Saturday, 31 December 2022

NEVER BROUGHT TO MIND

It was all the rage

To hit the town

To count those final seconds down

To crowd inside unpleasant pubs

Or squeeze a way

Through sweaty clubs

For midnight’s chime

And raucous cheer

To welcome in that brand new year

With plastic glass of foamy beer

That’s never brought to mind


It was just the thing

To dance the night

In swirling bulbs of Christmas light

Until the hint of childhood missed

Was twisted on that midnight kiss

The music loud

The spinning world

A neon number now unfurled

With flickered hope in mind


And now we’re old

On New Year’s Eve

It’s so much harder to believe

We’d all dress up

And choose to leave

Our sofa and our families

To pick instead an awful night

And not the warmth

Of love and light

We’d surely left behind

Tuesday, 27 December 2022

THE SOUL, THE HEART, AND THE MEMORY

For Sammy and me, it’s been a Christmas in transition. Behind us, our wealth of traditions and memories, each telling us how Christmas ought to be, ahead of us, the home we haven’t reached yet.


There were some things we started though. On Christmas Eve, we went to Midnight Communion - this time at a new church. The candles twinkled and the rector preached, and we sang rousing hymns until it was time for “May I be the first to wish you all a very Merry Christmas” and we shared the ‘peace’. It was nice to be there with Sammy. Then we all sang all the long verses of O Come All Ye Faithful, and stepped out into the Christmassy night air.


It was our first married Christmas too, which made it all the more poignant. Stockings, just like we used to do in our family, then round to her family for dinner and gifts and games. It’s been excellent for me to get to know everyone a bit better, though, once again, I was missing my own family too.


Christmas was always so grand and so majestic, right from the beginning. I miss those family times. But families grow and change shape - and then houses are not big enough and distances are not small enough, and so the scintillation of Christmas magic starts again somewhere new, mixing up grief and joy and hope and bittersweet memories. I wish I had known that that was the way of things when I was young. But that, I know, is not the way of things.


The transition for us this year is that we’re not exactly somewhere new, but not somewhere old either. So it’s natural to miss the way we were, but also it’s inevitable that we long for the way things will be.


Boxing Day has long been my family get-together day. I wish I could describe it well this year. One sister, absent with grief; another there and croaky with flu, my parents clutching tea to keep warm, and a big TV screen showing a computer game - around which my fifteen-year old nephew threw gangly arms and bobbed his curly ADHD hair. The niblings have grown up.


My niece, now 20, was sipping a snowball (which I thought was custard) and my third sister’s boyfriend was there, to add unhelpful comments to proceedings. Sammy was quiet. I just missed my Grandma.


Christmas was born in transition, wasn’t it? We paint our nativity scenes with warmth around the stable, retro-projecting our own notions of family, home, and safety onto that holy night. But it was cold too. It was dangerous. It was temporary.


Anyway. That shouldn’t give you the impression we’ve not had a good time. It’s been wonderful in its own unique way. Having a wife who shares love for the season is a joy and a delight, and the permanence of her on the first Christmas morning of many to come, felt like a gift I could never have imagined. It will probably sit up in my mind as a Christmas like no other, given the context, but one infused with wonder and delight, alongside that very grown up feeling of loss and nostalgia.


And it’s not over! We’re still after all, only on le jour de three french hens, and the hallowed season of Betwixtmas has only just begun. Today we’re going for a walk and doing some baking - small things, but things that are good for the soul, the heart and the memory.

Thursday, 22 December 2022

ANDY WILLIAMS HAS A WONDERFUL TIME IN SAINSBURY’S

“It’s the most wonderful time of the year…” sang Andy Williams in Sainsbury’s. We were doing our Big Christmas Shop, calculating the moment when the veggies would be at their freshest and the store would be at its least frequented. I’m sure someone’s done equations on that but I don’t care to look it up: it’s Christmas after all.


I don’t think I can agree with Andy Williams though. I mean Christmas might have been the most wonderful time of that particular year, a year that saw the assassination of JFK and escalation of the Vietnam War. But Andy doesn’t really go into detail about why. He just goes on about ‘mistletoeing’ (not a word) and ‘scary ghost stories’ (not entirely Christmassy).


