I am aghast but hardly surprised to realise that the last
time I updated this blog was just before our second son, Mackenzie, was born.
He arrived on Bastille Day - 14th of July 2016, and has been a
delight. There were some anxious moments just after he came out, when he seemed
to be having trouble breathing and had to be put into an incubator for about
10-15 minutes, but then his lungs seemed to stabilise and the desperately raspy
cough settled down and he was on Helen’s chest and soon suckling well. Unlike
Calvin, Mackenzie had no trouble feeding from the breast, indeed he generally
has no trouble eating as much as he can get his hands on! While Calvin has the
enthusiasm of a puppy for all things, Mac or Kenzie as we sometimes call him
seems an old soul - he is quite calm, smiley and friendly, but doesn’t like
being surprised and has a temper when he doesn’t get his food. The name was my
maternal grandmother’s maiden surname - a descendant of the Mackenzie clan of
Scotland. Also, my paternal grandfather’s name was Ken. [Many people seem to
have taken to naming daughters Mackenzie, clearly oblivious of the fact that ‘Mac’
means ‘son of…’ in Gaelic.] At 8 months old now, he is very cute with a
two-tooth grin, and has just about figured out how to crawl instead of just
pulling himself along the floor with his arms; he is also trying hard to stand
up when a stable object allows him to pull himself to his feet.
Two kids is definitely double-trouble though. Those moments
when Calvin used to have a nap and there was peace for a while; unfortunately
now there is another short person whose nap schedule is not the same so until
7pm at night most of the time someone is awake. However Calvin is at playschool
in the mornings, and luckily we have a domestic helper who looks after
Mackenzie in the mornings so that Helen can get out and about or get on with
her own to-do’s. At the moment Helen is on a career break, having been offered
less-than-ideal maternity leave, and she is doing a fantastic job of giving our
little men all the love, attention and food and necessities that they need.
Helen has purposely sought to enjoy Mackenzie being little much more, as she
has seen with Calvin how quickly the time passes and they grow up and into new
phases of their lives. Calvin is still the same boisterous and friendly little
man,
albeit now sometimes in the grip of emotions powerful enough that they
seem both uncontrollable and scary for him. He will occasionally howl inconsolably
about some perceived slight or denial of a desire (“I want juice!”) until he is
left gibbering and thoroughly unable to remember what the original problem was.

In my last blog I mentioned that I have been considering the
possibility of pursuing work in tertiary education and academia. In the latter
half of last year I met with or had email correspondence with a number of
people in this realm and realised that a PhD is essential to teaching or
lecturing at this level. Something which I am very drawn to now that I have had
two final-year classes where I have frequently wondered to myself how much I
might have enjoyed teaching some of those boys a year or two later. From a
personal perspective, I am sure that I would enjoy much more, teaching students
whose attendance is based on their own volition, and in a much less
authoritarian environment with my preferred approach of trusting students to
make their own notes and do their own preparation for learning, with no input
from me regarding anything other than their academic output (I don’t have to
care about dress codes, haircuts, attendance at sports practices, their
subservience to hierarchy, or anything else that quite frankly I would rather
was not my problem). I have also observed among my colleagues that teachers
with families who also try to study part-time are invariably stretched
incredibly thin. Based on financial needs, and the relative comfort of having affordable help with looking after our children in South Africa, I
decided however to shelve the idea of a PhD at least for a while. Fortunately,
my parents intervened and helped me to consider how far my savings in the UK
might be able to support me, and also that at my ripe old age of 35, I shouldn’t
be putting things off for another day.
With that in mind I began in November last year a frenetic
process of making applications to various programmes to study a PhD in
Education, at Universities in both the USA and the UK. This included not only
the applications themselves (long personal statements and CV’s and all) but
also revising for and sitting a test called the Graduate Record Examination -
essentially a test of mathematical and verbal literacy and writing ability. The
maths was a major challenge having not really done much of it since the
examinations I took to qualify as a chartered accountant, and certainly some of
the geometry and algebra I hadn’t been near since I graduated from high school
in 1999! Nevertheless I managed to do fairly well on all parts of this test (in
3 weeks of intensive preparation once I realised that I had to submit most of the
applications for PhD’s by early December and therefore had to write the test
before the end of November). When I was studying every evening and full days on
weekends, Helen was a tremendous support as she took care of both boys (with
generous help from her parents and siblings) during those weekends.
