Telephone Conversations with my son Andy, By Graham Hadfield 1,138 words
Me: Have you read my creative writing yet?
Andy: No, I’m doing my politics essay.
Me: Read it now and then text me to tell me how brilliant it is.
Andy: Would you like some constructive criticism?
Me: No.
Andy: I want to read you the beginning of my dissertation to see what you think.
Me: What is the title?
Andy: Unravelling the Causes of the Russian Invasion of Crimea in 2014: A
Comparative Analysis of Classical Liberalism and Offensive Realism Perspectives.
Me: If you must but for god’s sake read it slowly.
Andy: It’s a beautiful sunny day here.
Me: Have you put on your sun cream?
Andy: No I’m broke. I don’t have the money for it.
Me: It only costs £6.
Andy: I have to have special sun cream or I come out in spots.
Me: Here we go again, presumably you also have to bathe in asses milk.
How much does it cost?
Andy: £15.
Me: I will transfer the money to you on the strict understanding that you don’t
spend it on food.
Andy: What’s up?
Me: Just been to the gym and run a mile.
Andy: Very impressive.
Me: Don’t try and match me Andy. With your level of fitness you would have to
build up to the mile very slowly, I would start by seeing if you can run to the end
of the road first without collapsing in a heap.
Andy: I don’t like running.
Me Next time you come to the Isle of Wight we can do a run together.
Andy: I’ll tell you what, you can run and I’ll walk alongside.
Me: Very drôle Andy.
Andy: I’ve just done my shift at WH Smith. My favourite co-worker is a little
Vietnamese man. If someone comes into the store who looks a little dodgy he
follows them round the store saying repeatedly “Please don’t steal”.
Me: That’s brilliant. How do people react?
Andy: Someone rather gave the game away today when they turned on him and
said this store has nothing worth stealing.
Me: You remember how my sister in law who runs an international cosmetics
company told me that I have very beautiful skin for a person of my age.
Andy: Yes you mention it frequently.
Me: It’s made me very protective of my skin. Sometimes I am walking down the
street and think my skin could do with a little moisturiser. I wear sun cream all
the year round.
Andy: Yes I know.
Me: At the start of each ramble I ask if anyone has forgotten their 50 factor sun
cream and would like to use mine. Inevitably a little voice pipes up saying they
think a little sun is good for them, vitamin D and all that. I turn to face them
and invariably find I am gazing into a face that looks like a weathered prune.
Andy: This new guy Simon I’m working with at WH Smith’s is driving me crazy.
Me: Why?
Andy: He is 29 years old and lives with his mother.
Me: So.
Andy: It’s the things he says.
Me: Like what?
Andy: He says my mother wants me to find a pretty lady to marry.
Me: Oh dear.
Andy: I asked him whether he had ever had a girlfriend.
Me: What was his reply?
Andy: Oh yes, I’ve been a naughty boy in the past.
Me: He sounds like Michael Crawford in Some Mothers do have em.
Andy: Whose that?
Me: Before your time. Research him on Youtube.
Me: Andy, I’ve just had a brilliant business idea.
Andy: What’s that?
Me: It’s an old people’s home with a twist.
Andy: What’s the twist?
Me: You guarantee that within a year you will have persuaded the old person to
take assisted suicide.
Andy: Ohhh kay
Me: The slight business flaw is that you will be unable to charge those exorbitant
fees year after year while you keep the old person hanging on by a thread.
Andy: Have you talked about this with anyone else?
Andy: I’ve just been concussed.
Me: How?
Andy: I was getting something low down behind the counter at WH Smith’s when
one of my co-workers opened a draw above my head without telling me.
Me: Was that Simon?
Andy: How did you guess?
Me: Did he apologise?
Andy: Yes, I wanted to smash his face in.
Me: I can’t wait until I am seen at the local GP’s by an AI robot rather than a
physical doctor.
Andy: Why’s that?
Me: More reliable diagnosis and less embarrassing.
Andy: How less embarrassing?
Me: Let’s take a hypothetical case? Say your problem was erectile dysfunction.
Who would you prefer to discuss it with, a robot or a smirking female GP?
Andy: Yes but wouldn’t you miss the human interaction?
Me: You mean the caring voice they put on and the sympathetic hand across the
table when they tell you have six months to live. No.
Actually I told the GP last time I visited that his job was threatened by advances
in AI.
Andy: I bet that went down really well.
Me: Yes, now I think about it he did seem a bit put out.
Andy: I was outraged in my seminar today when someone accused me of coming
from a privileged background
Me: The problem is your accent Andy
Andy: I explained to them that unlike many people at the LSE I don’t have a
trust fund to fall back on. As a child I qualified for free school meals and went to
the local comprehensive rated as a failing by Ofsted.
Me: I wish I’d been there. It must have been like a lecture from Jacob Rees-Mogg
about his tough upbringing on a council estate.
Andy: Ha ha very funny.
Me Andy about your updated cv.
Andy: Yes what did you think?
Me It didn’t give enough prominence to your time in Home Education with me.
Andy: How was I supposed to do that?
Me: Well I seem to remember that you once won a finger painting competition. .
You could stick that in your list of achievements. It might provoke a weak smile
in your reader and differentiate your cv from the rest.
Andy: A definite no to that.
Andy: Guess what I’m doing all morning.
Me I don’t know
I’m writing letters to various charities who give educational bursaries to see if
they will contribute to my fees at the LSE.
Me Doesn’t sound much fun.
Andy: Yesterday I received a letter back from a charity that I’d previously applied
to saying that I didn’t meet their criteria.
Me: Oh I’m sorry to hear that.
Andy: I’m going to send them a snotty letter back.
Me: You can’t do that Andy.
Andy: Oh yes I can.