Sainsbury’s got gradually busier as we pushed our trolley round. From the snippets of conversation we overheard (not to mention our own debates about the list) it was clear that hardly anyone in the store was having a good time.


“I’m just getting through it and out of here as fast as possible,” said one lady, her sequinned Christmas jumper glinting in the frozen aisle. Others were even less impressed. A gentleman gave me a look of solidarity as his wife led the way through a crowd by the cheeses. One hand held a long list, the other a pen. He seemed to be blindly following her, and crossing things off with a wistful eye on the price labels. I raised an eyebrow back, knowingly.


The staff were stressed too. Shelves needed restocking and shuffling with whatever the computer had decided goes where - decorations are gone, nibbles are in. Gifts are dwindling and boxes of Quality Street are invading the ‘seasonal’ aisles. And in between all the changes, their store was crowded with these pesky customers - people who stop and dawdle, can’t control a trolley and don’t know where the chutneys are. And there were hundreds of them.


Sammy and I got to the end of our list and escaped with a Starbucks hot chocolate. I peeled open the long long receipt and scanned it for discounts and nectar points.


“Ooh Santa,” she said.


“Well I am checking it twice,” I replied.


Andy was the only one having a truly ‘wonderful’ time, I realised. His heart has been glowing with those Christmas royalties since 1963. Lucky old Andy.

Tuesday, 20 December 2022

COLD STARS AND BURST PIPES

I wanted to shout at the night sky. I don’t think it would have done any good, but I wanted the stars to hear it.


We had been close over the weekend. The solicitors had moved quickly, paperwork finally sorted; we’d drawn the funds and we were ready. We’d even got our friends ready to help us collect our stuff from the lockup on Wednesday. It looked like it was all coming perfectly together, just in time for Christmas. The miracle was on.


And then it wasn’t.


“Matt,” garbled the estate agent, “Basically there’s been a disaster at the top of the chain…”


My heart. My heart can’t take much more of this, I thought, staring at the road outside Malcolm’s front window. The cars were rushing by, the sky was December grey, and the Christmas lights twinkled with some sort of misplaced joy.


A burst pipe has flooded the house our vendors are buying. That means they’re stuck where they are, and so are we - if we are anywhere at all - for Christmas, perhaps for good. The delay might push beyond the end of our mortgage offer, meaning, well, meaning we might have to find somewhere else, rent, and almost certainly lose a lot of money. We went from twinkly Christmas joy to bleak midwinter in the blink and fizz of a tree bulb.


Worse, I had to tell Sammy, right away. I didn’t know how to do that; I knew how upset she would be, I knew the voices that would whisper in my head when she burst into tears. I knew how awful it would all sound when it came out of my mouth.


We’re so tired. My cheeks are lined with tears and I have no clue how to turn this back to thanks and rejoicing, despite everyone we know urging us to do that. I wish I were a better Christian, more resilient, more focused on heaven than home somehow, less strainable. But I’m not. I’m hotheaded and angry, and emotional and stressed. I stand outside my father-in-law’s house and I shout at the sky.


The stars looked back, cold and silent.

Saturday, 17 December 2022

WINDSOR AT CHRISTMAS

Back to Windsor today. It’s different to the last time. The Queen, like the summer we last saw her in, has gone. Winter has coated the castle in snow, just an icing on the battlements, the green grass and the cannons, but enough to show which season it is.

There’s something about the castle at Christmas. They decorate the ornate rooms with huge, sparkling Christmas trees and garlands and wreaths. Underneath the trees, between the seventeenth-century sofas and gilded pianos, are boxes of presents, wrapped neatly in Victorian paper and ribbons. It’s just the right amount of poshness and old-fashion to make it charming.


It’s strange though, how different it all feels without Her Majesty. Sammy pointed out how she feels the same - as though our connection to the monarchy has been somehow diminished and what we have left is doing its best, but won’t ever be what it was. That’s not the King’s fault. It just takes time to get used to the new, when you were so familiar with the old.


This week we also watched Harry and Meghan’s six-hour Netflix documentary about their long journey out of the Royal Family. That is one complex situation isn’t it? In a way, none of us are qualified to comment, and yet all of us seem to have the need to. There were two things that stood out. One, hurt people hurt people, and two, if the queues to get into Windsor this morning are any measure of anything, the monarchy will survive just fine, regardless of what the beetroot-faced newspaper men might furiously tell us.


