Forever Autumn

September

Gone are the aromas of hot earth and barbecues, lollipop-coloured clothes, other people’s lives audible through open doors and windows, sunshine warming bare legs, iced drinks sweet and herby.

As Summer tips into Autumn, there’s the scent of apples; hedgerows bejewelled with garnet and obsidian and ruby berries; the skip-whine-trudge of children going to school; bare legs encased; steaming drinks warming and spiced.

Conkers peek through spiky eyelashes from tree and pavement. What were you supposed to do to harden them? Oven? Vinegar? I can’t recall. Did I ever beat anyone? I can’t recall that either.

But I remember the first day of the school year when I was fifteen, far too sophisticated for conkers, walking down the hill to collect my friend, ignoring my mother’s plea to wear a coat. It’s still too warm, Mum, and it’s not going to rain.

I was ready for Autumn. I always was. Tired of the heat – or more often – the disappointment because there was none, tired of a lack of pattern, I was happy when primary colours became muted and freedom became something earned at the end of the day. Albeit briefly, I even looked forward to school.

We walk the mile to school wearing our freshly ironed shirts, knotted ties, dark skirts and jumpers. The uniform is supposed to make us look the same but never can. Short, tall, curvy, uncurvy, maturing at different ages into different shapes, we are ourselves, pushing the rules about skirt lengths and shoe styles and make-up to make uniform individual.

We pass the path to the waterfall, cross over the bridge over the river which will run slow into the bigger one for a few weeks yet and under the narrow gauge railway.

On every deciduous tree around us, the leaves are still green but they whisper in the breeze to each other ‘When shall we change? What will be the tipping point?’

I barely notice, too busy wondering if this year’s set texts in English will be good and what stories I’ll be asked to write and thinking as I’ve thought before:

Surely this year at last, school will be fun, the teachers will be inspiring, the bullies will have lost interest, and the boy will finally see me properly and fall in love…

October

By October, leaves are red and gold and orange.

My wedding day was in October. All the days leading up to it had been grey and drizzly. Early in the morning of that day, I heard a pattering on the roof. No one had planned for rain.

My father, the tee-total, brings me a Bucks-Fizz, saying ‘Rain before seven, fine by eleven’ to help me stop worrying about what will happen if it doesn’t stop.

Then we’re caught up in a flurry. I’m too busy with hair and make-up and unfamiliar hooped petticoats to notice what is happening outside. When my mother and sister have gone ahead, Dad and I wait with nothing to say, because what can be said? I am doing something irrevocable – going from single to married, from daughter to wife. I’m aware of myself teetering on the edge of change, while my father is muttering the words he will shortly need to say.

Who giveth this woman?

Her mother and I do.

I hadn’t lived with my parents for ten years by then and I was never my father’s chattel anyway, and he never thought I was. But I was his beloved, stepping into a new stage of life.

Once he’d held my hand as I learned to walk, and later held the bicycle steady as I learned to ride and then… both times, he’d let go to see how I managed alone. Now, as I teetered, he was trusting once more that once he let go, I’d keep my balance.

And then the car arrives to take us to the church and Dad and I walk towards the entrance, late guests scurrying past.

Arm in arm for the last yards we pause and look up.

Above us in the churchyard, trees bow heads crowned with golden leaves, and above those leaves is a canopy of the deepest, clearest, most beautiful azure sky.

I am ready.

November

November is sometimes a drowning month when wind drives the last leaves from every tree to skitter angrily across grey skies before rain drums them into the mud.

Even if it doesn’t rain, the skies are dull, the night encroaching on day at either side, crushing it slowly hour by hour towards Solstice. Frosts start, snow may fall.

For a day or so, fireworks stud the grey night, rockets going up, up, up and balancing in the darkness before… Hoom! They fall in showers of impossible brightness. Bonfires scent our hair and clothes with woodsmoke. Our hands are warmed by hot dogs and steaming chocolate, before waving sparklers in defiance against the black night.

I remember a firework display when my children were very small. My baby daughter puts hands over her ears and buries her nose in my shoulder, sobbing. It’s too overwhelming for her. Not for my toddler son who tries to out-jump and out-shriek the fireworks then… losing both wellies in the mud, steps forward in his socks and…then falls flat. Just as well the noise blots out what my husband is saying as he picks that muddy figure up.

When the fireworks are over, November becomes dull again until Christmas fills the town with lights and gifts and sparkle.

In the countryside, a few brown leaves cling moistureless for a few more days, then fall to crunch under feet before turning into earth at the foot of their tree.

