In May 1976, at the age of 10, my younger brother James and I climbed into the family car with our dearest belongings and said farewell to our childhood home. As we drove across town to our new house we had a sense of excitement, but our parents were subdued. Over the 12 years prior to that day, my parents' dream home on the seafront in Sussex had transformed into an unsustainable financial burden. They had to sell and so we crossed to the other side of town.
Looking back now, the new house we moved to was nowhere near as good as the old one, but at that age I judged it by how close my friends were and, of course, the quality of the local newsagents. By both counts, it was positive. I also now had my own room and soon set about unpacking my comics. My father had bundled them up with string, and so my fledging collection of Beanos, TV Comics, Marvel UKs and more, quickly found space within reaching distance of my bed. With a new radio next to me, this was my set-up for years ahead, and soon I was adding early issues of 2000 A.D. and Doctor Who to the weekly shop.
For me, these comics were not just reading material, they were more like souvenirs of past days. If I picked up Avengers #1 then I was back in the Post Office around lunchtime on Friday 22nd September 1973. The Look-In issue with the Bowie cover was a memorable walk to the shops a few months earlier. Titans #1 in late October 1975 was the comic I was gifted on a beach walk to tell me I was going into hospital for an operation the following day. The retained Pippin and Playlands reminded me of very early years when the Saturday morning paperboy's clatter of the letterbox sent us racing down the stairs. James was the Pippin reader as he liked the glossy paper, I had the Playland with its matt finish as it had more of a grown-up newspaper feel.
My parents said the relocation was only a temporary situation, but after three years, the regularly-mentioned move back to the seafront 'next year' never came about. The downgrade had stuck and my parents' own ambitions being thwarted took on a more personal meaning. Nothing seemed quite so good now. I'd gone to a different secondary school from my friends and the comics themselves seemed a poor pastiche of past glories, especially my favourite Marvel line.
The new home stayed in the family for decades, far longer than the first one, and in between university and jobs, I began to yearn for the old place. We never really let go of it in our family dinner conversations and it stood there as testament to the family's own high tidemark of achievement. Going to that part of town always saw a tweak in the journey - just to see how number 7 was.
In time I moved out, met and married Tracey, and then later we had our own family, though still living in the same town. We created new memories and not only did my family grow, but so did my collection, up into the stratosphere. The Pippin and Playlands were now relegated behind collectable original UK art and Silver Age Marvels, but that first house was still the 'golden age'.
Inevitably, my two children picked up on my indirect drives around town, and it became a bit of an in-joke between the four of us.
Sadly, just prior to the Covid lockdown, James passed away at short notice. Due to a health condition his life was always going to be shorter than any of us wanted, but we never reckoned on 51. I spent the last days sleeping over at the hospice. It was a close time together, but he never complained and then he departed to join my already long-gone parents. The one thing that struck me though, was he said his happiest days had been at number 7, which saddened me even further as surely he'd found more to enjoy in life after his first 8 years. I couldn't disagree though, as I'd always known it.
Having no wife or children, James was very generous in what he left to me. He wanted me to go and live back near the seafront and I inherited enough for Tracey and I to ponder that move. Then one day my daughter came rushing downstairs, waving her IPad and shouting "Dad, isn't this the house you used to live in?" Those little diverted drives had made their impression. She was right, it was the very same house.
A viewing was arranged and, though brief, it confirmed what I'd always known - number 7's DNA was utterly etched in my mind. I navigated the rooms at ease, even looking for and finding the chip on the banister I'd made and been scolded for, back in 1974. I made a point of opening and standing in the larder, next to where the potato and onion stacker had been. I leant on the small bedroom inner windowsill the way I used to. I stood in the old nursery and breathed in the air. The room sizes felt right, despite the fact that I'd grown. However, it was a shock not to find the back garden as we'd left it. I'd anticipated the trees would be more mature, but they were gone. Everything was different - even alien. It just wasn't the back garden I remembered. Then I spotted the familiar immovable stone bench right at the end, an anchor all this time. The change around it now seemed more plausible and palatable. I sat down on it for the first time in decades.
I stepped back out through the front door and then down the driveway to the pavement. I whispered a goodbye for the moment, not yet knowing whether it would be forever or not.
However, a deal was done and four months later, on my birthday, we picked up the keys. As I turned the key in the lock I momentarily pretended it was only the day after we'd left. It had taken time, but my old family (no longer here) had returned. I took something personal into the house for each of them as if they were with me. My father's tin box with his name printed on it, my mother's Red Rum book, and my brother's box of early toys. Each of these consciously and carefully carried over the threshold.
The four of us had decided that we wouldn't be living in a museum. The house needed updating and expanding to properly and comfortably accommodate the four of us. I took the view that, had my old family never moved out, alterations and additions would have occurred anyway over the years, so it would never have been preserved 'in amber'. However, updating requires money, so I'll have to consider selling some of my comics collection to help raise the necessary funds.
Letting go of comics does not come easily. For every Donald And Mickey that was never going to make the full trip, there's a Mighty World Of Marvel that was meant to. Also, which is more important - the last issue of a set or the first merger issue the following week? Are graphic novels or single issues the ones to keep? I type this and stare at the wall. Yes, I've made the return home, but sadly, to meet the cost of improvements, not everything that's come home with me will be staying.
