Tuesday 18 March 2014

Eulogy by Gavin Aiken

Following on from Scott’s own words I’d like to say a few things about him from my own perspective.

Nearly ten years ago, I asked Scott to be best man at my wedding. Then about a year later, Scott asked me to do the same thing for him – I think his exact words, by text, were that he wanted me to return a favour. I was obviously honoured to be asked, and although I was very nervous about making the speech, really the whole experience was a pleasure. When  Scott rang me just 6 months ago me to tell me about his cancer diagnosis, and asked me then if I would make a speech at his funeral, I was shocked and devastated, but my next thoughts were that at least it might not be for a number of years, that somehow he might beat it and be around for a lot longer. Horribly that has not turned out to be the case and so here I am, making a speech about my best friend which I would give anything not to have to do.

Let me take you back 23 years to 1991, when we both started at university at Queens’ college, Cambridge. Like him, I was very nervous about what it would be like, what kind of people I would meet, and if I would fit in. Scott was the first person I met, and as I remember it, I was impressed by his long hair, and thought he looked cool, seemed friendly, and immediately helped me to start to feel like I might actually enjoy it there. His recollection of our meeting was slightly different – he remembered that I was too daft to figure out how to lock my door and wondered what on earth I was doing there! Nevertheless we became great friends immediately and remained so ever since.

At college Scott had a great many friends – he always seemed to know more people than anyone else, both from our college and others - and made a big impact on college life, appearing on the front cover of the college magazine and many times in the gossip pages. Scott was the best person to while away an afternoon in the pub with, he was one of the world’s great conversationalists, both a great talker and a listener, and there would never be a lull, we’d never run out of things to talk about, 99% of them utter nonsense.

However one big aspect of Scott’s personality showed through early in those days – his strong sense of knowing his own mind and what he wanted to do. Many of us were very keen drinkers and carousers and although as he said himself in the words I’ve just read Scott hardly seemed happier than when in a pub or a bar, playing pinball, chatting about everything and nothing, and generally hanging out, he would always leave first and no amount of wheedling or persuasion would make him change his mind. This was always the case throughout the time I knew him – without being selfish, he did what he wanted to do and wouldn’t be changed from that course. In many ways that made the time that he spent with you more of a privilege, because you always knew he wouldn’t do it simply out of politeness.

Despite the many happy hours in the college bar, he managed a very good degree in law and landed a trainee place at Herbert Smith. He spent a year in York doing the legal practice course, making many more new friends in the process, before moving to London to join Herbert Smith. However despite this being one of the top law firms in the country, and what he had been aiming to achieve for years, that strength of character showed again as he pretty quickly decided he wouldn’t be happy if he stayed, so he quit law completely and joined a recruitment consultancy.

During this period he and I lived together again in Belsize Park in London, along with Tim and Mike from Queens’. Another of Scott’s very noticeable character traits was his love of humour and a good catchphrase, and it seemed like many of his favourites were coined or appropriated around this period. As a bunch of lads living together we spent a lot of time playing computer games, especially Mario Kart, and Scott was always proposing “a spot of frappé” or a “spot of Bond”. He also had many drinking related catchphrases – “pop a half in”, for when he wanted to slow down to avoid the pale face at the end of the night – “not hurting anyone” – as in “shall we have another pint?” “why not, we’re not hurting anyone are we?” – and one which started with Andy but Scott latched onto with great gusto - “it’s a small place but we’ll all be welcome”.

There are places in the world that for me will always have an indelible connection with Scott, for example the Fitzroy Tavern near Goodge Street in London, which became a default meeting point for nights out in Soho, or Taylor’s, just off Soho Square, again the start of many great nights, and chosen by Scott for the proximity to his recruitment consultancy office. However another place is more a general class of place – the mountains – because it was around this time when we went on our very first snowboarding holiday together, along with Rupert and my then-girlfriend Kath, now my wife. Kath had been skiing many times whereas Scott, Rupert and I were all total newbie idiots, but the fun of learning a difficult new skill relatively late in life, combined with a good amount of hanging around in pubs meant that we were all hooked. Since then we have had a number of amazing holidays together and Scott also spent many happy weeks with Hayley in Leysin, kindly put up by Hayley’s godparents in their chalet. I was lucky enough to go to that same place with Scott in March last year for what turned out to be Scott’s last snowboarding trip. We planned it at quite short notice, and I remember very vividly him saying a couple of times on the trip that you have to take your chances when they come along. At the time it seemed true enough as we were having a great time and had nearly not got it all arranged, but now it seems incredibly prophetic, and terribly important, as he said in his words which I just read out.

