gibberish


I am posting this correspondance here as an act of goodwill

For those of you who have had the misfortune of making an unsuccesful insurance claim of late or who have been following the saga of our two claims from the Nationwide Building Society that spend millions of pounds advertising that they don’t act like the banks who as portrayed in their ads as moneygrubbing scum, this letter that I wrote to them upon our claims being rejected again may be of interest.


11 April 2008

(Name of staff member withheld)
Nationwide Building Society
Insurance Claims Department
Claims Team 1
Kings Park Road
Moulton Park
Northampton
NN3 6NW

Dear (Name of staff member withheld)

I received your letter dated 10 April, never have I read a correspondance so overburdoned with farcical comments and patronising platitudes.

I have made several hundred photocopies of it and tomorrow morning I shall take the train into Edinburgh and place them in various public conveniences in the city centre for people to use when toilet roll runs out as the nonsense that is contained on those two pages ranks alongside Hillary Clinton’s recent misspeaking.

Actually wiping one’s anus with those letters places them on a category higher than the contents really deserve, but at least whilst the user is waiting to apply the paper to the job in hand they might have a right good laugh reading Nationwide’s authorised tosh.

I will not take the Mondial claim any further because you seem to have found a neat get out clause. But, just for the record I will once again remind you that we did not inform you of my father’s condition because he was not in the travelling party, none of the travelling party was unfit and more importantly, as I have told you and Mondial on numerous occassions, two consultant’s told us, indeed recommended to us, that we went on holiday, post diagnosis. We were told my father had six to nine months to live, and that the holiday would be important for us to build up a bit of energy for what lay in store later in the year.

The holiday was three weeks after the diagnosis and so, acting on their advice, we confirmed that we would travel and booked the insurance.

But it is your job as insurers to unearth the most appropriate terms and conditions to invalidate a claim.

So, hey, you win.

Well done.

Sleep well tonight.

Your thoughts were so touching and comforting when you said in your letter

“I am sorry that I cannot bring you more welcome news in such a difficult time for you.”

Awww, bless.

And if you’re looking for a good place for your summer holidays try Lagos in Portugal. It’s lovely. But expensive for four days!

Now. The kitchen claim. That’s a different matter entirely and it ain’t job done “screwed another sucker behind the façade of a nice letter” yet.

I do not accept your findings and do not find your “goodwill” gesture.

Goodwill?

Goodwill is doing the job. Actually, no it isn’t. Goodwill is doing more than the job.

How dare you suggest that replacing half a kitchen is goodwill.

Can you begin to fathom how insulting, patronising, cheap, tacky and irritating the use of that word in the context of this situation is? No? Well I’ll tell you.

It is very insulting patronising tacky and irritating.

Goodwill is honouring more than your side of the bargain.

And lest it is unclear let me spell out to you what that bargain is.

Step 1 Our house goes on fire (not part of our plans that Saturday in dim and distant January, not part of the plans at all. Oh no; that was definitely one of the things most of us would plan not to do.)

Step 2 We discover part of our kitchen is burned

Step 3 Loss adjuster visits, agrees with us and signs off our claim

Step 4 Replacement parts for the damaged area of the kitchen cannot be sourced therefore our entire kitchen is rendered damaged. I think it’s called a write off in insurance parlance. It’s just like if you crash the front part of your car and it is irrepairable (like our kitchen) the car is written off and you’re required to replace the whole car. Not cut off the back end and weld on a new front end. That would be silly.

Step 5 You ignore this technicality and spend the next 4 months conjuring up reasons to only pay for half the kitchen as an “act of Goodwill”. I don’t want half a kitchen (Name of staff member withheld) I want a whole one. Just like I don’t make half an insurance premium payment I make a whole one.

It really is very, very simple.

Step 6 You see my point. (at last) You stop acting like half the cost of kitchen will bring Nationwide Building Society to its knees (you’ve got a credit crunch to do that) and act like a courteous, mutual society – not like corporate, moneygrubbing nincompoops.

Step 7 I convince the friend of mine who had £75,000 in savings in your organisation but moved it away upon hearing of my story, to move it back again – as an act of “goodwill.”

Come on (Name of staff member withheld). This is just silly. I don’t want to shell out half of the cost of a new kitchen. I just want my old one back the way it was. But it’s been discontinued. That’s unfortunate. That, frankly is your problem.

Assuming you see the error of your ways and steps 5 – 7 unfold I will not have to bring in the insurance ombudsman and I will go round the cubicles of Edinburgh’s Public Conveniences and uplift the aforementioned bogroll.

Oh, and you may have noticed that as an ”act of goodwill” I have refrained from swearing at any point in this letter.

Yours sincerely

Mark Gorman



randomness
April 3, 2008, 12:20 am
Filed under: Scotland, dad, family, food, life, stories | Tags: , ,

While I was a regular visitor to St Columba’s Hospice seeing my Dad I posted this.

“If I had some eggs, we could have ham and eggs; if I had some ham.” my Uncle Christopher declared this afternoon.

Wise words.

But my mother violently disagreed with this because she retorted

“If we had some eggs we could have eggs and ham; if we had some ham.”