I am specifically looking to study further in the field of
Education. Thus, despite having a postgraduate teaching qualification (PGCE)
and a Masters from LSE but not in Education, I sadly found that something about
either my application or my academic or working background was deemed
insufficient for most Education PhD programmes, as the past few months have
seen successive rejections from all of the PhD programmes that I applied to (6
in all). I therefore made applications to study a full-time Masters Degree in
Education in order to immerse myself more fully in the literature and current
controversies of Education - while also writing a Masters thesis which I hope
will be the first chapter of my PhD - and hopefully also give me the time to
figure out who I should be looking to get as my supervisor for a PhD.
Essentially the research that I want to carry out relates to my experiences of
the gap between training to become a teacher, and learning or receiving
training in how to effectively operate in an organisation (such as a school) as
well as to work collaboratively and to effectively manage others. My
professional experience in accounting and management consulting has shown me
that other industries do much more than seems currently to be done in
Education, to directly address these sorts of ‘professional learning’. My hope
is that I can do some primary research specifically in South African schools
from which suitable training courses or modules may be developed to offer to
teachers still in the earlier phases of their careers. So that those promoted
to being heads of department or pastoral heads, have built some capacity and
knowledge in organisational management and inter-personal and team management
before they find themselves learning on the fly, while sitting in the hot seat.
After a few months of great uncertainty - considering the possibility
of moving to the USA or the UK and repeatedly having my hopes dashed, I was
recently accepted to study a Masters in Education at King’s College in London,
and am still pursuing one or two other opportunities in the UK for similar degree
programmes. Having already notified my headmaster at the beginning of the year
of my applications to study overseas (with his kind patience while I awaited
responses to my applications before resigning) I was then able to confirm this
acceptance to him a few days ago, and he shared the news with the staff of my
school last week that I will be leaving the school at the end of June in order for us to move our family to the UK. It is
certainly bittersweet - as there is much that I have enjoyed about teaching at
St David’s and some good friends who I have been fortunate enough to make
there. However, it feels right to move on to a new challenge, and I am very
fortunate to have full support from Helen and two boys who are still small
enough that the move should not affect them adversely. I must admit that when
we had an extended period of grey and miserable weather in Johannesburg just as
I had made my applications to various Masters programmes in the UK, I wondered
if nature was playing a cruel joke on me to remind me of what I’d be letting
myself in for. But on the other hand it will be great to see many friends again
and perhaps, given some of my frustrations and misgivings about South Africa at
the moment, it is a timely pause for reflection.
South Africa has had a mixed bag of fortunes since my last
blog update. On one hand, the August local elections saw the ANC, historically
the party of liberation under Nelson Mandela, lose its control of a number of
key municipal areas including Pretoria, Johannesburg and Port Elizabeth. However,
seemingly undaunted, our President continues to preside over numerous
shenanigans ranging from thinly veiled attempts to remove the
internationally-respected finance minister, to continuing to pursue an insanely
expensive and seemingly corrupt deal with Russia for nuclear power (which the
finance minister has expressed opposition to on the grounds of fiscal
irresponsibility), to recently presiding over a fiasco in which it was found
that the agency used to pay out welfare payments and social grants (upon which a
reported 45.5% of all South African families rely for sustenance) had been
appointed by government in a manner that was invalid and unconstitutional. The
minister in charge of this department has not, as yet, been fired or even reprimanded
publicly, because she is the head of the ANC Women’s League and has backed the
ex-wife of our sitting president to succeed him (which would be his preference)
when the national conference to plan succession in the ANC takes place later
this year. In addition, South African universities were last year beset by
violent student protests centred on the issue of fees charged by universities and
the fact that many students, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds,
simply can’t cope with the financial burden. While they are correct, I
unfortunately think it is hardly coincidental that these protests become
loudest when examinations loom, as many students have been so poorly prepared
by our basic schooling system that they are barely literate and often the
bursaries or scholarships which they have received to study are contingent on
their achieving passing grades. Last year some universities were unable to
complete the academic year due to the protests and this, along with affirmative
action in employment at South African universities, has convinced me that I
need to obtain any further qualifications at world-recognised education
institutions firstly to give myself some certainty of being able to graduate
and secondly to compete with local applicants if I return to lecture and
research in South Africa.
