I have become entranced by the present seriesof the Apprentice. Partly it is the contestants. Not only are they self-confident to the point of unrestrained megalomania but they say things like:

“When I was young I used to pray not to be beautiful. Girls used to be nasty to me because I am so beautiful (sob, weep etc). All I wanted was to look ordinary like everyone else”

Who among us has not suffered the appalling agonies of being too beautiful? Or try this on for size:

“Donald and I are so much alike. He married an Eastern European woman and I go out exclusively with Eastern European women”

In truth what has me transfixed is Donald Trump’s barnet. However closely l look at his thatch I simply cannot work out what is going on. I have tried freeze-framing. P and I have watched him stand atop skyscrapers and focused on how the wind lifts his hair in the hope of discovering its secret.

The Hair Beast

It is nothing as simple as a comb forward and a dye job. There appears to be folding involved somehow.

In the opening credits Trump walks from a building with a look on his face which I think is supposed to say “I am a powerful man and master of all I survey”. However, what it actually communicates is “I have just had a particularly satisfying bowel movement”. He is, to steal a categorisation favoured by one British journalist, not someone you would want to follow into the loo.

What is mystifying is the admiration he commands. As he sits in an apartment apparently produced by Saddam Hussein’s interior design agency, people move about him fawning.

When I was in New York a couple of years ago I took a bus tour with some other marathoners I had met on the flight over. We were difficult customers. We demanded to know how Times Square could be a square when it only had three sides. This won us the unfading emnity of the guide. (As P likes to remind me, no-one loves a smartarse). The guide was in love with Trump. He pointed to an enormous blingfest of a building and told us that Trump had sold it to an Arab Prince for 7 million dollars.

Guide: Do you know what happened next?

Me: No

Guide: 4 years later the prince sold it for 25 million dollars. What does that tell you?

Me: Donald Trump is an idiot?

Guide: No sir, he is not. It tells you that you should never trust an arab.

With this kind of wisdom on offer I really should have been taking notes.

Now I have an apprentice of my own. Barristers have “pupils”. Once upon a time pupils would pay barristers for the privilege of trailing after their “pupil masters” carrying papers, procuring gin and opium and placing their wagers on the 4:30 at Kempton in a smoky bookies’ offices off Fleet Street. Now pupils receive a hefty sum of money from Chambers to finance their year with us and have a book of Pupils’ rights so comprehensive that for the most part I have to follow them around making them tea.

I have cleared a human sized space in my room and now my shiny new pupil is sat tapping away at her laptop and contemplating the long slide down the arc of professional disillusion that, if all goes well, will leave her as battleworn and grumpy as the other members of Chambers. Her year’s training is, though this will not yet have sunk in, a year long job interview and I … well I am Donald Trump. I must just go find myself a nice Eastern European woman.

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Perhaps you have had the experience of having a relationship crack, splinter and fail only to discover that all those sad songs on the radio that normally cause you to grind your teeth are suddenly full of the deepest truths and most perceptive observations. How could you not have noticed that Celine Dion was singing out for you; weaving your pain into her session musicians’ syrupy noodlings?

There is a sort IVF equivalent. Whenever we are in the middle of a treatment cycle, the media seems to go infertility mad. Front page of the Evening Standard (London’s evening paper) last night carried a story about womb transplants. This morning the radio was headlined cheerily with the news that, as I have turned 40, any child we succeed in having is pretty much guaranteed to be autistic. The story hung in the bedroom like a breath of stale air as Penny got up to get herself to her early morning scan.

We have been twice delayed but it looks as if we are ready for egg retrieval and sperm deposit on Thursday (known in our house as “NHS wank day”).

The autism story reminded me that should P, by some miracle, conceive that is only the start of the worries. People we love have lost children through miscarriage; lost children at birth; given birth to children with birth defects that made survival impossible; lost children to illness; lost children to drugs; the permutations of possible tragedy seem endless. Then there are the existential concerns that pepper many of the blogs I read: are they good mothers; are they turning into their own mothers; how do they stop the nastiness of the world seeping under the doors and round the windows to poison the childhoods of those they adore; will their neighbours ever stop complaining about the dog poo?

This will sound odd, but I long for those worries. I want my chance to strive to make sure we have a kid who “turns out alright”. I don’t understimate how the concerns will eat at me. I will oppressed by the thought that my every reaction to my child indicates there is more of my father in me than I can bear, but to hold P’s hand again as she drops the pregnancy test to the bathroom floor and to feel myself brace for what is to come as she starts to sob – the reality of that seems somehow worse now than the worries to come. 

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Back when I was at university it was well understood that a particular History don had a good working relationship with the security services. Over a pint or more in the beer cellar (and in whispers) the gossip suggested that his job was to spot likely candidates for espionage and guide them from dozing in the library to stalking the back streets of Sofia armed with an exploding fountain pen.

It was with some excitement, therefore, that I saw that a neatly typed note had been stuck to the green baize college noticeboard, signed with the don’s name. It said “a gentleman from the Civil Service will be visiting college to discuss careers in public service”. I smiled, relishing the discretion of the don’s language. A gentleman from the “civil service” – beautifully put! Word spread quickly and by four o’clock a line of us had formed, hair neatly combed, Sandanista-supporting t-shirts swapped for shirt and tie; all trying to look like we could mix a martini with one hand whilst throttling the life out of an enemy of the State with the other.

I was not, it had to be said, an obvious candidate - well not since the British Security Services abandoned their former practice of recruiting only communists and then being amazed when they defected. I was a member of CND and a would-be firebrand of the Labour Club. My prospects of recruitment therefore depended on their having not found out anything at all about me. However, with their past track record that seemed decent enough odds.

I was invited into the room by the previous candiate as he left. I settled myself into a chair and tried to look deadly. Opposite me was a man in his 30s. He was clean-shaven and had mousey hair receding faster than he no doubt would have liked. He gave me a warm smile and asked me what I saw myself doing in the public service. I didn’t feel I could say “sleeping with pneumatically-busted double agents and firing off live rounds”. I realised that, like the History don, I needed to demonstrate a certain discretion.

“I would like to travel”

There was a long pause: “Yes, go on”.

I wondered whether I’d said enough. He obviously thought not.

“I would like the opportunity to use foreign langauges”

“Uh-huh” he encouraged. I was running out of innuendoes.

“And travel to places that … you know … one might not ordinarily get to see”

“Sounds like the Foreign Office” he interjected.

“Well … sort of … but perhaps a bit less diplomatic”.

He shifted in his chair and moved his hands so that he showed me his palms.

“Well” he said “I’m from the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Fisheries so I don’t really know a great deal about the Foreign Office. I did spend 4 months in the Department of Transport – would that be the kind of thing that would interest you?”

The answer was no. I rose sadly from my chair and shook his hand, only then wondering if it might be covered with some swift-acting contact poison (it wasn’t).

“Before you go” he added

“Yes?” I said, turning back.

“Could you ask the next person to come in?”

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