When I first retired, well, was forced into a spell of inactivity by redundancy and the lack of effort, both on my part and the employment office, I found myself kinda at a loose end.
I only had twelve months left on me mortgage plus the outstanding balance of a bank loan on the car and a couple of hundred on a washer drier, which was all covered by PPI. So I had a nice lump sum to put in the bank from the severance, plus all my outstanding debts were paid for me by the insurance, plus a monthly stipend from social security, so I didn't really have to work for a living any more.
I tried to call Wayne at the bank to thank him for selling that insurance cover to us but he never returned my calls. I keep getting calls on my mobile about PPI and I tell them every single time to keep it up, that they are doing a great job, PPI was the best financial product I ever bought. They never seem happy about my genuine heart-felt comments, they must just be extremely modest about having given me the very best advice I could possibly have had at the time I took out those loans.
Anyway, after a year on the dole I was still out of work, with just a couple of years to go before I draw my pension, so the employment people gave up trying to find me a job and put me on pension credit. This was just like unemployment benefit but I didn't have to go through the farce of applying for non-existent jobs. Apparently a lot of agencies don't like potential clients (or rivals) to know they've hardly got anything on their books so they invent hundreds of false jobs just to look as though they have business. All that does is give false hope and waste everybody's time. Just not mine any longer.
It still left me at a loose end with nothing much to do but sit around the house. To be honest, I would have been happy doing that. Working for a living loses its appeal after 48 years with your nose rubbing hard against the grindstone.
Mandy, my wife of long standing (too bloody long, I think sometimes) took the same view and immediately decided I needed a vegetable allotment halfway across town to keep me out from getting under her feet all day. She organised the allotment for me, as she pretty well organises my life for me in general. I never get access to the car since I stopped working.
Mandy needed the car during the day for all the shopping she does and socialising with her friends. She's never worked a job in her life but was usually kept far busier than me, even when I had a job. I suppose this all helps keep her looking young, well she's fifteen years younger than me to start with.
She has coffee mornings with other layabouts, sorry homemakers, then there's shopping and library/museum visits in the afternoons, charity and fundraising organisations, the women's institute and townwomen's guild meetings in the evenings. In between, she spends several hours a week down the gym. No wonder she keeps her firm hour-glass figure.
Damn it, what with weekend shopping outings, taking in a musical show and overnight stays with her friends in London and other places, other than our evening meal I hardly ever see her.
I hate musicals, so I count myself bloody lucky being able to watch match of the day in peace and quiet with a can or two of ale every now and then while she's away enjoying herself.
When I was home alone, in those first few weeks after redundancy, I kept getting calls from her friends to arrange meetings or invite her to certain places and times, or take messages. I was like her bloody appointment secretary. Our fridge was covered in yellow post-its. Some of her friend's husbands also kept calling asking her to ring them back. Bloody hell, I thought, if she got me doing her appointments diary, like these other guys were clearly doing for their wives, my bleeding life wouldn't be my own anymore.
So, even if I wanted to, I couldn't get out of going to the allotment every day. My life wouldn't be worth living otherwise. So I picked up an old push-bike with a basket on the front and wire rack over the back wheel. Didn't cost me nothing, cos I saw it in the local free ads. Had to take the front wheel off to fit it in the car to get it home though. And I had to keep pumping up one of the tyres, which had a slow puncture, every couple of days.
Well, I found a little potting shed on the plot that the gardening secretary allotted me, which was handy. Looking around the plot it looked like the previous holder only grew stinging nettles at one end and dock leaves at the other, no doubt to sort out any stings suffered by passers-by.
Them stinging nettles sure grew high and wide. Must be some great soil under there I thought. So I scrapped off some of them weeds and put them in the compost area at the end of the plot. Unfortunately I had filled up to overflowing before I got to the end of the first row of weeds.
Damn! I had by my reckoning twenty more rows to do. So, when nobody was looking, and fortunately not many people go down there during the week, I put the next row of weeds in my neighbour's bin. Dang! I thought. That was the solution. I ended up taking wheelbarrow-loads all over the allotments, especially early in the mornings when it was quiet and no-one about. I found that a little sure goes a long way!
I tried to burn some of it off, too, after lugging two gallons of petrol from the other side of town, one in the basket and holding onto the other can while I steered the bike one-handed. The cans were too big, they wouldn't fit on the wire rack.
The damn wind was fierce where it was so open and the flames soon cleared most of the dock patch plus three neighbouring plots, a shed containing at least fifty championship racing pigeons and a six-foot high boundary fence for about thirty-six feet or so, fortunately just missing the allotment clubhouse by barely six feet.
If the wind had been blowing the other way I'd've lost my damn potting shed! That would have been a complete disaster. Phew!
Anyway, I hid the petrol cans at the back of the shed, covered by some sacks, and blamed the fire on vandals. There was a lot of muttering goin' on, I can tell you, but I've got a thick skin, you need one when you've been married as long as I have, married twice as it happens. One thing though, helplessly watching them pigeons being roasted alive in front of my helpless eyes put me off KFC for almost a fortnight.
Anyway, I scraped off the rest of the nettles which the flames didn't touch. Then I planted a load of seeds in the spring sunshine and all that came up in the summer was nettles at one end and docks at the other. At least that damn plot was consistent.
I made a lot of nettle tea that year and have enough dried leaves to last me well into my seventies. I hope they're good for you, cos they taste like shit.
The next autumn and winter, Mandy forced me down to the allotment again every single bloody weekday, so I put a paraffin heater in the potting shed plus an armchair that I found in a skip down Shepperton Street. It had casters on three of the corners so I managed to push it down there with only three stops on the way to get my breath back. Anyway, I left the door of the shed open when it wasn't raining so the damp mildew whiff of that chair died down a bit.
Either it did or I just got used to it.