I'm nearly 60 (well, 58, so two years to go!) and this is my life. I can't believe I've lived so much of it and I still have so much to do, so much to learn. The angelic one, my daughter for the last 28 years and hopefully for many more, broke my heart when she buggered off to university broke it again when she got married, and then proceeded to sew it all back together when she developed a stronger bond with us than we'd ever had before. It's her turn, time for her to test the water and jump in. But that doesn't mean my time is over - yet!
A little bit about me, I'll be 60 in the first week of 2022 - not that long off really - and yet I don't feel much over 30! In my head I'm only 26 - so I don't know who that old lady is who looks back at me with wrinkles and saggy skin when I glance in the mirror.
I'm a Northern Lass, born in a small market town on the outskirts of Liverpool, a town not sure if it belongs to Liverpool or Lancashire, a town that only just scrapes into having an M&S Food shop, without the full store, a town that survives only because it has a university and a market, though it is still stuck in the old style market with granny knickers baring all alongside the delights of giant bubble blowers, thick woolly socks and shiny bright saucepans all for under a fiver.
I'm a Northern Lass, born in a small market town on the outskirts of Liverpool, a town not sure if it belongs to Liverpool or Lancashire, a town that only just scrapes into having an M&S Food shop, without the full store, a town that survives only because it has a university and a market, though it is still stuck in the old style market with granny knickers baring all alongside the delights of giant bubble blowers, thick woolly socks and shiny bright saucepans all for under a fiver.
Not being for me, I moved as far away as I could get from marketville - well, as far away as I could get with a Scouse husband who doesn't want to leave his beloved republic of Liverpool. We landed in The Port of the South in the North (in truth there is no port, and it's not in the South, but hey, that didn't seem to matter to the Victorians who named the place 'Southport'!) in 1990, the land of the pseudo-riche and the beach that people think is devoid of sea (it only comes in twice a day, like the sea anywhere, but people seem to think they never see it) and we hope in the next decade or so we may be accepted as locals. The angelic one arrived in '92, followed by the scruff (Sam, a 'sprollie', also known as a collie-spaniel cross, and the angelic one's little brother) in '99. Sadly the scruff left us in 2010, doggy dementia having got the better of him and us.
Since then we've moved into a house we love, gained MillyMoo the Cockapoo, and occasionally Peanut the Poodle Pup (she's 6 now, but the name has stuck).
I have a little writing and reading room, which is where I am crafting my novel and writing to you.
Since then we've moved into a house we love, gained MillyMoo the Cockapoo, and occasionally Peanut the Poodle Pup (she's 6 now, but the name has stuck).
I have a little writing and reading room, which is where I am crafting my novel and writing to you.

It's nice to learn something about you:)
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