I went into the harbour town on Monday, relieved, I was, not to be travelling the switchback road today, Tuesday. I knew that Prince William and Princess Kate planned a walkabout, and I just knew. No parking, Chaos, Road Closures. Angst and Grumps. A lot of capitals there. However, my beloved son called me to say his big fancy yacht was coming in to harbour on the Visit Day. Oh…….
It wasn’t really a conversation with myself, not when one of my darlings are nearby. I would drive anywhere on any switchback to find and hug said beloved. As I spun along the almost empty switchback, up hills, around endless corners and hardly meeting a single visitor, whom, we joke here, has no idea how to reverse, and on a single track road, I hoped and prayed for a parking space. My mini is tiny, easy to park, I could perch anywhere. I turned down into the town, saw the camera crews, the newspaper journalists, the big mikes with those fluffy tops, the tourists all regailed in summer sparkle. The sun did shine, the air warm. I arrived to witness a serious and furious altercation on a parking space, and thought, no, this isn’t for me. I spoke to my lovely friends in the Harbour Garage and asked if they could advise me. They did, and I applied my mini, sort of, around a couple of vehicles with serious issues, neither of which were going anywhere this day. Then I walked, no, I danced through the thronging crowd, as if I was somebody, down the Private Pontoon, to this classy ship,and there he was, chatting to the lifeboat crew. A cup of tea, no, two, and a good catchup with a man who was my middle child, still is, but who is now a husband and father of five and just marvellous. I heard it today from the guests aboard. I’ve heard it hundreds of time before. He is calm, he is intuitively connected with the vagaries of this Atlantic/Island conflict, and is decisive and respectful. That’s him.
Anyway…..I managed to escape the harbour town before the roads were closed. I am thankful. Not just because I escaped, but more. How on earth do these young royals cope with no freedom, endless security restrictions, no chance to say Hey, let’s go for a picnic, let’s walk down the street, let’s do any damn thing spontaneous? I heard murmurs about the Royal Family as I fannied about with parking, as I walked down the pontoon to the superyacht. It thinked me. It is easy, no, possible, to be so unvisioned in a life as to make opinions and judgements based on fluff, no experience, no research. Not sure that’s an opinion, nor the basis for an intelligent judgement at all.
Later, I see how my islander friends greeted the young couple, the smiles, the touches, the obvious conversations. And I am glad. They came to our island for peace and I hope they found it. They did their visit thing, they were gracious and approachable. They didn’t choose to be born, but they have grabbed it with both hands. I cannot imagine how tough that is. I used to be furious when the father of my endless children wasn’t home by six.
Perspective.