Not sure about that. In fact it’s total bollocks - because what she really meant to say, and did, was…

“If we had ham, we could have ham and eggs; if we had eggs.”

You know what…

…I don’t give a monkey’s uncle!

My first draft said “I don’t give a flying fuck” but I thought I should be more thoughtful and sensitive than that.

Anyway, the way tinternet works it has become a strangely popular post, having been read 500 or so times by people googling this lame image, which was the image I nicked to put in the original post. Strange .

ham.jpg



all the world’s a stage
March 24, 2008, 6:54 pm
Filed under: Arts, Scotland, dad, family, humour, life, photography | Tags: , , ,

all the world’s a stage

Originally uploaded by mark gorman.

my dad doing what my dad did best. basically showing off . Found this shot in Jane’s house on Easter Sunday and fiddled about a bit in photoshop with it.



This is Pego
March 20, 2008, 10:28 am
Filed under: dad, family, life, photography

The cheetah-protecting sheepdog in South Africa named after my dad.  Still a pup but getting pretty huge.

pego.jpg



There’s a body down there
March 11, 2008, 6:22 pm
Filed under: Scotland, dad, family, sports

Mark,  my mum  and I went off to watch Ria in her gymnastics competition at Perth last weekend.

Mark always enjoys it.

As you can see from last year’s photo here.

img_0437.jpg


Peter Gorman spotted doing a bit of R and R
March 1, 2008, 5:52 pm
Filed under: Arts, dad, family, life, photography | Tags: ,

James McLaughlin sent me this photo that one of his pals on blipphoto took yesterday.

It seems my Dad has taken up painting.

Because it’s surely him!

pego-painting.jpg



dad
February 4, 2008, 7:27 pm
Filed under: Arts, Scotland, dad, family, life, photography, stories | Tags: , , , , ,

dad

Originally uploaded by mark gorman.

I took this picture 18 days before he died. On June 30th 2007. At a barbecue at our house. It turns out it was the last thing he ever ate. I know it’s a rather melancholy photograph but it was a moment of repose amongst a lot of smiling and laughing. I’ve converted it in Photoshop to add to its melancholy air which might seem a little morbid to some of you but, you know what, I think it’s beautiful and I’m very fond of it. There’s more, happier, pictures of my dad on my Fluickr site which you can find here



Sniffing
January 1, 2008, 11:32 am
Filed under: dad, family

This is Pego, the goatherding dog named after my dad in training.

Kickng Ass.

binder1.jpg



The last post. 2007. That was my year that was.
December 31, 2007, 10:27 pm
Filed under: Arts, Restaurant reviews, Scotland, books, dad, family, football, golf, humour, life, sports | Tags: , , ,

As I head off to enjoy, with a heavy cold, the Hogmanay celebrations it’s time to bring the 2007 blog to an end.

Looking back on the year one thing will rise above all other memories of 2007, the passing away of my father.

A great man who had a great send off.

Saturday past was a poignant ending to the year as we committed his ashes and closed a half open door. My Mum, all of my sisters, Jeana, Denny and James were there at a simple ceremony that was just right.

I have said much on this subject , but it can be summed up here.

The Hibees winning their first cup in 16 years was a great highlight too, but slightly marred by the aftermath and then JC’s ‘walking on water’ turning into ‘JC plays Judas’ in December.

Shame on you JC.

A full year of working for myself was very rewarding and proved I can bring the family up at the same time. That meant a lot to me.

As did my 78 on The Queens Course in November and my 78 at Ratho in August, my first ever single-figure-above-par golf round.

Amy’s Standard Grade results were outstanding and made both Jeana and I very proud, as did Tom with his pre-eminence on the golf course and Ria’s determination on the Gymnastics floor. She finally achieved that elusive bridged kick-over during the summer but was once again thwarted in her chase for a merit at her cnmpetition in November because the judges raised the bar and docked her points because her cuffs were too long.

It will happen.

Jeana’s contribution to a beautiful; Queensferry and her ability to manage the Queensferry’s non-gardening population in a rendition of Strictly Come Cat Herding was worthy of merit.

In books Joshua Ferris’, Then we came to the end was my new book of the year.

In music it had to be Robert Plant and Alison Krauss’ Raising Sand.

And my movie of the year? A tough one, but I’ll plump for Control, just edging out Atonement.

TV show of the year? UI’m tempted to go for The Secret Millionaire but the one that inspired me most was the Genius of Photography.

The greatest thing that happened to me technologically was the discovery of Flickr and the amazing avenues it opened for me.

Gig of the year was a close call between midlake at the ABC in Glasgow and Candie Payne at Cabaret Voltaire. But I have to give it to midlake because they are the greatest band on earth right now (including Arcade Fire) and I saw them.

Ridiculous decision of the year undoubtedly goes top The Nobel Prize Jury who gave Al Gore the Peace Prize. Why? Great guy, great politics, great movie. Peace prize? Get real.

But awarding that free kick to Italy in the 90th minute runs it close. But that’s not just ridiculous. That’s corruption.

And my man of 2007, for several reasons, was Mike Donoghue.

Restaurant of the Year was, no question, Kismot.

