Family

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by Enormous on February 3, 2010

My mother and idiot stepfather John called to see me yesterday. (Well, to be honest, I don’t think either of them are that bothered about seeing me; it’s Audrey they really come to visit.)

When they arrived, John thrust a box of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts at me. ‘Have one of these. They’re gorgeous.’

‘No thanks, John,’ I told him, ‘I don’t want to end up like one of the waddling spheroid people I keep bumping into around here. Anyway, I thought you were trying to lose weight?’

‘I keep telling him . . .’ my mum interjected, ‘what with his heart problems and everything . . .’

‘I’ve had three of the buggers already. Tell your mum a little of what you fancy does you good.’

‘Why don’t you tell her yourself, John?’

‘I can hear him you know. What did he say?’

‘Have you forgotten to put your hearing aid in again, mum?’

‘What? A bee? What bee? Where?’ She began vigorously wafting the air around her head. ‘I hate bees.’

‘I’ll have it, then, if nobody else wants it.’ John flopped down on my sofa, put his feet on my antique wooden coffee table and set about demolishing the last of the doughnuts. ‘Here you are, Audrey . . .’

‘What?’ I exclaimed. ‘You know she can’t have anything like that, John.’

‘Yeah, yeah, diabetic, I know.’ He mockingly made quotation marks with his fingers.

‘Why on earth where you going to give her a piece of your bloody doughnut, then?’

‘A little bit won’t hurt her.’

‘Good grief! When are you going to – ‘

‘What? Betty who? Who’s Betty?’ My mum called from the kitchen where she was busily putting the kettle on. She is always putting the kettle on, my mum is.

‘Nothing, mum.’

‘What?’

‘I feel a bit sick now. And you’re right, Davy-lad, I am supposed to be watching my weight. I feel a right fool now for eating all those.’

‘H’m.’

‘But I can’t help myself, you know. No will power. I seem to spend most of my life these days trying not to be an idiot.’

‘Really, John? How’s that working out for you?’

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Bo Selected

by Enormous on April 14, 2009

I am so glad the Obama kids have decided to call their new dog Bo.

Bo was my Irish great-grandfather’s nickname. He was a hero in World War One. He received the Victoria Cross for valour “in the face of the enemy” which probably meant he told some devastatingly bad jokes to a few Germans and forced them to surrender.

He was infamous as an incorrigible teller of egregiously unfunny gags, rendering mute anyone who encountered him – not from trying to breathe through tears of laughter, but from confusion and tedium. It has been said by certain family members that I take after him in this regard but – and I am not joking when I say this – it is a complete fallacy.

Something else that endears the new Obama dog to me is the fact that he looks a lot like Audrey, what with his glorious abundance of black hair and his sad eyes. He does not have a long white beard like she does, however, something that holds him back slightly in the canine perfection stakes. (Audrey just told me that.)

In fact, when I pointed out to her the fact that he resembled her quite a lot, she remained unimpressed and looked at me stoically as if to say: ‘Whatever.’

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Moaning Lisa

by Enormous on September 18, 2008

I hate to moan, but . . .

About seven days after Nelson leaves me and Audrey behind to return to his luxury penthouse flat in London, I always get a little down – which is unusual for me.

Apart from when I have a hangover – when my cast-iron defences begin to crumble and fail – I manage to keep any depression that threatens to rear its ugly head safely at bay, buried and sealed with the efficiency of long habit.

That doesn’t alter the fact that I miss my brother when he isn’t around; he lives too far away. Still, the situation could be substantially worse: he could live next door.

On a tenuously connected note, I wrote a new song yesterday, another one about sex, obsession and torture. It’s called Moaning Lisa. Here’s the first verse:

Moaning Lisa takes her teacher home
He likes to hear her moan
She tells him she loves him
But there’s something wrong
He said: ‘I want to hear you moan.’

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O Hold Me, Firm Earth

by Enormous on March 24, 2008

I’m shocked. I simply could not believe it on Saturday when my Uncle Michael did me an enormous favour. We have hardly been on speaking terms for about fifteen years and it has been an established belief within the family that we hate each other’s guts.

Michael is a staunch supporter of the British National Party, an organisation whose political ethos differs slightly from that of my own, to say the least. He is a rather odd-looking fellow: he is very overweight and has a strangely coloured complexion, the like of which has long been regarded as something of a medical curiosity. (His face has a sort of greeny-white pallor that changes to a colour that doesn’t actually exist in this dimension whenever he manages to rise from his armchair to waddle into his filthy kitchen to get more cheese.) I once saw him naked and now I always have to close my eyes whenever I go past a butcher’s shop.

I thanked him for his kindness and told him how much his help was appreciated. ‘Uncle Mike, I didn’t know you cared.’

He shrugged heavily. ‘I don’t,’ was all he had to say.

Not a word was uttered after that. We stood in silence for about three minutes while the wind blew an empty can of Foster’s Lager along the street outside. Audrey was looking up at me and blinking furiously. Once again, mute canine witness was being paid to my spectacular lack of social ability.

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The Man Behind The Curtain

by Enormous on February 21, 2008

My brother has been talking recently about how he hates receiving visitors at his flat.

I reminded him yesterday of something he used to do, some rather bizarre behaviour that used to provide me with hours of endless amusement, all those years ago when we both lived at home.

