Archive for October, 2009

The 1960’s were only yesterday…

Friday, October 30th, 2009

It’s an strage irony that many of the things that I’m learning in my Welsh History course happened during my lifetime. I recall the trauma of going into the Science Museum several years ago and seeing a punched-card sorting machine that I used daily during my time working in payrolls with British Rail in 1966-67. That was probably the first time I realised I was growing older.

Summer of love

Summer of love

This week we’ve talked about three things that happened during my favourite period in history – the 1960s. I entered the decade a pre-teen (just) and left it a new adult at 21 – ironically, in the year the UK reduced the voting age to 18. It was the decade of the Civil Rights Movement, the Swinging 60’s, folk-rock, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Rolling Stones, the Mersey sound, the Summer of Love, Woodstock, the death of John Kennedy and Martin Luther King, the first man on the moon, social revolutions, rise of feminism, anti Vietnam war protests, Harold Macmillan and Harold Wilson, plus, of course, England winning the World Cup.

In one lecture, we talked about the student riots in France of May 1968 led by Daniel Cohn-Bendit. I was detained by French police in Calais that month for three hours for some reason I never quite understood. The only thing I had in common with Cohn-Bendit was fiery red hair!

'Cofiwch Dreweryn' ('Remember Treweryn') Graffiti on A487 near Aberystwyth

'Cofiwch Dreweryn' ('Remember Treweryn') Graffiti on A487 near Aberystwyth

In Birth of Modern Wales we discussed Treweryn – the disastrous decision to flood a Welsh valley to provide water supplies for Liverpool, the real need for which was unproven. Bessie Bradock (a famous portly outspoken Liverpool MP) bulldozed this through and Liverpool Council arrogantly refused to meet a delegation of Welsh local people. Still today “Cofiwch Dreweryn” (”Remember Treweryn”) arouses passions. As a young teenager I remember watching tv images of men women and children marching to protest about the theft of Welsh water and the destruction of a beautiful valley.

The Aberfan slag heap collapsed on the school

The Aberfan slag heap collapsed on the school

Of course, 1966 saw the neglect and arrogance of the National Coal Board result in the death of 116 children and 28 adults at Aberfan. Despite the warnings of the instability of the slag heap, nothing was done and 144 people died. I recall crying as I saw the grainy black and white images on my tv at home. I visited Aberfan subsequently and published a tribute online. Do have a look at www.hiraeth.org.uk/aberfan I was encouraged when several of my student friends were knowledgeable about events that occurred before they were born.

Dinorwig quarry

Dinorwig quarry

Finally, I was discussing with a PhD student the effects of the closure of the Dinorwig Quarry in 1969 on the community of Deiniolen where I live. It’s a shadow of what it was, a large number of unemployed people, few facilities for kids, and over 20 shops and restaurants have closed leaving a single shop and a dispirited community with no heart or focus except the thriving primary school.

The common thread in all these rather depressing incidents is the arrogance, insensitivity and poor response of officialdom in situations in which they did evrything wrongly. Unlike many people, I become more left-wing every passing day!

So the 1960s weren’t as wonderful as I remember them. But I’m glad I lived through them and can say, ‘I was there!’

Hollol wallgo

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

So my first essay is submitted and my brain happily did not explode, although it was touch and go at times. In this electronic age, we had to submit it in two ways. First, online to a program which checks for plagiarism. This was a dramatic process with various dire warnings appearing at stages but I finally was issued with an e-receipt. The second submission was to drop a paper copy into an oversized post-box, which left me with a real sense of anti-climax. However, a few days later a Hogworts owl had delivered a paper receipt into my owl-hole, sorry – pigeon hole.

Finally, I have entered real student life and went out drinking with the gang after a late lecture which finished at 6pm. Actually, we went to Wetherspoons for curry night and several of us left at 9.30.

Neil Messerschmidt Mortiboys (don't ask)

Neil Messerschmidt Mortiboys (don't ask)

Neil and Father Josh, however, upheld good student tradition and finally collapsed, tired and emotional, into bed at 4.30. Again, 21st century technology helps us and the photographs that appeared the next day on Facebook told an interesting if somewhat disturbing story.

Over the weekend I was congratulating myself and feeling I was in control of my life again. By Monday I was cruelly disabused of that illusion when I realised I had to submit a fully referenced bibliography the following day for an essay for which I had not even chosen a title.

