I was born and raised in the town of Llanelli on the south coast of Wales. Outside of the UK it seems most people think of the whole island as England, when in fact there are four historic nations that make up the Island; Wales, Scotland, Cornwall and England. In Wales, more so than any of the other Celtic countries, even Ireland. We still speak the ancient language that existed before the Anglo-Saxon invasions of the 5th Century. (There are some who say I still don't speak English) I went to work for the local bus company, South Wales Transport, in 1971. It was only a stopgap until I could find something better. I'm still looking for something better. I've been involved with mass transit ever since. I worked as a bus driver, an assistant transport manager and, for a change of pace, as a tour bus driver based in London. I was living the happy, carefree life of a bachelor and loving it. "Fall into their arms but not into their hands" was my motto. Then an American woman, on vacation, caught my bus. Before I knew it I was married and living in Los Angeles, California. When I came here I decided to do what I have always done and I joined the bus company, Los Angeles Metro. I became a federally certified instructor and yes I teach Americans how to drive a bus. As an instructor I would often point out the importance of what we do. I believe and have always believed that mass transit is essential to modern civilization. There are a number of highlights to my career; More than I could comfortably fit into this article. The award that I am most proud of came in the year 2000 when the readers of the Downtown News voted me "Best Bus Driver" in Los Angeles. The other highlight was when I was an operator out of West Hollywood, Division 7, a television station back in Wales were doing a program called "The Welsh in Hollywood" We drove a bus around Hollywood and Beverly Hills with the T.V. crew on board filming and interviewing me. It resulted in a lot of e-mails and calls from friends and family. These days I'm still an instructor for Metro. In 2009 I received a call from a production company, Human World, based in Santa Monica. They contacted me through the Celtic Arts Center; they were making a promo video for the release of Bungie Corporation's latest addition to the Halo X-Box 360 game series called "Halo 3 ODST." I'm not a gamer and had never heard of the game up to that point. They said they wanted a song for the video and they were looking for an "Obscure" language. They felt Welsh would be a good fit and asked if I could write the song. I agreed, we used the tune from a contemporary Welsh song called "Lament" gave it a martial beat, then following the guidelines they gave me I wrote the song. It went viral on You Tube and is still very popular. My friend Lorin Richards is put together a beautifully illustrated book based on the Welsh alphabet. He wrote a poem where each stanza describes a character from Welsh legend and begins with a letter from the alphabet. I was invited to co-author the book, writing a short piece about each character to go along with Lorin's poem. Since that publication I have written another book for "A Raven Above" Press, again with an array of distinguished international illustrators. This one, "The Children's Voice" is a collection of Welsh Nursery Rhymes with a literal translation of each and notes on the culture that they describe. Now, thanks to Amazon, I am fulfilling a lifetime dream of being an author.