Early in the year Jane and I spent a week in Gran Canaria. It was great fun but now seems like a distant memory belonging to another time altogether. Because of the time of the year we stayed in the south in a place called, Porta Morgan, known as Little Venice.
In part as a response to this, I applied for
and was granted a Permission to Officiate from Bishop Christopher of Coventry Diocese.
This was generally so that I could ‘officiate’
in our ‘home church’ St Matthew and St Oswald’s with Overslade.
As we went into lock
down our Vicar, Alan and Jane Hulme (wife and Associate Minister) had to shield
as Alan was vulnerable. It has not come
to pass but there was a concern about funeral cover.
I have done a recorded sermon by Zoom, which was a challenge as I tend to be animated when preaching!
I have done a recorded sermon by Zoom, which was a challenge as I tend to be animated when preaching!
I was also engaging with Jane H on using
puppets for school assemblies. Having a PTO brings me into line for
safeguarding and other types of cover.
However, lock-down put paid to school’s work
and so ‘James and Grandad’ have taken to having Zoom chats every week! These are recorded and feature in our
recorded Act of Worship on Sunday mornings.
This is one of the earlier ‘chats’ when they are talking about Covid-19…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBBmfSJ6Moo
‘Grandad’ relaxing after chatting to James!
The other thing lined
up that did not happen was my volunteering with a local Riding for the Disabled
Group. Unlike the Stafford group the one
nearest to me only have access to an outside exercise ring and therefore only
meet from March – October. (Stafford met at Ingestre and meet year-round) So we
are waiting to see when that might pick up again. My guess is it will be next
year now.
As the year turned around, I re-engaged with
the Farming Community Network. The work
of this charity has become of vital importance.
Our Warwickshire Group meetings have gone on-line with Zoom. We have also gone on-line with ‘Chewing the
Cud’ – which in some ways has been good as it has brought more people ‘around
the table.’ I get such a buzz seeing
people chatting and sharing life stories and exchanging ideas and resources.
The other charity I am heavily involved with is
Rural Mission Solutions. (Chair of Trustee's)
When lock-down began to take hold Barry Osborne
and I discussed the idea of offering some sort of on-line worship on Sunday
morning. For several years now we have
been offering webinars on Rural Mission and Evangelism. These worship services have been a steep
learning curve, but we now have a ‘settled’ pattern of a 9am live Service going
out through Zoom each Sunday. Currently
we are working through a series entitled - ‘God’s Unlikely Choice.’ We have looked at Abraham as an unlikely
father, Gideon as an unlikely leader and Paul as an unlikely apostle.
With the RMS Service
going out live and weekly it has been demanding and ‘someone’ reminded me
recently that I am retired! I needed
that reminder as one of things I have said is that while in ‘work’ I generally
put that first and fitted family and domestic life around those demands. But
now in retirement I want to flip that around and be available for family and
friends and of course myself.
This shift in my mental furniture is an ongoing piece of work. I have always had a strong work ethic and do not like letting people down or causing them more work or not helping if I am able. I am always keen to share what I have discovered but now find that sometimes I need to shut up and sit on my hands because it is not my call to make.
However, just down the road 10
minutes away live our grandsons, James and William, now 15 months old. They are
all the distraction you might need!
Thankfully, we are now back meeting up with them once again as these
early months see such changes in them.
We also had a holiday in France scheduled for us all, but that is another postponement until next year.
Of course, you will be aware that we have three
other lovely grandchildren in Cornwall. Kerryn, Lowenna and Isla. We had a
lovely time down there in March, staying in our caravan at Par Sands and
celebrating Lowenna’s 5th birthday.
www.gofundme.com/f/support-for-lowenna.
Like everybody all our ideas and plans were
thrown awry by this pandemic and we have not been able to explore much of the surrounding
area. The ‘Midlands’ is enormously rich in history and many places played a key
role in the life of this nation so we are looking forward to exploring more
when we can do so safely.
Before the lockdown we did manage a visit to Leicester where our youngest son Joe is now living. We paid a visit together to the Richard 111 exhibition which was fascinating. More recently we met up at Abbey Park, where Cardinal Wolsey is buried.
And I have been discovering more of the
local area while out running, walking and cycling. Rugby has the river Avon
running through it and the Oxford Coventry canal. Plus, it was once a railway
hub, so there are numerous tracks and pathways that form a network around the
town and just outside.
Life is still full on and fun even if we are
currently feeling very frustrated. Like everyone we are looking forward to
whatever the ‘new normal’ might bring – and a trip to Costa!
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