In three months, they’ve gone from green to … dead?

Maybe not exactly. Because they’ve fallen, mushrooms can grow. Under them animals seek food or store it. A hidden world is revealed by bare branches: the last of the berries, bark, fungus, hedgehogs, deer, rabbits, squirrels, and the curious, mischievous fox – russet, red, fawn, silver, orange.

Those Autumn leaves have transformed, every one holding a memory of eons of leaves that once emerged green then turned gold then faded so something else could grow and live. Another tree, a fungus, a creature.

Everything fades but nothing ever truly disappears. It changes. It feeds. It makes something new possible.

Everything is a matter of timing and balance.

Words and image copyright (c) Paula Harmon 2025. These are not to be used without the author’s express permission including for the purposes of training artificial intelligence (AI).

It’s All on the Board

An image of board games and a card game:

Do you like or loathe board games? We love them.

In our house, games come out for family get togethers, or when we have friends staying. It’s something we all (with the possible exception of my father-in-law) look forward to. Yes, my adult children play video games too, but when they’re home, they even bring their own friends round to play board games with us sometimes. There is nothing like a board game to foster, um, healthy interaction and um… Let’s have a think shall we?

Contraband

Contraband was my parents’ and dates back (as you can probably tell) to the 1950’s or 1960s. It’s a bluffing game in which you take it in turns to be a traveller passing through customs, or the customs officer.

Like most bluffing games, the fun is trying to keep a straight face when you’re smuggling stuff or pretending you have the diplomatic bag when you don’t or trying to look guilty when you’re innocent to tempt the customs officer to make a false accusation and have to pay compensation.

My dad made a brilliant customs officer. He’d stare menacingly into your eyes then do something like waggle his eyebrows to make you confess all. I developed quite a good poker face (even if I’ve rarely used it to play poker, and then never for money).

Scrabble

When I was about sixteen and went to visit my German penfriend, we played Scrabble. My penfriend tried making English words while I made German words. However, my vocabulary was tiny, and while her English was very good, the letter selection was designed for the German language, so the ratio wasn’t right. We gave up quite quickly.

My husband can’t spell, but loves Scrabble. Playing it with him is a very long-winded process as the options are (eventually) to tell him how to spell something, or let him use a dictionary.

One pre-internet summer we went on a three-week trailer-tent trip in northern Spain. It rained solidly for the last fortnight, a quagmire forming under the ground sheet. We were a long way from town, so we spent some of our evenings playing Scrabble. It took him so long to play his turns, that I managed to read most of Lord of the Rings during the games we played.

Monopoly

I couldn’t picture Monopoly because it’s in the attic somewhere with Rummikub, Pictionary, Trivial Pursuit and Skirrid. (I like to think that the friendly household ghost (who makes odd noises around the house) and our timid household elf (who moves stuff about) spend their evenings playing them and will be upset when we’ve moved enough clutter to find them.)

I was rather a goody-two-shoes child, but I confess that when my friend and I played Monopoly with our little sisters, a determination to win at all costs possessed both of us.

‘If you give me Mayfair, I’ll give you Old Kent Road and Whitechapel,’ one of us would say, making the most of our younger sisters’ slim grasp on finance. ‘Of course it’s a fair swap!’ Then we’d bankrupt them.

They cottoned on in the end of course, and my sister still complains about it. I feel little shame. It was revenge for all the times she got out of chores by being cute.

Cluedo/Clue

She can’t accuse me of cheating at Cluedo since it’s barely possible, but even as an adult my sister finds it baffling. After playing one Christmas a few years ago, I found a clue sheets on which she’d written ‘Have you got any idea what’s going on?’ and my brother-in-law had written in reply: ‘Nope’.

When the children were little, we bought a French version while holidaying in France. Then we realised that the board had a different layout and extra rules. My French wasn’t up to working them out, so it’s actually never been used.

The layout change wasn’t so bad. That’s happened on and off since it was invented as you can read about here. But ever since that holiday, our family has called Colonel Mustard ‘Colonel Moutarde’ with a bad French accent.

Articulate

Articulate starts the most arguments. You have to describe something on a card to your team mate and if they get it right, you move to the next card, getting as many right as possible until the time is up. The key is being on the same wavelength as your partner. My husband and I usually are which means we’re sometimes not allowed to be in a team. But we’re not always.

