Over the next month or two I will be adding some wonderful, coincidence, stories from amazing authors. Today's story comes from author and illustrator, Gilli Allan.
I
went to art college aged sixteen. Various factors, including my immaturity, caused
me to drop-out after only two years; my intention was to get a job as an illustrator.
I was willing to consider fashion, book or advertising but unsurprisingly, none
of the possible employers – magazines, publishers, advertising agencies – were willing
to consider me!
Croydon Art & Technology College.
During the next five years my life became a stony uphill
road. To keep body and soul together I took jobs I was totally unsuited for. Although
I never let go of my ambition, my self-belief fluctuated wildly. Consequently,
the time and energy I devoted to keeping my portfolio of specimens up-to-date
and professional, and to apply to potential art-world employers, was inconsistent.
I veered between hyperactivity and lethargy. It didn’t help that my love life
was also a desert. According to friends I was far too choosy.
That’s
when a series of coincidences - seasoned by a sprinkling of luck - changed everything.
I decided to accompany my parents to an advertising industry party, given by a
photographer friend of our family. Typical of me, I scanned the assembled
company and wrote them all off. But a small man, ten or more years older than
me, with wild hair and a wild beard, took a marked fancy to me. That evening my
parents nick-named him my ‘little hairy hobbit’. I eventually gave in to his
blandishments and danced with him. Peter was South African, not long arrived in
the country, and was looking for a job as a copy-writer. He certainly had a way
with words and he made me laugh. The time had come, I decided, to take
my friends’ advice. I accepted his invitation to 'go out'.
From the start, Peter misread me. He saw someone
bound to have far more intellectually adventurous tastes than was actually the
case. His own enthusiasms tended towards esoteric jazz, foreign movies or alternative
theatre. But apart from the mismatch in our tastes, I didn't find him at all physically
attractive. I never slept with him. I don't recall ever even kissing him (he nicknamed
me his frozen camelia!), but I knew he had higher hopes of our future than I
did. He even credited me - undeservedly - with his dream job which he found in
the weeks after we met! I was uncomfortable to find myself the focus of his
magical thinking. And his ability to amuse me was undercut by his total failure
to arrive at a date on time.
South African Embassy
On
that fateful day I had been hawking my specimens round various artists’ agents
and magazines with no reward. I therefore had my portfolio tucked under
my arm (1st coincidence) when I arrived on time outside the South
African Embassy on Trafalgar Square, to meet Peter. Nearly half an hour passed.
I was tired, fed-up and decided to give him one more minute. When he arrived just
in-the-nick-of-time, (2nd coincidence) the lucky star that might
have whizzed past if I’d lost patience and gone home, juddered to a halt above
me. Peter told me plans had changed and we’d
been invited for a meal at his friend’s place. (4th coincidence.)My lucky
star now amplified its beam to full strength. I’d never before met, nor
even knew about Alan. It turned out he worked in an advertising design studio as
a senior illustrator (5th coincidence). He looked at the portfolio I
still had with me and advised me to call his studio manager asap. Their junior
illustrator had just walked out (6th coincidence)! I phoned the
following morning, and an almost immediate appointment was made. I was offered
the job at the interview, and I started the following Monday. At last! I was in
my proper place in the world, at ease in my own skin.
Peter
had long gone when my husband-to-be came into my life. I arrived home after
work and discovered an impromptu gathering at the flat I shared with my sister.
The good-looking stranger I met in my own kitchen was called Geoffrey, and it
became immediately apparent he was deeply interested in, and very knowledgeable
about, art. So, the self-assured artist he encountered that evening (even
though commercial rather than fine) had to make more of an impression on him than
a depressed and demoralized shop girl.And it is Geoff who has supported me, been my best
friend and given me the life that has enabled me to become a writer. But I do wonder - would he have pursued me
with such determination had the transformation which began outside the South
African Embassy, and involved a little hairy hobbit, never happened?
For a fuller account of this story go to:
http://gilliallan.blogspot.com/2019/10/not-all-turning-points-are-life-changing.html
BURIED TREASURE
mybook.to/BURIEDTREASURE
Find Gilli’s other books TORN, LIFE CLASS and FLY or FALL at
author.to/GILLIALLAN
Contact
Gilli at
http://gilliallan.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/gilli.allan.1
https://twitter.com/gilliallan
If you missed the other Coincidence stories, please click on the links ...
The Piper
An Hair Raising Coincidence
The Best Laid Plans
And Did Those Feet...
A Magical Memory
A Caribbean Tale
Thank you as always for stopping by and please come back for more.
Please, take care of yourself and each other and I hope the sun is shining on your face and in your heart.
Hugs
Pauline
4 comments:
Thank you so much for inviting me to share this story. Pauline. I still look back with awe on that evening, when a sequence of unlikely events came together to transform my life.
Thank you for sharing too. It's a great story and with such a happy ending. x
Coincidences like this lead you to wonder whether things were 'meant to be', don't they? And if that's an illusion, then it's a happy one in this case. A charming story.
Thanks Ian. It still sends shivers down my spine when I think about it. The first decision - to allow one more minute for my date to turn up, was the crucial one. My life might have been irrevocably altered if I'd given up.
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