The Cast

The man in the grave was alive.

 ‘Fuck off and leave me alone' came the gnarled voice from the depths,  beneath the pink pastel candlewick  its ornate Rose’s now caked in rivulets of mud. 

‘If you don’t want soup, how about some coffee and biscuits ?’ I pleaded

 ‘Bugger off and gie me peace' .

‘ So that will be a no’ I thought as I wound my way through the gravestones and vaults, dark and frozen beneath the sycamores swaying in the cold Edinburgh wind that whips against the sombre outline of St Cuthbert's church.

Out on the street I found the care van dispensing soup and clothes to a group of about 30 graveyard  dwellers fresh out of the homes they have made in graves and every other nook and cranny that the cemetery had to offer. A mere drop in the ocean of the 4500 homeless souls who live on the streets of Edinburgh, these people are Edinburgh’s homeless crisis an ever growing problem fuelled by social, demographic and housing policies. Many have mental health problems and this deadly concoction makes the Capital second only to London in terms of homeless numbers. We ask no questions, they tell no lies is our motto. But the overriding question hangs the air, an unspoken question that even the brave fear to ask: who are you and how did you get here? We hide in the safer mantra: why  these people are here  is not our concern, the fact that they are hungry is. 


Yet 'these people’ are just that, ‘people’. They are not filthy sleeping bags lying soaking in doorways. They are not pathetic little paper cups sitting on the pavement asking 'for any spare change’ with mangy looking starving dog as a prop. These are people are as different as those that pass them by every day, avoiding their gaze as they scale the moral high ground. At best, amusing curiosities and at worst drug fuelled beggars looking for their next hit, characters in a daily Dickensian street show.THE 


The Audience

The taxi drivers sitting on their rank watch the gathering of no where men with disgust. The nightly show was addictive .Wasters. Chancers. Lazy bastards. They concurred as one, in a camaraderie  unparalleled in their cut throat world. They watched the group of down and outs huddled around a small van parked in the taxi rank on Waverly bridge. They carried a variety of ruck sacks, carrier bags and boxes.  One guy in a Hearts top looked smashed. The taxi drivers aggrieved at losing one of their parking spaces looked in disgust at the Christian ‘do gooders' that fed these wasters and encouraged them. Apart from one relatively well dressed guy with military upright stance and impeccably polished shoes, they were all in what are best described as rags. One guy had no trousers so had tied his sleeping bag around his waste kilt like fashion. One women, clearly pregnant laughed and joked with the mainly male crowd. She smoked heavily. They should beg on the streets of eastern Europe where they belong. They held a common hatred of these common men and women that even outstripped their mutual hatred for cyclists. Some even lived in skips with their kids. The murmurings of unbridled disgust grew.

The Lady

My eye  catches a young woman wearing a torn and ravaged  camouflage jacket with disintegrating trainers and loose sole that flip flopped as she walked. 

She stood in the queue speaking to a man in a Hearts top.  They spoke warmly and quietly to each other which was somehow strange in the melee of banter and slagging. It was as if they knew each other, friends or relatives perhaps although in their demeanour they were worlds apart. His shirt was  about three sponsors old and looked like it had yet to see the inside of a washing machine, it probably never will. Apart from her dress she was well spoken, public school even, and her well groomed hair was set neatly  in a bun and her nails, perfectly manicured silvery black  shellac with one painted gold  caught my eye.

 ‘What’s your name?’ I asked

‘Does it matter?’

‘No'

‘It’s Karen’ she relents

 ‘What can I get you?’ 

 ‘Soup, what kind of soup is it?’ Came the reply in an accent more akin to a New Town dining room than the homeless care van. 

‘Tonight we are serving Bethany butternut squash and lentils'. Despite their lurid lifestyles, the powers that be ensure that food on offer has a healthy option

‘It’s pure boak’ shouted the Hearts fan ‘yer better aff with the Cuppa Soup than eating that shite’ 

‘ I will pass your compliments on to the chef ‘

‘I love butternut soup,’ Karen said

' Where are you staying tonight ?‘ I asked as my curiosity prevailed 

‘ O somewhere’

 ‘And tomorrow ?’