On a day-to-day basis, I am hardly convinced that South Africa
is terribly worse off than the far-right nationalism that seems to be barely
held in check in Europe or the election of a certain orange-faced liar in
America. Or even the apparently selfish and narrow-minded pursuit of Brexit
being applied by current UK leadership on the narrowest of margins in the
public vote (has the Prime Minister grossly over-estimated Britain’s bargaining
power, or does she really think that xenophobic attitudes to immigration will
be solved by separation from the European Union and a resulting economic
slump?) But it does sometimes feel like our national dialogue in South Africa accuses
those of us who believe in rule of law of being colonialist or un-African. When
my blood boils as I see a succession of local mini-bus taxis drive a few
hundred meters up the wrong side of the road (forcing oncoming traffic aside) so
that they don’t have to wait at a congested intersection - I am sometimes
greeted by a shrug that suggests I shouldn’t be unrealistic in my expectations
for South Africa. After all, Lagos, Nairobi, and even cities in Asia and Latin
America, see similar flouting of the law and selfishness. From my LSE days, I
know however that the real issue is a lack of willingness to apply the law to
all - because with the correct incentive structures (such as widening use of CCTV at
key intersections and fining the taxi-company owners rather than individual
drivers, as well as creating a much harsher tier of fines for professional drivers
who carry paying passengers) this sort of activity could easily be dramatically
curtailed. However, it is an open secret that many police officials are
shareholders in taxi companies and therefore take a light touch to law
enforcement. Perhaps this should come as no surprise given that our president
and many of his closest allies in positions of the most supreme power, are all
violating the laws, often to enrich themselves. T’was ever thus: politicians
everywhere are crooks (or self-aggrandisers) and they certainly were under
apartheid.
![]() |
Calvin: "It was him." Mackenzie: "Whaat?" |
The rugby season has just started again and I am determined
to enjoy what I can of this season - again with kind support from Helen who
looks after the boys on Saturdays while I am out running around. The Referees Society
continues unfortunately to be somewhat chaotic, despite their forming a new
committee which was appointed rather than elected (as had previously been the
case), but I try to focus only on what I can control in my own performance. I
hope to make Pirates Grade before we leave for the UK (where I would still like
to continue to referee), and to bolster my efforts I undertook a punishing
fitness training programme that allowed me to achieve a 13.1 on the
beep test in early February - not as fit as I once was, but still one of the best scores among
all members in the society and enough to prove that my age shouldn’t be counted
against me. I still enjoy being out on the field and plan to keep doing it
until I don’t enjoy it any more (maybe a bit like a 56-year old member of our
society who was famous for having refereed over 1000 games at schools and
clubs, who sadly passed away a week-ago Saturday, shortly after refereeing a
game.)
