Storage Cupboard and Scales
Today, I rummaged in the storage cupboardnot for nostalgia, just for a jar of pickled onions for my salad. On the very top shelf, behind a box of tangled Christmas fairy lights, I noticed the corner of a case that, truth be told, I thought I’d got rid of years ago. The fabric had dulled, zip sticking. I tugged, and out slid the long, slender body of an old violin case, looking like a stretched shadow.
I left the onions on a stool by the doordidnt want to forgetand squatted down right there, feeling as if it was easier to postpone any decision that way. The zip gave in on the third try. Inside was my violin. The varnish was scuffed, strings slack, bow resembling a neglected broom. Yet the shape was unmistakable, and something inside me clicked, like a light switch flicked on.
Suddenly I was back in Upper Sixth, lugging this awkward case through South London, wishing I didnt look so ridiculous. Then came college, work, marriage, and the gradual driftbusy with everything except music lessons. Mum and Dad stored the violin for a while, eventually it moved with my boxes when I set up home here. Now it slept in the cupboard among odd bags and boxes. Not wounded, just forgotten.
I picked up the instrument gingerly, as if it might crumble. The wood was warm against my handodd, as the cupboard was chilly. My fingers instinctively gripped the fingerboard, and I felt strangely embarrassed: my hand no longer knew how, almost as if Id nicked someone elses prized possession.
I could hear water starting to boil in the kitchen. I stood up, closed the cupboard, but didnt put the case back. I set it in the hallway, propped against the wall, and went to turn off the hob. Salad could survive without onions, anyway. I was already making excuses.
Later that evening, with dishes cleaned, the only thing left on the table was a plate of toast crumbs. I fetched the violin case into the living room. My husband was flicking through TV channels, barely listening to anything. He glanced up.
What have you found there?
Its my violin, I replied, surprised at how steady my voice sounded.
Oh. Still alive? he chuckled, gently mocking, though kindly as always.
No idea. Ill find out.
I opened the case on the sofa, sliding an old towel underneath to protect the upholstery. Out came the violin, bow, and a tiny box of rosincracked and dry, like icy puddles in winter. I ran the bow across it; the hairs barely scraped the surface.
Tuning was its own awkward humiliation. The pegs were stiff, strings squealed, one snapped and slapped my finger. I muttered a curse more quietly than I used to, aware of neighbours. My husband snorted.
Maybe leave it to a professional? he suggested.
Maybe, I said, though inside I was angrynot at him, but at myself for being so useless.
I found an app on my mobilea tunerand propped it on the coffee table. Letters appeared, the needle danced. I twisted pegs, listened for the sound to steady or spike alarmingly. My shoulder ached, fingers grew tired from the unfamiliar strain.
When, at last, the strings stopped sounding like wires in a gale, I placed the violin beneath my chin. The chinrest was cold, and I felt my neck skin stretch thin. I tried to stand straight, as Id been taught, but my back resisted. I laughed at myself.
Going to give us a concert? my husband joked, eyes still on the telly.
For you, I said. Brace yourself.
The first note was so harsh I jumped. It wasnt really a notemore a whinge. The bow wobbled, my hand couldnt hold a straight line. I stopped, breathed, tried again. Slightly better, but the shame still prickled.
This shame felt adult, not like teen embarrassment where its as if the whole world is watching. Now, nobody was outside listeningjust walls, my husband, and my own unsure hands.
I played open strings, one after the other, counting under my breath as in childhood. I tried a D major scale; my left-hand fingers stumbled. I honestly couldnt remember finger placements. My hands were thicker now, pads landing off-target. No familiar sting in the fingertips, only the blunt realisation that my skin was too soft.
Dont worry, my husband said unexpectedly. No ones brilliant first go.
I nodded, not sure who needed reassuringhim, me, or the violin?
Next day, I visited a luthiers workshop near the Tube. It was unromantic: glass door, counter, guitars and violins hanging, the scent of polish and old dust. The repairmana young chap with an earringtook the violin with easy confidence.
Strings need replacing for sure, he said. Pegs greasing, bridge needs adjusting. Bow could do with rehairsbit pricier, though.
He said pricier and I flinched. Council tax, medicines, birthday gift for my granddaughter flashed through my mind. I almost said Never mind, but instead asked:
Could we just do the strings and bridge for now?
Of course. Shell play.
I left the violin, received a receipt, slipped it in my purse. Walking outside, I felt as if Id handed over more than an objectperhaps a part of myself to be repaired, to return capable.
Back home, I opened my laptop and typed adult beginner violin lessons. The phrase made me giggleadult beginner, as if grown-ups were a special category needing extra slow explanations.
I found some adverts: Results in a month; Individual approach. The promises felt overwhelming. I closed the tabs, then curiosity got the better of me and I messaged a lady teacher from the next postcode: Hello, Im 52 and hoping to refresh some violin skills. Is it possible?
Instant regret. I longed to unsendnot because of her, just the vulnerability. But it was done.
That evening, my son dropped by. After a hug in the kitchen and a chat about work, he spotted the violin case.