 ‘Somewhere else, heading off to Stirling tomorrow’ 

‘Friends there ?’

‘ No I just have never been there. My late sister went to University there'. She paused, as if wanting to say more but held back then gave up.

She drinks her tepid soup quickly and tucks the buttered rolls in  to her carrier bag that seemed to hold her everything. She lit a roll up, said goodbye then disappeared back in to the graveyard.

The Junkie 

The guy in the Hearts top spoke. Rough, very rough with a voice that scraped along his cigarette and heroin eroded voice box. He seemed drunk or stoned or both but then I realised he was not. This was him, a brain battered by a life he hates and which hates him and where his youthful dance with the dragon had led him into a lifelong dalliance with his prince of darkness where a wrap of heroin is worth more than his life.

‘Av never had a job, never wanted one. Got bevvied  on Buckie everyday since I was thirteen. Buckie, glue, lighter fluid, you name, I took it. Then straight on to the heavy stuff. A only went to school until a wis 14 then I got kicked out for nicking a teacher’s purse tae get some mare bevvy'

‘My mother kicked me out when I was 15 for nicking her fags and I’ve been on the streets ever since. The Social gave up trying to get me a job so now they give me £5 a day which I have to go and pick up at High Riggs then a just hing around for the rest of the day, see what comes ma way'

Sensing a lack of sympathy for his position his tone changed

‘Its nae fun ye ken. You wake and your cold and your worried, worry, worry, worry: where will I end up today? what will I eat ? where will I sleep? then you get tired and sleep in a doorway and your hungry and cold'  as he spoke I noticed that he looked cold with cold blue eyes, skinny shivering arms and feet damp in a pair of torn summer sandals,

‘Your always cold even in the summer so you take a drink and see if anyone has any puff or crack if your lucky, because you need it, really really need it and if your not out the game you try to cadge some cash to get out the game. Ye dinny want it but you need it’. As he spoke, faster and faster and more and more desperate I knew that he really needed ‘it’ now.

‘ Then you go to the soup van for some hot soup because your so bloody cold then you try to find somewhere to crash, some shit hole that you can break in to  or on the streets, cold, so cold then the same the next day then the next day it’s the same, then the same, then the same again'

His drawn eyes  and unkempt beard make him seem far older than his 29 years. Hands covered in tattoos. ‘Love' on the left hand and ‘Nicki' on the right. Who was Nicki I ask ‘ Ma  bird’ he says . It’s actually Nickie with an ‘ie' I but since I’ve only got 5 fingers I cut her ‘e’ aff he smiles, an affable smile and a smile that I feel is not seen too often, locked firmly in his prison of  a mind.

 ‘A really loved her. We were goanna git married if we could get it together ye ken. Her father wis  a big shot lawyer he’d sent her tae private school in England and paid for her to go to a Stirling  Uni. but she jacked it in, she was too fond of the wacky baccy then Charlie and jellies. Then they  wanted fuck all to do with her and she ended up on the streets and he said he was gonnae set us up in a nice house if we got clean and got jobs but we never did, so they never did. Then she topped herself, overdosed on jellies. Couldnae handle it any mare when she got pregnant, totally fucked off she wis. Then her mother and father turned up at her funeral. Bastards. Stood and gret like weans then pissed off for a do up in Morningside.  Telt me a wis scum but a really loved her. Ah should have topped myself then but I’m shit scared of death; after all the things I’ve been up tae, it will  the burning fire for me nae doubt. Cannae be much worse than here mind you and at least it wid be warm’.