I’m now back to rapid cycling between happiness, panic, optimism, despair, bewilderment, confidence, exhaustion, denial and deep satisfaction. It’s sort of bipolar disease on speed. Apparently that’s normal student life for those who aren’t normally stoned/drunk/hung-over and can’t feel pain anyway!

Father Josh (note book on Catholic priesthood and Bible)

Father Josh (note book on Catholic priesthood and Bible)

Oh, and ‘hollol wallgo’? It’s my Welsh phrase of the week. It means ‘completely bonkers’. It’s the phrase that most readily comes to mind when I think of Gary Gareth, Father Josh and Neil. Fortunately, the other three members of the gang of seven (Jo, Jen and Rhonwen) maintain nature’s balance of sanity. I make no statement where I am.

Rebecca Riots, Friends and University Bureaucracy

Friday, October 16th, 2009

The Rebecca Riots

The Rebecca Riots

It’s still proving to be a new and novel experience to be a full-time University student at the age of 61. However, it’s been quite different from my expectations. It’s been much harder work than I expected – well I have been coasting lazily for almost two years other than working on the house and my hobbies. The amount of reading we have to do is quite terrifying. Then there are essays to plan for, seminars to prepare for and deadlines to cut one’s wrists for.

The best part is the friends I have made already. Somehow, eight of us have teamed up as an unusual group of good friends. All but one of us live outside Bangor in the area between Holyhead, Penygroes and Mold and one in Halls in the Catholic chaplaincy. At the risk of ruining everything we’ve built so far, here’s a little about each of them. Josh – the one in the chaplaincy – explains that he’s there primarily because the priest gives out free beer and sandwiches at the social evenings. His biggest concern is if he can recall the words of a ‘Hail Mary’ if called upon. He is one of the four ‘economy-size’ blokes in our group (yes, I’m another one). We’re all the right weight, just several inches shorter than we should be. Neil, who has the amazing middle name Messerschmitt on Facebook, is a computer whizz who keeps us all in stitches. Then there’s Gareth. What can I say about Gareth that won’t involve me in a libel suit? Well, he cheats at Scrabble – you wouldn’t believe the words he uses. If you ever feel you need an opinion on anything, well Gareth will have one! ‘Larger than life’ is somehow a pale and inadequate description. Completing the male contingent, the fourth man is not Anthony Blunt but Joe. The quietest of all of us, he has passionate political views and often just smiles as the rest of us put the world to rights with passion.

Three women complete our group. Lesley, who is a near neighbour of mine, shares my problems of holding two lives in tension. Hers is a busy farm life and she’s questioning whether she can do both farm and university. We’re all trying to encourage her as none of us want to see her leave. I’m trying not to let the fact I get the odd lift home from Lesley affect my judgement! Rhonwen is a first-language Welsh speaker and helps me with my Welsh module – actually, not that much yet, but I’ll be calling on her more. She and Jen, the final member of the group have been a real surprise to me. They both look like whatever the female equivalent to ‘mild-mannered Clark Kent’ but the reality is very different. A hundred years ago they would have been up there with Emily Pankhurst and the Suffragettes fighting. Jen was the first to draft a stinging letter of complaint to the Estates Department, followed by Rhonwen, concerning the completely useless so called ‘parking arrangements’ for students. I was only sorry that we don’t have the facility to do Harry Potter type ‘howlers’, which is really what was called for. They are two feisty ladies!

I’ve been so impressed by the kindness shown to one another in the group (sometimes heavily disguised in the case of some of the lads) as each of us has had the pressures of ordinary life and university life together. In fact, I hit the wall on Wednesday and went down with a bug half way through the day and went to bed with a 38.4deg temperature after throwing up. One the third day I rose again (not the most famous resurrection in history, I know) but all the gang showed concern and sent supportive emails, Rhonwen offering to take notes for me.

That was in marked contrast to my university lecturers who chose to ignore my emails of apology that I would be unable to attend their lecture. We were told to do this with dire consequences if we failed to show for a lecture without having sent apologies. I sent four emails (four lectures and seminars that day) and not one had an acknowledgement. Would it have hurt them to hit the ‘reply’ button and typed ‘Thanks for letting me know’? Just forget, ‘I hope you are better soon’. All I got was a threat from one lecturer who said I failed to show up at her seminar and would get a yellow card next time. So much for Bangor University’s supporting culture.

