Feb 27 2010
Decorating
When I was growing up, we lived in a red brick 1950s council house, built to house the London overspill following the Blitz. It was on the edge of the town and the garden backed onto a playing field, which was itself surrounded by fields and ditches and hedgerows – a haven for children growing up and a place of skinned knees, scratched arms, nettle stings, bumped heads, first kisses and all the rest.
When we moved into the house, my parents’ bedroom had thick wallpaper in various shades of cream and black and brown, featuring a nautical theme of galleons in full sail. Having, as my mother so descriptively puts it, ‘not even a pot to piss in’, the redecorating of their bedroom came fairly low down the list of priorities, well after kids’ shoes, cats and Puffin Book Club purchases. For about 4 years they put up with those ships, until my mother tried to persuade my father to strip off the wallpaper in preparation for redecorating. After months of nagging had failed to do the trick, my mother, armed with a kitchen knife and a washing up bowl full of soapy water, did the job herself. The walls beneath were solid enough, and a sort of greyish plaster. Now all they needed to do was repaper the walls and paint them whatever colour they fancied.
A year or two passed. My father showed no signs of enthusiasm for the great decorating project, and my mother resorted to guerrilla tactics. ‘If you don’t decorate the bedroom,’ she threatened, ‘I’ll get the children to do it!’ And he would laugh and go back to his crossword.
One wet day in early February, my brother and I returned from school to find Mum waiting for us with tea and toast. She then produced two big boxes of thick crayons, led us upstairs and told us to decorate her bedroom walls! It must be every child’s dream to have such a large canvas, and we took full advantage of it. Well, my brother got bored after about 20 minutes and went off to do something else, but I got more and more exuberant as the time went on. I started with a big tabby cat, whiskers extended and tail curled. Then I drew a rainbow above the bed, using every colour in the crayon pack, whether they were in the spectrum or not. I tried to draw us, but didn’t do very well ( I was only 8 years old at the time). Then, I struck upon the brilliant idea of drawing Mr Men. They were simple shapes, lovely colours, and had lots of personality! So I ran to my brother’s room and demanded all the Mr Men books he had. Two hours later I had covered the walls, and the pièce de résistance was a magnificent Mr Tickle, a beautiful orange blob with enormous long wavy arms that went all the way around the room. I used two whole orange crayons for him and wore them down to tiny stubs that my fingers could barely hold.
When my father came home he went upstairs to change, and me and Mum held our breath as he walked into the bedroom. There was a stunned silence, a sort of growl, then a chuckle, then a full shout of laughter as he realised what had happened. And do you know something? Those Mr Men were still there 4 years later!
Eventually, as time went on and my brother and I moved towards adolescence, my mother eventually realised that if there was any decorating to be done, she would have to do it herself. The walls of the bedroom were finally papered in woodchip (yep, parental units were still spending all the housekeeping money on books and red wine), and painted with white emulsion. After three heavy coats of paint, Mr Tickle was finally rendered invisible. About 5 years ago, my parents moved out of that house, where they had lived for over 30 years. By that time they had bought it, and like a lot of houses on the street, it had new windows and doors and you would be hard pressed to tell it was ever a council house. Being within easy commuting distance from London, yet right on the edge of lovely countryside, the town where I was brought up had become fashionable and affluent, meaning my folks could sell up and buy a cottage in Suffolk. They sold the house to a lovely young couple with two small children. And I wonder what they thought when they decorated the bedroom and stripped off the old 1970s woodchip wallpaper and found what was underneath…….