It was nice to see the soldiers in their long winter coats. They marched past imperiously, arms swinging, rifles and bayonets high. You don’t ever want to get in the way of those people.


And the castle, there for a thousand years, uninvaded, impenetrable on its steep bank over Windsor and Eton, glistened in the winter sun. Behind it, the layered sky of foggy banks and wispy clouds, soft-stroked like an impressionist painting in grey, gold and silver. It was so different to last time. So much seems to have changed. And yet beneath the frozen snow and icy patches, it really hasn’t. I think that’s a good thing.

Friday, 16 December 2022

EXPECTING SNOW

We were expecting

A blanket of snow

That covers the world in white

But all we got was

A handful of flakes

That had soon disappeared overnight


We never get snow

It’s not very fair -

When the weatherman said it would come!

We were expecting

Toboggans at dawn

And a magical day for some fun


Meanwhile on Facebook

Our friends in the north

Are posting their pics up online

Throwing snowballs about

With carrots and gloves

And having a whale of a time!


We were expecting

A blanket of snow

Instead it’s a normal old day

At work and at school

Where it’s boring and dull

And the sky is still heavy and grey

Thursday, 15 December 2022

SNOWY DENOUEMENT

So there wasn’t quite a Christmas miracle. Just more confusion. I think (and to be honest, I need to call the solicitor later) that we can exchange, the funds are ready and so is the chain… apart from what the emails yesterday called the ‘intransigence’ of the people at the top of the chain, who for some reason are only now just realising that they’ve got a week to empty their house.


This whole process has been horrible. I once described it as handing over a bag of emotions to someone and watching as they reach in at random to decide which one to give you next. Here, at the sticky end of this miserable wait, it’s more like somebody dangling hope in your face and then snatching it away when you reach out to take it - again and again and again. We were quite prepared for closure yesterday; then they told us it was close, then they told us that it wasn’t, and now today we’re close again. I can’t take much more dangling about.


Isn’t there supposed to be a redemption-story in those movies? You know, like a grumpy old man who rescues a girl from a frozen lake and turns out to be a war hero. Or a mean lady, who has a change of heart on Christmas Eve and rips up that business contract after all? Where’s that character? Where’s our snowy denouement?


Well it’s not too late, I guess. As they say at my local Pentecostal deliverance centre, “God is an eleventh hour God, glory to God.”


I get it Pentecostals, you can put your arms down. Just sometimes I wish God could also be a 2pm-nice-and-early-so-you-can-stop-worrying-all-day God as well. But you know, I think he’s clever enough to be both. And what the Pentecostals know for sure is that we can trust him. So amen to that brother-sisters. Amen to that.

Wednesday, 14 December 2022

A MUTED RED LINE

Today’s the day then. Our Christmas deadline for exchanging. Perhaps I’m not full of enough faith, but there’s a muted sense of resignation about it. Neither of us expect the Christmas miracle.


I’ve been joking about how it should happen like it does in those movies - the snow falling at exactly midnight, and the whole town coming over with fresh-baked cookies. Then, in a flurry of surprise and falling snowflakes, the solicitor arrives with a freshly drawn contract and a bunch of keys wrapped up in bright red ribbon. Hark the Herald plays. We all sing as the Christmas lights sparkle, and then, roll credits.


“I think it’s okay to be pragmatic,” I said last night. Once again my brain was wrestling with the idea of letting go of hope to defend against disappointment. It seems very natural, but also… not very spiritual.


“The faith part of me really wants it to happen tomorrow; the logic is though, that it won’t,” I said to Gary. I was thinking about the two documents needed from our vendors’ vendors: the grant of probate and the non-revocation of power of attorney. Despite our solicitor reassuring us that they’re ‘straightforward’, I have a deep, uneasy feeling that both of those things are just as complicated as they sound. And we also have to remember that there’s probably a family trying to resolve that complexity in the middle of some grief.


So here we are - a muted red line, a simpering milestone: a resigned sense of gloomy predictability. In a way (although it means a nomadic Christmas in the cold) there’s some relief in it not happening today. At least we know where we are (or aren’t) for a few weeks - and admittedly, the pressure would be off for the festive period. It might not be the Christmas we wanted, but we can make the best of it.

