All over the world there are billions and billions of hinges that we never think about. They exist and operate in perfect silence.
Then there is the rusty hinge. We cannot ignore the rusty hinge. It drives us demented, creaking and groaning with weary metallic sighs each time the door is opened and closed.
The rusty hinge fills our minds until we can think of nothing else. It gives hinges a bad name. We focus on it, obsess about it, just as we ignore its trillion perfect cousins.
I park outside the little shop in a North Mayo seaside village. Inside, the woman behind the counter has her back to me as she chops some onions for sandwiches.
Not wanting to give her a shock, as she has a knife in her hands, I wait until she senses my presence, which precipitates her subsequent flood of apologies that I rebuff as kind yet utterly unnecessary.
“So, what can I do for you?”
“Well, actually, I’m looking for the Community Gardens. You wouldn’t happen to know where they are, would you?”
“Follow me.”
We head to the back of the shop, where she stands on tiptoes as she battles with a long sliding latch. Bit by bit she manages to ease it across. The door opens and there, stretching out in front of me is the Community Garden.
“Well, I really hit the jackpot, didn’t I!”
“You did, now.”
“Thanks so much !” I say as I wander off to explore the impressive efforts of the local crew.
The morning temperature is only 2°C, but the northerly wind chills it to way below freezing, so I’m surprised and a little concerned to find as I return that she has left to door open, to allow me back into the shop.
I close the door behind me, and slide the latches, amazed at the tacit kindness and generosity of the woman.
Back at the counter I thank her profusely for leaving the door open, as the cold wind has robbed her shop of all the warmth it held when I arrived. She waves her hand to dismiss the notion that she has been in any way inconvenienced.
I offer her my hand to shake.
“I’m Charlie, and there’s a bunch of us looking into starting a Community Garden in Killala. I was told yours was impressive and that it is. Had no idea it was out the back of the shop, though. Dead lucky there, wasn’t I! Thanks so much for letting me have a look.”
She tells me her name and the name of the other woman working behind the Post Office window. She shakes my hand and then she wishes me luck with my endeavours.
I leave the shop having bought nothing, but gained so much. The woman had asked me nothing about my mission or motives. She just let me out the back to prowl unfettered, and left the door open despite the freezing morning.
“Another beautiful hinge!” I say out loud to myself, as I get back into Joey SX and drive home.
Between the ages of 15 and 35 I hitch-hiked over 100,000 miles. As a teenager I hitched back from school, to the pub, to my girlfriend’s, and each summer I took the ferry to France and hitched around Europe and the Middle East.
In my early 20s I hitched in the USA, New Zealand and Australia, and then four years later went back and did it all again. I hitched just about every inch of the UK’s extensive motorway network, getting to know the best junctions and Service Stations so that I travelled faster than Public Transport.
When I arrived in Ireland back in 1992 I was delighted to find a fabulous hitching country, and explored the west coast from Cork to Donegal with my thumb and the generosity of others.
Somewhere along the way - I cannot remember where or when - a driver shared with me the theory of the Rusty Hinge, which perfectly matched my own experience of people.
All over the world I met thousands of fantastic people. I enjoyed a special and sometimes intense one-to-one conversation with every type of human, save for the ones who don’t stop for hitchers.
That doesn’t make them rusty hinges. I don’t blame them for not stopping. Why should they?
Countless times I was invited to stay the night at a driver’s home. Often an onward lift had been arranged for me by the time I awoke the next day. I was driven, housed, fed and watered, and in the process got to know and better understand the people of each different country in a unique way that guided tourists cannot.
The vital truth I gleaned from those years of travels is that people are good. Old young rich poor: doesn’t matter. After all my years on the road I recall only one bad lift, in a Jag in the middle of the night on a German Autobahn, with a man who behaved in a sexually predatory way, but he was my only rusty hinge.
With a rusty hinge in the White House and another in Moscow making all sorts of grating and offensive noises, it’s so easy to think of the human race as a bad bunch, but we are not.
When times are hard we might need some spiritual WD40, in the shape of hugs and care. Although we are incredibly different and hold opposing views on everything, we are all good hinges, getting on with our lives in fairly gentle, inoffensive and efficient ways.
For that, and for my awareness of that, I give thanks.
©Charlie Adley
23.11.2025




