In Malaysia, the word “flat” would
conjure the image of a multi-storey living dwelling as in “Flat Pekeliling” at Jalan
Pekeliling in Kuala Lumpur. But in the UK, apart from multi-storey dwellings,
it is also used to refer to a set of rooms for living in, including terraced
housing.
Upon arrival in Blackpool, after
putting up for a couple of nights at our temporary accommodation at the Marlowe
Hotel, I moved into my first flat at No. 4 Cheltenham Road as arranged by Susan
Didsbury from the college’s Student Service Affairs Office. I remember it had a
lovely little rock garden with small plants that had colourful white
and purple flowers in the front yard.
After only a month, I moved to
another flat closer to college at No. 20 Norbreck Road. A few months later I
moved just next door to No. 22 when our seniors Rashid Salleh, Majid Kamari, Sharif
Haron and Ahmad Said moved out to enter universities. No. 22 Norbreck Road was
a two and a half storey terraced house with the landlord occupying the ground
floor.
I remember the flat had a textured
glass front door with white wooden frames. Inside, it was all carpeted. As I
entered the house, a side mirror would be on my left, and to my right,
continuous right up to the back part of the house, would be the living area for
the landlord, Alex, and his family. Proceeding on, keeping to the left, would
lead me straight to the flight of carpeted stairs leading to the first floor. Upon
reaching the landing on the first floor, if I went straight ahead, I would go
through a narrow corridor which took me the rooms of Ghani and Azhar at the
back part of the house.
But I would usually make a 180-degree
U-turn towards Shaari’s big room located in the front part of the house, and
there make another U-turn to take another flight of stairs towards Hamidin’s
room. Another U-turn in front of Hamidin’s room would finally lead me to my
room and the kitchenette which I shared with Hamidin. Yes, my room and the
kitchenette were located on the top most floor. It was actually part of an
attic, located directly below the pitched roof of the house.
The kitchenette had a small dinner
table for two by the wall on the right side, and at the far end to the left was
an old Philips telly with two old sofas arranged facing it. The kitchenette had
a small window with views to the street and Norbreck Castle Hotel just across
the road in front of our house. A cooker with electric stoves was located by
the window and a small grey fridge stood next to it. The kitchenette was always
brightly lit as there was a skylight opening in the roof which flooded the area
with natural lighting.
The bathroom was located on the first
floor. It was rather small but had a bath tub and was equipped with an electric
shower. We Malaysians never used the tub for taking a bath. Instead, bringing
our habits from home, we preferred to shower – whilst standing in the tub. The British traditionally use bath tubs for their personal hygiene. But then again, they were
not that famous for their cleanliness. It was a regular joke amongst us
Malaysians that the English shower or take the bath just once a week.
The tap water in UK was always very cold. And it can take quite some time for one to
familiarize and adjust the tap in order to get the water to the right
temperature for a shower. So, the first time I attempted to shower,
there was I standing
in the bath tub half naked, in the cold, fiddling with the shower head for a
good few minutes.
But it could be worse. You see, most rented flats in the UK had electricity supplied through a coin-operated meter. It worked like a parking meter. We drop 50 pence coins in the meter’s slot and get a certain
amount of time to receive electricity. If that time elapsed while you were in
the midst of a shower, then you’re in trouble. You wouldn’t want to be running around
the house covered in soap suds hunting for 50 pence coins. The only choice was
to soldier on – continue showering using the freezing cold water.
But old
habits die hard. We continued to shower every day and this was occasionally a
source of concern to Mr. Alex Stent, the landlord. Being so used to having long,
splashing showers back home, we had this great tendency for getting the floor
all wet and damp.
Another thing
which made Alex grumble was our liking for hanging our wet socks and underwear
on the central heating radiators all along the corridors. We used to wash our
clothes at the self-service laundromats. But for small items like socks and
undies, they were washed at home. And where better to hang them out to dry then
on those lovely hot radiators. Barely an hour placed on them and you’d get some
nicely dried and warm undies, ready to wear.