The Soldier

Ralphie was a soldier and a piper. He was one of the battalion of ex squaddies whose parade ground was now the long streets of Edinburgh which many struggled to march in without their sergeants discipline to guide them. Ralphie had left the army many years ago but still he had the gait, pride and manicured appearance of someone who had spent a lifetime protecting and lamenting  his Queen. He fought and played in Iraq and Afghanistan and his sandy hair, his sand paper skin and pock marked face looked as if they had imbibed the desert battleground  where he had spent so long. His front teeth were gone.  His accent, no longer the lilting west highland of his youth but rather a hybrid variety of dialect  perhaps middle England. After the army he had pursued successful career in security in the south east but came to Edinburgh  to marry a woman he had never loved but who could give him a bed back in Scotland.

‘The army was good. The Taliban were there and were deadly but you didn’t have to get in to bed with them, unlike my three wives who were more deadly than any roadside bomb.’ I look for an ironic smile, but there was none. He meant what he said.

‘See these teeth that you can’t see ? ‘ he joked ‘ these weren’t the result of the Taliban, ISIS or the IRA, I lost these when my second wife panned me’

‘You’d have thought I’d have learnt my lesson after two, but what did I do? Move back to Scotland and get married for a third time. I must be really mental. That one only lasted 2 years but she cleaned me out. No home, no cash, no woman, only my pride’.

Public complaint and political pressure means that soldiers do get some priority for health and housing and they do have access to many support groups however drug reliance and mental health problems mean that many do not avail themselves of that support.

 ‘Thankfully I had managed to develop PDSA in the army which meant I got in to a military hostel but I’m on the streets all day and I’m bloody starving. I don’t get any money as I  still have a house in Kent except that I don’t have a house in Kent because wife number 2 lives in it’ and I can’t afford a lawyer to sort things out'

I  muse whether his PDSA was the result of military action or the life long guerrilla war that he seems to be fighting with his ex wives.

‘I can’t go for a job or else the hostel will charge me £800 a month and I’m bottom of the council housing list. 18 months most have to wait but because of me being mental they say I should get somewhere soon but in the meantime I am as they say, fucked’.

The Right To Buy policy removed 495,000 houses from public housing stocks in Scotland. Private sector rent increases and growing numbers of short term lets have added to a problem that Edinburgh refused to acknowledge for too long keeping the problem ‘hidden deep in it’s Old Town until it rose – much like the haar fog that creeps in from the sea - until it could no longer be ignored.’ (New Statesman)

‘These characters here get by on drugs’ continues Ralphie but I wouldn’t touch that shit so I hang around the libraries and museums all day then it’s a la carte dinner at the care van then back to my bed'

 ‘You guys in the care van are a marvel, apart from the crap soup you serve – butternut squash and lentil soup ? You must be joking'.

Before we drive off, a short man with long matted locks lurks out from the cemetery carrying an infested once blue sleeping bag with a ravished pair of trousers  that barely reach his ankles.

 ‘Any coffee left pal?’ he asks.

 ‘Aye  there’s soup and rolls if you like’

‘ Coffee with 6 sugars please’ 

‘Do you know the guy sleeping in the grave with the pink sheet ?’

 ‘Aye that’s Rab’. 

‘Is it worth me trying to get him up again ?’ I ask

‘ No way! Once he gets cosy with his shoes off he disnae  like to go oot’.



Such is life with homeless: the story is that there is no story other than a the bleak final chapter that they are now living. Occasionally there is a happy conclusion but usually there is not. The most likely next step is a room in a dirty B&B with draconian rules and a curfew that make prison sound a better option and for many prison will be the next, sometimes welcome step. Death is often, again sometimes welcome outcome with suicide rates higher than anywhere else in the population and where the average age of male death is 44 compared to an average of 76 with 600 people dying on the streets of Britain in 2017 as a result of suicide, drugs and alcohol overdoses. This is not care in the community but careless as a community. The situation is one of paradox: no home means no benefits which means no chance of getting a home. No home means no job application which means no job so no home, and no home means no chance of getting 'clean'. In fact no home means no chance.

Epilogue

Then the audience give up waiting for a hire. The show’s over so they turn their meters off and head for home. Home to nice painted semis, with small loving wives and warm comfy beds. To small loving children with long happy futures but who maybe one day will star in the show.


