…WATCHING A PIG BREAK ITS LEG.
We were driving down a Welsh lane, behind this tractor pulling a trailer that had a massive sow in it. Suddenly, the pig decided to jump out. But it hurt itself rather badly and hobbled off with the farmer in pursuit. I was about three and, for some reason, my mum Pauline’s way of dealing with this violent situation was to break into a Welsh-language folk song about families killing pigs to eat in winter. The scene has always stuck in my mind.
…MY PARENTS WERE FROM VERY DIFFERENT BACKGROUNDS.
My dad, Philip, was a doctor whose family had made enough money from a hardware store they owned in the Welsh valleys to send him to college. My mum, a medical secretary, came from a family of Neath faggot makers. Dad was well travelled. Mum used to say, “The furthest I’d go when I was young was an escalator in Cardiff.”
But they were together for 53 years, until he died in 2018.
…DAD WAS QUIET BUT HUGELY INSPIRING.
He used to tell people he was a carpenter, because he didn’t want to be put on a pedestal because of his profession. He taught me to listen and to treat everyone with respect. He’d play me Bob Dylan, Maria Callas, Duke Ellington and all sorts of other music. And he encouraged me and my three siblings to try all different types of food. He made me open-minded and gave me a great appreciation of the world’s cultural riches.
…EVERYTHING WE DID OR LEARNED AT PRIMARY SCHOOL SEEMED TO HAVE A SONG TO GO WITH IT.
It was a Welsh-language school in Swansea. And there were also constant solo singing, poetry and choir competitions.
Music was everywhere when I was young. We’d to go the chapel with Mum each Sunday and sing various gorgeous hymns. I inherited a piano and taught myself to play that and the guitar, too.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2020-Ausgabe von Reader's Digest UK.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 2020-Ausgabe von Reader's Digest UK.
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