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church, flowers, garden improvements, geese, goslings, hospital appointments, Lent, Lent course, safeguarding, solar panels, spring, Suffolk
After successfully finding my way back to my blog I have so far failed to do any blogging. I found that I had committed myself to doing so many other things that the time and energy for self-indulgence (i.e. writing for my own amusement) was lacking.
We spent over a year sorting out my late mother’s belongings and then after the start of the new year we began helping Alice, our elder daughter move the rest of her possessions that were still in our house up to her new home in Sheffield. This entailed quite a bit of hard decision-making on her part and a lot of trips to the tip and the charity shop for my husband, Richard. When that was done I decided that I might as well carry on the good work and begin a clear out of my own extraneous belongings, also going through all the stored bedlinen etc., and I had just got going with that when Lent began – and what a busy Lent it was! Note to self – get on with the clearing out!
I’m not sure whether I told you that three years ago I, with four other friends, was commissioned as a lay-elder (with licence to preach) in my church. To be commissioned we have to prove that we have had a DBS (Disclosure and Barring Service) check done (criminal records are checked to make sure we have behaved ourselves recently) and we have to take part in a safeguarding training course. Three years ago I took Level One and Level Two Safeguarding Training.
Every three years lay-elders have to be re-commissioned and therefore another DBS check has to be done and our safeguarding training has to be brought up-to-date. This year we have struggled through Level Three of the training programme. We should also be doing a course on dealing with abuse in the home but there are no spare places at present on the on-line course. Safeguarding is important work I know, but I think it highly unlikely that I will have to use this knowledge in a real-life situation very often, if at all. It presupposes that we deal regularly with children, young people and vulnerable adults. We don’t. In all eleven churches which make up our benefice there are only four children who come to church fairly regularly, with their parents. We have no youth groups, Sunday Schools or creches. We have a choir that meets just before Advent to practice singing carols. They disband just after Christmas. We have a hand-bell ringing group led by Gail the organist. The only times that most of us meet are for church services, fund-raising events and PCC meetings etc. There may be some parishioners who have vulnerabilities they do not, will not, or cannot share with others but, as we all know each other quite well, we know where everyone lives, we know many of each others habits and hobbies and a lot about everyones’ families, I feel that we are in no real danger of being harmed by a thoughtless remark or by being given a hug when we’d rather not be touched. If we got a visitor or even a new church-member (Glory Be!) that would be different and we would know to behave with care. As for any of the other sins like coercion, bullying, grooming or sexual abuse, I really cannot see any of us indulging in those – or getting away with it either. However, as we all know, there are some very nasty and devious people about and it is better to be safe than sorry. I finished writing up the final part of the Safeguarding course ten days ago and submitted the work. I now have to wait a week or so to find out whether I have passed. I committed myself to reading some of the approved and relevant books and documents and I am making my way through those at my leisure. I also have to do some kind of project in the church during the next six months to do with promoting safeguarding. Oh dear!
I attended a Lent course which met every Wednesday evening at the Rectory. This was quite good fun as we were greeted by Bonnie the black labrador on arrival, learnt about the Desert Fathers (and Mothers), had a discussion and a cup of tea and then drove home again at 9.00pm. The five minute video we watched at the start of the meeting sometimes speeded up and the narrator’s voice changed, to our childish amusement. I quite enjoy witnessing the drawing out of the nights as I venture out in the evenings during Lent. We begin in February, leaving the house at 7.10pm in the dark and cold, often with foggy, rainy and sleety weather. By the end of Lent we leave home in the light with Spring weather to the fore, which is also sometimes foggy, rainy and sleety!
My friend Gail and I spent the afternoon of the day before Mothering Sunday (15th March) at her farm making posies to hand out the next day. I took the posies home in water in a couple of her lambing buckets, kept them in water overnight in our cold garage and then in the morning prepared them for presenting to the mothers in the congregation or to people who would be seeing their mothers later that day or, wanted them to put on graves.

Gail at the organ before the service, practising the hymns. You can just see the basket of flowers in front of the altar.
The spring flowers have been wonderful this year – so many snowdrops and aconites then daffodils, primroses, celandines and cowslips, lady’s smock, stitchwort, tulips and blossom everywhere. Sadly I haven’t had much opportunity for admiring them up-close on a walk; I speed past them in my car on my way to the shops or to church.
