When we drive places my Dad will invariably tell stories about people, places and experiences he has had. This is one of them. I am so proud of my Daddy and you can see where I got my creative writing gift from!
This post has been reposted from my Dad's blog site www.kenaitken.net
THE WORLD IS A VERY SMALL PLACE: AN EXPERIENCE WHILST I WAS A STUDENT IN 1969’.
The
feelings of both the future freedom ahead and vague financial
apprehension jostled internally side by side with the rhythmic rocking
of the train. The window of glass with timber frames, dust-grit
cornered, was propped up fully in its sliding frame. I pondered
absent-mindedly on the passing late afternoon scenery. I was a
countrified college student on my first train journey since I was very
young. I remembered one earlier trip to Sydney with my parents when I
slept overnight up in the recessed luggage rack. I was travelling from
Mullumbimby to Morisset, south of Newcastle. An awareness of aloneness
was intensified by the empty carriage. I settled back in the railway-
green vinyl seat.
This
year, instead of a scholarship, work and study would have to be
together. I would have to pay my way through college. Would I make it?
Hence the apprehension. College holidays had ended. New clothes and new
shoes had been a priority. It was something to have that new-dressed and
new-shoed feeling. Of significance were the new black shoes on my feet.
It was a real change from last year.
A
train-change at Casino filled the carriage with travellers. Two sat
alongside me in my seat. Three people sat opposite me. The aloneness
changed to one of withdrawn social quietness. Strangers or friends, I
had yet to meet? The Northern Rivers railway night settled down. Wrought
iron suitcase racks and sandwiched teas. Conductors, people moving up
and down the corridors of panelled wood. The night was cold. I would not
reach my destination till the following morning.
The
withdrawness melted. Travelling conversation emerged. Tentative at
first but curious of personal intent. `So your from Mullumbimby? Have
you lived there all your life?” `Yes. My parents have lived there most
of my life. My parents have a banana plantation ….. Wilson’s Creek …..
out from Mullumbimby. Really nice country. I’m studying at a private
college near Newcastle’.
`What
are you about? Are you from these parts?’ `Yes, from Casino. I’m in the
army now ….. Sydney’. He was a young man, older than I was and in his
early thirties. Civilian clothes.
Pale
yellow lights outside indicated passing villages, farms and towns. The
train stopped. Passengers alighted. Our compartment emptied and there
was now room to move. The whistle sounded and the train moved off down
the train tracks. Shoes off, socked feet, legs rug-draped, stretched out
across opposite seats. Carriaged-comfort. Fleeting railway signs at
passing stations flicked by through the cold glass. The conversation
with the Casino-man developed and deepened along lines of mutual
interest. Strangers in the night but have we met before? We finally
settled back, dozing in our drowsiness. The second class carriage would
provide an uncomfortable night.
In
the early hours, predawn, I awoke. My sixth sense said things had
changed. An extended train-stop at Broadmeadows. Stationed silence.
Passenger changes again filled our carriage compartment. Less room. A
few more hours and it will be Morisset. I dozed off back to sleep.
My
travelling companion from Casino awoke me. Soon it would be time to get
off. The train slows. It is around five in the morning. Gosford! Oh!
No! I am twenty miles down the track from where I should be. A great
panic ! Shoes on ! Suitcase down from the rack ! Travelling rug. Hurried
goodbyes, I alighted from the train with real feelings of frustration.
It meant catching another train back to Morisset. I went to find the
station master.
As
the train pulled out, I glanced down at the black bitumen of the
platform and then at my shoes. A cold flush of disbelief then dismay,
crept over me. On my right foot was my new black shoe. On my left foot
was one brown shoe!! An interminable moment went by till comprehension
mounted. In the predawn darkness, I had mixed the wrong shoes. They felt
the same. Now what was I to do? The impossibility of walking into class
in one black shoe and one brown shoe visualised before me. My train by
this time, was fast receding down the curve in the track towards
suburban Sydney. How was I to recover a single black shoe in all the
carriages arriving in Sydney that morning. My financial loss left an
inner hollow.
As I walked down the platform, I turned and looked up. A large overbearing billboard blurted out the statement:
TRAVEL BY TRAIN TRAINS TAKE THE TENSION
OUT OF TRAVELLING
The philosophical implications are best left unsaid ! I resigned myself to a train back to Morisset and then by taxi to college.
It
was four days later and an unexpected letter arrived from my mother.
ESP-like, she asked if I had lost a shoe on my train. How did she know
that, being six hundred miles away? The story unfolded further.
In
my casual conversation with the Casino-man, I had mentioned I was a
student at a college near Newcastle and I was from Mullumbimby. His
girlfriend worked in the Casino telephone exchange. He had rung her and
told his plight. I can imagine the expression on his face when he
arrived in Sydney! She then rang the Mullumbimby telephone exchange and
asked if any of the girls knew anyone in the district with a son
studying down near Newcastle? He could not remember my name! Mullumbimby
was then a town of about two thousand odd people plus all those out in
the outlying country. We lived six miles up in the mountainous bush.
Somehow, the woman rang Owen Aitken. The departure time was confirmed.
The present events had taken their course. The advantages of the days
before computerisation!
The
girl from Casino rang my parents. If I would send the brown shoe back
to this address in Sydney, my black shoe would be sent back! I carefully
wrapped the shoe in a brown paper parcel, addressed it carefully and
launched it off on the postal ocean like the proverbial note in bottle. A
week later my new but much-travelled shoe arrived in the post.
The world is a very small place!!
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you like what you read please comment here