Unless the several million wood lice with whom I share a home have transported it away to a place where they can worship the shiny cylinder, it remains very possible that when I move out of this place, I might find the pen down the back of somewhere unthinkable beneath my desk.
But how did it leave its case, where it had rested since 1973?
Why and what and who knows…?
I let it go, just as I did my Ricoh watch.
Eleven years after I received that pen, I awarded myself my Ricoh watch, when I worked for said Japanese photocopier company.
From October 1983 to November 1984 I shot up their corporate structure like some kind of marketing Icarus, constantly and incredibly swiftly being promoted, given more and more responsibility and money, until I was earning more than any 24 year-old should ever be allowed to earn.
They promised me I would be Marketing Director by the age of 30, but after seeing the Sales Manager drop dead from stress on the office floor, and my good friend and boss endure an excruciatingly slow and horrendous breakdown in front of my eyes, I confronted a profound truth.
Money does not make me happy.
In fact, despite everyone in my personal and professional life telling me what a massive success I was, I felt utterly empty.
My soul was a void of despair.
Even though exceptionally able to empathise with purchasers from conglomerates and corporate giants, I did not care how many photocopiers were sold to anyone anywhere.
I hated my job, and felt deeply depressed, convinced I was wasting my life.
The company paid for my car, my petrol, my household bills, gave me an unlimited expense account and an American Express card, thereby making it incredibly easy for me to save money.
Also, among several other job titles, they made me Head of Giveaways, so natch I gave myself a wonderful Ricoh watch.
I’d worked my voluptuous butt off. I deserved it.
Having accumulated a small fortune in savings, I quit the job and on November 22nd, 1984 boarded a spanky new Virgin Atlantic flight to Newark, New Jersey, and proceeded to travel for a year, very slowly, around the world, whilst writing a craftless yet passionate first draft of a novel.
Even though that book was never published, I went on to enjoy the privilege and good fortune of living off my writing, loving both my work and the meaning it brought to my life.
For nearly 40 years I sported on my left wrist the Ricoh watch that reminded me every day of that decision I made at the age of 23; of who I am, and what matters to me.
Then, six months ago, I stayed in an hotel in Sligo, left my watch behind in the room, and never saw it again.
I mourned neither the pen nor the watch. Of course I was a little sad that two significant lifetime possessions had left me, but I shed no tears.
I still had Blue Bag.
Relax, loyal colyoomista: there is no ‘had’. I have Blue Bag, and yes, as my friend Andy suggested many yonks ago:
“You’ll be buried with that effin’ bag.”
Were it not for my wish to be cremated, I would most certainly and happily rot into the soil with Blue Bag decomposing upon me.
Instead I say burn me with Blue Bag. Scatter our combined ashes off the cliffs of Kilcummin Back Strand.
Purchased for a tenner, from a tourist shop on Oxford Street the day I left Ricoh in 1984, Blue Bag and I have been around the world twice together.We have hitch-hiked over 200,000 miles together.
In the Cadillacs of California, the buses of Bali and the 24-wheel rigs that monopolise European motorways, Blue Bag stood on its end between my legs, taking up no more space than I do myself.
That allowed it to stay with me on buses in the developing world, while traditional backpacks were hoisted onto the roof, far from their owners.
In strange bars Blue Bag’s handles are hooked round my bar stool so that no stray hand might whisk it away.
Before the ridiculous limits of carrying of liquids in airports, Blue Bag used to be my hand luggage, allowing me to be off the plane and out into a new country while all the other passengers were left behind, waiting at the baggage carousel.
Through all manner of insanity and tribulation, Blue Bag has been by my side.
When it’s hoisted onto my right shoulder, I feel safe; complete; ready to take on the world and win.
Oh, and (slightly embarrassed cof cof) I simply want Blue Bag with me; always. Metaphorically and practically, it’s been my fast track to freedom.
Now that my craziest travels are behind me, I still use Blue Bag for two or three day trips, but when heading to London or further afield, I pack Blue Bag into my suitcase, because … well … you never know when you might need a mad dash.
One man and his bag.
That’s the only possession I need.
©Charlie Adley
01.11.2023
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