Best day out was, ironically in a way because it was set amongst so much sorrow, the day Jeana and I walked to Cramond Island in a post-funeral state of exhaustion, shock and trauma to return, in a way spiritually refreshed, and to be met by Tony Delicata’s offer of a free lunch at The Cramond Brig.

Tony. That hit the spot.

Performance of the year went to my sister Jane for her rumbustious rendition of A Fairy Tale of New York at the FAT Christmas show.

Twats of the year? Mondial Insurance. Get it up Ya.

Muppets of the Year. Sky. Get it up ya. (But at least we’ve had a laugh at their expense.)

Wife of the year? Jeana Gorman.

Put it this way. I couldn’t live with me.

And so to 2008.

My hopes?

Terry makes a full recovery.

Terry and I share school barbie duties at St Margarets in June.

Hibees remember they are a football team now that they are a succesful business. You’re not in the dock yet Mr Petrie but there will come a point after you’ve coined in another few million in January when enough is enough. (Oh yes, and we win the Scottish Cup, but even before it starts I’m putting that one on hold for 2009.)

Tom gets down to a 14 handicap.

Tiger Woods wins the Grand Slam (I don’t care I love Tiger Woods) but Scotland also find a golfer (Mark Warren looks the only real contender.)

I win something, anything, at Dundas Park.

PT Anderson wins Best Director at The Oscars.

Amy skooshes her highers.

Ria gets a merit at Gymnastics.

Jeana realises her potential. (Or at least realises she’s realised it!)

My mum and Emily have a fantastic time in China.

Carlisle Utd get promoted to the Championship.

Boris the Spider returns to the racetrack.

I am healthy throughout.



What my dad would have loved.
November 27, 2007, 11:05 pm
Filed under: dad, family, humour, jokes, life, photography

This is what. Read all the comments here and follow the links.

Right up his street.

Good old James!

It’s basically the classic “Someone taking a photo of someone taking a photo routine” which my dad loved so much.



Would you buy a Chicken Chasseure off these men?
October 30, 2007, 6:26 pm
Filed under: Restaurant reviews, dad, family, food, life, work | Tags:

chefs.jpg

Four of the handsomest chefs on the planet cooked a three course meal (with three or four choices per course) for 60 of the ladies of Holy Cross Parish on Saturday. Given that I was at it from 10 am to 11pm the day after the hedonistic Scottish Advertising Awards it made for a tough gig.

My dad did it for years, so I took his place this year.

But we made at least £500 profit for charity so can’t really complain.

At least we looked good.

Nae. Great!



The cheating game

“Nothing resembles an honest man more than a cheat.”

French Proverb

“Men cheat for the same reason that dogs lick their ball…because they can.”

Kim Caterall (Change the first word to Insurance companies)

“As you grow older you’ll see white men cheat black men every day of your life, but let me tell you something and don’t you forget it - whenever a white man does that to a black man, no matter who he is, how rich he is, or how fine a family he comes from, he is trash.”

Harper Lee ( change white man to insurance company and black man to customer)

mondialuk.jpg

As many of my readers will know I have had a bad year with insurance companies. This post illustrates my point. In it I shared with you that my dad could not claim for cancelling his holiday in Lourdes in July, even though he was dying of cancer.

Of course, as we all know, he has now passed away as a result of this and consequently the family and I had to return from holiday after four days in Portugal because his condition had dramatically worsened after we left the country.

We went on holiday on the advice of three different consultants. Each assured us that they did not believe Dad’s condition would worsen in the following fortnight; but sure enough it did.

So, I would like to point out to anyone who reads this that they should be very wary of taking out holiday insurance with Mondial UK because what they do is, to all intents and purposes, cheat you of your money.

Some time after our return and my Dad’s death I filled in the claim form that we requested from Mondial UK, complete with a letter from the consultant stating that she believed it had been safe for us to travel.

Having received this they said this wasn’t good enough; they needed his GP’s report.

Why?

Did his GP have a better insight into his illness than the person that was treating him?

Really, I mean seriously, how could he? What is the point of this?

I’ll tell you the point.

It is more likely that the GP will play it safe and say we shouldn’t have gone, because he was remote from the case. He wasn’t MORE authoritative, he was LESS authoritative and that means he is more likely to err on the side of caution in case the insurance company come back on him. (Oh yes, and GP’s get nice wee earners from insurance companies to fill in forms saying the family were mad to go away, by the way. Believe me. I know.)

Anyway, we went ahead and got this. Bear in mind that we had to pay the GP a fee for this which was totally unnecessary because as it transpires they were always going to invoke the “you knew he was ill so you weren’t covered” clause.

Nevertheless his GP confirmed that it was appropriate for us to travel. At that point and that point only, bearing in mind that they had sufficient evidence BEFORE we paid for the GP’s report, they knocked our claim back totally because they said we knew he was ill before we travelled

OF COURSE WE BLOODY KNEW.

And so did they when we submitted the first claim, because we BLOODY TOLD THEM.

Why then, did they ask us to spend money getting another piece of evidence that said we were right to go on holiday, only to invoke a clause that made it quite clear that we would NEVER get the money back.

Why? I’ll tell you why.

Because they are cheats.

If they were playing the game fairly they would (at worst) have told us that we were on a hiding to nothing when we filled the claim in.

The only conclusion I can draw therefore is that they have no morals.

They have no decency.

They have no respect.

They have no sense of duty, service, care or understanding about how to deal with people - their customers.

Insurance is quite clearly a racket.

Two claims where death is not a reason for paying out on a claim. How do they live with themselves?

PS You know those hugely amusing ads by Nationwide with the big guy slagging off the dodgy practices of the Banks. Where he takes the piss out of their shareholders. Where he says nothing like that happens at Nationwide because we are moral.

We look after our customers.

We aren’t cheats like the banks.

nationwide-mortgages-brand-new-customers-only-ad-advert-visit4info-tv-cinema-_1192811814673.png

Yes, you guessed it.

We bought the insurance from Nationwide. It was a white label product that presumably doesn’t come under Nationwide’s too good to be true image.

PPS. I’ve had a pile of emails about this. Don’t email me your shared grief. Put it on here for the world to see. Blogging is Social marketing. It is power. If they see what we think they might do something about it.

PPPS. Apparently the Insurance Ombudsman is potentially the key. I will let you know how I get on because I am not taking this one lying down.

PPPPS.  If you have even the remotest sympathy with my view please pass forward this link to everyone you know.  this is how social marketing can make a difference by giving us a chance as consumers to have our voice heard.



A note from my mum
August 3, 2007, 11:04 am
Filed under: dad

My mum’s not a blogger, but she wanted to say thank you to everyone who has written to her in the last few weeks, and written comments on this site. So, over to you Mum…

mum-and-dad-to-be-used-onm-back.jpg

I would just like to take this opportunity to thank all those who have responded to Mark’s blog about Dad. He was obviously very much loved and respected by so many people.

He had a great talent with youngsters and this showed in the way they responded year after year in FCT’s wonderful productions.

I know FCT will continue for many years , left as it is in the hands of young people with as much talent, and with the help of the adults in the background who care so much for them.

I love and miss him very much, but his spirit will live on in the children who will continue to perform over the years.

What a wonderful legacy he has left.

With love and thanks to everyone.

Mum



My dad’s Eulogy
July 23, 2007, 10:31 am
Filed under: dad

Pru Mclaughlin has asked me to post my eulogy for those of you who were unable to make the funeral. It is a bit on the long side and probably better heard than read. But here you are.
Out of respect I shall take this down next Monday.

PETER GORMAN 

How can I, in a few short minutes, sum Peter Gorman’s life up?

I can’t, so I won’t.

I’ll take more than a few short minutes, because let’s face it; this is a time for reflection and celebration, and I’m not going to miss anything out if I can possibly help it.

When I first phoned my Uncle Rab to tell him and Helen of my dad’s diagnosis Rab told me, “Mark, you need to do everything you can to help that great man”.

Those three words That great man struck a chord with me then, and still stand out now, as the words that best describe my father.

Bismarck said that

A really great man is known by three signs- generosity in the design, humanity in the execution, and moderation in success.

I think that quote perfectly encapsulates the essence of my father.

And I’ll read you it again

A really great man is known by three signs- generosity in the design, humanity in the execution, and moderation in success.

Generosity in the design is the first of those signs

My father was most certainly generous to a fault in the giving of his ideas, his creativity, his energy and his skills.

Humanity in the execution is the second

He had a humanity about his actions that were probably only apparent to those that were closest to him. Not all of you will know of his work with the St Vincent De Paul (alongside my mother) or the endless painting of old ladies kitchens and living rooms that he never charged full rate for, even if half of them were loaded.

Or, surely the supreme irony, the ridiculously successful wine and cheese nights for the down and outs (or DOMs as my dad called them) that he and my mum hosted every spring in Holy Cross Church Hall.

But it is the third sign that most strikes me as being right on the button when it comes to describing the great man that was Peter Gorman.

“Moderation in success”.

Despite outward signs to the contrary my father was a very modest man and his success was rarely very public. By contrast I’ve spent a great deal of my own life in the limelight and yet I have achieved very little in comparison to the treasure trove of humanistic jewels that my father collected.

In his later years that more public recognition started to emerge. In 2004 he was nominated for, and won, a Radio Forth Award, and earlier this year my great friend, Mike Donoghue, nominated dad for the inaugural Edinburgh Award. The fact that Mike’s nomination was accepted and he only lost out on a countback to Ian Rankin is testimony to his contribution to this, one of the great cities of the world.

(Actually, the countback bit might not be strictly true).

But whether that success was publicly lavished upon him or not does not matter a jot. The presence of so many of you here today does.

Over the last few months people have said to me about his illness that it’s not fair, he’s been snatched away from us so young and words to that effect.

I see it differently actually.

· He had three score years and ten (plus a year for good behaviour).

  • He’d done pretty much everything he’d ever wanted to do.
  • With my mother he had raised a family he was immensely proud of
  • He got pretty close to the finishing line in reasonable shape
  • He left us relatively quickly and peacefully
  • And he bore no grudges, had no unfinished business.