Whats thisa violin? he asked, clearly surprised.
Yes. Found it. Might give it a go.
Mum, really? He smiled, not mockingly, but a bit lost. Its been ages.
Years, I agreed. Thats why, actually.
He nibbled a biscuit, pondering. Why bother? Youre always knackered.
I felt those old defences riseready to justify myself, prove my right. Explanations always sound pitiful.
I dont know, I admitted. I just want to.
He studied meseeing not Mum-the-manager, but a woman after something for herself.
Well, go on then, he said. Just dont overdo it. And spare the neighbours!
I laughed. Theyll copeIll play in the daytime.
When my son left, I felt lighternot because hed allowed it, but because I hadnt pleaded my case.
Two days later, I collected the violin. The new strings gleamed, bridge straight. The luthier showed me how to tune gently, how to store it.
Dont keep her by the radiator, he warned. Always in the case, yeah?
I nodded, schoolgirl-like. At home, I sat with the case open on a chair, just staring at the instrument, nervous about making another mistake.
I chose the simplest exercise: long bows on open strings. As a child, it was a boring punishment. Now it felt like salvation. No tune, no scorejust sound and the effort to smooth it.
Within ten minutes, my shoulder hurt; by fifteen, my neck was stiff. I stopped, put the violin away, zip fastened. Anger bubbledat my body, at age, at how everything now seemed harder.
In the kitchen, I poured water and watched out the window. Teenagers zipped about the estate on scooters, laughing. For a moment, I envied not their youth, but their shamelessness. They fell, picked themselves up, rode on; nobody told them it was too late to learn balance.
I went back to the living room and opened the case again. Not from duty, but because I refused to end the day angry.
The teacher replied that evening: Hello. Of course its possible. Come alongwell start with posture and simple exercises. Age is no barrier, but patience is essential. I read it twice. The word patience was honest; it made me feel calmer.
For that first lesson, I carried my violin like precious cargo. On the Tube, people staredsome even smiled. Let them, I thought. Let them see.
My teacher was a short woman around forty, cropped hair, kind eyes. Her studio held a piano, shelves of sheet music, a childs violin on a chair.
Lets have a look, she said, asking me to pick up the instrument.
It was immediately clear: my posture was wrong. Shoulder hunched, chin clenched, left wrist stiff as a board.
Its fine, she soothed. Youre just out of practice. First, lets just stand here. The violin is not your enemy.
I laughed, feeling sheepish at fifty-two, learning how to hold a violin again. But it was liberating, in a way; nobody demanded I be brilliant. Only present.
After the lesson, my hands trembled like after PE. She gave me instructions: ten minutes daily on open strings, followed by a scale, no more. Better little and often, she stressed.
Back home, my husband asked, Howd it go?
Hard, I answered. But good.
Are you pleased?
I considered. Pleased wasnt quite right. I felt nervous, funny, exposedand yet somehow, light.
Yes, I said. It feels good doing something with my hands again, not just cooking and working.
A week on, I dared to play a tiny tune I remembered from school. Found the notes online, printed them at work, tucked them in a folder away from nosy colleagues. At home, I set up the sheets on a makeshift standbook on a cereal box.
The sound was jagged, bow sometimes snagging two strings, fingers fumbling. I stopped, tried again, over and over. At one point, my husband poked his head in.
Thats nice, he ventured, as if not wanting to disturb myself or the tune.
Dont fib, I shot back.
Im not! I mean I recognise it.
That made me grin. Recognisablealmost a compliment.
At the weekend, my granddaughter Pippa visited. Shes six and immediately clocked the case.
Granny, whats that?
A violin.
Can you play?
I was about to say, Once upon a time, but for a child, theres only now.
Im learning, I told her.
She perched on the sofa, hands folded earnestly on her lap.
Play for me.
I felt my heart race. Playing for a child was scarier than for grown-upschildren hear honestly.
Alright, I said, taking up the violin.
I played the same tune Id been struggling with all week. By the third bar, my bow slipped, the sound shrill. Pippa didnt flinch. She tilted her head.
Why does it squeak?
Because Grannys bow is wonky, I laughed, feeling lighter.
She laughed too.
Go again! she urged.
So I did. No better, but it didnt matterI played right to the end.
That night, once everyone was busy elsewhere, I settled in the lounge. My printouts lay on the table, pencil for marking sticky bits. Violin in its case, zipped but left outnot back in the cupboard. The case stood beside the wall, a gentle reminder, part of my new routine.
I set my phones timer for ten minutes, not as a push, but to keep myself from burning out. Opened the case, lifted out the violin, checked the rosin, tightened the bow. Under my chin, I exhaled.
The sound came smoother than it had that morning. Then it slipped againno swearing, just a quick correction before drawing another long, slow bow, listening for steadiness.
When the timer beeped, I finished the stroke, gently replaced the violin and zipped up the case. Left it near the wall, not hidden away.
Tomorrow will probably be the same: a little embarrassment, a little ache, a handful of clear, true seconds worth the struggle. And that, I realise, is enough to keep opening the case.