I mentioned Scott’s sense of humour just now. Scott was a funny man. He loved a joke, many of you will remember his favourite joke about a pianist, obviously not suitable for polite company and definitely not suitable for a church. Thinking over my memories of Scott, so many of them involve laughter. Scott with his glasses askew, Eric Morecambe-style, or with his arms folded, faux-curmudgeonly, disapproving of one thing or another, or repeating one of his favourite catchphrases.

Having moved out of the flat in Belsize Park and lived in Stratford for a while, Scott then made another momentous life changing decision which seemed crazy at the time but in retrospect lead to the happiest phase of his life of all. This was the decision to quit the recruitment job, which he never liked, and to leave London to go to Bournemouth to join the Chase Manhattan (as it was then) graduate IT training scheme, again making more great friends with others in the same intake and throughout the bank generally. He lived again in another crazy shared house with Kal, Pete, Simon and John, then got his own flat, and via the pursuits club crossed paths with Hayley. Luckily for him she had joined to try to meet some new friends and they hit it off and quickly became an item.

Scott loved life in Bournemouth – the coast and outdoor life seemed to suit him much better than London. He was able to go climbing and play football regularly – and he and Hayley enjoyed many travelling adventures together before settling down to start a family. In fact Hayley tells me that it was just after surviving the encounter with a tsunami on holiday in Thailand when she first suspected Scott might be planning to propose to her. He immediately started planning a luxurious trip to Barcelona, where they stayed in a beautiful hotel, went to the top of the cathedral, had fancy meals and did many romantic things which would have been perfect opportunities for a proposal. However it didn’t happen then – it was in fact a number of months later when he finally popped the question, while sitting in his favourite comfy chair in the flat, with Eastenders on TV.

After marrying his favourite bear in 2006, he and Hayley were then overjoyed at the birth of Samuel in November 2008 and again when Maisie was born December in 2010. Scott loved kids and was brilliant as a dad and so proud of Samuel and Maisie. However things didn’t always go as smoothly as Scott might have hoped – Hayley tells me of one time when Samuel was being weaned and she left Scott in change of feeding him. When she came back she found the room covered in the green spinach puree Samuel was supposed to be eating, and Scott stripped down to his boxer shorts, obviously with everything completely under control! Or another occasion when they visited Longleat safari park and Scott took Samuel into the toilets – and from outside Hayley heard a huge shout of pain and surprise, which turned out to be due to Samuel pulling the disabled rail off the wall and onto Scott’s head.

Despite these occasional mishaps, Scott was clearly as happy with his lot as he’d ever been, with the perfect wife, family, job and lifestyle. After a variety of careers and places to live he’d finally found the ideal things to suit him – he had grabbed his chances and things looked all set. Sadly however the happiness was not to last long enough and in July last year he was diagnosed with the lung cancer which was to prove fatal.


As a scientist I try to take some comfort from a few amazing thoughts. One is that every heavy atom of every molecule that makes up the planets of the solar system, the earth and every living thing on it, and all the cells and fibres of Scott’s body – all of these atoms were fused in the heart of a star billions of years ago before coming together to make everything we see around us. These atoms are now permanent and can’t be lost or destroyed, and in fact over the years to come, many of the 1200 trillion trillion water molecules which were once part of Scott will become part of each one of us here.

Another thought is that all the photons of light that ever bounced off Scott’s face, all the particles whose paths were interrupted by his smile, or his funny faces, all those hundreds of trillions of particles, have raced off like children, their ways forever changed by him. Some of those particles found their way into our eyes, and from there went on to create constellations of electromagnetically charged neurons whose energy will go on and on in the form of our memories.

Those thoughts don't really make it any better that he has gone. Scott, we will all miss you but I’m sure we will never forget you, and our thoughts are with Hayley, and the children, and Scott’s parents and brothers and family.

But he always was the first to leave the pub and I suppose you can't change the habits of a lifetime.