Reading about 'underground' cartoonist LEE JAMES TURNOCK's comic strip character, NICKY HUNT, reminded me of a real-life inveterate 'fantasist' (by which I mean liar) who used to pal about with me from 1965 until he joined the Navy shortly after his dad died in 1977. We remained friends until 1981, when I concluded that he obviously had mental health issues and finally severed all ties with him.
I last saw him in Gosport near the end of April '81 when I was living nearby, and it was then I realized he was no longer the person I thought he was - if indeed he ever had been. This man simply couldn't open his gob without a monumental, unbelievable 'porky-pie' popping out. For example, even before he joined the Navy he used to wear an over-sized diver's watch, and when a friend (RONNIE ROSS, now sadly deceased) asked him what it was, he replied that it was an atomic power-pack for his bionic arm. (This was around '76/'77, when the SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN was still on TV.)
In 1981 I'd returned to Portsmouth - at his invitation - only to find that he steered clear of me and never came to visit - apart from one time when I saw him on his moped coming from the direction of my bed-sit while I was returning from the shops. I hailed him, but he stopped for only just long enough to tell me he'd no time to talk - then he was off again. He was only about two minutes away from my place and two minutes away from his base (by bike), so I wondered why he'd gone out of his way if he'd no intention of stopping. When I got back, my land-lady revealed to me that he'd only been checking-up to see if I'd returned to Scotland yet.
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Me in my room in Boulton Road, Southsea, 1981.
Yes, I know - it looks like a Crimewatch photo |
Obviously he was worried that the longer I was around, the greater the chance I'd eventually meet some of his newer friends and perhaps inadvertently blow the gaff about some of the 'tall tales' he'd spun. After all, this was a guy who, with crash helmet tucked under his arm, used to visit bars that bikers hung out in - even before he had a motorbike. (No joking.)
Months later, when I finally returned home, my father told me that while I was in Portsmouth, 'Billy' had 'phoned one night with a curious request. "Mr. Robson, I was in a bar the other night having a drink, and I told a guy I was talking to that I'm a Lieutenant Colonel in the Royal Navy." (This was when he was working in Gosport's Haslar Hospital.) "He didn't believe me, so I gave him your number and told him to 'phone you and you'd confirm it. If he does call, could you back me up?" Naturally, my father told him not to be so daft. "Go on - a favour for a favour" pleaded the deluded 'Billy'. My father enquired what he meant. "I visited Gordon the other day and it cost me money for petrol for my bike," quoth Mr. Mental, referring to his lightning-quick dash to check if I was still around. When I heard this, I gave my parents strict instructions that, if 'Billy' ever 'phoned, I was out - even if I was in.
About six or seven years later, the 'phone (then in the hallway) rang and the answer-machine clicked on. As I stood at the top of the stairs to hear who it was - a Detective Inspector someone (couldn't make out the name) wanting to talk to me. I went downstairs and picked up the 'phone - "Hello, who's this?" I said. "What's the matter, don't you recognize an old friend?" The voice had changed, being that strange hybrid accent that many 'Jocks' acquire from spending years down south, so at first I couldn't identify it. Then the penny dropped and I hung up without replying. The 'phone rang again and his voice from the speaker said "I'll use my warrant card if that's what it takes to talk to you!" Poor, deluded fool. He was never in the police - I checked, even though it was a racing cert that he wasn't.
It seems that leopards can't change their spots. Egged on by a pal who'd also known 'Billy' we both looked at his Facebook page about a year ago. According to him he's a Falklands war veteran who was fast-tracked through the ranks of the Royal Navy, is thinking of taking a course in astro-physics (or something equally far-fetched, was taught to cook by both GORDON RAMSAY and JAMIE OLIVER (or two other equally famous TV chefs), has hacked into NASA satellites to take photographs of outer space (with a clearly nicked pic from the Internet), had a successful career as a world-class photographer (though his webpage is conspicuously absent of any evidence which would indicate it), and is a personal buddy of BILLY CONNOLLY and folk-singer RALPH McTELL, who he claims to have known since the age of twelve. Oh, and he learned to scuba-dive at the age of nine. (Which was all news to me - and I've known him from when he was six.
