З життя
Sometimes Life Throws Us Unexpected Gifts. My Story Began One Night While I Was Asleep, and My Good Friend Asked Me Questions I Answered in My Dreams.

Sometimes life tosses us the most unexpected presents. My story began one night as I dozed off, while my dear friend Emily asked me questions I answered in my sleep.
One evening, she whispered, Whats your biggest dreama Maserati or some other fancy car? Half-conscious, I mumbled back, A saxophone. The next morning, she told me about it, and that little midnight chatseemingly insignificantended up changing my life forever.
Id always been a huge fan of Jimi Hendrix and The Rolling Stones, and rock music was my first love. Yet, the guitar never quite felt like *mine*. Music mattered deeply, but the instrument had to be one that truly spoke for me. And then it hit me*Why not the saxophone?* It seemed odd, yet perfectly right.
From that moment, everything shifted. I took up the sax, attended masterclasses, and even studied at the Royal Academy. Music became my true calling. Over the years, I was lucky enough to perform with legends like George Martin and Nigel Kennedy. Those encounters taught me that music isnt just about techniqueits a language, one everyone understands.
Yet, these days, youll mostly find me busking on the streets of London, playing for passersby. Im one of the last old-school street musicians left in Britain. Years ago, crowds would stop, listen, toss a few quid into my case. Now, most hurry past as if Im invisible. But that wont break me. I keep playing because music *is* life.
At 72, I still lug my sax out into the cold, even when its barely five degrees. It sounds mad, but Ive never felt more alivethe music fuels me, and the occasional stranger who pauses for a note or two keeps me going. Every sound, every breath into the sax is a piece of my soul, shared whether they realise it or not.
Musicespecially the saxtaught me patience, discipline, and honesty. Busking strips it all back: no stage, no spotlights, just you, your instrument, and the citys hum. And in that simplicity lies something beautifulreal connection, raw and unfiltered. It reminds you that musics magic isnt in applause or awards, but in touching someone, even for a second, amid their rush.
I often think back to that night, half-asleep, murmuring about a saxophone. Whod have thought one sleepy word could rewrite a life? It led me heremade me a musician, gave me joy, and brought me faces Id never forget.
Maybe lifes not about what you *have*, but what you *do*. Sometimes the answer finds you in the oddest placesa dream, a sign, the people who just *get* you. My storys one of passion, patience, and proof its never too late.
The world changes, people hurry, but music stays. It heals. It unites. And Im grateful to still be out there, freezing my fingers off, watching tiny moments of magic happen. Because music *is* lifeand as long as Im breathing notes into this sax, Im alive, full of fire and joy.