He has always been a vaguely eccentric fellow and at times even a little odd. I am sure he would not mind me telling you this and neither would he deny it; it is merely an essential element and primary facet – one of many – that combine to make a truly fascinating, unique and remarkable individual.

I asked him if he could remember when he was about eight-years-old and he was going through a peculiar phase of hurriedly secreting himself away somewhere in the sitting-room whenever there was a caller at the family home. His favourite hiding place was behind the long curtains that hung in front of the French windows.

Whenever there was a knock on the front door, he would immediately stop whatever it was he was doing and bolt behind the red velvet curtains in order that he wouldn’t have to speak to whoever it was at the door, should they be allowed into the house and enter the room.

My mother was invariably forced into excusing her young son’s irregular behaviour to whoever it was that had come to visit her – the meter reader, the man from the Pru, or one of her male friends from the council – because my little brother’s Paddington Bear plimsolls and white ankle socks were at all times still visible beneath the hem of the heavy curtains. ‘He’s a little shy,’ she used to say.

‘He’s a little idiot,’ I would add, helpfully.

He would quietly remain there for the duration of the visit and, try as we might, could not be coaxed to come out from the comfort and safety of his beloved hiding place.

I mentioned to him also in our brief conversation yesterday how I am slightly worried by the fact that he still exhibits this strange behaviour even now, when he is in his thirties, whenever he is at my house.

Old habits die hard, I suppose.

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Hand-Shaped Bruise

by Enormous on February 8, 2008

‘Why aren’t you at school, Billy?’

I met the cheerful little youngster on the recreation ground this morning. He was on his knees trying to feed chewing gum to Audrey. ‘I don’t think dogs like gum, Billy,’ I told him. I asked again, ‘Why aren’t you at school?’ He ignored me a second time and increased his efforts to get Audrey to accept the sticky substance she was being offered. I persisted in trying to get an answer from him. It wasn’t easy, nor did I succeed entirely. ‘Is the school on holiday today?’

‘Don’t know.’

‘Why aren’t you there?’

‘Don’t know.’

To my horror, I noticed that the boy had bruises all over his little arms and what looked like a very recent one around his left eye. I feared the worst.

I despair for the vulnerable and innocent little 8-year-old, I really do. What future is there for him? After a few more years of having to suffer abuse from his parents, the only thing he has to look forward to is becoming a junior member of one of the local gangs of miscreants and abberants, and then on to a spell in prison and the eventual physical abuse of his own children.

Back at the house, a precarious thought struck me as I was emptying my bowels. (I have my most inspiring notions and ideas when I am performing this function.) What popped into my mind was this: Perhaps I can help the child.

But what could I do? Should I contact Social Services? I fear I could only make things worse for him. I toyed with the idea of marching around to his home and confronting his mother and father on their doorstep – but what if I am wrong?

‘I’ll save him,’ I said to Audrey who was watching me from her vantage point beneath the mixing desk in the studio.

But, inevitably, I came to my senses. I felt pathetic and useless. Fastening my trousers, I flushed the toilet – an action which I feel expressed my ridiculous intentions quite eloquently.

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Stinking Pitt

by Enormous on January 4, 2008

I had a strange dream about Brad Pitt last night.

My band Enormous had a gig at the Royal College of Music and Brad, being a fan, had contacted our management to ask if he could come with us as part of our road crew – I think he was doing some research for a part in a movie.

Bizarrely, it transpired – with the help of some Fantastic dream-logic – that Brad knew my mother quite well, so it was arranged for him to be picked up from her house in Mansfield. When we arrived, he was waiting at her front door. She was fussing all around him, looking him up and down and tutting constantly in that expert way that mothers do. In one hand she held her purse and in the other, her nose. ‘Hi, mum, Brad,’ I said cheerfully.

‘He stinks!’ she protested, to no one in particular.

And indeed he did. I don’t know if it was Audrey who had broken wind and the noxious aroma had invaded my dream or something, but the stench coming from the handsome film star was of the worst kind.

‘It’s his jeans!’ she went on. ‘Look at the state of them! I insist that you let me buy you some more, Brad.’

I felt slightly uncomfortable standing there in the rain, staring at Brad Pitt’s famous legs, but it was true: his ruined denims were in tatters and it was obvious that the offensive smell was coming mostly from that area of his body.

The band and our entourage sat in the van and had to wait while I, under orders from my mum, was forced to escort the unfortunate Mr. Pitt to the local Tesco’s to buy him a new pair of trousers. ‘Right, shall we go to the shop then, Brad?’ I asked him.

Too touched by my mother’s charity to say anything, he merely coughed his embarrassed assent and we walked to the supermarket in silence, twinned by our awkwardness.

He chose the cheapest pair of jeans he could find (only £3.00!) and on our return to the house, we jumped into the van – the two of us pleased beyond words with our frugality – and sped off with the rest of the band down the motorway towards London.

From then on, my dream was even more anomalous. The gig was the usual fraught experience due to my forgetting all the chords and lyrics to our songs and the audience was dressed as warthogs. Brad disappeared into the mists of semi-consciousness, and later on, I had sex with a beautiful blonde-haired student of the violin who said she was the Queen of England – which was rather pleasant. It all got a bit weird after that.

I do remember this though: after the gig, as we were loading the various monitors, guitar amplifiers and drum cases into the van, Brad was nowhere to be seen.

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