We have had some work done on the outside of the house. In February last year we had solar panels put up which involved scaffolding at the front of the house. This spring, we had scaffolding at the back as well as the front of the house. We have had almost all of our gutters and downpipes replaced and also the underfelt (under the roof tiles) of the bottom third of the roof at the front and back of the house and also on the lower roof over the porch, utility room and the front of the garage. A big and expensive job but a necessary one. Two weeks ago, work was begun to improve the driveway, the parking area, all the paths and the patio at the back of the house. This is extremely messy work and I have found some of the damage done by the large digger to shrubs and plants quite upsetting but when it is done we hope the pleasure of smooth paths and better parking will outweigh the inconvenience.
I travelled up to Sheffield recently to visit Alice and Phil, her husband, for a couple of days. Alice hasn’t been well and has also had a lot of trouble at work. I needed to see her and make sure that she was coping okay. She definitely looked very tired and is trying to managed chronic exhaustion but I think she will be alright eventually. She, like my younger daughter Elinor, has been looking for a new job, but without success so far.
I have been on a hospital waiting list for months to have someone look at my hands to decide whether I can have surgery to remove some cysts on my finger joints. They are extremely inconvenient and sometimes painful. I cannot easily get gloves on and find gripping anything very difficult. At long last I was asked to attend the hospital a few weeks ago. I had lots of X-rays and spoke to a clinician who agreed that I can have the worst ones removed. He told me exactly what the procedure would be and all the side-effects and things that could go wrong. A little daunting, but I am pleased that he will be able to help me. I am now on his personal waiting list. I was told in January that I would be called back in April to see if the laser surgery on my eyes has worked or not. Well, April has come and gone and I have heard nothing from the hospital. To be honest, I hadn’t thought that I would be called back so quickly. It must have been wishful thinking by the hospital staff!
That’s it for the time being. I have been planning a few trips out so I hope to write posts about them eventually and I feel I ought to finish writing up my account of our holiday in Brittany. That will give me something to do!










Well, this was a very comprehensive return to blogging. Congratulations on finding the time and the energy.
I can sympathise with your feelings about having to do all the safeguarding training, but you never know, it might come in handy one of these days, even if it is not directly connected with your church work.
I hope that your solar panels are working well. Ever since we got ours, the weather has been unremittingly gloomy and I feel a bit responsible for that.
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Thank you, Tom. Actually, we are very pleased with our solar panels. Over the year we have had them our electricity bills have almost halved and we often export energy to the grid. We also have many days where we are completely self-sufficient using our own electricity either directly or from the battery. We do have 17 panels and a large battery which probably accounts for the amount of savings we have made. I think it also helps that we live in the east of the country which is usually dryer than the west. Please don’t feel responsible for the gloomy weather or for choosing to have the panels. They are a good thing!
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We like ours a lot and often export our surplus.
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It is wonderful to have you back with us, and in such a comprehensive way! I hope you get the pass you want for the safeguarding course – even if you think it unlikely to be needed you can never be entirely certain, so it is as well to have done it.
I hope the treatment for your hands happens soon and is successful – it must be very awkward for you sometimes and you will appreciate the improvement when it is done!
Looking forward to hearing more of your news when you are able. The Brittany holiday needs rounding off, and I always enjoy your walks with Elinor.
Take care 💐
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Thank you, Clive. The post was rather long, wasn’t it?! I also know that the safeguarding knowledge will be of use and I only wish that things like this had been in place (and if they had been, had been taken heed of) when my daughters were at school. They might not still be suffering the effects now.
The hand treatment will be a great help when it happens despite the list of possible side-effects!
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Long maybe, but a very worthwhile read! The safeguarding course sounds a lot like what my ex-wife had to go through to qualify as a higher level teaching assistant, and I know she got benefit from it.
Fingers crossed for your hand treatment 🤞
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Good to see you blogging again Clare. That’s to good thing about writing a blog – you can take a break when other things demand more attention. I look forward to more thoughts from a Suffolk Lane. May the sun continue to shine on you and your solar panels!