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

NIGHT VOICES

“You can’t even keep her warm,” whispered a voice in the dark. I rolled over and buried my face in the thin duvet I’d been left with. It was cold. Next me to me, Sammy, wrapped up in every piece of sheet, duvet, pillow I could find, was shivering herself to sleep.


We’re still waiting for our house. If nothing happens today or tomorrow to unblock the paperwork at the top of the chain, then we are having our first Christmas together in someone else’s home, under someone else’s feet, with a pot-plant tree and a string of battery-powered fairy lights. And it is freezing.


The other day I asked my accountability pals whether they shouldered the burden of big decisions as the men in their marriages. As I was asking it, it seemed like such an old-fashioned question; a thought that had surfaced from the dark ages of misogyny when we used to agree that men were the head of the house. I don’t even know why I asked it! My friends talked about ‘division of labour’, and about how it’s important to carry things together, but also submit to each other’s strengths. I stopped short of telling them about the night voices.


“Pathetic husband, useless man. Your dad wouldn’t have let this happen.”


“I am a child of God,” I whispered back, silently, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. I am doing my best. I am… a good man…” It was all I had. I was weeping with tiredness.


I threw an arm around the shuddering cocoon of duvet and stroked the cold head that was exposed to the pillows. It was uncomfortable but at least it was a bit warmer for her. I don’t feel the cold like she does, so I was okay, but there was no way to go to sleep like that: all the angles were wrong.


All the angles were wrong. The cold, uncomfortable elbow, shoulder, ribs, knee. And the sharp voices that like the darkness so much. They are wrong though, I thought as I watched the shadows on the ceiling; my dad would have done the same thing in this situation, and I am far from useless or pathetic at this difficult assignment. I’m learning. And we’re waiting for a story that has been hard-fought-for, long awaited, and beautiful. And even in the middle of the night I knew, I know, I keep knowing: morning is coming.

Sunday, 11 December 2022

ROTARY SANTA

The Santas are out. We saw one yesterday, perched in a Rotary Club sleigh outside Sainsburys. To be honest, he looked a little ropey, as though strung together at the last minute - off-red coat, cotton-wool beard and a face far too young to be the real thing. Also, I’m not sure what Rotary Santa was supposed to be doing, as all he had with him was a charity bucket and a stereo blasting out “Santa Claus is Coming To Town” at a distorting volume.

What do kids make of these Pound-Shop Santas? They surely can’t be fooled, can they? I mean, are there parents wheeling trollies into Sainsburys who are pushing the idea that the lonely man in a painted crate is the real, actual, bona-fide Father Christmas? I can barely believe it.


“Oh they’re just pretending to be the real thing,” I can just about remember my Mum whispering to me in a 1980s BHS. We’d been queuing up to see a man in a cupboard, guarded by surly elves and plastic penguins. She was trying to convince me that the people in Santa’s Grotto - including the elves with the look of disdain - were sort of representatives of an invisible, but very real Father Christmas, who obviously was too busy preparing at the North Pole at the time, and certainly wasn’t frequenting department stores in the Home Counties. No, she was clear - these people were his helpers, and I was to go along with the game of pretending while perched on the knee of a stranger, so as not to hurt their feelings or give the game away.


I’m not a parent. I don’t know how you navigate this topic with small children. I don’t even know if you can apply the same approach twice, or even if you should try. All I know, and all I knew then was, if there was a real Father Christmas, a real person who squeezed down our chimney and popped through the electric-bar heater somehow, it didn’t matter even half as much to me as being loved by Mum and Dad. So going along with the pretence was easy. Then I got a little sister and actually being one of Santa’s Little Helpers for her sake became my nudge-nudge wink-wink role. In fact, even now she texts me on Christmas morning to say: “He’s been! He’s been!” She’s 37.


Anyway, I smiled at Rotary Santa yesterday. I couldn’t tell whether he smiled back as his beard just wasn’t able to move the way normal beards do - along with his mouth. He jangled his bucket and looked at me with tired eyes. Why does Saint Nicholas need to collect money for a charity? And why does it have to be me?