Right, altogether now - "JACKANORY, JACKANORY, JACKANORY". Needless to say, we both fell about laughing at this catalogue of absurdity. Unfortunately though, there was a sad side to his inability to grasp reality, and let me wind up this overlong reminiscence by revealing what that was.
As I previously said, I was best man at this fantasy merchant's wedding in 1978, but I had gone down to Portsmouth a few days in advance of the 'big day'. The morning before the ceremony, while he was out somewhere, his fiancee broke down in tears and confessed to me that she was now having severe doubts about going through with it. Her brother and her friends considered him a complete weirdo and had expressed concern over his alarming propensity to tell the most outrageous lies at the drop of a hat. What was I to do? What I should've done was tell her that I didn't think he was mature enough to get married and had been telling porkies for as long as I had known him so was therefore unlikely to change.
However, I was faced with a dilemma. If she called off the wedding as a result of anything I said, I'd then be the bad guy. I knew that he'd continue to pursue her and woo her after I'd gone home, and probably persuade her (against her better judgement) into marrying him, and I'd then be excluded from the celebrations and most likely be a pal short as a result. So I chickened out, telling her that I'd have a very serious talk with him and explain that all his lies had to stop; that he was about to embark on a wonderful new chapter in his life which he should take extremely seriously and stop embarrassing both himself and his beloved with his absurd fabrications and fantasies. So I did - at great length and in excruciating detail (as is my wont). At the conclusion of my sonorous oration he soberly assured me that he was 'indeed an altered Toad'.
He was lying of course.
On the day of the wedding, when the registrar asked her if she took this man as her lawful wedded husband, there was a long, long pause. Then, with tears streaming down her face, she hesitantly said "I do" and thereby made one of the worst decisions of her life. A decision that I could probably have prevented - and to this day am filled with regret that I didn't at least try to. The marriage lasted a couple of years or so and the poor woman went through hell. I hope she's happy now and, should she ever get to read this, can forgive me for my inaction. I last saw her around August or September 1980 when they were both up on a brief visit.
So there you have it. Trust me, Nicky Hunt's nowhere near as bad as the guy I've just been telling you about. He's certainly a lot funnier though.
I'd love to leave a longer response to your post, but the Australian secret intelligence agency has asked me to head to a meeting in Paris to formulate responses to the weekend's events (good thing I'd just finished that course in multilingual bomb disposal - the one that James Cameron insist I take last time I was doing some script doctoring for him).
ReplyDeleteFunnily enough, BS, the reason I had to make do with republishing an old post is because I'm currently engaged in trials of a super-soldier serum I invented. Along with super-strength, super-speed and invulnerability, it bestows invisibility - which makes typing difficult when you can't see your own fingers.
ReplyDeletePoor guy he obviously has a serious problem that is above the "normal" fibbing to make yourself feel better type of thing - I had a pal that used to come up with some really daft stories ( you know I was in a band we nearly go signed to RCA – he couldn’t play any instrument or sing – he could drive but when I asked him to drive me home in my car one day the excuses came out – thank goodness in that case) he was nothing like this guy though but I really found him quite tiring after a while . Luckily for me he moved up North so I took that opportunity to stop contact with him.
ReplyDeleteThe getting a disease from a toilet seat was a story that doctors put out in the early 20th century to make it easier for folk to seek treatment for VD etc (ie “I must have gotten it from a toilet seat doc, honest”) seemingly it worked and the myth has stuck that you can get this type of thing from a toilet set (you can’t of course, unless perhaps, you licked it!!!) .
What eventually became tiresome for me, McS, was that his lies became (probably always were, in fact, but they seemed amusing when I was younger) so blatantly ridiculous as to be an insult to people's intelligence. When someone apparently thinks that you're so stupid as to swallow absurdity, then it's time to say goodbye. On his Facebook page, he says he can no longer play his guitar (on doctor's orders) because of a heart condition, but then says he's taken up the flute, Now slap me gently and call me Cuthbert, but surely blowing into a wind instrument requires more effort than strumming a guitar? He never could play it, incidentally, merely strum and hum at the same time. Honestly, if there's a bigger fantasy merchant alive, I'd be mightily surprised.
