Last Friday my mother left the home she has lived in since 1963 (she  knows where she was when Kennedy died) and moved to a sheltered  accommodation flat in Lewes. I had no idea how she was going to react to  the change and worried that beyond her facade of stoic resignation, my  mother might feel utterly miserable, but to my relief she seems  blissfully happy in her new home. It's as if she has been released from a  terrible burden.
The process of moving was quite  frenetic. I'd been given ten days' notice and, in addition to working  full time, I had to find a removal company, decorate the flat, get a  carpet laid, install an electric cooker and assemble several kits of  flatpack furniture.
Finding a removal company was particularly  difficult: three answerphones (one of which had a 'comedy' message) and a  wrong number. The final call also seemed liked a wrong number, as the  phone was answered by an aristocratic gentleman called Peter,who sounded  as if he'd taken too many drugs in the 60s.
The phone  call began awkwardly, as Peter seemed reluctant to commit himself to  anything, including the nature of his business. Perahps it was a wrong  number, but I was desperate. Could Peter move my mother's possessions to  Lewes? After many awkward silences and strange noises in the  background, Peter said that he probably would be free on July 8th, but  needed to check a few details. Could he phone me back in the evening?
A  day passed and I hadn't heard a thing from Peter. I phoned him:
"
Ah  yes, Mr...er...I'm glad you phoned me because I don't appear to have  your number. Anyway, July 11th should be fine in Storrington. What? July  8th in Teddington? Oh...well I'll have to check my  diary...hmm...hmm...yes, that should be fine too."
My heart sank.
To  move couldn't have been simpler: 30 boxes, three chairs and one fridge,  but when Peter - a portly, ruddy-faced man in his late 50s - arrived an  hour late (only a minute before my mother ceased to be the legal owner  of her house), he seemed overwhelmed by the task ahead of him. 
"You  said there were 20 boxes," he complained. I patiently pointed out that  they were very small boxes and would have filled 20 normal ones, but he  was determined to feel hard done by, pointedly refering to the  refrigerator as the "fridge-freezer", as if we'd deceived him.
My mother turned to me and in a whisper that you could hear 50 yards away, said 
"He's a drinker." 
Suddenly  a van door opened and a young man walked up the garden path. 
"This is  my er...son," explained Peter. The young man said nothing, but slowly  started to rearrange the boxes as if he was playing Tetris. This was  going to take all day.
I went up to my bedroom for the  last time. To my surprise, my life there flashed before my eyes in a  slightly crass, cinematic manner. All that was missing was a soundtrack -  maybe the oboe and harp version of the Crossroads theme tune that they  used to play during particularly sad moments.
I thought  of the time I first discovered Radio Four, when I was eight, and  listened in the dark to Mrs Rochester's terrifying wails. I also  remembered the patterned wallpaper that seemed to come alive and dance  in the semi-dark; recording songs from the Top 20 on Sunday evenings;  practising scales on my new piano, recovering from my first hangover;  listening to late night phone-ins on LBC; being cold; the sound of  trains trundling past; reading Enid Blyton by torchlight; and, when I  was two, being carried around the house by Dad to show me that there  were no strangers hiding.
I closed the door and said goodbye.
I  went downstairs and told Peter that we were going to leave. We would  wait for them in Lewes. All Peter had to do was leave the door on the  latch and shut it behind him when he left. What could possibly go wrong?
Mum  and I got in the car and as I turned the key in the ignition, I  realised that this was it. We could never go back. I had expected this to be an emotional moment for my mother, but she was too preoccupied with  an anecdote about Auntie Betty to even notice. I interupted Mum and said  that we should say goodbye to the house. She looked back briefly and  said 
"The funny thing is, I don't feel anything. I just want to get to  the new place."
When I had arrived, all that Mum was  concerned about was being able to make a cup of tea for the removal men.  It took quite a lot of persuading before she agreed to let me pack the  kettle and tea bags. Later, as we joined the M25, she said 
"Well, I'm  glad I didn't make him a cup of tea now. He's absolutely useless. I  wouldn't be surprised if he locks himself out of the house." 
After  40 miles, the hazy outline of the South Downs appeared in the distance.  It had been raining heavily for most of the journey and I worried about  my mother's chairs getting wet. But as we drew closer to Lewes, the  clouds broke and the sun appeared. 
"This is a good sign," my mother  said.
As we entered the hall of the flats, I felt like a  nervous parent taking their child to university or boarding school. How  would my mother get on? Would she make friends? Would she wish that  she'd stayed in Teddington? These questions had haunted me for the last  few months.
Walking towards the lift, we heard a  loud voice behind us: 
"Now, who's this trying to sneak past me without  saying hello?" It was the house manager. We barely knew her, but she  threw her arms around my mother as if she was a long-lost relative. It  was a good start, but I was still anxious to see my mother's reaction to  the flat.
I opened the door and let my mother go in  first:
 
"Ooh, what a lovely carpet...cor, you've been busy...oh I like  this...and you can see the hills...and the curtains aren't too bad...I  might keep them...this is lovely, really lovely." 
As  we stood by the window, looking at the sheep grazing on the Downs, my  phone rang: 
 
"Hello, this is Peter...no, we're still in Teddington. The  thing is, I did as you suggested and took the door off the latch and  shut it behind me, but then I remembered that I'd left my briefcase in  the kitchen and I really need it.What should I do?"
Several responses sprang to mind. 
Peter  and son eventually arrived three hours late. I decided to help them  rather than waste another two hours and by 6.00, it was all over. At the  end Peter was charm itself, wishing my mother a happy time in Lewes,  recommending local places for a good lunch. We said goodbye and I  comforted myself with the knowledge that I would never require Peter's  services again.
One week on, I have been amazed by the  ease with which my mother has adapted to her new circumstances. She  seems genuinely happy in a way that I never dared to imagine was  possible and I hope that without the burden of trying to manage a cold,  damp house in a street with no shops, my mother still has at least  another decade ahead of her.
The last few weeks have  been exhausting, but they have also been a welcome distraction from the  main thing that is going on in my life at the moment. Three weeks ago,  my oldest son was diagnosed with a neurodevelopmental disorder (it's complicated, so I'll avoid labels for the moment).
On the  one hand, this news is heartbreaking, but on the other it comes as a  relief after five very difficult years that culminated in us having to  take our son out of school. We now know why he has found ordinary life  so difficult and, more importantly, we will now be able to get him the  help he needs.
It's a great pity that some of the psychologists at 
CAMHS  didn't recognise my son's condition earlier, as he could have been  spared a lot of pain and distress. Instead, we were accused of trying to  'medicalise' our son and the spotlight was turned on our parenting  skills. If we had seen a psychiatrist (as opposed to a psychologist) at  the beginning, our lives might have followed a very different course.
I  have avoided writing about this subject for a long time because I'm  aware that the appeal of this blog, for many, is the things I come  across in my job: the strange book covers, old photographs and Derek's  diaries. But since my son's diagnosis, I have found it increasingly  difficult to write the usual, mildly amusing blog posts whilst my life  is undergoing what feels like a huge, techtonic shift.
I  apologise for the self-indulgent nature of this post, but it has been  cathartic. I will return to the Victorian photos, politically incorrect  book covers and strange ephemera soon, but for the moment, this is what I  needed to write.