As previously stated on this blog, when I was much younger and still at school, I was prone to daydreaming. On pleasant sunny days, I'd sit and gaze out of the window and imagine I was flying through the clouds and soaring into the stratosphere at super-speed, doing all the things that beings imbued with the power of flight are able to. Well, apart from pooping on pedestrians below. I was a superhero, not a seagull. (Yup, I was a nutter even back then.)
On rainy days I was more relaxed, preferring just to look out at the grey skies beyond, as rivulets of rain raced down the pane, leaving little trails in the dirt on the window. As I type this, it's raining outside, and it's with difficulty that I tear my gaze from the sky to apply myself to the task of writing yet another historically accurate, rousing reminiscence with which to thrill and enthral you. I hope you appreciate all the sacrifices I make on your behalf.
In previous posts, I've alluded to the fact that all our horizons seem to be narrowing, as fields and play areas are consumed and crammed with sheltered housing for the elderly or squashed, teensy houses or flats for those climbing the property ladder. For someone who grew up in a new town in the '60s, with its wide open spaces and acres of greenbelt for as far as the eye could see - and beyond - the disappearance of those green areas is casting a claustrophobic shadow over what was once an open and spacious place in which to live.
Close-up of part of the view from the back windows |
My town currently has a new schools programme underway, in which a new school is built and then the old one demolished, thereby freeing up land on which to erect housing. One thing that strikes me about these new buildings is that they have far fewer windows than their predecessors, in many cases resulting in pupils only having four walls to stare at (though no doubt the classrooms are brightly-lit), as opposed to a view beyond the windows. It must be like living in a prison. Even where classrooms do have windows, they're high-up, narrow ones, which allow no sight of the scenery (such as it is) beyond.
The same room as above and below. As you can see, the pupils had quite an expansive view before the windows on one side were covered |
Take a look at the accompanying photographs of one of my old primary classrooms. The above photo was taken circa 1986, about 16 years after I had left for secondary school. Apart from new desks, everything was much as I remembered it. As you can see, two of the walls have large windows, through which the pupils have a view of houses and fields outwith the school. In the photo below, taken in the same class in 2012, one side has had its windows covered so that it can be utilised for pinning up pictures, etc. This wasn't restricted to that one room; that entire side of the school had all the windows blocked off, restricting the pupils' view of the wider world outside.
2012. Dull, dreary, dismal and despairing. I'm glad it wasn't like this in my day |
Maybe there's no correlation, but I can't help wondering if narrowing people's horizons may also narrow their dreams and aspirations. As a schoolboy, I used to explore the clouds from the comfort of my desk, and felt free and unfettered. Just what do today's schoolkids dream of, or explore in their imagination with only the claustrophobic confines of four walls to 'inspire' them?
Any thoughts on the matter?
They dream of Play Boxes and X Stations and other modern rubbish instead of filling their heads with what they should do - COMICS!!
ReplyDeleteKnow what you mean about the disappearing greenscape. When we first moved to this new town in '71, I could step out of the French window and walk our dog across country to the next town without crossing a road. How that has changed now! I have often said to the missus, " Wherever they find a blade of grass on this town, they build on it!"God help the wildlife!
Can't say I spent much time daydreaming looking out the school windows though. I was always far too busy, drawing DALEKS or cartoons of other kids and the masters and sneakily passing them to my mate.We even made our own comics about one of the lads in our class who had a very shiney nose and we turned him into a super-hero, called "The Dazzler!" 2 decades later - Marvel nicked our name!
I did a fair bit of drawing in the margins of my jotters when I was a kid, JP, but I could also always find time just to gaze out of the window. After all, that's what windows were invented for.
DeleteIn my Comprehensive school there was a structure called 'the Terrapin building' which looked like a two-story green box with windows - it looked nothing like a terrapin. Upstairs was the large art room and downstairs was cookery and home economics. Whenever you went in the building there was always a lovely smell of baking. Downstairs also had the same kind of large windows as in the picture above. My school was due to be demolished about 10 years ago but was saved by a bell tower which had a preservation order put on it ( the school had previously been a grammar school). I don't know if the school still stands because I've never bothered to find out but the plan was to demolish the school and build houses on the site. There was a large green area in front of the school which now has houses built on it. When I was a kid we used to go looking for dropped coins in the pub car park but now that car-park has a house built on it so I'd agree that they seem to build houses on any available space nowadays.
ReplyDeleteThere's an old school in Glasgow that's now a pub. The outside looks pretty much as it always did, but the inside, I'd imagine, has been completely remodelled. Shame to think that the old classrooms no longer exist, even 'though the exterior of the building does. As for green spaces being built on; the answer, CJ, is to put something in the water to prevent people breeding - then we wouldn't need so many houses for single mothers and feckless fathers. Don't worry, there'd be an antidote, which would be supplied when couples could prove they could support a family and be fit parents.
ReplyDeleteIt's also caused by immigration though ,Kid, as the population has increased by 6 million in the last 20 years or so. Politicians cram immigrants into an area whether there's room or not - oh no, I'm sounding like Nigel Farage now !!
ReplyDeleteYup - and immigrants breed, too. We need something in the water - NOW!
ReplyDelete