Of course we’d all like more time, most especially my mum, but let’s not get too downhearted here. He left this mortal coil satisfied that he’d said all he had to say, and believe me that was plenty enough for anybodies lifetime.

I think that’s a pretty decent result.

Because we had time to talk to him before he left us we were able to recount many of the occasions and chapters in his life that meant the most to him and us. We had a right good laugh at some of them and I want to share them on behalf of all of the family with you now.

One thing you most certainly could not accuse Peter Gorman of, was being one-dimensional. So, this account might wander about a bit, but you will forgive me that I hope.

So, as Davina says; let’s look at some of his best bits.

Dad was not from a wealthy family. Occasionally he would regail us with the tales of growing up with his 43 brothers and sisters in a soaking wet shoebox on the M8 (long before it was built admittedly) getting woken up at 4 in the morning, having a load of rotting fish dumped all over them and then being forced to lick the tarmac clean, before working a 23 hour shift building the Winchburgh shale bings by hand. And of course, you try telling young folk that today and they won’t believe a word of it.

Consequently though, this made dad a world expert in skip raking and log gathering. (In fact James and Emily tell me that when James returns triumphantly from Tesco with a half price tray of oysters he is prone to exclaim “look what I found in the skip rake”).

One of the happiest days of my dad’s life must have been when, having moved into Bonnington Terrace, he discovered that the open demolition site of the burnt down Chancelot Mill was in fact the world’s largest repository for beams of wood. Actually, he may have bought the house for PRECISELY that reason. It was just perfect for him and I to spend a cheerful morning climbing through piles of rubble extracting the timber to go home and saw into 18” lengths to burn on our, admittedly lovely, living room fire.

If I’d been given a pound for every time he said to one of our visitors, “Mark gets two heats from this fire, once when he’s sawing the wood and once when it’s on. Arf arf.” I could have bought him a gas living flame fire and paid for the gas bill for the near 20 years we stayed there.

This thrift store glee has clearly rubbed off on Jane who is something of a bargain seeker herself – her favourite shop is TK Maxx and she has been known to freecycle the skips of Edinburgh - but never so spectacularly as the day my Father sneaked us up to Arboretum Road in the middle of the night to rehouse a velvet three piece suite to what was known as “The Green Room”. OK it smelt a little bit of stale urine for the next 10 years – but it was a bargain.

The Green Room. Now that was a name that always made me laugh as it sounded like we were descended from some dynasty of lost Russian Tsars. Perhaps that was why my father was so keen on his alter ego; Pietro Gormanovitch. I always loved that loose association of geographic derivation, Pietro being of Sicilian origination and Gormanovitch, presumably, a little-known family name from somewhere in the foothills of the Urals.

In honour of this I have registered my latest Scotsman Fantasy Golf team as Marcello Santos Gormanovitchslikova and my son Tom, not to be outdone, has registered as Tomas Gonadas.

Back to the woodcutting days. It would be fair to say that dad and I did not exactly see eye to eye on this one. Indeed many altercations arose as a result of this torture I felt I had to endure. But in the long run it was all worth it for one truly momentous 30 seconds of sheer and utter joy. The greatest moment of my then teenage life.

Big Davy Morrison, known to all and sundry as Gagy for his ability to clutch a pipe and carry on a conversation simultaneously, is a lifetime friend and agent provocateur of my father. Davy came round one evening, resplendent in top hat and kipper tie, on his way to The Lord Nelson with my dad. Why on earth he was dressed up like Pete Doherty on a bad day is anybodies guess because to say the Lord Nelson was salubrious was as if to say Heart of Midlothian have a rosy future.

And, while we are on the subject of fashion, I would like to thank David Reid for posing the question “Who else would dress up on a day to day basis like a weird and wonderful combination of Peter Blake, Dr john and a French Onion seller?”

Anyway, back to Gagy…as my father was upstairs preparing for the evening’s entertainment, Gagy, as was his want, wandered out to the back garden to offer words of encouragement to me as I toiled under the strain of sawing up the latest batch of 16 hundredweight of oak found in a lay-by at Abingdon that morning. Rich in sap and therefore doubly difficult to cut I was not best pleased to see ‘Gagy’ sookin’ and blawin’ on his ubiquitous pipe. His cheery demeanour only adding to my frustration and, it must be said, rage.

However Gagy, being the good old soul that he is, let forth on one of his child labour tirades aganst Pego to which I was a willing subscriber and then, in an act of great unselfishness, dispensed with the titfer and took an end of the bowsaw to assist, at least for a few moments.

The moment was short though because no sooner had we started than he shrieked with horror. “Ma tie!” Somehow it had become ensnared in the sawing process and been cut sheer in half. “Sylvia’ls gonnae kill me. It’s ma best tie and I only got it yesterday”.

Well, to say that was a tension releaser would be something of an understatement. Indeed, in years to come it would be known as David’s folly, so much so that on the occasion of Gagy’s 50th Birthday, my dad gave him a miniature model of the trestle, saw and half a tie as a memorial to said article.

I talked earlier of my dad’s generosity but that virtue applies equally to my mum because we all know that behind every great man is a great woman; and never was that adage truer than here.