In January I was fortunate enough to get time off from my
school (and permission from Helen) to return to Chile for the first time since
2008 to attend the wedding of my dear friend Cesar who I have known since I
assisted in the English Department at his school when he was in his final year
there in 2000 - shortly before I went to Oxford to begin my undergraduate
studies. Although a week was too short to be ambitious about my itinerary, I
had a wonderful time catching up with friends both from the school and from the
basketball I played outside of school. I managed to go on an organised day tour
which included a short hike on some foothills of the Andes outside Santiago,
and also to play basketball a few times as well as to enjoy some leisurely
mornings
reading a book next to the pool without any worries about children or university
applications or anything else. I had a great time seeing different aspects of Chilean
life again, from a meal with Cesar’s parents at a restaurant specialising in
traditional Chilean cuisine, to a barbecue with my old basketball mates which
was clearly organised by the men because it only featured spicy sausages in
rolls, and hunks of steak and they all drank copious quantities of beer and
then pisco and Canada Dry (no vegetables, no garnish, nada…) Sadly, I was training for
the referees fitness test so I didn’t drink for the month of January except one beer that night with the old basketball crew, and two
drinks at Cesar’s wedding. On another evening I had a lovely dinner with
several of the ladies who were once in the school I’d assisted at along with their husbands and partners. And it was interesting to note that the
conversations, while in Spanish and at times different in flavour and nuance, still held many of the same
issues (work, family, politics): one couple with young children were trying to
figure out which school to send their daughter to next year and had
concerns
that some of the expensive private schools had become snobby, but that the
state schools, while a great social mixing ground, were not up to the same
academic standards. (Sounds familiar in many places!) There were also weird and terrifying experiences such as
discovering that my friend Pelao likes to look over at his passengers while
speeding his car around cliff-side hairpin bends (cue: white-knuckles and rude gestures
for him to look at the road) to visit an American-Chilean friend of his who had
satellite television on which we watched the NFL Conference finals and they
admired and sampled this friend’s amateur horticulture with particular emphasis
on marijuana plants. I was lucky to also spend some time with Cesar during the
week, despite the pressures of arranging everything for the wedding and also
his inner conflicts with working under his father in the family business (I've never met people working in a multi-generational family business who haven't found it challenging). We
enjoyed an awesome hike up a local hill that turned out to be surprisingly
arduous, but with a magnificent view over Santiago despite the veil of cloud
and smoke as a result of forest fires in many nearby regions. The wedding
itself was a large affair with over 300 people, but it was fun to be there and
to see some of the differences in how it was done, and great to see Cesar so
happy on the day.


One tremendous source of frustration over the past 7-8
months has been that the hearing aids which I purchased in the middle of last
year, called Phonak Naida, have turned out not to be nearly what they were
advertised, despite being very expensive. I bought the aids because they are
water resistant (with an IP67 rating which means they are dust proof and meant
to be water resistant to submersion up to 1 meter) which meant that I could
wear them for normal day-to-day life as well as for sports activities. What I
have found however, is that once I start sweating, they cut out within about 20
minutes as sweat enters the battery compartment. Thereafter the aids have to be
put into a dehumidifier for a few hours before they can be worn again. As you
can imagine, this is hardly practical for someone like me who relies on aids to
hear much at all. I have been in correspondence with the local South African
office and even with the head office in Switzerland and have simply received a
series of excuses. Literally: “sweat is a difficult substance” (me: but your
product brochure specifically lists resistance to sweat); “water resistant
means it works again after exposure, not that it works under exposure” (me: you
don’t mention that anywhere in the product literature and that is certainly not
what water resistance means when you wear a watch or use a cellphone); “you
must sweat abnormally we’ve never had this problem before” (me: bub, you should
meet some of my friends who really sweat, I have seen pictures of pools of
sweat under their exercise bike, and don’t be so rude!). In the end I had to buy
a supplementary pair of much older tech Japanese hearing aids that are properly
water-proof. I have tried to persuade Phonak that it is unreasonable for me to
shoulder this expense alone, given that it is the failure of their expensive
product that has forced me to make this purchase. And after months of
discussion, they have simply returned with the answer “either return the
hearing aids for a full refund or accept them as they are” [and keep spending
your own money]. And I apparently have a week to make a decision (after months
of them obfuscating and obstructing). Though I have a great deal of other
things to worry about, quite frankly I am very tempted to do everything in my
power to prevent other people from suffering the same ill-treatment by sharing
this experience as widely as possible and potentially also approaching the
consumer ombud regarding this situation.
Now that we have many changes descending upon us, as we
ready our house for viewings by potential buyers and begin to consider all of
the different aspects of this move, there is much work to be done in the next
few months. We are a little daunted by the prospect of a move, living in the UK
with kids will no doubt be a different experience from both of our previous
lives there as care-free young professionals, but Helen and I are also excited at the
prospect of a new adventure. We will continue to make the most of life here in
South Africa over the next few months, but also to prepare ourselves for a new
chapter with its own challenges and enjoyments.
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