He sees you when you’re sleeping, He knows when you’re awake…” blared the stereo perched on the arm of the immovable sleigh. Poor old Rotary Santa, I thought. The Real Father Christmas wouldn’t really approve of this kind of representation, I’d wager.


And the kids aren’t hoodwinked for a second either, are they?


Tuesday, 6 December 2022

HOPE, HOME, AND FAMILY

I have found writing difficult lately. It’s ironic really - my first poetry book is about to come out, I’m employed as a technical ‘author’, and I am (as you’ve seen) engaged in lengthy correspondence with John Lewis. I just haven’t been able to put a decent blog post together for a while.


I’ve started a few. I had some observations on football the other day that were *chef’s-kiss* electric. I tried writing that one during England’s 3-0 demolition of Senegal in the World Cup but while it seems I can remain perfectly placid as the ball zips into the net, barely anyone else around me could contain themselves. It was all a bit distracting.


Then there’s the ongoing house drama. Writing about that is almost as deflating as trying to live through it, and fifteen weeks after moving out of our flat, we are kind of exhausted even talking about it. Not that we mind anyone asking.


Meanwhile the weather’s gone cold. Autumn slipped into winter somehow and now the afternoons are Christmassy and the wind is freezing. I could wax on about the weather again but I don’t think it’s exactly uplifting. I’ve come to realise that expressing yourself lyrically is fun and even therapeutic, but my poetry is not everyone’s cup of tea.


All of that leaves me in Costa, for a quick lunch break, and a drink that’s curiously all adjectives: a small, decaf, oat, flat white. I’m not even sure I’ve got those in the right order. How have we got to a world where a product is made out of adjectives?


I’ll try to write more often towards Christmas. That season, more than any other, seems to evoke a lot of emotions. It’s a swirl of colour isn’t it, around the ideas of hope, home and family.


I like to think about those things a lot at the moment.

Tuesday, 29 November 2022

A QUICK REPLY TO JOHN LEWIS

Dear Romily [not her real name]


Thank you for your reply dated Tuesday, November 29th, 2022. I’m grateful for your acknowledgment of the ‘hard time experience’ we’ve been having in purchasing the Arthur Price cutlery set. We appreciate the apology.


In your response, you gave us two options of stores which currently have the item in stock. One is in Kingston upon Thames, (where there are apparently 3 items) and the other is John Lewis, Cheadle, which (for reference) is a drive of 3 hours and 21 minutes from our current location.


You also very kindly provided telephone numbers for these stores - thank you. I rang them both, hoping once again to reserve the item.


You’ll never guess what happened, Romily! I was redirected to the call centre both times. I know! What are the odds?


I’m afraid this only adds to my growing suspicion that customers are now unable to call stores directly, even though you implied that we could. It is intensely frustrating.


In addition, the operative in your call centre went on to tell me that the price of the item in question is now a full £380, instead of its original discounted price of £190.


In effect then, for my wife and I to purchase the cutlery set from John Lewis, it would now cost us twice as much as it would have just a few days ago, and would also involve either (a) a jaunty trek into London, or (b) a 6-hour road trip, not including our already wasted trip to Oxford.


Far from helping us, your proposed solution is for us to go to even further trouble, at twice our own expense, for a product that even you agreed ‘might not actually be available’ when we got there.


Personally, I can’t see at all how any of this matches with Section 3, articles 93 and 94 of your constitution.


You claim that the Partnership will “aim to offer the best value in the marketplace for goods and services of comparable quality and availability”.


Well, for comparable availability, you might be interested to note that the same product is currently online and can be delivered to us from other retailers. Meanwhile for ‘best value’, please also note that we were able to purchase that same item, the 76-piece cutlery set, online, for less than half the price advertised by John Lewis.


I’m now escalating this because, once again, we believe John Lewis is better than this, and we want you to know.


Centralising call centres is certainly cost-effective for you, but it reduces your service quality, and isolates your customers. We don’t feel appreciated by your Partners in this experience, and unfortunately we’ve lost a little faith in your quality of service. Had there been a simple way for us to reserve the item on the day, we would have purchased it from you. Had there been a way for the partners to contact those stores and reserve the item, we would have done so. Your system let you down. And we think that is a shame.


Again, if there is any way in which you can help us, we would greatly appreciate it.