Brian Harris 













February My Father was diagnosed with the early stages of Bone Marrow Cancer. March On Friday 27 March (my Mother’s 88th birthday) I received a call from her asking me to find a nice “Nursing Home” for both she and my Father to live. This was an amazing step forward as I had been trying to suggest that they move to a Retirement flat a year or so prior to that. Their health was deteriorating and I know it took a lot of guts to admit this to themselves but they could no longer life safely in their own home. It was not easy to find a suitable Care Home as not many allowed me to visit and have a look around as by that time, we were well into complete lockdown. However, I did produce a report for my Father (who was always very business-like) highlighting what I considered to be the main 6 contenders and costs. I did find one and following my visit I thought if they were all just as suitable as that one so making a final choice might be rather difficult. April The plan was to go for 2 weeks respite on Tuesday 7 April (the first week had to be in quarantine) but during that time my parents had decided they would stay permanently. Their rooms had been re-arranged to allow both beds to be placed in one room allowing access via an inter-connecting door to their own lounge. My Father was given assistance when he had to attend the Western General Hospital for a blood transfusion towards the end of the second week. This left him very tired and within hours of his return had to be taken to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary and in a few days was diagnosed with COVID19. It was thought that he might not survive that weekend – but he did! May / June I was then told twice that he was in the final stages of his life. So, with my Mother safe back in the Care Home I spent 6 weeks dotting around from their house, the Care Home and the Royal Infirmary. I was not allowed access to either of them for quite a while and trying to disguise my voice on the phone as to what was really happening in the hospital was difficult. The staff phoned me ever day to keep me totally up to date with what was happening. Gradually he started to improve but I was informed for a second time that he may not even leave hospital. Thankfully the management and staff at the Care Home were on hand to explain the situation from a medical viewpoint to my Mother but I don’t think she really took it all in. Not at that point. Thankfully despite his age (88) my Father survived this dreaded virus and returned later in May to be with my Mother at the Care Home. He was very weak and suffering from post-COVID confusion, which we all hoped would eventually pass. COVID19 had speeded up the bone marrow cancer and Haematology confirmed to me that he was too frail to undergo any form of chemotherapy and that palliative care was the best solution. This was carried out by the Senior Nursing Staff at the Care Home. Their main aim was to keep him as comfortable and pain-free as possible. This they did with amazing expertise, compassion and respect. This in turn made it really difficult for my Mother and at times she felt lonely and isolated as gradually his ability to communicate coherently started to dwindle. Despite her own mobility problems, I encouraged the staff to start taking my Mother through to the resident’s lounge – this would possibly start to help her to join in a little more. As usual one of her most amusing phrases (and she is well known for her wit) was “mm I don’t fancy it much – it is full of old people!”. My grandmother was the same and she lived until she was 97. July / August / September I had to break the news to my parents that it was now sadly necessary to sell their car and even more importantly their home. Helped by good neighbours, friends (with cars). Endless taxis – so much so that one driver suggested we have our own Christmas Lunch! Ian, Steve, Stevie, Christopher and more – thank you all – you are great guys. House up for sale / cleaning and general improvements prior to photography ……… with very little external help due to COVID 19 guidance and regulations. Adhering to all the rules became quite frustrating as there were many offers of help and support, I was not allowed to accept. Removal firm from hell - not a good choice ……. Sacked ! Junk Removal firm – saved the day! 1 - 15 October I dealt with the sale of their house and car but clearing a house of 46 years of stuff and endless memories was I think one of the biggest challenges I have ever faced. In fact, my Mother had her own version of Santa’s Grotto stored away in their attic. What to do with all those decorations, candles, tinsel etc – easy – donated them to the Care Home! Anyway, even my Father was keen that I write about not only his experience (some of which he had no recollection of whilst in hospital) but that I record what we as a family had experienced during this time. I am so grateful to the Doctors, Nurses and Staff at the Royal Infirmary and certainly the Manager and Staff at the Care Home. They have given me so much support and encouragement and helped me and my Mother through some really tricky emotional moments. I also feel that mention must be made of the love, help and devotion of my lovely Husband, his daughters, relatives, neighbours and some very special friends and many taxi drivers. Even the occasional text message from family further afield asking me how things were – meant a lot. 15 – 18 October – took a few says away at Dalmahoy ….. to try and re-charge my batteries. 