Skip to content
Gems Press

Gems Press

Books Worth Remembering

  • Books Worth Remembering from Gems Press
  • Classic True Stories
  • Books to Read Free
  • Selected Graphics
  • Shop
  • Toggle search form

Tim Jeal’s Parents

Posted on July 14, 2022 By Gayla

It was not until I was seven that I became embarrassed by my father’s lack of self-consciousness. He had just discovered the Bates ‘better sight without glasses’ book and method. One exercise involved rolling the eyeballs in order to strengthen the internal muscles of the eye. Another, called ‘palming’, required one to place one’s palms over both eyes and to imagine a starless night or black velvet. When my father chose to do these exercises, sitting beside me on a District Line train en route to Dorking via Wimbledon, I sat in silence, cheeks burning, convinced that our fellow passengers would think him crazy.

When I travelled with my mother on the tube or bus, things would be very different. Sometimes, she would nudge me surreptitiously, indicating some comically dressed person, and then greatly enjoy my difficulties as I fought to keep a straight face. She herself could remain composed after saying the most outrageous things. If I’d ever laughed out loud, she would have told me I was being extremely rude, and would have meant it. While I might enjoy the sight of a fat man in a tight suit, and be entertained to see some elderly woman grotesquely made-up, I soon felt mean for being amused and thought of what my father would have said to me if he knew. He always found he had things in common with people, and never smiled at their expense. I liked this. But I also admired my mother’s ability to look so innocent while making her funny and mischievous remarks.

One day, while standing with my father in Wimbledon Station near the glass case containing the stuffed dog that stood on the platform right through the 1950s, I told him how much it worried me when he did the Bates exercises in public. He looked flabbergasted.

‘People might laugh at you,’ I explained.

‘I wouldn’t mind if they did.’

‘But I mind, daddy.’

‘Do you really see people staring at me? What sort of person would do that?’

I thought of my mother. My father looked quite unhappy now. I wanted to tell him it was because I loved him that I cared what people thought. But just then the train came in, and soon we were with other people. I knew he had the Bates book with him and now felt he couldn’t read it because I would get upset. I started to feel guilty. Maybe if people had noticed him rolling his eyes, it wouldn’t have mattered. When we were approaching Dorking, I reached out a hand and was relieved he took it. — Tim Jeal, in his book Swimming with My Father: A Memoir (read for free)

stories

Post navigation

Previous Post: W.C. Fields Leaves Home
Next Post: Octavia Wilberforce Considers Her Own Happiness

Related Posts

Michael Palin Stops Smoking stories
A Man Can’t Just Sit Around stories
Rodney Dangerfield Is Born stories
Joy of Life stories
Jane Smiley on Baths stories
A Noble Ruin stories

A Premium from Gems Press

Sign up for our mailing list (all it takes is your email address), and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit*.

Recent Posts

  • Help with Using HTML to Make Kindle Books
  • Selected Graphic Elements
  • Selected Graphics: Decaying Daguerreotypes by Mathew Brady, Circa 1850
  • Selected Graphics: Dante’s Divine Comedy
  • Selected Graphics: Grunty Animals from The Flower of Nature, Circa 1350
  • More Great Books to Read for Free
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, September 1905
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, October 1904
  • About Gems Press
  • The Book of Glimmer: Adventures of Marcus & Stub
  • Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit
  • A Collection of Tracts, on the Subjects of Taxing the British Colonies in America, and Regulating Their Trade.: Volume I
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume One
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume Two
  • Health in Your Homes, by J. Fletcher Horne
  • The House I Live In, by J.W. Ford, M.D.
  • How to Work, by Amos R. Wells
  • The Brother Cadfael Medieval Mystery Series, by Ellis Peters
  • List of 63 More Great Books You Can Read for Free
  • Sex Tips for Girls • by Cynthia Heimel
  • Books About Sleep That You Can Borrow
  • French Horn Hell
  • Eppie Lederer Becomes Ann Landers
  • A Love Letter from Dylan Thomas
  • Adventures of Madame Godin in the Country of the Amazons
  • Flower Spirals and the Fibonacci Sequence
  • Edward Snowden Explains What Happens When You Enter a URL in a Browser
  • Like a Fart in a Trance
  • Thomas Edison Explains Electricity in Paris, 1889
  • A Dubious Business Tip from Aristotle Onassis

*As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

Sign up for our mailing list and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit.*

About Gems Press

Contact us at contact (at) gemspress.earth

Copyright © 2025 Gems Press.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs