Born in the middle of last century my life was one big adventure rolling endlessly from morning into night. A bag of skin and sinew, always a bit slower, a little weaker and believing my peers considered me less intelligent, made me determined to succeed.
There would be no question as to my career path, I
wanted to join the family motor business and become a racing driver. Well, a
boy could dream. My heroes were men like, Lex Davidson, Jack Brabham, or NASA astronauts.
Never questioning my strength, I found it hard to
understand why everyone around me could run further, swim faster and whose
hand/eye coordination seemed like it was God given. In essence I considered
myself a dork and, if I wanted to get to the Grand Prix circuits in Europe had
better be a bloody good mechanic.
Back then, I never understood about the effect girls
would play in my post-pubescence. One kiss from a blonde bombshell at a netball
game on a steamy, starlit, summer’s night knocked my boyhood ambitions for six.
The girl, now long gone, woke me to a different set of
priorities and for the next thirty-five years I won and lost at business, never
having enough time to question my health, or why my stamina failed me when
others worked on.
My business world was crumbling during the recession
we had to have and, I felt as if I had been building sandcastles before an
incoming tide. I couldn’t make anything last. However, determination and
perspiration are strong allies and our family business held ground until a
buyer could be found.
Moving to Melbourne, I worked in a number of sales
positions, which took me across Australia and overseas. In my sixties and
considered a fossil by HR folk, I took a job as a parts picker at AGCO, a
company selling Massey Ferguson tractors. Considering myself unfit, I didn’t
take a lot of notice of the aches and pains, but my right shoulder began
drooping even more and occasional numbness travelling to my fingers worried me.
Introducing herself as Dr. Katrina Reardon bustled in.
‘Now look straight ahead and purse your lips,’ she said. ‘Hmm, now whistle?’
Doing my best to imitate a botoxed catfish, a breathless
wheeze escaping my pucker.
‘As I thought,’ she said, while casting a knowing eye
over my Mr. Men like physique, ‘you can’t pucker your lips.’
‘I’ve had no complaints to date,’ I replied.
My smartarsed comment withered, dying the death it
deserved, Katrina asked me to remove my shirt and as I responded to her diagnosis
commands, she checked my drooping right shoulder and soft froglike midriff.
Dr. Reardon had been with me only a matter of minutes
before offering her suspected diagnosis, FSHD. Recommending the biopsy be sent
for genetic testing to confirm her verdict, Katrina explained how my life could
change over the next few years and my need to give up working as a furniture
delivery man.
At home my wife Ruth and I began sorting out the
ramifications of this change to our lives. ‘What are you going to do?’ she
asked.
‘Might write a book,’ I said
‘But you don’t read,’ she laughed.
She was right. I didn’t read novels, but being in
sales I could tell stories, I just needed to make a yarn last.
Since that night Voss, The Price of Innocence and
Gillespie’s Gold have also been published. With a growing list of novels, biographies
and self-help stories gathering dust on my hard drive while I search for a
publisher, I continue to write and learn my craft.
Who would have thought this no longer skinny kid from Orroroo in South Australia, could find his books in many libraries around the country? Not me.
Terry