Dunblane

Thirty years ago this coming week, Sarah and I were on a short break in the Lake District. We had been together for ten years, we were living in a beautiful place, our respective careers were fulfilling, the children, aged five and seven, were healthy and happy, and we had the luxury of a nanny with whom we had left them at home while we took time out.

It was a cold spell. The hilltops were snow-covered and down by the lakes it was sleeting. We dressed for the weather and walked during the daytime. Then, feeling cheerful and well exercised, we dined in the hotel in the evenings. 

On the morning of 13 March, a Wednesday, we woke late and were eating breakfast in our hotel room with the television on, when the programme was interrupted by a news flash. It stated simply that reports were coming in of a shooting at a primary school in Perthshire.

For a dreadful period – I no longer remember how long: it might have been a few minutes, it might have been much more – we sat there dumbly and waited for more information. At that moment, two hundred miles away, our children were at a primary school in Perthshire. 

Our relief when we heard the fateful word ‘Dunblane’ was beyond description, though only momentary as more details of the story began to emerge, and continued to do so over the coming hours.

Thomas Hamilton, a lone gunman, had walked into the school gymnasium carrying four legally-held handguns and opened fire, killing sixteen pupils, all but one of them aged under six. He had also killed one teacher, and injured a further fifteen children and adults. Then he had turned the gun on himself.

We went out and walked that day but we were struggling, as were people everywhere, to take in what had happened. At dinner that evening I started to have an unpleasant sinking feeling. My heart rate increased and I began to feel as if darkness was closing in around me, then suddenly the ground opened up beneath me and I was falling into an abyss of anxiety and despair. It came on me so powerfully and unexpectedly, and terrified me so much, that I could hardly speak.

I made it through the meal and by the end of the evening the feeling had begun to abate, but I was left in a state of high anxiety. I had no idea what had happened. For several days the anxiety persisted and with it a powerful sense of disconnection, as if all my feelings had shut down. For months after, I felt disjointed. It was like having been knocked off my axis. After that I was plagued from time to time by similar feelings, until eventually, a good while later, I sought help and embarked on a therapeutic journey which has continued intermittently throughout my life.

Triggers are complicated things and the triggering event may not always have any very obvious or logical connection to the original trauma. But I am as certain as I can be today that what happened that evening in the Lake District was that an echo of abandonment, stemming from my own experience of being sent to boarding school aged not quite eight, burst to the surface in response both to the fatal vulnerability of the Dunblane children, abandoned to the terrible madness of Thomas Hamilton, and to our abandonment of our own children at that moment, having left them behind at home, the oldest being almost exactly the same age as I was when I was sent to school.

Twenty years passed and in 2016 the anniversary was marked by services and programmes. Relatives, survivors, siblings and others closely involved reflected publicly on the dreadful events. I was struck by their dignity, composure and lack of bitterness: the eloquent head teacher who still felt guilty that it could have happened in his school; the softly-spoken father who had lost his only child three years after losing his wife to cancer; the beautiful young woman who would never know her elder sister.

I woke the morning after that twentieth anniversary with their voices still in my head, and it came to me that there was something I had never done, so overpowered by my own feelings had I been at the time. I bought some flowers and drove to Dunblane. It was a spellbinding day with long views of big hills lifting their snowy summits into an azure sky.

Dunblane cemetery is not an easy place to find, tucked away at the back of one of those sprawling residential developments where one can easily become lost in a maze of seemingly identical streets. When I got there the place was deserted, the only sign of life three magpies hopping about in the sunshine among the gravestones. 

I made my way towards the memorial fountain and stopped in front of the two rows of graves that stand before it; the graves of twelve five-year-olds and one adult, Gwen Mayor, the 45-year-old teacher who died trying to protect her pupils.

I placed some of the flowers on the rim of the fountain, inscribed with the names of all seventeen who died, and some by Gwen Mayor’s grave. Then I stood there and shed tears. I thought: there is nothing in human experience that can make sense of something like this. I was there for perhaps fifteen minutes in all and saw no one. It felt lonely. I would have liked to be able to share my feelings with someone.

