About Isaac French
Childhood
I haven’t changed a lot. I am still perky. In case you are confused, I am the one on the right, my brothers being the other boys sitting on the canon. They are the ones without an ice cream. I believe it was my birthday.
I was born just after World War II. If you peer hard enough, you can just make out the warships in the background of the photograph. My father was a shipwright in Devonport Dockyard.
My parents were bombed out five times during the war and eventually moved across the water to Cornwall. I was born in Cornwall, the youngest of three boys. Our childhoods were full of love and caring and church and God.
On Sundays all changed. My brothers and I sang in the choir and
Adulthood
A rather flattering photo, I’m afraid. I must have destroyed the others. I managed to survive two years as a teacher but I knew it wasn’t for me. I used my educational qualifications to lever my way into the NHS and, thanks to many re-organisations – the NHS is always being reorganised – ended being in charge of hospitals.
In my last working years, I became an expert in illicit drugs and a special adviser to governments and voluntary organisations on running drug services. I am not sure how this happened. Still, I felt very privileged.
I hope I did some good.
Retirement
Retirement was a wonderful gift. I was healthy, reasonably well-off, and with the freedom to choose what I wanted to do. I tried five different activities. Sculpture – I struggled to find the right medium and to remain motivated; mathematics – I loved maths but realised that creative mathematics is a young persons’ game; saxophone my lips were not powerful enough for me to form the right embouchure, so said my tutor, bloody cheek; writing – I started writing in Bath Library. I love the process of writing and I love writing in libraries. Bath Library, Bristol Library and the most recent, Morrab Library in Penzance. I can write at home but it is a struggle. I like to go out to write (work) and go to a café for lunch.
I know I said five activities but, for the life of me, I cannot remember the fifth. Ah well.