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Some say that Life is made up of lost
opportunities. Whilst that may be correct, Life is of course comprised of many
aspects and to imply missed opportunities is foremost among them displays a
negative mind-set that may even, for those of that demeanour, escalate those
lost opportunities.
Nevertheless when I look back at my life I
can think of many opportunities that I have not taken, regret not having taken
and today—at 63—despair of ever taking. They range from the relative mundane
such as not going to the Bruce Springsteen concert to the life changing such as
not travelling the world or not becoming proficient at playing a musical
instrument—I would have loved to be a rock drummer.
But one opportunity I did take, one
afforded me by my late mother, was to become a writer. It wasn’t immediate, I
started as a delivery boy in a newspaper, but doors opened continually and
often fate intervened to help. In that regard, and in having the mother whom I
did, I have been truly blessed. Let me say this though—and here we are arriving
at the theme of this Fryday—I don’t think I am particularly talented as a
writer but I am a good reader, a vociferous reader, and that, along with fate,
the mother and luck, has helped immensely.
A young lady whom I met yesterday and who
is yearning to be employed in the communication industry prompted these
thoughts. She is a hard-worker, intelligent and has a supportive mother; yet
you can see the doubt in her eyes and what is extravagantly called the fear of
the future. That is understandable; at her stage of life, much of the future
stretches before her like an unmapped desert. Yet she will have guides across
that desert. There will be people to help her. There will be opportunities that
come up—some of her own doing, others through sheer luck or the intervention of
Fate. Nobody, and I mean nobody (unless they choose) is left to face the future
alone.
My life has undergone many changes. One of
the most abrupt and ultimately joyous was in 1986 when I won a major writing competition
that I had not even entered. But Fate intervened, and I was subsequently offered,
and took, the opportunity to write full-time. Another more recent was the
meeting of my wife under a set of circumstances so unlikely that many have said
it was Fate playing Cupid. I agree. It was.
I am now likely to make another change
(with my wife, not to my wife J) and like that young lady yesterday I, too, have a new and uncharted
desert to cross. But cross it I will,
because I will have Fate as a friend and a glorious nurturing thing called Life
to lead and to lead me.