I won’t be able to do the same thing again next week because I am going to a wedding in India. But thirty years on I still feel a powerful connection with that terrible, inexplicable event. I feel the need to honour the memory of that day, those events, those tragically unlucky children and their heroic teacher. So today I write this for them, from my heart, in memoriam.

Within a year of the killings the UK government had enacted legislation banning handguns.

Posted in Empathy, Kindness, Loss, Love, Memory, Mental health, Personal development, wellbeing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Accentuate the positive

Music is on my mind. Making, not listening. In truth, it’s seldom far away, but right now it’s more than usually present. I’ve spent the morning trying to figure out set lists for a concert in May at our local theatre. It’s not at all straightforward.

We began a dozen or so years ago as a duo, my singer friend, Dave, with me as his keyboard accompanist, playing favourites from the sixties and seventies. In recent years we’ve expanded to become a group of seven musicians, mostly aged over sixty (some, including me, well over), who put on an annual winter show in the arts centre here in my village. 

Last Christmas, for the first time, we had to face the challenges of being what is, in effect, a geriatric band. In the run-up people started getting ill and developing conditions. One member’s partner got a slot for her hip operation on the night before the gig.

Eleventh-hour personnel changes ensued. Somehow we ended up with an extra voice and a strings section, bringing our number to ten. One set of challenges solved, another created. But as we approach the end of February, on another grey day, I need to cheer myself up. I’d rather write about positives than challenges.

For example … my literary agent and old friend, Jenny, has twin thirty-eight-year-old sons from her first marriage. One of them, Davy, was diagnosed with motor neurone disease when he was just thirty. 

Last week he was selected to compete as a snowboarder in the British Winter Paralympic team. He will be going to Cortina in March as the first MND athlete ever to compete at a Paralympic Games. Jenny’s joy and pride exploded out of the WhatsApp message bringing me the news.

Closer to home, another friend, Erica, has been writing a book about her journey from the source of one of Scotland’s major rivers to its mouth. It’s a lovely book about landscape, local lore and history, the crafts and characters she encounters along the way. 

Over the last year I’ve been metaphorically walking alongside her, reading and commenting, chapter by chapter. Yesterday she heard that the book is to be published by one of Scotland’s major publishers. Another delighted WhatsApp message lit up my phone. 

Yesterday also I spent a fascinating couple of hours with Jen, the war reporter whose book festival event I recently chaired, quizzing her about the way that drones have changed the face of warfare.

This is information I need for what I’m writing at the moment. Jen has experienced it at first hand, reporting from the frontline in Ukraine. She was able to give me invaluable, if horrifying, material. 

A second important strand in my current writing project relates to the particular genetic condition of one of the characters. I heard yesterday from the society representing people affected by it, with contact details of a specialist I can talk to.

It reminded me of how important research is, not merely for the mechanics of plotting, the benefits of plausibility and narrative weight, but also as a source of energy. Knowing stuff excites me. It fuels the narrative engine and makes me want to get on with telling the story.

To complete the catalogue of positives, back to music. On Wednesday evenings I play with friends in my local pub. Depending on who is around we combine piano, guitar, fiddle, mandolin, double bass and vocals. 

The repertoire is mostly Americana. Google describes this as ‘a contemporary music genre blending American roots traditions, including folk, country, blues, bluegrass, and roots-rock.’

Last night we were already a full complement when three visiting Canadian musicians turned up out of the blue. They added a second fiddle and guitar, and an accordion, to the line-up.

It made for a glorious couple of hours of shared music-making and the connection, the sense of community, that comes with it – even when, as in my case, the pub piano faces the wall and you have your back to everyone else.

February can feel a bit like facing the wall, but without the music. But at the risk of sounding trite, experience tells me there’s always a positive somewhere within reach – even if only that it’s March on Sunday.

Posted in Collaboration, Health, Mental health, Music, Stories, Storytelling, War, wellbeing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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