My bedroom
was quite small and, being in an attic, a part of the headroom was an awkwardly sloped ceiling. Its walls were painted white. It had a study table and a chair where I’d
spent long hours on my studies. On the desk was a white study table lamp, two
bottles of black Parker Quinck ink and a row of books arranged against the wall.
Pasted to the wall just in front of me – using Blu-Tack – would be some photos,
a to-do checklist and a paper cutting of Lat’s cartoon strip. Directly behind me was my queen size bed. On
the wall, next to the bed was a Pink Floyd poster, left behind by my senior
Sharif, a Pink Floyd fan.
To make the room feel fresh and
homely, I kept a balsam plant bought at the Fine Fare supermarket. It sat on
the fireplace just next to the study table. I used to feed it with liquid plant
food and when it was about 7 or 8 inches tall it started producing lovely pink
flowers.
My room was always cold. Heating for
individual rooms were from electricity
supplied through the coin-operated meter and – as far as possible – we students
tried not to switch it on in order to save money on heating. Thus, during
winter, most of the time I would have my socks on in my room and sometimes I’d
even be wrapped up in my sleeping bag while studying.
During weekdays, our daily routine was fairly fixed. After a quick
breakfast of cereals, we’d walk to college and only return home in the evening.
Hamidin and I would take turns to prepare a simple dinner. We had our dinner
usually seated in front of the telly and sometimes we’d be joined in by Shaari
from just downstairs or Ghani and Azhar.
As weekends approached, we would start planning for some recreation with
a spot of badminton or tennis. But I would especially look forward to
invitations for lunch or dinner from the guys at other flats, with Hodgson Road
being my favourite hangout. Weekends were also set aside for a visit to the
local laundromat to wash my clothes or to do shopping for our kitchen
essentials at the Fine Fare supermarket at the town centre.
When I moved to Manchester, my flat at 25 Shirley Road, and later at 39
Woodlands Road in Cheetham Hill, were owned by British Asians. They may have been
older and not as well kept as my Blackpool abodes, but they were conveniently close
to halal shops and the local mosque.
At Shirley Road, the furnishings were also very basic and there was no
television – or the telly, as the English would call them – for my housemates
Ahmad, Syed and Yusni to sit around and watch together. So, I bought a small,
very old telly which I kept in my room to watch the news and keep a tab on weekend
football results. But it was also used to brighten up my mornings by catching TV
presenter Selina Scott on the BBC’s Breakfast Time.
My room at Woodlands Road was much bigger than at Shirley Road. That was
nice, yes. Only thing was, during winter it would be a big challenge to heat up
the room, especially when you have two or three big, drafty windows. A bit of
industriousness and effort were needed. After a trip to the local DIY superstore,
I sealed up the windows using clear window insulation film which created a simple
double-glazed system. They worked quite well. Other housemates Ramli, Zainal and Ahmad also had them.
In Manchester, we didn’t have our landlords staying with us. So,
we could take showers to our hearts’ content and we could dry our undies – and even
lots more – on the heating radiators. As long as we paid our rents on time, the
landlords would leave us alone. And now we could even order our own fresh milk delivered to our
doorstep by the local milkman.
I liked to open our front door in the mornings to the nice,
fresh outdoor air and picked up our bottles of milk inside. The milk would have been just nicely chilled by the dawn air to be
drank or taken with my cereals.
On weekend mornings, I would sit on my bed facing my old telly
with a mug full of fresh, chilled milk, specially concocted by throwing in a
pinch of Nescafe and two cubes of sugar. With the Sunday paper, The Observer,
spread out in front of me, and with Selina Scott glancing at me, throwing her
sweet smiles from the television screen, it was a perfect start to the day.
2 comments:
I used to fiddle the coin operated meter using wire and was caught twice by the landlord.I remembered very well the short blonde-haired Selina Scott beautiful face on BBC TV.
I really wanted to fiddle as well Hussain. But didn’t dare because unlike you, my landlord was staying just downstairs :-)
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