Kind regards

Sunday, 27 November 2022

A QUICK LETTER TO JOHN LEWIS

Dear John Lewis,


For a long time now, my wife and I have seen your products and quality of service as exemplary.


For example, we used a John Lewis wish list for our wedding, we’ve ordered a number of subsequent items using your click and collect service, and we’ve long considered your local store as a first port of call for excellent gifts and household products.


However, we’d like to let you know about a difficult experience we had with you on Saturday, November 26th, 2022. We feel certain that informing you will help you improve your service, and we hope that it’s that spirit that comes across from our story.


First, we noticed a product online we were interested in. We’ve attached the reference for information: it’s a 72-piece Arthur Price cutlery set retailing, at the time, at £190.


As you can see, this product is ‘only available in stores’ - and we decided to visit our local John Lewis, Broad Street, Reading, to purchase it.


The product was out-of-stock, but we were told by one of your partners that there was one item in stock at the High Wycombe store, and one in Oxford, Westgate.


At this point we decided our most sensible option was to call and reserve the product with the Oxford store. Unfortunately, after some confusion, we were told by the operative that it is not possible to call John Lewis stores directly.


That left us with the only sensible option of driving to Oxford to buy the item in store. It is a 70-mile round trip, and, as you might appreciate, getting into Oxford on a busy Saturday before Christmas is neither easy nor enjoyable.


To our dismay, we were told by a partner at the Westgate store that the product was not in stock, and that there was nothing she could advise other than travelling to central London, where the Oxford Street store had the item in stock. She also told us that we could reserve the product, something the partner in the Reading store told us we couldn’t do - and in fact, were unable to do via your call centre helpline.


As you can imagine, we were less than impressed at the idea of chasing knives and forks around the country, based on a computer’s unreliable interpretation of stock, as well as the opaque communication from your partners and call centre operative.


We both feel that the system let us down, and that operating a centralised call centre instead of direct contact, actually worsened our experience, rather than enhancing it, particularly given our wasted journey.


We’d like to ask you if there is anything you can do to help us? As we mentioned, we have always considered John Lewis a champion of excellence and high quality, and we want to continue using your services with confidence.


Thank you,


Kind regards

Thursday, 24 November 2022

TALES OF THE PUSSYCAT

I got called a ‘pussycat’ yesterday. It wasn’t endearing; in fact, it didn’t help me at all. I had become frustrated on the phone to the estate agent (not with her) about how long everything is taking, and then apologised.


“Oh don’t worry,” she said, “Compared to some I have to deal with, you are a pussycat.”


So this is how it works then: I get furious, with cheeks ablaze and the fire of a thousand suns in my eyes. And then I erupt at someone: livid, incandescent, volcanic with rage even. But then it comes out like a miaow in the wind?


Two things stood out. One, I’m a cat. And two, this horrible game is always won by lions. I mean it. Unless you roar down the phone and show your teeth, it seems you get nowhere. And in these meaner times, I’m worried that everything feels a bit like that.


Now, you could argue that a pussycat is a lion, only smaller. You could say it’s all about attitude and confidence, or even a bit of sass every now and then. You could even say that it doesn’t matter how you’re viewed by anyone, but it does matter how you see yourself. These are fair points. Except it does sort of matter when you try to be assertive with an estate agent, and she laughs it off as though she’s just seen Peter Dinklage try out for the basketball team.


You could also probably make a case for just being yourself and letting the authenticity do the work. That’s a bit like saying it will all work out in the end because love, kindness, gentleness and patience always win out over their opposites - or that the tortoise’s determination is greater than the hare’s complacency.


But even the tortoise knows he only has a chance because the hare has all the power. If the hare hadn’t stopped and rested, who would have won? And a pussycat might be a lion, but only one of them can actually catch a zebra.


So anyway, I was a bit down in the dumps yesterday. There’s no sign of anything moving, and our chances of getting in before Christmas are fading. The solicitors are waiting for other solicitors, we’re waiting for them to do something useful, the families in the chain are getting more and more agitated. It’s a waiting game - but it’s worse than that, it’s a wait for something that might not ever happen. If this goes on another month or so, we just won’t be able to afford to move at all. And honestly, that really terrifies me.


Perhaps the scariest thing is that the estate agent might just have been right about me after all.

Friday, 18 November 2022

AND THIS WAS ODD BECAUSE IT WAS

Every year on the 18th of November, I celebrate this blog’s birthday, and, as of today, I’ve been posting here for nine years. Happy birthday, little blog.


Sometimes I think it might as well be 90 years; the world is so different now. And it continues to change. Blogging itself seems quite ‘old-fashioned’ in the great scheme of things - most blogs are professional marketing tools, adverts, deep-dives on complex subjects: the kind of thing hardly anyone gets to the end of. I’m posting nonsense! Just thoughts and reactions to my day, like a public diary. And I don’t know anyone else who does this.


I think people might have, had social media not taken over the world. Flumpbook used to be the place for it, where everyone went. They even used to call a post a ‘status’ where you could tell everyone how you were ‘feeling’. Remember that? So-and-so … is down because someone who shall remain nameless isn’t talking to her… My guess is that people soon got fed up of that kind of thing.


When I started blogging, Twitter was limited to 140 characters, which made it a sort of micro-blog. I liked that. But rather than link threads together, I’ve always found it cleaner to just have somewhere to get on and write, in short-to-medium bursts of energy.


So I’ve just carried on. I’ve never pointed anyone here, I’ve never actively promoted it. I just kept on writing - about anything. And this is post number 2,207.


A lot of the talk today is about how Twitter’s new owner might be about to drive it into the ground. Apparently he’s locked all employees out of their buildings, and posted a picture of a gravestone with the Twitter logo on it. I actually think he’s trolling everyone, and loving the power. Nevertheless, there’s a chance that social media is about to change once again, especially as the post-TikTok generation grow up - there’ll be something new round the corner.


I still like blogging though. I might be a dinosaur, but I still think this is my favourite way of getting my thoughts ‘out there’. I don’t really mind if nobody reads it. It’s not a promotional tool. It’s just a thing I’ve been doing every few days for nine years. Out there for me, means somewhere outside of my head.


And I think that’s alright.

Wednesday, 16 November 2022

SQUASHED TEA

“Of course the other problem we’ve got is that that house is full of stuff and there’s no movement to get it cleared or anything,” said the Estate Agent at 70 miles per hour, referring to the house that our vendors are buying.


I interrupted.


“Look, I appreciate that they don’t want to start clearing out until they’ve exchanged, it’s just that we emptied our flat in three and a half days and we’ve been homeless for twelve weeks…”


My voice was strained like the final tea leaves of the day. There was a soggy tinge to it too: fed up, annoyed about the injustice of it all, squashed like a wet teabag.


I can’t handle much more of this. I feel as though we budgeted for six weeks in our minds, had a reserve for maybe another four or five, and now we’re just at the end of our resources.


One piece of advice given to us has been to push the nuclear button, and tell them we’re pulling out unless we exchange by a certain date. Given house prices right now, that would be devastating for everyone, and potentially us. But I don’t want to play that last card in the deck just yet - I still feel as though we risk losing the stand-off, and I would like to be a man of my word. Integrity is very important - it couldn’t be a bluff. And this game is full of bluff and spin already.


Others tell us we’ll “get there” - which is true, we will. I just wonder at what cost to my mental health, and also when. Sammy is desperate to get in before Christmas; I am just feeling rough about the whole journey and want it to be over as soon as possible. I just want to go home now please.

Tuesday, 15 November 2022

CRUNCH WEEK

It feels like a bit of a crunch week in the Unsettling Adventure. We expected to have moved by now; we are still waiting. Nine months in.


Sometime soon we’re going to have to make decisions about what’s next, regardless of what’s going on.


The hold-up is in the chain of course. Somebody needs to sign a thing before anyone else can do anything. At least, that’s what we imagine the problem is - nobody can actually tell us.


“We’re not allowed to know what the issue is,” said the estate agent the other day, shortly after declaring that it was “Definitely something small and nothing to worry about.” I smiled weakly at that.


Crunch points are interesting. Will the miracle happen at the last moment like it does in the movies? Will the clock tick all the way down to 00:01 just as our hero saves the day? Or will seeping reality push us towards a more practical assessment of the situation?


In other words, is it better to have unshakeable, unswerving faith at the crunch point, or is it wiser to prepare for the worst and take action before the fat lady sings?


That’s been a theme for a while now: what to let go of, what to hold on to - that precarious balancing act of faith and wisdom. Somehow, I think God expects us to have a bit of both, which always creates a really interesting tension. I could spend a lifetime figuring out how to work that out.


Anyway, here we are: crunch point. One thing must be true though and that is that (as they say) ‘faith comes by hearing’ meaning that it makes sense to hold on to all the things you’ve actually heard from God. Another point is that you can ‘ask for wisdom if you lack it’, which means you can pray for it. So managing the crunch point tension is all about hearing and praying - which is no surprise, really.


Also, bubbling away in my mind, is the thought that there are lessons we’re learning and will look back on. It’s hard to reflect now, but I’m sure there’s some strengthening, some building, some testing and pruning going on for Sammy and me. One day, on our comfy sofa, in our new house, we might get the chance to see it from the other side. For now though, it’s just a rocky part of the adventure.

Thursday, 10 November 2022

THE AUDACITY OF A PARKING SPOT HEIST

I had to go to the pharmacy today - long story, but I had to pick up some medication. Oh. Not a long story after all: that’s it.

Anyway, the pharmacy I go to is on a high street. There are one-hour parking spots on either side of the road, so I found one opposite the shop and went in.


I queued up. Then...


“I’m here to pick up a prescription?” I said, inflecting as though I were on Home and Away.


“What’s your name?” asked the white-coated lady. I told her. she went out back and had a loud conversation with someone unseen. For some reason they both had to repeat my name several times. How do famous people cope with this kind of thing? I wondered. Anyway, out she came, smile made out of makeup.


“Can’t give it to you I’m afraid. Our pharmacist is out to lunch and she needs to sign it off. She’ll be back in half an hour?” It was her turn for inflection.


I nodded and said that was okay. I’d have time. I drove off somewhere else, listened to the radio for a bit and then came back to the high street.


I thought the pharmacist was the person in the white coat. Not her then? Life’s confusing these days! I drove back along the street, looking for a parking space. There was one left, and just in front of it was a hatched no-parking-area in front of a driveway. I pulled into the hatches and threw the car into reverse.


Before I knew what was happening, a car screeched in behind me and took my spot. I raised my eyebrows in the mirror, made a kind of ‘what’s going on’ gesture with open hands and then wound down my window.


The guy was getting out. Short, hi-vis jacket, shorts, boots, round face. I could see him in the wing mirror. He could see me.


“Aw look I’m sorry mate,” he babbled, “I just only need to get one fing, I promise I’ll be in and out, it’s just that I got limited time on me break and I only need this one fing from the shop an’ I won’t be like five minutes mate honestly, it’s just the one item I need.”


“Yeah me too,” I said incredulously. He disappeared across the road into the One Stop newsagent, still apologising as he went.


I’m not sure what good an apology is if you’re doubling down while you’re making it. Yes, I’m sorry I’m stealing your money from you old lady, really I am, but get your bank card out, we’re off to the cashpoint. Mr Jenkins, I’m sorry I almost ran over your cat just now but not to worry, I’ll just hop back in and give him another go.


About three minutes later, Mr round-face-yellow-jacket stumbled out of the One Stop clutching two massive crates of Stella Artois.


“They’re not even for me!” he laughed.


I raised my eyebrows as he clunked open his door and climbed in to his car, still parked right behind me. There had been no opportunity to give him a piece of my mind (I wouldn’t), no opportunity to reassure him it was all okay (it wasn’t) and no opportunity to bless him anyway (I couldn’t). He’d talked the entire time, and I’d sat there in disbelief.


I parked up, got out and crossed the road, still thinking about it. In a way, it’s impressively audacious to risk a road-rage incident for two crates of terrible beer. I couldn’t help wonder whether I’d done anything at all to dissuade him from doing that exact same thing again, whether he’d learned anything, whether he’d done that many times before and was a practiced master at filling an angry void with cheery conversation. And then, inevitably I wondered whether I’d learned anything either. I checked my watch. I still had ten minutes to get back before my next meeting. I’d just about make it if I was in-and-out of the pharmacy.


The door jingled behind me as the warm air mingled with the cold. There were four people in the queue, and no-one behind the counter apart from the lab-coated lady I’d thought had been the pharmacist.


Brilliant, I thought.