In the past few months the depth of my parents relationship; love actually, has shone out as a beacon to me. He didn’t want my mum to be swamped by the physical burdon of nursing him and she did remarkably well to resist the temptation to do too much. However the emotional nursing that she gave him was both inspiring and very moving.

One, quite simply, cannot eulogise about my father without eulogising about my mother too. And that is the way he would have wanted it.

Three episodes of selfless generosity stand out for me in my mum and dad’s life. The first, was the love and devotion that they showed to Jane, when at an early age she became pregnant with Emma. Not only did they selflessly look after mother and child but they welcomed Nik, another great man by anyone’s standards, into their lives.

You look at Jane’s family now and realise what a great gift their generosity was to them.

The love, and support that they showed Sara when she returned from the sunny shores of Goa with a little extra baggage cannot be underestimated either. Indeed Denny was unquestionably the apple of my Father’s eye. Who, that knows of it, can forget the Starsky and Hutch-esque race through the streets of Edinburgh with Sara writhing about in agony in the advanced stages of labour on the back seat of his Nissan Micra as it became the first portable Gormanovitch Labour ward sitting in a parking bay at the door of the Simpson Maternity Pavilion. Close, but no cigar!

The momentous motor was later traded-in and when the dealer enquired what the large stain on the back seat was, with a shrug of the shoulders Dad said “Ach, we just spilt some water”.

When I started my own company in 1993 with a wife, child, two bairns on the way, a 30% wage cut on the horizon, and not a brass farthing to my name they unhesitatingly stumped up the not insubstantial capital to fund (by way of a loan – and no guarantee of repayment) my part of the birth of 1576.

Of course, my dad never wanted me to breathe a word of this to my sisters. But now I think is an opportune moment to thank him publicly for his role in the setting up of such a great company.

Talking of the world of commerce; Dad had a go at entrepreneurship upon being made redundant from Flexello Castors and wheels.

Although dad worked extremely hard all his life it would be fair to say that he was a modernist; believing that you work to live and not vice versa. Whilst it would be a stretch of the imagination to describe his venture in setting up the next Macdonalds food chain as a success, it spawned a sub-culture like no other.

I, like everyone else in the family, in fact almost everyone else I know, took my place behind the counter at Yumble Dumbles; but it is Sara that is most central to this tale.

For those of you who were not fortunate enough to experience this epicurian nirvana let me first describe to you the signature dish; everything else will make sense thereafter.

A long brown finger role stuffed with stovies, and a double sized link sausage looked remarkably like a finger in a poultice and hence spawned the name “The Sair Finger”.

But it was the unique language of Yumble Dumbles that linger longest in my memory and are so symbolic of my dad’s wit, humour and individualism. What more could an individualist have than his own language.

Nowhere else in the world do the following phrases, sayings and words exist.

Look up Shabs in the Oxford English dictionary and it draws a blank. Type Shabs into Google and it says “did you mean shacks?”

In Yumble Dumble land though, Shabs was the king of words. The most popular put down.

Shabs referred to someone talking about a subject of no interest. For instance if I came home to my wife and recalled, hole-by-hole, my afternoon’s golf she would be required to throw her head to one side and say “shabs”.

Or, if particularly unimpressed, Shaaaaabs.

A Shabster was a truly shabbish person. Or animal. We named one of our cats Shabs.

A thudme was a customer who was so dull (beyond shabbishness) that they would literally bore you senseless and thudme was the sound of your arse hitting the floor…with a thud.

Yumblitious was, of course, something really tasty. I vividly recall reheated, three day old, pizzas being presented at tea time at home with my dad trying to convince us they were edible by proclaiming them; Yumblitious.

He fooled no-one.

Delicados was the Sunday word for Yumbleitious. As in “Hmm Hmm delicados!” (The high pitched voice was an important part of the language).

Anyone who was in the least bit sibilant (or, as Sara corrected me, someone suffering from whistled articulation) was mocked mercilessly in the back shop by the request for “sixty six portions of spicy sausages please.”

And requests to tidy up the shop were never straightforward. Instead this required a rendition of the clangers….

His name Pego stemmed from those days too, as did Sago, Mago, Jago and Lorenzo the magnificent;

But more inventive names were saved for others. Let’s start with the poor guy who was a bit slow in doing what my dad had asked him to do – he was known as…… Tony A’hm gonnae,

The deep sighing lady was known as Sighanara

…and Shona who never filled the cups of tea to the top? Naturally she was Shona half cup.

It was at Yumble Dumbles that it was first noted that my dad cut paper, not with scissors, but with his mouth. Like so Mime mouth-like scissor movements) …

And latterly, when clicking a mouse, it too had its own mouth movement…

But we all agreed the other day that our collective all time favourite Yumble Dumbles moment came not from Pego but from my cousin Julie who, on being unable to find the serrated edged knife, asked him. “Where’s the jaggy knife Uncle Peter?”.

He was fond of his anecdotes and wee sayings and one of my favourites was his toast.

“May the best ye’ve ever seen be the worst you’ll ever see

May a moose ne’er leave yer girnal wi a teardrop in it’s ee.

May yer lum keep blithely reekin’ till yir auld enough tae dee

May ye aye be just as happy as I wish ye now tae be.”

