Ten days later I got a large fat envelope to say I had the job, in the West Indies! I had to look up where in the world that was, to know where I would be going. Eight weeks of training, seen off at Heathrow by a handful of friends, and a huge, wide, international world opened to me, full of mistakes, social faux pas, far too much alcohol, and five filled passports in seven years saw the boy become the man. I visited Canada and the US, as well as circling my huge territory from South America to Bermuda over those seven years.
I got married to Anita in Trinidad in 1968, left my job in 1972 for many reasons, and we emigrated to Australia in 1973, coming directly to Cairns. I had got used to the tropical heat and Anita knew no difference.
I probably set a world record for my walking from London to Singapore round and round a Boeing 747 with our colicky three-month-old son, Shean. When I walked onto the top of the steps at Changi Airport, it was 11 pm., 33 °C and about 90% humidity. There was a perfume of turmeric, sesame oil and frangipani hanging in the air, and I spontaneously said, ‘I’m home!’
We spent three days in Sydney that nearly killed us with the heat and no air-conditioning, ten days in Brisbane in a cool motel, and arrived in Cairns. No job, no contacts, and just a little bit of money. I do love the foggy curtain, the cutting edge when you are alive to all and any opportunities.
I went to see a pharmacist who I called Mr Treacy only to find out that in Far North Queensland first names were de rigeur. I was appointed locum Chief Pharmacist at Cairns Base Hospital for five weeks, which was interesting since I had never worked in a hospital, and it was ten years since I had done any dispensing. Then I was manager of the After-Hours Pharmacy for a year before buying the smallest but busiest pharmacy in town in a large medical centre, in partnership with another pharmacist. That was a learning tree!
After three years the bulk of the doctors moved on to explore other disciplines in medicine, and I so nearly went broke. I bought out my partner, we imported some more doctors, but I had to sack some of my staff, the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
Another ten years saw me opening a new pharmacy at Trinity Beach, near our home at the northern beaches, which was yet another learning curve. I did some courses to improve my management skills, and I wrote a couple of papers that I presented at conferences, one on the management of Stinging tree stings, and the other on the treatment of Otitis externa or Swimmers’ Ear.
In 1990, the wheels fell off my marriage, and I found myself in court, having no understanding of how or why I was there. There followed three years of PTSD, during which time I met Rebecca and we were married in 1991. Thirty years later we have had no cross words and no arguments, but we talked out a million words of exploration because we had both seen the frying pan and were not at all keen on the fire!