On Monday 14th January 2013, I published a post about someone I once knew. (Click here for details if you're interested.) Little did I know at the time (only having found out on Sunday just gone) that a Facebook comment on Sunday 13th January 2013 - the day before the post - had expressed sadness at news of his demise sometime the previous week. Well, what a shocker! (Thing is, if he's dead, who subsequently amended some of the things on his Facebook page that I alluded to in my 'piece'? But that's for pondering on another day, perhaps.)
When I recently did a 'Google Search' to again find his FB page, among the selections offered (though only when I used one particular browser out of several available to me) there were some photos and comments that aren't on his site, but apparently in the comments section on someone else's FB page. (That's how I discovered the comment about his passing, though I was only able to access that link twice - it seems to have now disappeared.) The photos show a ravaged man who looks far older than the 52 or 53 years he was at the time, likely as a result of him being an alcoholic, something he admitted when he visited our home town sometime in the late '90s or thereabouts (he'd lived 'down south' since late 1977) to a woman he called 'Auntie Margaret'.
In case you're wondering how I know this, the woman herself told me when I ran into her around 1999 or 2000 and she mentioned that he'd been up for a visit a year or two before. She'd attended the same church as him, his sister and parents (as in the same denomination, though maybe a different congregation) and was therefore a friend of the family, but he regarded her as an 'aunt-type' figure so that's how he referred to her. Whether she minded or not (or was actually flattered) is something I'm not privy to, not that it's important.
To be honest, I have mixed feelings about the news of his passing (if information that's ten years old can accurately be described as 'news' - though it was certainly news to me) as I now wouldn't have crossed the road to pee on him if he were on fire (as I said somewhere before). However, this guy was once one of my best friends (if not my very best friend - when I was young enough to subscribe to such a notion), so for the sake of our childhood friendship I felt a little sad on learning he'd passed away. (I'd met him on my first day at my second primary school, on Wednesday 10th November 1965.) Strange, now, to think that while I'd subconsciously assumed he was yet gadding about somewhere, he'd embarked on the 'long sleep' more than ten years ago.
Sadly, he was a compulsive liar and inveterate fantasist who never seemed to realise that the 'tall tales' he told were so completely unlikely that many people who knew him as an adult regarded and dismissed him as a pathetic object of silent ridicule. Who knows what made him like that - a need for attention, perhaps? So the person whose death I'm sad about is the 6 (going on 7) to 21/22 year-old I once knew and liked, not the person he later became (or perhaps always was, but I just never noticed at the time). Undoubtedly, a large part of my small sadness is related to the reminder of my own mortality that his passing begets, but it's also to do with a life he wasted and a potential he never fulfilled.
In previous posts I've referred to him as Billy Liar, which is probably more apt than Walter Mitty as there was an element of pathos to Billy Liar's predicament, whereas Walter Mitty's was more humorous, being played for laughs more than anything else. I also called him 'Adam Cowie' on my blog, but his real name was Alan Bowie, which, long after I jettisoned him he amended to Alan Bowie-McDonald - though don't ask me why. When we were teenagers he lamented the fact that he didn't have a 'middle' name, so I suggested Adam and he became for a good long while Alan Adam Bowie. (Or A.A.B. when he was writing it on lampposts and walls with a broad-tipped ink marker pen.)
Anyway, unless reports of his death are 'greatly exaggerated' (and if they are, he'll probably be behind it) that's him gone from this softly-spinning green and blue globe which hangs upon nothing, and I'll never see him again this side of doomsday. Except in memories and old photographs of course, when I still held his friendship in some regard before his slow-but-seemingly-certain slide into decadency and despair.
So here's to the memory of Alan Bowie - though not the Alan he became, but rather the Alan I believed him to be before the scales finally fell from my eyes and I saw him for what he was. However, the end of our friendship was as a result of his unacceptable attitude and bewildering behaviour, not that of mine.
Ah, all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
The 10 year-old Facebook comment about his death, which I only saw this Sunday (17th) |
A.A.B. in the back garden of his bedsit in St. Andrews Road, Southsea, December 1978 |
Alan around the age of 7 or 8, I'd guess. He gave me this photo when I was down in Southsea/Portsmouth in 1978 |
13 comments:
I've been reading the original post from 2013 which was fascinating but I'm curious how he made his wife's life hell. I've known people who told obvious fibs but nothing like your former friend, Kid. On the subject of him adding a name - I know somebody who changed his surname to Parker by deedpoll (that was his surname when I met him) but I persuaded him to change it back to his original surname Price (which he did).
I once knew a guy called Jimmy Jobbey who changed his name - to TOMMY Jobbey. (No, I'm kidding.)
He made his wife's life 'hell' in an emotional way, CJ, in that he'd sometimes go off to his naval base in the morning and then she wouldn't hear from him for days on end. She'd 'phone me, distraught, to ask if I'd heard from him, but I hadn't. Whether or not there was ever any physical abuse I don't know, but his behaviour and lying caused her an enormous amount of stress, so much so that she turned to the church for solace around a year and a half or so into the marriage.