There are photos of people crying with laughter while in another team, A shouts at B because B’s suggested something ridiculous as the answer to a perfectly ‘obvious’ clue and B shouts that A is incomprehensible and obtuse. Insults fly and divorce and/or murder is threatened. It makes no odds – we all (with the exception of my father-in-law) still love it.

Winning exchange:

‘You know Shakespeare’s play where they killed a king?’

‘Er…’

‘OK, so the burger place that sells burgers that’s not Burger King? The first half.’

‘Er… Mac?’

‘Yup. Um… the beer that Homer Simpson drinks?’

‘Duff? Oh! MacDuff.’

‘Yes!’

Losing exchange:

‘You know the man who fell out of the tree?’

‘Er…’

‘He was a scientist. What did he discover?’

‘Aspirin?’

What do boardgames teach?

Chess and Backgammon teach strategy (and so does ‘Ticket to Ride’ which I haven’t described as we’ve only played it twice), but the other board games above?

Reading through this list makes me wonder. Monopoly was originally invented to teach about the evils of capitalism, but during a game, almost everyone turns into an evil capitalist. Clearly I was no better than any of them once.

The others might be accused of encouraging lying, manipulating and arguing. Perhaps. Or maybe they just help you let off steam.

Despite a lifetime playing board games, I grew up to be the upstanding moral citizen.

And let’s be honest, they’re great fun.

Words and image copyright (c) Paula Harmon 2025. These are not to be used without the author’s express permission including for the purposes of training artificial intelligence (AI).

Apples, Pears and Triangles

When my sister and I were teenagers, our parents went away for the weekend leaving us to our own devices.

Is this a tale of wild parties? Nope. We were far too boring.

Instead, we started a two day super low calorie diet.

Started.

The first meal was a raw egg beaten into orange juice.

One sip was enough for both of us. We’d been brought up not to waste food, but…down the sink it went and the diet went in the bin.

At the time, my sister and I were slim, healthy and fit, but we were both self-conscious about our busty figures. ‘You’re an inverted triangle shape,’ the magazines told us (apparently is a carrot shape now). We could have been apples or pears or hourglasses. We didn’t want to be any of them. We wanted to be like the girls on TV.

The negative body imagery I grew up with was not simply through media and peer-pressure (then nowhere near as bad as it is nowadays) but from years of little comments (made as if we weren’t there) by the extended family:

  • ‘He’s rather a trencherman isn’t he?’ (*)
  • ‘Her feet are large – I imagine she’ll grow up to be big.’  (She didn’t.)
  • ‘You’re not as thin as you used to be.’ (I’d just had a baby.)
  • ‘Isn’t that dress is a little tight/low cut/short?’ (No.)
  • ‘Their busts must be from their Polish great-great-great-grandmother.’ (She wasn’t Polish and no one knew what she looked like.)

(*In case you don’t know, a ‘trencherman’ is an old-fashioned term which suggests someone who’d not only eat their meal but what it was served in (a trencher originally being a piece of stale bread used as a plate).)

One of my earliest memories was hearing someone say Dad ought to lose weight and being upset because I thought he was lovely and cuddly. It wasn’t till much later that I realised the risks to his health.

He really did try.

He started every fad diet going, and what Dad ate, the whole family ate. Luckily for us the diets only lasted as long as Dad could bear them (generally about two days).

He kept a complicated graph on which noted his weight daily down to the quarter pound. When later quizzed as to why, he said it was because of a diet he’d been on which had worked. Was he still on the diet? No. He’d just kept the graph habit. My sister and I rolled our eyes. We didn’t understand the genetic element of the situation nor the psychological one.

I had a different battle at eighteen. A combination of negative body image, a broken heart and struggling with my A levels meant that my life felt out of control, so I controlled the one thing I could: eating.

I wasn’t trying to make myself ill. I’d had a friend who became anorexic and was taken out of school a few years earlier.  But caught up in my own misery, I couldn’t see I was risking the same.

There was little recognition of eating disorders then. They were seen as a lack of self-control rather than a psychological issue. The parents of the friend with anorexia initially insisted she was just losing puppy fat. But she’d told me she’d started cutting out food because bullying from boys at school and feeling second best to her brother had become too much. I hope she got the treatment she needed. The parents completely cut her off from her former friends and I never found out.

I myself didn’t become anorexic because Dad spotted how thin I’d become and said so. I realised it must be bad if he noticed and started to change what I was eating.

It was a struggle to get back to normal, not least because shortly afterwards I went to university (despite duffing up my A levels) and was too shy to go to the refectory to eat with strangers. I fundamentally lived on crackers and soup until I made lifelong friends and started reaching a sensible weight.