ReplyDeleteI had a friend who was in the army from 1978-81 (I met him in 1988) and he was obsessed with everybody knowing he'd been in the army - he seemed to think we should all bow down to him eternally because he was an ex-soldier. He had photos of his army days on the walls and his one medal on display (it was for a 6 month tour of duty in Ulster). But that one medal wasn't good enough so he bought some second hand medals and put them on display pretending he'd won them !! He also phoned me up one time and told me that somebody we both knew had died which, like a chump, I believed. Bizarrely this friend of ours did indeed die two years later. But eventually I started to take anything he said with a pinch of salt. We had a falling out in December 2000 and I haven't seen him since - but I still send him a Christmas card every year because I'm nice :) Kid, this post is the kind of thing you'd put on MMMM so have you abandoned that blog ? I've been wondering for a while why you don't just put those posts on here as Kid Klassics and then you'd get more comments than just from me - as you have on this occasion.
ReplyDeleteYou're too nice, CJ - I'd tell him to sling his hook. Liars steal your time and attention when it could be better spent elsewhere. Haven't abandoned MMMM, but I originally created it to give the non-comics related posts on Crivens a wider audience, but I don't think there's too many left, so I'll have to start writing new ones. And some of the posts on MMMM have appeared as Klassics here as well, so it's the best of both worlds.
ReplyDeleteMakes me think of an old friend. He was a rough sort but I knew him. Apparently he grew up short and smoked and I never saw him again after we moved. I believe he was a Chelsea fan. I strongly suspect he didn't have a good life but you never know.
ReplyDeleteDo you keep in touch with any of your old friends in Britain, Phil, or are they all now just distant memories?
ReplyDeleteMy best friend I still keep in touch via FB. Personally it's interesting to see the politics of some of my old friends. We went to the same schools yet ended up on different spectrums.
ReplyDeleteThe most useful skill I learnt at school was how to fence....ok so it's not very useful.
You never know - it might prove very useful if you ever have to fight Zorro.
ReplyDeleteLies are so much more interesting than reality, I could regale on last night's trip to the restaurant where I dined on lark's tongues and truffles instead of supping alone on pease soup again. I don't think I've ever encountered a case quite so startling as this although the point about him believing his own tales is something I have observed. Playing pool once with a person who missed an easy shot then nudged the table, in full view everyone to sink the ball and he seemed genuinely shocked when no one would play with him.
ReplyDeleteWhat I find interesting, is not the lies themselves but the acquiescence of third parties to the deception. I'm not sure if that's a product of the awkwardness that might arise from calling offenders out or maybe something more complex, to do with social interaction. I notice that in certain relationships, deception is overlooked, mothers with their sons for instance. Also individual status within a social context seems to play a role, the truth behind personal conflicts between people in certain discrete contexts seems to be irrelevant in relation to the status of the opponents in that context. I've gotta go now Mai Ling wants me to look at the proofs of the photos from her latest modelling assignment in Milan.
One of the biggest 'lies' is by men who wear dodgy toupees which are obvious to everyone. I'm always amazed at how their wives collude in the would-be deception by not being too embarrassed to be seen out with them - especially as most wigs look like a fur glove perched on top of the scalp. As regards other lies, I think that married couples turn a blind eye to the lies they know their spouses tell them, simply for a bit of peace.
ReplyDeleteThat raises an interesting point, if something is obviously false is it really a lie? No one is deceived by a rug on balanced on a noggin, I'm pretty sure you didn't buy that stuff about Mai Ling either, obviously it's patent fantasy--it's Madrid not Milan. Interestingly, someone I know retouched his bald spot when a photographer caught the back of his head. He did it really badly in Photoshop, I considered ribbing him about it but thought better of it, you know vanity an' all. Thing is, he plastered it all over Facebook, so everyone's seen it.
ReplyDeleteWell, someone with a wig is trying to give the impression of something that isn't true, so that qualifies it as a lie, whether it's an obvious 'falsehood' or not. And I completely believed that stuff about Mai Ling. (Or did I?)
ReplyDelete