My six-year-old son Ben knows I write books, but can’t understand why I don’t write Star Wars books.
Recently, he has become more interested in my life when I was “little”. He is especially excited about the days when his three-year-old sister “didn’t exist”, a state of affairs he would love to see replicated today.
He wants to hear about the houses I lived in, the toys I played with, the people I knew. While it’s difficult to get into the details of your earlier life when your ex-wife is now engaged to your brother, I answer him as honestly as I can.
As he lies in bed at night, I tell him about parks and playgrounds, broken bones and street games, the grandfather he never knew.
Talking to my son has uncovered buried memories of my late father lying next to me, sharing the stories of his national service years. I can’t recall any of the events, only loose impressions of a firing range, an army camp, an assault course, and a signals post in a forest. It’s made me understand how much love he put into those stories, which nobody will remember now they been forgotten even by me.