However, some will pick themselves to stay. They're the memory ones. Spider-Man Comics Weekly #55, bought in town where Boots is now. That first TV Comic bought at Teleski's near my Gran's. Dracula Lives #1 from Watson's, which I took to school at lunchtime, and so on. And it's with those souvenirs that the house comes alive again, with my old family now mixing in with the new. Moments that perhaps should be remembered with new souvenirs.
Interestingly, I'd considered what would've happened if the house on either side had been available instead. If I’d moved into either Number 5 or 9, with new folk going in and out of Number 7, that would likely have created an imbalance within me, akin to one of those Star Trek episodes when everyone is carrying on normally, but there’s one who senses that something is 'off' - and it is.
Given everything I've said, you could be forgiven for thinking that I regard this absolutely as my forever home and that I’ll be carried out in a coffin. The thing is, my legs have felt tired since childhood and I can foresee a day when the stairs might be just too much of a struggle for me.
So I plan to be here for 20 years, but then move into a bungalow. It would be tragic to move back and die at the foot of the stairs. Imagine that - as a kid running over the spot where you later die, then getting yourself away from there, and then putting yourself right back there for it to happen. So, getting back to the point, I intend to leave on my own terms when I know my time here is properly done. There is one alternative of course - a stairlift. I'll make the final decision when that moment comes.
Sometimes, as I sit on the old stone bench in the garden and listen to my wife and children chatting nearby, I also seem to hear the voices of my parents and brother, whose presence yet permeates the place of my boyhood. The past and the present combined, to accompany me into the future. In returning here, I feel that I've finally fulfilled my parents' wish, which fills me with a sense of achievement on their behalf, as well as my own and my brother's.
"Made it, ma (and pa) - top of the world!"
Brilliant stuff! So I'm not the only person to have returned to a former home, though in my case I was only away for just over 4 years, not decades like you. I've now been back here for nearly 36 years - more than 3 times the duration of my first stay - but it only seems like a couple of weeks ago at most since I returned. Hope your days ahead are as happy as you wish them to be.
ReplyDeleteLast December I made a return visit to the village where I grew up. I hadn't been there since my mother died in 2009 and it was nice to see the place again and the house where I'd lived as a child and where I'd visited regularly until my mother's death but I also felt I didn't belong in that village anymore and I knew this would be my final visit. I suppose I went back to say a last farewell to the place that had been part of my life for so long.
ReplyDeleteIf houses (or any inanimate object) can have some sort of 'sentience', CJ, maybe it misses you? Next time you're in the neighbourhood, say hello to it when you're passing.
ReplyDeleteHi Christopher,
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful story and told so well; thanks for sharing it with Kid & ourselves and hope you create many new memories to cherish in your new/old home.
Best wishes,
Big D
I'm sure that Chris will appreciate your kind sentiments, BD, as I do, too.
ReplyDeleteKid, I forgot to send my congratulations to Christopher on regaining his childhood home and I hope he lives there for as many years as possible.
ReplyDeleteYou may have forgotten to congratulate him, CJ, but I'm sure Chris knew you were thinking it. And now you've remembered, so no problem.
ReplyDeleteThank you everyone for your comments. I hope you have your own episodes of the best parts of your past being enjoyed again, whether a comic, a TV programme or simply a welcome reminder.
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you, CN, for writing such a memorable post and sharing such personal insights into aspects of your life. I found it fascinating, as I'm sure other Crivvies have too - even those who haven't commented (yet). I wonder how many people belong to 'our' club? (By that I mean those who have returned to a former home years after they left.)
ReplyDeleteA great guest blog, Christopher. Very affecting, and strikes a chord for those us of who have lost a sibling and parents over the years. I do like your thinking that you're prepared to move out at some point in the future but on your own terms, rather than driven by your parents' financial circumstances decades ago. I'm also in awe that your wife agreed to the move! My own spouse thinks that I live in the past enough as it is....
ReplyDeleteThanks again for taking the time to blog.
Chris has enjoyed reading the comments so far left about this post, B, and I'm sure he'll appreciate yours in equal measure. Thanks for taking the time.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful story beautifully told Christopher. As baggsey says the story particularly resonates to those of us that have lost a sibling and\or parents, that was certainly the case for me. I don't really have an attachment to any family home, although I may have had if we stayed in such a lovely house (although all my family homes were largely filled with love and laughter), my attachment is more for a time long gone and sadly we can't go back to visit a moment in time. But as you note some comics (music etc) do have the uncanny ability, for a very short time at least to help us visit old times. I can just imagine your mum , dad and James smiling happy to know you made it back "home".
ReplyDeleteI think it's great you don't plan to keep the house as a "museum" to the past but intend to made new memories . Your mention of taking items precious to your mum, dad and James was wonderful - I have done the same in any new house I have lived in since my mum, dad and brother passed away - good to know it's not just me.
There you are, CN - yet another 'thumbs up' for your post, this time from McS. The boy has taste.
ReplyDelete