I listen to tapes sent to me by Tape Aids for the Blind library
service. I have macular degeneration and can no longer read print so my audio
tapes are a great source of comfort and interest to me.
They set off from the depot in Durban, South Africa, neatly
packed in little plastic containers with buckles on the outside to keep the
tapes safely inside as they journey to my home in Harare, Zimbabwe.When the tapes, sent by post arrive, they are thrown over the gate and are picked up by the gardener English (who doesn’t speak a word of it) and handed to me with great deference.
I am never without tapes for the wonderful people in
To return, I simply have to pack them back into the box and the reversible label addressed to me is simply reversed – and returned to sender via the Post Office here, where there is no charge at all for carrying them by mail.
This amazing free service for blind or partially sighted readers
is all done without fuss; no emails, telephone calls and there is never any
problem at all – can you imagine that?
I always have an enjoyable book to listen to and in a world
of frantic IT interchanges the joy of listening to a good book in a quiet
cottage is a soothing panacea.
When I originally joined I was given a form to fill in with various categories of choice – science fiction/murder mystery/ biographies/ autobiographies etc.
Oh what wonderful hours I have spent listening to the
biographies of Julie Andrews and Elizabeth Taylor, the perfect writings of
classics like Thomas Hardy, Jane Austen and Charles Dickens, Shakespeare and
sometimes poetry.
I have tasted the flavour of
Then there is a description of the workings of the throat: he
gulped; she felt a lump in her throat; his throat tightened; he choked; he
swallowed.
Emphasis is given to a flow of emotions by observing the
course of tears. “…..she shut her eyes and a tear escaped down her cheek” or
“…her tears overflowed”.
How about: “He looked deep into her eyes and saw them fill……Their
eyes caught…..Their eyes locked.”
Plus: “She looked down at her feet……..He rolled his eyes
towards the ceiling”.
Funniest of all is the mouth: “He grinned a slow grin.” I
tried to do that in front of the mirror and failed.
“She pulled up the corners of her mouth and tried to smile.”
(Try that one.)
The body too comes into play: “He lurched through the
door…….He eased himself closer……He leaned his shoulder against the doorway……He
sighed through his teeth’
“She exhaled and then spoke.” How do you do that?!
In conversation, how many people listen well? They usually
do the talking and then look at their watch when you reply! Yet how interesting
and informative is it when true conversation emerges; when experiencing a
stimulating exchange of ideas that are expressed and listened to.
It is a gift to find a good listener who is not anxious to
interrupt and overcome your poorer efforts with a form of aggressive vocal
thunder. There must be so many wonderful stories hidden away that could be told
to a sympathetic and interested listener.
Let us find time to listen.
Each story differs – and again, that is what makes it interesting.