And of course the well practiced duet, usually with Sara or Lorenzo the magnificent

“You got a light Mac?”

“No, but I’ve got a dark brown overcoat.”

He told me a story against himself on the odd occasion that I really liked. As a child he one day spotted, through the fence of the local carbonated drinks factory, a pile of soda siphons and thought the glass straw in the centre of the bottle would make an ideal pea shooter and so climbed the fence and smashed a bottle to extract said peashooter. Unfortunately the peashooter elect went the same way as the casing. It took 50 attempts at this to finally realise that if he just choried one of the dispensers and redeemed it at the local grocers’ shop for the deposit he’d have enough dosh to buy 100 pea shooters.

Over the last decade or so mum and dad were often spotted at Edinburgh airport, jetting off to another foreign adventure; backpacking in Australia, driving a mobile home across New Zealand or just lying about on a beach in Barbados, like you do.

Probably the trip most rich in memories, for Emily certainly, was the one to Australia. The purpose of the trip was ostensibly to visit Emily who had been working there for a year rustling cattle or branding kangaroos or something. You never know with Emily. Whatever it was it wasn’t mundane.

Anyway, they went on a bit of a road trip and one day arrived at Cape Tribulation which is where the rainforest meets the beach. Emily and my dad decided to go on a walk through the rainforest in a six inch deep sea of mud guided by a big fat orange rope. Barely had they begun when my dad, wearing beige ankle socks and fake Teva sandals, costing £1.99 from Lidl, had the sole of his left sandal sooked off his foot by the mud. He soldiered on, squelching through the Amazonian mud for a further hour in one and a half sandals and, on completing the walk, returned to the site of the sooking incident at the start of the walk.

Amazingly, he not only managed to retrieve the sole but repaired the sandal and carried on wearing it for the remainder of the trip.

A few days later, after a grand day out, Emily made a bit of a faux pas.

As many of you will know my dad was very keen on Morecombe and Wise’s seminal Jimmy Durante sketches, in which Eric Morecombe sat at a piano with a white paper cup over his mouth and playing “sittin’ at my piano the other day…” my dad appropriated the idea for himself and regularly regaled us with it.

As we grew older it seemed to become his own.

This day in Australia my dad performed the paper cup routine and Emily made the desperately slaggable mistake of asking my dad why Jimmy Durante always performed with a white paper cup in his mouth.

A classic.

The memory of these foreign trips, along with the great love dad had for us, the family, is the most powerful memory my mum has of my dad. And what great memories they are. Not just for her, but for us too, because my dad was very fond of capturing these holidays, at considerable length, on video camera. Not only was he director and cinematographer of these lavish epics but he was, of course, voice over man extraordinaire.

“And this is the hotel and this is the view from the window and this is the local bar and this is the car we’ve hired and this is the Eiffel tower and this is the swimming pool and this is a kangaroo, and this is another kangaroo and this is another kangaroo….” And so on.

There is no shortage of reminders of the holiday scenarios that mum and dad embarked upon.

Now that he is no longer with us my primary objective is to get mum to the North and South Pole so that she can complete her continental set; as she’s bagged all the rest.

We all know that Dad had a wicked sense of humour and I can assure you that remained to the end. Two days before he died we were with him in the chapel at St Columbas hospice and he was holding a rain stick in his hands. He was barely able to turn it, but turn it he did and just as he did so it started to rain outside. I told him this and said to him.

“You never told us you were a witch doctor” to which he replied

“It’s on a need to know basis”

And on his last day Emily told him that she had been to visit her new flat just around the corner and that she could see Mum and dad’s garden from her window.

“Good” he replied “You can cut the grass then.”

But my favourite comment of all was when I was discussing the touchy subject of funeral arrangements with him in the Royal.

I asked him if he wanted anything in the coffin and he replied

“Aye, me.”

Perhaps the single most defining aspect of Pegos life (almost half of it was devoted to this after all, was Forth Childrens Theatre. Prior to FCT he was an amateur actor of modest standings. Like me, I fear he was given to a lack of subtlety on the stage. Not for him Romeo or King Lear. He was fonder of pantomime and Scots comedy and it was through his association with Holyrood High School’s FP Dramatic Society that FCT was born.

In the summer of 1977 a posh kids drama group from Woking in Surrey had elected to put on a show in the festival called 1212 AD. Written and directed by Therese Kitchen A greater luvvie than Dickie Attenburgh the cast of principles was supplemented with a bunch of kids from Holyrood High (myself included). In need of a stage manager and someone who knew the theatre in the school my dad volunteered his time and that was the start of it. The following year we put on a show about the history of chess at St Mary’s Cathedral in Palmerston Place and year three was mid-rehersal for a play about Robert Louis Stephenson (minus the reference to his syphilitic death) called Monsieur De La Plume, when a letter arrived from Therese bitterly decrying the Edinburgh kids’ lack of talent and announcing that she was pulling out of the show.

Well, my dad, Chris Lewis and a few others decided that the show must go on and they hastily formed FCT. On this occasion it is not an understatement to say that the rest is history. 27 Fringes later plus at least 25 Easter shows and many triumphant one act play festivals FCT is stronger than ever. The talent is awesome and has spawned many an acting and theatrical career. Several marriages (not least Jane and Nik) and quite a few babies.

