Life's Turning-Points
#16

I remember when cricket batsmen did not wear helmets. This match will always stick in my memory.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mD0uglDlJVM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mD0uglDlJVM
#17

In 2000ish when internet dating was still a novelty I responded to a profile for a "crazy Canadian, landlocked in London". That was a life changing moment as it lead to me emigrating with said Canadian in 2004 to part of Canada I'd barely heard of and only visited once in the depths of winter. The other life changing events of course were the birth of my kids in 2009 and 2012 respectively. Sadly, the youngest is also responsible for a life changing moment a little over three weeks ago when she was diagnosed with leukemia. Not all life changing moments are good, but we overcome adversity and fight on.
#18

I am so very sorry to read this. As you may know, my daughter's autism has, in large part, defined my life. I've lived apart from her mother since the 1980s but we remain in close contact. Autism being the demand on caregivers that it is, I've been obliged to support them financially all along. I've made a lot of money along the way. In truth, I wouldn't have bothered for myself, all I really wanted (like Ronnie Scott) was live music and a good car but, when you have a disabled person to support, you have to do it. I, at least, had the advantage that I could stand before a huge audience, think "they won't bite you" and know what it's like when humans do bite you. That's my turning point, when the doctor looked at the tiny child and said "in my view, you are correct to be concerned. I think this is autism though I can't write that down at this age".
Al the best, there's no more to say.
Al the best, there's no more to say.
#19

Irony, innit? At the time the Guardian talkboard started, 1999 or thereabouts, I registered with my name then realized I should have a pseudonym. I was wondering what to use while arguing on the phone with the mother of my children. I was insisting that I would not pay for the opinion of a second aromatherapist (the first one having failed to cure the autism) when another daughter, who was at my feet, wagged a finger at me saying "you're such a deadbeat dad". dbd @ hotmail was taken so I tried dbd01 and ended up at dbd33.
#20
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...I guess that most of us have various career/ job application turning points too, but I have a couple of non-voluntary ones. I was two years out of uni when my employer seconded me to a client, originally just for three weeks, but I ended up staying for four years (the client liked me and put me on their payroll after the first year), and along the way was asked to lead an innovative, arguably ground-breaking project that set the course for my career since then. I occasionally wonder what I would be doing today if i hadn't been seconded to that client more than 30 years ago. 

In Nassau we knocked on doors, and purely as a courtesy I called in at the trust-company - to be told that the Irish chap who had got the job I'd applied for back in December hadn't turned up, and did I still want the job? Yes, please! Linda easily got a teachers' job, and we lived the life of Riley for the next 3 1/2 years. Tax-free. And working in tax-havens is all I've ever done since then. A turning-point indeed.
#21
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And the title of my thread there "Why so few shrimps on the Barbie?" was a reference to the reluctance of Australian immigrants to post to the "chat" site. They must be a lot more reserved crowd than the Canadian ones! This Maple Leaf is jumping, by comparison. Mind you, maybe a lot come here expecting a chat about the NHL team. (Which I remember very well from my time in Toronto, by the way! Sigh. Those were the days, my friends.)
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#23

Irony, innit? At the time the Guardian talkboard started, 1999 or thereabouts, I registered with my name then realized I should have a pseudonym. I was wondering what to use while arguing on the phone with the mother of my children. I was insisting that I would not pay for the opinion of a second aromatherapist (the first one having failed to cure the autism) when another daughter, who was at my feet, wagged a finger at me saying "you're such a deadbeat dad". dbd @ hotmail was taken so I tried dbd01 and ended up at dbd33.
#24

That gateway, alternative medicine leading to a subscription to Health Freedom News leading to campaign materials for Lydon LaRouche presaged Qanon, anti-vaxxers, Trump and the Freedumb truckers. The right has a long history of batshittery.
Last edited by dbd33; Jun 30th 2022 at 11:53 am.
#25
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My wife's turning point was answering an advertisement on an Earl's Court notice-board for a travelling companion. She and Louise (the advertiser) made it down to Greece before the personality-clashes became dangerous enough for Linda to storm out of their hotel room at four a.m. and hitch a ride into Thessaloniki and the Youth Hostel there. I happened to be there too, and she bummed a ride in my Beetle next morning. Life with me - both then and later - was very different from what she was expecting. Three Norwegian grandchildren wasn't on her agenda, that's for sure. How the Norwegians got into the picture is another story. It all started when our son hitched a ride on a yacht going to Texas...
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Just to close out that theme - how we came to have three Norwegian grandchildren... Our son, then aged 24, hitched a ride with some Americans on a yacht sailing from here (Cayman) to Texas. He worked his way down to Mexico as far as Mexico City. While washing car engines there for a dollar a day, he lucked into a modelling + TV commercials job for $100 a day. [Or was it per hour? I forget. Per day seems a bit low, but per hour a bit high. I'll ask, next time he phones.] He turned his back on the money, and fell in with a band of Western hippies, one of whom was a young Norwegian and her year-old toddler. The band wandered down to South America, where the Norwegian girl got pregnant and insisted on going back home for the birth. [Norwegian women do that.] That was our second grandchild, and the third came along a few years afterwards, with a different mother. Luckily, they all speak excellent English now.
Among my family's land-holdings is a rough treehouse in the village of San Marcos La Laguna in Guatemala. If it's still there. He has the title, but, well, it's been 19 years now...
Among my family's land-holdings is a rough treehouse in the village of San Marcos La Laguna in Guatemala. If it's still there. He has the title, but, well, it's been 19 years now...
#27
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Actually, the major, major turning point of my life was fathering a child. Initially I wasn't at all pleased with the addition, but after two or three years of holding-off, I fell helplessly in love with my little boy - and that changed my life. Not only did we decide to stay here in this Caribbean island, instead of moving on after our standard three-year stint as we had planned, but I became a house-father while my wife kept her job. I was the parent of first resort. I lasted six years at that, and never went back to full-time work outside the home. He and I were always (from that time) closer than he and his mother, owing to my Saint-Paul-on-the-road-to-Damascus turning point.
I wonder how many others have seen the acceptance of a child as their turning points. A lot, I expect!
I wonder how many others have seen the acceptance of a child as their turning points. A lot, I expect!
#28

I had a similar turning point in 1998, re online dating, but neither you or I are particularly unusual in that regard here on BE - there are/ were three regular contributors to BE threads (that I knew of) who met their spouse on line, before I met the future Mrs P in 1998.
As the evening wore on, the lesbianism seemed negotiable so my daughter asked for the car keys and said she'd crash in the car leaving me the room. Her mother was subsequently quite scathing about that "am I to understand that you left your underage daughter in a bar with elk hunters while you went to have sex with a lesbian?" is not a question one should answer without counsel. Certainly a lively debate about the environmental impact of hunting was in progress when I, er, retired. Anyway, the upshot was that the bisexual came to live (I ultimately sponsored her as an immigrant partner despite my being married to someone else),
It all want well until her life changing fixation emerged. She was negotiable as a lesbian but non-negotiable as an equestrian. In due course we moved to the country. I've had an involvement with horses ever since.
#29
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Anyway, your story covers a whole huge mass of turning-points, and is very much in the spirit of the thread! I'm sure our readers would be delighted to read of any others you can tell to a mixed audience! (Smile) (I have to add "smile" lest I be accused of being serious when I'm not. It has happened.)
#30
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That caught my attention. Other than meeting random internet people to buy/sell a bicycle or a canoe or whatever, I have never really considered enhancing my social life this way. And then last year, I was giggling over something you posted and I thought 'next time I am in Toronto with some spare time, I am going to ping dbd and see if wants to go out for a beer'.