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Thank you, John. I will try to arrange my time a little better in future but I get so distracted and waste time too! 😀
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Writing for your own pleasure is very important! I salute you for the sorting through you have done both in your mother’s home and your own. I am trying to downsize before we move to a retirement village – it is not an easy task!
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Thank you, Anne. Oh, the awful sorting through and down-sizing! It always makes me nervous as I have accidently got rid of a treasure or two in the past.
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This is the first time I have read your posts seriously, Clare. I browsed your blog a bit days ago. Reading about your recent life gives me a sense of calmness and concreteness.
It was very kind of you to prepare the posies and hand them out to mothers on Mothering Sunday. We Chinese do not mark this day, but I read about it decades ago as a student learning English.
After the renovation project is over, the vegetation damaged in the process will surely make a successful comeback. Do not worry about them. I am sure better paths will mean all the work is worthwhile.
The goose family look so cute and curious. Are they wild or domesticated, Clare?
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Thank you very much, Shengliver. My friend and I have been making the posies each year for a while now. When more people attended all the churches in our area it was easy to find lots of volunteers for this job. However, that is not the case any more, sadly. Mothering Sunday is a little different to Mother’s Day though most people just call it Mother’s Day now. In church we refer to ‘Mother Church’ and how it protects us and this is what the day used to be all about. The flowers for our own mothers was added afterwards. The day is also called Refreshment Sunday where we have a little break from the fasting and seriousness of Lent. You are quite right about the plants; they will recover – and already the paths are looking so much better. The geese are feral; not domesticated but not quite wild either. No-one owns them they live in flocks on and near lakes. We have a large pond in our garden with a tiny island in the middle of it. Most years a pair of Greylags come and nest on the island and take-over our garden for a few weeks. We love them!
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What a busy rural life!
How nice to see the interior of St George’s with the sunlight flooding
through that top southerly window. I left before the removal of the old
green glass was complete. What a difference!
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Thank you, Richard. Yes, doesn’t the change of glass make the church brighter and more welcoming! Sadly, we didn’t get a good turn out for the Eucharist. Parking and access were the excuses; the spare flowers went to St Peter’s for the Evening Prayer service.
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Know the feeling.
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Thank you, John 🙂
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You have certainly been very busy, Clare. Unfortunately we are constantly reminded why, in general, the safeguarding checks are necessary. I hope you get results on your hands and answers on your eyes soon.
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Thank you, Derrick. Yes, safeguarding is absolutely necessary in a world where so many people abuse the power they have and end up shattering other peoples’ lives.
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Wow, you’ve certainly been busy, Clare. I love those posies. How lovely that you and Gail went through so much effort to make them. I’m sure they were well received.
Good luck with the operation on your hands, but I guess, from the sound of it that it may take a while for a date to be fixed for that.
I automatically cringe when I hear about building work being done, no matter if it is much needed or not. I guess it is a reflex from living with so many different projects following one another. It at least sounds like it worked out well for you.
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Thank you, Jolandi. I am like you and hate having building work done or any kind of work inside or outside the house. Because it needs to be done I grit my teeth and see it through. Fortunately, Richard has been at home overseeing the whole project and I have only ventured outside once or twice a day to see how far things have gone. It will be finished at the end of next week so not long to go now! Once the outside is done I can start to work on the inside of the house, room by room.
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Wonderful to have you back! You have been busy is right. The church rules sound as though they were written for other times. Good luck with your hands. And finally woo-hoo to you and Richard for installing solar panels. You two rock!
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Thank you, Laurie. The church rules are ‘one size fits all’ I think. There are many much larger churches than ours where the dangers of people abusing their power are more likely, perhaps. It is good to know that there is something we can all do to counteract any act that threatens our safety, but a lot of the questions we were asked to respond to were a little heavy-handed and I found it almost impossible to answer them, not having any experience of dealing with this problem (i.e. the need for safeguarding) in a church situation.
Not only have we had solar panels fitted (which was such a good thing!) but I now drive a non-plug-in hybrid car! I have found it difficult to get used to as it is not only an automatic (a new experience for me) but very naggy. Hoots and beeps all the time with messages popping up on the dashboard. Very distracting!
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Onward, ho!
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