wanted a telegram from Charles and Camilla - Princess Anne, maybe!  Mum died in 2019 when she was 93, after having suffered from Alzheimer's for 10 years.


I was taking a look at what London was like when she was born there in 1926, the year of the General Strike, and picked out three (very short) videos.  I can't add videos to this blog at the moment, but these links take you to YouTube.

London 1926 1.51 mins long

London Bridge 1926

General Strike 1926

Photos of London life in 1926, HERE


Mum in the middle, about 1941 :)


In 1926, when she would have taken Mum out in her pram, this is what my grandmother might have paid for her shopping.  Back then, of course, the currency was pounds, shillings and pence, but I've converted it into decimal currency for ease of comparison:

A loaf of bread: 4p

A pound of butter: 8p

Half a pound of cheese: 4p

Eight Sausages: 6p

Six eggs: 5p

Five pounds of potatoes: 3p

A leg of lamb: 30p

A whole chicken: 25p

The large family home Mum, her parents, brothers and sisters grew up in, in West London, probably cost her father around £1,000.

On the right, aged 8


With regard to this time in my mother's life, I came across an amazing coincidence via a Twitter friend who lives in Massachusetts - it's HERE if you're interested.  It's short, fear not!

I have to just mention this, while I'm on the subject of familial coincidences - during WWII, Mum's brother Geoff was in the Navy, while her brother Ken was in the Army.  They never knew where in the world each other was from one month to the next (and indeed the world was a much larger place in those days), but one day down a little street in India, Uncle Geoff literally turned a corner and bumped into his brother.  Of all the streets...  below, from one of Mum's many photo albums.



This was taken in about 1951, in Beccles, Suffolk, where Mum met our dearly beloved father.  I love how elegantly people dressed in the 50s.  I remember Mum wearing white gloves in the summer, particularly to church.  I also remember her saying, some decades later, 'Why doesn't anyone dress properly anymore?' 😄


This snap by my sister Julia; it's just so like her.



Happy birthday in heaven, Mummy :) 

🙏




Monday, 5 January 2026

Three Siblings Face the ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE!!

 

Everything seemed so normal - there we sat, my brother Eddie, me, my sister Julia, just a pleasant family get-together at our cousin's Sue's house.  Or so we thought...



...until Cousin Sue's neighbour banged on the door, begging to be let in, distraught, bloody; he said that a mysterious virus had appeared down at the docks, and 'things were getting bad in town'.  

And all of a sudden he changed into a ... well, a monster.  He bit Sue, actually bit her, and suddenly there was mayhem.  It all happened so quickly.  Around us, our family members turned into bloodthirsty savages.  

Then Eddie said, "I think this might be the zombie apocalypse'


Nothing fazed my sister.  Julia said, "Look, we've watched The Walking Dead, we know how to fight these things!"  Indeed we did.  Once we'd dispatched our former family members using kitchen utensils, mostly, Eddie took our grandfather's ceremonial sword from the its hooks on the wall.  I found a handy crossbow in the cupboard under the sink, and Julia filled a Louis Vuitton handbag with supplies.

An abandoned bike waited for us outside - we were ready!



We strode through the streets, collecting weapons as we went, confident in our ability to fight the living dead.  

How hard could it be?  



"We've got this licked," said Julia.  "After 11 seasons of TWD and all the spin-offs, we know how to ex a few zombies!"



After a while, though, it did start to get a bit more scary...



...so we left for the seaside, thinking things might be quieter in peaceful Cromer.  But zombies were everywhere!  We fought them on the streets, on the pier, in Morrisons; we fought them on the beaches!



'We fight on!' cried Eddie, brandishing his Katana, slicing head from body with style and aplomb that would have impressed even Michonne!



Eddie wielded his blade like a man possessed!  However, Julia and I got into a tussle with a few of them, after which we started to feel a bit strange.

"Have you two been bitten?' Eddie asked.  Of course we said no, it was just a scratch.  But he looked at us oddly.  I felt like he didn't believe us.  I wasn't sure if I believed us, either.



Hi, this is Eddie.  

I was right, they'd been bitten.  Still, a man's gotta do what a man's got to do, even if those slavering freaks used to be his sisters!



The End