When I last saw him in 1981, he said his wife was away looking after her sick granny, which may have been so, though I suspect she'd already decided to leave him by then and looking after her gran gave her a convenient opportunity. He either hadn't realised it yet or just didn't want to admit it.
Thank goodness you commented - I'd started to think that this post wasn't going to get any bites.
Must ask - why did you want your pal to change his name back to Price? I once changed my name to Percy Hinkle Pinkerbottom (honest), though not by deed-poll, which isn't necessary in Scotland (as long as it's not for criminal purposes). All you have to do here is inform all the relevant authorities and people and places you deal with of how you now want to be known. I'll maybe tell that story on the blog some day, though I've an inkling that I alluded to it before. (I've still got my unemployment card with that name on it.)
Thanks for that info about your former friend's marriage, Kid, and I can only hope that his poor wife had a happier life after she finally left him!
I persuaded my friend to change his name back to Price because I thought it was rather silly he'd changed it in the first place so Roy Parker became Roy Price again thanks to me. He had a friend who'd copied him and changed his name from Simon Morgan to Simon Biggs (after Ronnie Biggs the train robber) but he too changed back to his original surname after I told him that Morgan was the same surname as Captain Morgan the pirate.
I wondered if he'd maybe changed his surname to Parker because his first name was Peter and he was a Spider-Man fan, CJ.
Yes, I hope she found a decent man who treated her right and with a bit of respect. She deserved it. My former friend claimed on his FB page that he was married (to another woman), but he was never a bastion of truth or accuracy, so it may just have been a woman he hooked up with. Regardless, she left him as well, and he took up with someone else, but I've no idea how long they were together before he died. Sometimes people are just afraid to be alone and will accept just about anyone, so that could be the explanation for her putting up with him. She must have known that he was a compulsive liar - it was hard to miss.
I confronted a classmate about his lie. He proudly replied: "Well, I fooled you!" With some liars, a feeling of superiority, to their dupes, may be a motivating factor. A liar I met, in adult life, justified her lies on the grounds that, "Everybody lies" - when clearly they do not. In AAB's case, however, the outrageousness of the lies makes it seem pathological, as you suggest. Isn't telling lies continuously linked to psychopathy & narcissism, too - who knows? I imagine Boris Johnson qualifies in several of those categories!
Phillip
I doubt that A.A.B. would ever have admitted to a lie, P, even if he could boast "I fooled you." When, as an 8 or 9 year old kid he was discovered to have traced an illustration he'd claimed to have drawn, he simply changed tack and said his sister had drawn it. The implication being that if it was a tracing, his sister was the liar and not him. Which doesn't really make much sense, but that was the 'logic' he followed.
Kid - Could you possibly take down my comment? Reading it back, considering AAB's passed away, maybe it's in bad taste, whatever his shortcomings.
Phillip
If you really want me to, I will - but I don't think it's in bad taste as it's more about pathological lying than it is about A.A.B. Also, you were merely responding to my thoughts, not taking a dig at him as such. Besides, he's been dead for 10 years so it's hardly 'too soon'.
No, absolutely nothing to do with Peter Parker, Kid - my friend didn't read Marvel comics!
I agree that Phillip's comment isn't in bad taste!
What was in bad taste, CJ, was my former friend claiming on another FB site (the one for our old school I think) that he had been a commanding officer on HMS Sheffield, which is now a designated war grave. He was never any kind of officer in the navy and was in fact a hospital porter in Gosport at the time of the Falklands war. Trying to big oneself up by claiming to be a Falklands war veteran is what's bad taste, so P doesn't need to feel he's doing the guy any kind of injustice.
Your pal didn't read Marvel comics? What was wrong with him?
Gordon, it's me, Alan. I'm not dead. I got put into the Witness Protection Scheme because I helped bust an international drugs ring ten years ago. My death was faked and I was given a new identity to throw the drug barons off my scent. I'm in Russia at the moment as part of a spy group for MI6 trying to bring down Putin. Don't tell a soul. I now have a new name, one that is ordinary and won't attract attention. Signing off for now, Bond... James Bond.
Surely you mean Bond-McDonald... James Bond-McDonald?
Update: I've just found a batch of old letters from him, and in one from 1980 he says that he's about to begin training as a medical assistant. I must've forgotten this, because when I saw him at Haslar Hospital in 1981 and asked him what he was doing, he said he was a medical assistant, which I thought was the first time he'd told me this. By this time I was disinclined to believe just about everything he said (experience) so I thought he was likely just bigging himself up and was probably a porter. However, it now appears that he at least trained for the position of assistant, though as he left the Navy in 1983 (if I recall correctly), it didn't last long. Did he jump or was he pushed? It seems I'll never know.
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