So, Rebecca Riots? Well, that’s my essay due two weeks today. I can hear ‘Rebecca, Scotch Cattle and the Chartist Movement’ calling me, ‘Amser gweithio prifysgol’. Blogging is far more fun.

Breaking through the pain barrier

Friday, October 9th, 2009

I hit a low point earlier this week and was drowning in a sea of seminars, lectures, workshops bibliographies, timetables, lack of parking spaces and general state of being dazed and bewildered. I even made a plea for reassurance on my Facebook status that I’ll get to grips with these things some time before I graduate. Immediately a number of friends came back with that reassurance. Here’s a couple of quotes:

Rob Merchant said,  You’ll be fine. It takes students the first 3-4 weeks to get into the swing of things. By Christmas you’ll feel like an old hand, and by your second year you’ll be wondering what all the fuss was about.

Jane Templeman said, I remember that feeling. I just kept thinking that if they left me alone for just a while I could actually finish a task but instead all these things appeared on my timetable!

It seems to me to be part of a strategy for helping youngsters into university life in the first year. For most, if they do not have something organised then they do not do anything, so the answer is schedule loads of stuff, knowing they will cut stuff and not read everything: a shot gun approach. However the older students are far more committed, want to learn as much as possible and so expect themselves to do everything thoroughly, making overload a real danger.

I think the skill is not to take it all too seriously. Missing the odd thing is not fatal at this stage, you can always borrow notes. However tiredness is the enemy to be guarded against because with it quickly comes unrealistic discouragement.

Wise words and really helpful to me. One of my anxieties was related to being an older mature student, living off campus and the possibility of not having any sense of being part of university life. The reality is happily very different. I’ve become part of a group, most of whom are mature students living off-campus like me, but all in their 20s. Next week four of us are getting together to plan our first major essay.

I suppose I’ve only done two weeks in my degree so feeling better this weekend is definitely progress!


One week down the road

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

exhaustedSo I’ve completed my first week of lectures: four one-hour lectures and a two-hour Welsh language class. That class took place on Wednesday moring despite my timetable saying Wednesday afternoon. I got an email Monday night to tell me of the change which clashed with seminars of course! To my surprise, the magic computer sorted the clash quickly and I’m in a Welsh class of three students – great way to learn a language but nowhere to hide!

Two of the four lectures were in a room that was too small (six students had no seats), with a non-working projector. I trust this chaos is purely timetable teething problems but we will see next week when seminars start. It was an exhausting week!

It’s going to be hard getting in to the practice of note-taking and I’m terrified about finding and reading the interminable list of books. One module asked for 11 hours lectures, 11 semininars/workshops and 175 hours of reading. Multiply that by four, add the Welsh lesson homework and I obviously have to give up sleeping. So how do students find all this drinking time I keep hearing about?

I do want to join some social activities but as I always have to drive, my options are restricted due to most society activity involving alcohol. The Welsh Learners’ Society was a big disappointment as they are all complete beginners. I was hoping to fnd people at a similar, or more advanced level, for conversational practice.

I do plan to talk about what I’m actually learning in my blogs but this week at Bangor has been largely administration. My abiding memory will be the warnings about the dire consequences of plagiarism and the ability of the University to spot it at 50 paces. All essays must be submitted electronically and they are crunched through software called MaeBrawrMawrSpioChi.com (BigBrotherIsWatchingYou.com).

Dolbardarn Castle

Dolbardarn Castle

However, the ‘Images of Wales’ module was great. One example was how Wales was seen up to about the 16th century as wild and untamed, so too its people were similarly portrayed as savages. Through contemporary art the lecturer showed how that image softened and matured. When Turner painted Dolbardarn Castle, Llanberis in 1802, the image was very dramatic. It’s a bit gentler now. The spot from which Turner painted his masterpiece is now a car-park and the background is now the terraces of Dinorwig quarry. Looking forward to next weeks’ Images of Wales lecture.

And the walls came tumbling down…

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Here’s the best way to demonstrate why climbing on a dry stone wall can be hazardous to your health. This wall in my garden had been showing an alarming bulge for the last few months and yesterday, this was the outcome.

Collapse of a dry stone wall

Rhosyn

Rhosyn

This was not caused by an adult or even a child climbing on the wall but my Welsh collie Rhosyn, who weighs under 15kg, jumping on to the wall. Fortunately she was not hurt but we were quite shaken!

So, when you realise that you have to walk the length of a field to get to a gate because of a dry stone wall, DON’T be tempted to climb over!