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An Agony Aunt Resigns
Novelist Susie Boyt resigns as an agony aunt.
Sometimes, when I am trying to get off to sleep I imagine all
the advice I have ever dispensed piled up into a tower of
words.
All the 'If I were yous', the 'Well why nots!' and the 'He
doesn't know he's borns', scribbled like white icing in the
sky.
Since childhood I have fancied myself as something of an agony
aunt . An old head on young shoulders, other children would come
to me to sort out playground disputes or for consolation when there
had been 'infidelity' amongst best friends (secret
tea dates behind the official best friend's back, favouritism
shown towards a rival etc etc). Friends would approach me when there
was a whiff of divorce in the air at home, or a grumpy teenage sibling
who was making life Hell. I remember once at primary school advising
a class mate to be 'extra extra nice to your Mum, lots of
cuddles and presents, that sort of thing' because her father
was having an affair with a woman at work. I was eight years old.
On Monday nights I was glued to the LBC late night problem phone-in.
With the radio under the blankets I marveled at tales of betrayal
and psycho-sexual malfunction. But I also liked the Helps at Hand
programme on Sunday afternoons that was all stain removal and
sprockets.
I listened and learned.
By the time I reached secondary school without ever quite realising
it I was operating a fully comprehensive advice service open round
the clock to all comers. Boyfriend troubles, quadratic equations
- I was proud of my range.
Part of my allure as an agony aunt has always been that I dispense
all manner of solutions. My one stop problem shop fielded inquiries
that were medical, literary, consumer, emotional or preferably combined
all four. All night chemist? Try Zafash in Earl's Court.
Saturday in Paris on a shoe string? Simply take the Eurostar Nightclubbers
Express a snip at £35 return. Can't remember the exact
dimensions in that poem of Wordsworth's where he measures
the muddy pool by the baby's grave - well 'Tis three
feet long, and two feet wide'. Should you mind if your boyfriend
goes for an 'innocent 'drink with a girl from the train
and neglects to mention it? If you mind, you mind. Do you need to
bake the pastry case blind for a lemon meringue tart? I'll
say you do.
As I entered my late teens it seemed to me that good pals existed
in order to eliminate the trouble and distress in each other's
lives. If I wasn't prepared to leap out of bed and speed
across London on a night bus for someone.... well, how could I
call myself a friend? I set upon this notion as fervently as if
it had
been my career. The stakes were high but then so were the rewards.
The feeling of well-being I got when talking through another's
trouble in a way that was truly consoling - there was nothing like
it. The sense that I was absolutely essential to another's
happiness made my awkward teenage life seem so worth while. And
what's more I got such good results!
When I was in my twenties and my nights were frequently punctuated
by 4 am calls for help, my friends' distresses were virtually
indistinguishable from my own. Like the novelist who takes six
hours to read the paper because he identifies with all the characters
in it, I did not know where I stopped and my friends began. I have
heard it said that as a parent you can only be as happy as your
most unhappy child and this was true of me and my ever increasing
circle. In the frenzy of emotions and hyper-sensitivity that surrounded
me I nursed the fantasy that my helpfulness was the stuff of legend.
It is a cliche that people who feel shaky surround themselves with
those who are even more delicate and I investigated this phenomenon
in my latest novel The Last Hope of Girls, in the character of my
heroine's mother.
Martha's mother was at home with harsh things...Rough dealings,
sharp practice, savage persons, threats, police stations and fluorescent
lit prison visiting centres...She actually found them soothing.
It was the smoothness of things that terrified her, living the
numb
life of a dead person.
While I do not think that problem solving was something that I
did to make myself feel strong at the expense of my friends, I do
believe that it filled a vacuum in my life, that it was a solution
in itself, as it were. I liked the status of being the one with
the answers, but more than this, it very much suited my at-the-time
frail emotional state, not to be the one with the questions.
And then, almost overnight, I crossed some boundary and the demands
that were coming at me spun out of control. I felt the anger and
frustration in slight acquaintances' voices as I struggled
to come up with solutions while they urged me to hurry and speak
up. I would come off the phone shaking with anxiety, and sleep
became
a thing of the past. One day I just stopped answering the telephone,
afraid of the fresh demands each call would bring. More and more
I realised that all I really wanted to say was, 'Could you
bear the idea of getting a little professional help?' One
person I hardly knew told me at this time, 'I don't
see the point of going into therapy, I'd much rather chat
to you for an hour three times a week.' YIKES
Then, while I was pregnant with my daughter, I started having nightmares.
I would be on the phone to an imaginary woman and she would be sobbing
and then the baby was screaming and I just did not know where my
loyalties lay. In the dream this balancing of babe and telephone
receiver hardened into genuine terror. And then suddenly, it all
became obvious. I would have to choose the baby. Everytime.
During my pregnancy, before I started having these dreams, I did
an intensive training course for a bereavement counselling charity
and one of the first things I learned in our role play was how to
sit out a difficult silence without stuffing it with soothing words.
At first this was hugely difficult. But when I realised that by
listening very very attentively it was possible that I could give
as much or possibly more than I could by making helpful suggestions,
it was a revelation to me. To be fully present to a person in distress
is often the greatest thing you can offer. This does not mean taking
that distress away or providing solutions. It merely means establishing
a safe environment in which the distressed person is free to examine
what he or she is feeling.
Once in my very last session working as a bereavement counsellor,
two months before my daughter was born, I had an overwhelming
desire
to say to the person I was counselling 'Of course dead people
live forever in the hearts of those who love them.' (This
is one of the least good sentiments expressed in Martin Amis's
excellent book Experience.) As the session progressed the phrase
would not leave my brain. I knew that these words would comfort
my client and also send me soaring in her estimation. But it was
not my job to make her like me nor to offer her neat little consolations.
I could not take away the pain of her loss. It was not part of
the
agreement, but for a moment I wanted it to be. I resisted and the
desire quickly faded. It was a huge life lesson for me.
I've given up giving advice now, and the amazing thing is
not one of my friends seems to have realised. It may be that now
all of us are older and wiser the demand has naturally withered
with the supply. I still have the odd lapse, don't get me
wrong. Sometimes I have to bite my tongue when I hear, 'YOU
DID WHAT!' or 'WHAT YOU NEED TO DO IS THIS...'
springing to my lips.
Of course, I will happily direct you to your nearest Kosher
Chinese Restaurant if you ask me or recommend a good invisible
mender
when you feel the need. And if you are in distress I'll listen
for as long as I can. But I won't make suggestions. If there's
a girl in tears standing on a street corner, I'll go and ask
her if she is all right but I won't linger and I won't insist
she comes
home with me for a bun.
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