You might not believe that if you saw me now. A combination of menopause, medication, genes (perhaps) and a sedentary job mean I’m no longer a carrot but an apple and need to lose several pounds.

Proffered help is sometimes trying.

A (male) doctor said ‘It’s so easy for post-menopausal women to gain weight but so hard to lose it.’ Little chuckle. ‘My wife’s forever complaining when I tell her she can’t eat carbs!’

How humorous.

I drink wine and I don’t exercise near enough, but I prefer healthy food. I’ve never been a comfort eater, but I am a boredom eater.

I explained all this to the doctor, who said that my ideal diet was poached chicken, poached eggs, lentils and no carbs. Thinking I’d infinitely prefer to give up wine than pasta, I got off the call with a desperate urge to make a massive bowl of macaroni cheese.

Instead I cooked eggs. (Poached, with no orange juice in sight.)

My paternal grandmother despaired over her post-menopausal but quite average weight and her greying hair and her soft face. I loved all of it and couldn’t see the reason for her distress then. But I understand now.

I’d like to be thinner not just – or even – because it would be healthier, but because deep down I still want to look like women on TV, even though they’re the middle-aged ones not the teenage ones.

Is that a society thing or a me thing? Dad and his daily weight graph is no different to me and my weight-loss apps which are only relevant if I’m eating less and exercising more.

Part of me wants to say ‘Come back next week and see if I’ve rejoined the gym and lost some weight.’

The bigger part knows ‘Maybe I will, maybe I won’t, but I need to love myself as I am either way.’


UK Help Links

Beat Eating Disorders

Menopause Matters

Obesity Support Groups

Diabetes UK

Words and image copyright (c) Paula Harmon 2025. These are not to be used without the author’s express permission including for the purposes of training artificial intelligence (AI). Image credit ID 21036277 | Apples And Pears © Elena Schweitzer | Dreamstime.com

The Inker

Despite any number of other things competing for my attention in October, I decided to Inktober again. In case you don’t know, this is a challenge to draw something everyday in October using ink and following a prompt set up by Inktober on Instagram. There was also a suggestion of which might be coloured rather than monochrome if the artist fancied it.

There are some astonishing artists out there but I’m not one of them. I just like sketching as a relaxation tool as I’ve said before. It makes me take a few minutes out of my day and use a part of my brain that doesn’t get dusted off that often which helps reset the other bits of my brain that are on hamster wheels.

I’m not particularly competitive other than against myself, but I like a challenge if I think I can do it without exploding for no reason other than pride. I can beat myself up endlessly about my failures in a lot of areas, but art isn’t one of them.

Last year the prompts were pretty random. This year there was a theme – travel – with a couple of curve balls (‘rust’ and ‘violin’ being the ones most off topic) and several that were so similar as to be almost indistinguishable: ‘trek’, ‘hike’, roam’, ‘expedition’.

As the world currently seems to be often a scary and sad place, I decided that I wouldn’t try to have any hidden meanings in any of my sketches this year. I decided to attempt light humour. This also wasn’t always easy when following the prompt – a challenge in itself.

I’m pleased with some and less pleased with others. Some I will possibly draw again. Some days it was hard to find the time, energy or inspiration but overall it was fun. Two of the sketches are based on life: the pony trekking (6th) and camping in a gale with my father insisting on cooking breakfast (22nd). In other sketches, the little girls are also sort of me and my sister and the teddy is sort of her bear Freda (2nd, 7th, 24th). The dragons wouldn’t like to be left out of course and somehow a unicorn muscled its way in, ridden by a friend. It proves I can’t draw horses even when they’re magical but there you go.

Not being confident enough to simply start inking directly onto paper, I made a sketch first and then inked in the detail using fineliners and on a couple of occasions white board markers because I needed more ink. I didn’t use ink ink with a pen as I need to practise that and I didn’t think to use ink ink with a brush. But I might start to do some practising because it appeals – I was longing for my watercolours throughout.

Looking back, I realised I could have created a story using the prompts as the plot. It didn’t occur to me when I was looking at them and it would probably have added a layer of stress I didn’t want or need this year.

Next year though… maybe I will.

Let’s see what the 2025 prompts bring.

But without further ado, here are my thirty-one inktober efforts for 2024. Which (if any) is your favourite?

Words and picture Copyright (c) 2024 Paula Harmon. Not to be used without the author’s express permission. 

