The Trusty Servant Nov 2019 No.128 | Page 13

No.128 The Trusty Servant Eric’s story: tragedy into triumph Eric Billington (Co Ro, 85-) recounts: On the 16 th June 2018 I had an operation on my back. It left me paralysed from the chest down and I am now a full-time wheelchair user. The editor has asked me to tell my story. My childhood taught me two things: to support Liverpool FC (because of being raised on the Wirral) and stoicism (because the cure for 60s rebellion at Sedbergh, where I had won a scholarship, was rugger interspersed with cross-country running). My school experience was wildly unhappy. But my year group was bright and all 14 of us went on to Oxbridge, I to read Engineering at Trinity Hall (1972-75). After the obligatory haircut, I had little difficulty getting a job, designing sewerage systems. After a year in the UK, I did three years in Bahrain and then a long motorbike ride through Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Sudan brought me to Nairobi, where the fresh strawberries and cold beers convinced me to stay. I got a job writing a proposal for repairing the water system in Kampala, Uganda. Idi Amin’s years of mismanagement had damaged it severely – and had left my hotel room in the Kampala Intercontinental with bullet holes in the door and no water to flush the toilet, so it was fortunate that the design team spent most of our time in the safe confines of Nairobi. During this period I developed a passion for sailing, leading to the Fireball World Championships in San Francisco Bay in 1984. Then in 1985, in response to an advert in The Times, I came to Winchester College as a part-time Physics teacher, covering for Tony Ruth’s two-term post-Hopper’s sabbatical. It was a perfect opportunity for me: a chance to see whether I would enjoy teaching more than engineering, with no commitment beyond the two terms. I was confident that, if I could hold the attention of drunken revellers in a crowded bar by singing folk songs, I shouldn’t have too much trouble with Wykehamists. I loved it immediately. I met with Martin Gregory once a week to plan and to brush up my rusty Physics; we spent much of the time talking about his heat engines, sewing machines and industrial archaeology. Soon opportunities for further terms materialised, with my time spread between Physics and Maths (so I well remember the ‘Algebra Wars’, as well as racing John Durran up the stairs of E block). I became a tutor in Toye’s (first with James Miller, then with Andrew Wolters), which was great fun and included some lively theatre productions. I was lured into running the squash by Simon Blake-Wilson, an enthusiastic pupil who just wouldn’t take no for an answer (so typical of Winchester). And of course I got involved with the sailing. Netley SC was a rather unforgiving location, with its steep and long slipway, impossibly complex security, and proximity to a busy commercial shipping lane. Yet we had brilliant times there. Easter training camp initially included actual camping, but happily we soon found parents willing to accommodate us. And in 1989, by the narrowest of margins over a surprised Sevenoaks, we won the inaugural BSDRA National Championships. On 16 th September 1994 I was introduced by Simon Woolley to a girl called Pip in the Wykeham Arms. By July the following year we were married; by September 2000 we had three children, a fourth on the way, and were moving into Kingsgate House to succeed Michael Nevin as Housemaster. We had ten wonderful years in Beloe’s, including the 13 centenary celebrations in 2005. Then Mark Romans took over in 2010. In fact we swapped, as I took over the sailing from him, winning the BSDRA Nationals for the second time in 2017 after several near misses. By then, I knew that I was living with a problem, a small tumour, probably benign, but unfortunately lodged right inside my spinal column. The MRI scan showed a small disc, reminiscent of the eye of Mars, lodged in amongst the nerves. We decided to wait and see, since removal of the tumour had only a 75% success rate. Cheerily the surgeon revealed that failure would only leave me paralysed from the chest down, and that I would still have full use of my arms. Waiting seemed a better option. Truth to tell, I found it easy enough to forget about the tumour. But in the spring of 2018, things began to unravel more significantly and something needed to be done. It was time to gamble, and the date was set for 16 th June. The good news was that the success rate had by then increased to 90%, and my surgeon was yet to have a failure. As I walked into the hospital, it felt a bit like the beginning of term at Sedbergh. Except louder and more vivid. My memories of regaining consciousness after a seven-hour operation are confused, no doubt partly because of the anaesthetic and the morphine that followed it. For Pip it was much harder. Having removed the tumour, the surgeon looked on helplessly as the neural connection between my head and toes broke down. My life had dramatically changed for ever, as had hers. After a week at Southampton General Hospital, I was transferred to the spinal injury unit at Salisbury. The Salisbury spinal unit serves the whole of the south of England. These