20 October – first visit to see parents after house sale etc. As the cancer had now progress my parents had very diplomatically been moved into 2 separate rooms (next to one another). I spent time with Mum in her room and then moved through to speak with Dad. By this time he had become rather incoherent but he knew me and could reply when I said across the room “I love you Dad – today is Tuesday I will be back on Friday”. He raised his hand to wave across the room in recognition of this and I waived back. This was to be the last time I would see him alive. 21 October Sadly despite his struggle to survive my Father passed away on Wednesday 21 October. I truly believe that once he knew that the house and car were sold and all things “financial” had been taken care of, that it was time to breathe a sigh of relief. He also knew that my Mother was safe and he had spent the last 8 years as her carer and had totally focussed on her health and recovery from a massive stroke on 16 November 2012 (my Wedding Day) – I am saving that experience for another article. 22 October Spent the morning trying to come to terms with the events of the night before. Arranged the funeral over the phone with a splendid compassionate Funeral Director and his colleagues who made everything so straight forward. The next few days were spent in conversation with my Mum, as well as Funeral Directors and their staff. At this point I think both of us were still in a state of disbelief. The staff and the residents at the Care Home were all so sympathetic. The next few weeks were spent making arrangements and trying to convey the message that we were only allowed 20 attendees at the Funeral. I was quite glad as I don’t think I could have coped with any socialising after the Mass and Cremation. It was a little weird choosing hymns for a funeral with no singing allowed by the congregation. Still, this meant I could choose hymns sung by some of the best entertainers with a full chorus and orchestra – my Father would have love that! 3 November I arrived at Strachan House to help get my Mother dressed (we had a rehearsal a few days before). She looked great and assisted by one of the carers who has been specially chosen to assist my Mother throughout that day. Everything went well – if you can describe a Funeral as that – but it did! In March I would never of imagined delivering my own Father’s Eulogy. Time for Reflection …….. It was now time to reflect on the last 9 months and think about how the experience has affected me. I hve been so busy organising parents, house sales, financial matters, funerals, that I scarcely set aside any time to grieve. I appreciate all the help and support we received from Hospitals, Care Home staff, family and some very special friends. I could not have asked for more but at the end of the day my personal feelings about my Father’s death were eased as I was told that he probably would not survive COVID9 and he did. My next challenge is to deal with my Mother’s grief which has manifested itself in various ways. The staff at the Care Home are very much aware of this and support her very well. One of my first new challenges was to try to re-adjust my sleeping pattern as the tiredness which had built up over the past few months was massive. Getting there now with the help of retail therapy (when I can). Possibly another couple of days away from home on the golf course might help. 8 December 2020 What now ……. Well, no one can answer that except to just keep going and hope for the best – that is the key word “hope” we can never give up on hope. The next year will come with further and new challenges but I think now that I have re-charged some of the batteries, I know I will able to face them all! 13 December 2020 As I predicted my Father’s death became quite real today. There is a Friary where I would head for where I might find some sort of spiritual seclusion, just for a while away from everything and everyone. I think as it is just over the Border that it probably remains closed until further notice. Perhaps I will find somewhere closer to home. Another good friend has recommended a Monastery in Perth – so I think that as early as I can in 2021, I will head there and not even take my phone (now that will be a challenge), and hopefully find the “spiritual” Jacqui again. Right now, I am starting to feel quite angry, frustrated and I just want to shout a lot – thankfully we do have a rather smart balcony so watch out neighbours …. I don’t seem to have as much patience as I used to – again maybe that will come back to me next year. 21 December 2020 News today is the cancellation of our 2 night stay away for Hogmanay. The golf course will have to wait. Jacqui Smith Sub-Editor talkoftheday.net December 2020