Risk

My first introduction to the horror which was Public Information Films was when I was aged between five and six.

One day, the police brought an Alsatian police dog to school. I was (and still am to some extent) scared of dogs, but this one was beautiful. The policemen seemed huge. They told us to be good and not to be afraid of the police. Then they said they’d show us what happened to criminals.

We went to the school fields and someone dressed in a stripy top and balaclava appeared from nowhere, snatched a bag and ran off. The policemen blew their whistles and shouted ‘Stop thief!’ to no avail. The beautiful Alsatian tensed and was released. It sped towards the ‘criminal’ who dodged and dived but was eventually brought down to the ground, his (well-padded) arm clasped in the jaws of the tail-wagging dog.

It was pretty impressive, though we weren’t sure whether we were being told that the police would protect us, or that crime would be a bad career choice.

Afterwards in the classroom we were shown a film about strangers. It featured a little girl accepting a lift with a strange man in a brown car and ending up locked in the cupboard under the stairs with his shadow getting closer. It was absolutely terrifying.

I hope that no child in that classroom had any idea what threat that little girl faced other than death, but we all sensed it was very bad. Then, as if we weren’t traumatised enough, the teacher said that when she’d been six, a friend and the friend’s brother disappeared and were eventually found buried in a sandpit.

I can honestly say that I’ve never felt the same about sandpits nor brown cars since.

If the point of this exercise was to make us wary of strangers, it certainly worked for me. A year or so later I got lost and walked for miles before eventually deciding I had to ask for help. As a perfectly nice man drove me home to hand over to my frantic mother, I was engulfed not only in fear but also in guilt. I had disobeyed the ‘not talking to strangers’ rule.

But as for other Public Information Films? Mmm.

Children’s television was awash with warnings about what lurked in the world to kill or maim us.

Perhaps this was because we were one of the last generations of children in the UK to roam fairly freely – often chucked out on a summer morning to play and not expected home till tea-time (with maybe a brief lunch in the middle). Well before the age of twelve, we went without parents to Saturday morning cinema, sweet and comic shopping, or to play in whatever our environment offered us.

Tufty the Squirrel warned us about road safety.  Charley the Cat warned us about other dangers. I was fond of Tufty, even if he had some very stupid friends. Charley sort of annoyed me, possibly because I was older by then and less inclined to want to be bossed about by a cartoon animal.

The animated ones were quite mild really except perhaps for one about playing in old fridges. I never saw a fridge that wasn’t in a kitchen doing its normal job, but after seeing that short film I was vaguely terrified that if I came across one which had been dumped I might suddenly be overwhelmed with temptation, climb inside and get suffocated.

Live action public information films were much scarier. In the same vein as the one about the little girl and the stranger with the brown car, The Spirit of the Water told you what awaited any unwary child who fell into a river or lake. Then there were the risks of playing frisbee near electricity pylons or mucking about on a railway which really were just plain common sense.

I’m not entirely sure any of those films would be made for children under twelve nowadays. They’re three minutes of horror.

Did they really make a difference to us? I’m not sure they did.

Despite playing in woodland, ‘caves’, a river and for a while an unsecured building site, and despite taking all sorts of very stupid risks (though not with the railway) my generation of children in my particular village survived. I’m sure that playing unsupervised helped us learn to assess risk in a way that can’t be learned any other way. Just because none of the children in my village were badly hurt (though one got close) doesn’t mean that others weren’t. Of course they were and we all knew it.

But deep down, that film I watched about the little girl has never gone away, and I think it has always been the fear of abduction which weighed heaviest with me as with many people.

For the record, that’s not because I think it’s more likely now than it was in the past. Any quick piece of research will reveal child abductions going back centuries.

So why does it remain a fear when the risk is much lower than injury from playing by a road or river?

Is that because injury from play or normal activities is a natural and acceptable risk, but abduction as an offence against nature: an abnormal, unpredictable evil event that should never happen?

I think it is.

Did I allow my children to play unsupervised like I did? Not really. Roads are busier and the local river runs faster. And I also know that some of the greatest risks they faced and still face are online. My daughter and a friend played in the brook of a nearby hamlet a few times but otherwise my children’s outside play without parents was via Cub and Scout Camps.

Do I regret that for them? I’m really torn between yes and no. What do you think?

Words Copyright (c) 2024 Paula Harmon. Not to be used without the author’s express permission. Image credit: ID 13589617 | Playing Rope Swing © Dan Otten | Dreamstime.com