So, yesterday I went to our reunion at Cranmer Hall in Durham. We were invited to a sherry reception followed by a meal on Wednesday night and then those who got a degree of some sort graduated this morning.
It was a strange event. Sad on a number of levels.
It was the last time that most of us will all get together in one place. One person commented on how it all seemed so normal when we got together, but that it was really unlikely to happen again. Sad.
It was the end of our (Catherine and my) real association with Durham. We have one set of friends who will still be there next year, but it won’t feel like home again in all reality. Very sad.
Finally, there was the loss of Cranmer Hall as a safe place and as home. This was particularly marked. It’s not news that the Warden resigned last term and that a new one has been appointed. I still don’t know exactly what caused the resignation (and I probably don’t want to know in all honesty), but it is obvious that it was an acrimonious divorce. At the reunion, Anne was never mentioned, it was a bit like after a nasty split where one partner cuts the other out of all the photos in the album. She simply no longer existed. That was sad.
At the reunion buffet (not really what we were expecting for an evening meal) we were told that it was great that we had come back and that they were really pleased to see us. That didn’t really ring true for me, the sherry reception had no sherry (although there was wine). We received letters which had half the dates from 2010 still on it and were given about 4 days to respond in the December madness that is Christmas. Essentially, despite being told in a speech that we were not forgotten, it felt that we had been. I wanted to feel warm, welcome and at home, but I didn’t and I understood that this was the last time I would be at Cranmer and feel like I belonged. I knew that would happen eventually but I didn’t expect it to be so soon.
The final comedy moment, was being told that recommending Cranmer to others would be a good thing. The people currently asking me about theological colleges are both women, and I feel that I couldn’t honestly offer Cranmer a recommendation, as the entire Anglican staff are now men (apart from one part time tutor who teaches one two week block course a year, amazing as she is, she simply isn’t in college enough to provide a significant Anglican priestly role model for women). There are other great women around the place (the college chaplain in particular is ace), but enough of them aren’t Anglican priests. Perhaps in a couple of years when the new Warden has settled in and made the place his, and they have employed some women I’ll feel differently. It’s sad that I feel like that after spending a year on a team trying to recruit ordinands and telling everyone the place was great. Very sad indeed.
All sorts of different sadness, change is never easy. And I understand that some of the way I feel is to do with the changes I’m going through. The reality is that everything will eventually be ok, but it would have been nice to have had longer to take it all in.
[This post was updated following communication from the college principal. I have made it clearer that these are my personal feelings and/or deductions and that my perception of reality may be different to others. I would also like to make it clear that I was disappointed by my visit to Cranmer Hall last week because my training there had been so fantastic. I wish the new Warden every success, he faces a challenging job.]