The outpouring of love, affection and respect from the kids at FCT over the past few weeks has been testimony to the utter respect that these children have for Pietro. In particular I met with Jenny Bell, Hannah Scott and Emma Reid at St Columbas last week and there they presented me with a beautiful poem about dad, but also the most heartfelt letter on behalf of all the kids.

I read it to my Dad, as someone in the family has read every single card and letter that family and friends have written him, and it was unquestionably the most moving moment of my life.

Sara would like to share that letter with you and she will read it to you all at the reception after the funeral. I would advise you to look out handkerchiefs at that point.

There are too many memories of FCT to dwell on just one; but for me the fact that maybe 5,000 kids have received a free dramatic education and performed on the world’s greatest stage, thanks to the generosity of spirit that my dad and the many adult helpers have given to this astounding institution is legacy enough for anyone.

It is at this point that I think I must draw things to a conclusion. There’s a tradition at FCT, established by my Dad that is, I think, a fitting way to end.

Each night of each show, cast and crew gather in the back hall at Inverleith, and my dad conducts a short ceremony whereby he rewards the child or children who have, in his mind most improved their performance. It’s not about being the best and the award goes to principle or chorus member alike. On calling their name they are told they are “on the button” and he snatches a button from his shirt.

It is a simple but really quite moving event and the recipient of the button can be spotted from a mile off because their grin lights up the room. The assembled cast and crew then shout out “Oggy, oggy, oggy, oi, oi, oi. Yaaaaah Beauty.” And cheer and clap and thump their feet on the floor.

It’s a riot.

My dad has improved his performance from the day he was born to the day he died so I think it is only fitting that we all agree that the person in this building with the most improved performance is my dad and that he and the way he led his life was quite simply; on the button.

So for that great man I would ask you all to join in that cry…

Oggy oggy oggy, oi, oi, oi, ya beauty.



evening news
July 23, 2007, 9:37 am
Filed under: dad

Here’s a link to the article that the news wrote (without a typo in sight) on Saturday.  Thank you, the News.



The Evening News
July 20, 2007, 4:15 pm
Filed under: dad

In a lovely twist of fate a really nice man, Alan McEwen of the Evening News, phoned me today to gather information for an article they are writing to run tomorrow about dad’s life.

It will appear on Saturday.

Hope you can all rush out and buy it.



Funeral arrangements
July 20, 2007, 10:57 am
Filed under: dad

These are published in The Scotsman and The Evening News today.

Anyone who read the Evening News last night will no doubt be puzzled that his epitaph was…

“An internal optimist whose dreams came true.”

Sure, he internalised the odd thing like the rest of us, but that was hardly what summed him up.

He was in fact…

“The eternal optimist whose dreams came true.”

A bit different don’t you think.

We have decided that this piece of gross ineptitude would have made him laugh rather than get all upset about it.

However, rest assured, a Pego rant was delivered. And there is one very, very sore arse at The Scotsman.

Anyway the corrected version appeared in the news today. and yes, you’ve guessed it. It was wrong. it now reads…

“The enternal optimist whose dreams came true.”

I made another call!

I wonder what an internal or an enternal optimist is?

Any thoughts?



Mr Reid
July 18, 2007, 12:28 pm
Filed under: dad

dr-john.jpg

David, of 1576 fame, has always had a great turn of phrase; but to read him say that my dad (and I quote)

“Dressed up on a daily basis like a weird and wonderful combination of Peter Blake, Dr John and a French Onion Seller…” made me almost wet my pants.

french-onion.jpg

David, of course, is a fashion model.

peter-blake.jpg

(For Jefferies)



Peter Gorman (30/05/36 - 17/7/07) RIP
July 17, 2007, 9:05 am
Filed under: dad, family | Tags:

pego2.jpg

Dad died last night at 4am as a beautiful new day dawned over Edinburgh.

He died full of dignity and at peace surrounded by his wife, four children and brother in the loving and caring environment of St Columbas Hospice. We will miss him desperately.

In an Evening News article in 1994 he said that he wanted his epitaph to be

“The eternal optimist whose dreams came true.”

They did.

Bye Dad.

If anyone has any memories they’d like to share with the many people who have been reading my blog please fill in a comment below. It’s really easy.

Honest.



Schnozzle Durante
July 14, 2007, 2:18 pm
Filed under: dad

jdurante.jpeg

Following Morecombe and Wise’s seminal Jimmy Durante sketches where Eric Morecombe sat at a piano with a white paper cup over his mouth and playing “sittin’ at my piano the other day…” my dad appropriated the idea for himself and regularly regaled us with it.

As we grew older it seemed to become his own.

However, my youngest siaster Emily revealed to me yesterday that a conversationhad taken place with my Dad whilst he was visiting her in Australia a few years ago. 

After a grand day out my dad performed the paper cup routine and Emily made the phenomenal faux pas of asking my dad why Jimmy Durante always performed with a white paper cup in his mouth.

Magnificent. 

How she will have the piss taken out of her for years to come.