Monthly Archives: April 2009

Rain and poets

To Neath this morning, taking Graham to the rail station to pick up a ticket in advance of his week’s absence starting tomorrow.

It rained.  It rained all the way there, it rained while we were there, and it rained all the way back.  Most uncomfortable.

“I sometimes think that Neath is trying to tell me something,” I said, stripping off my damp clothes the minute we got home.

“You may be right.”

“Nothing personal, you understand.”

“No, I know.  It’s something about rain and parades, like as not.”

“Dunno about that.  Rain and poets, perhaps. Never the twain shall meet.”

“What’s a twain?”

“Not sure, really.  Something to do with mud, rivers, and lots of water.  And a long bit of string with a weight on the end.”

“You have a really peculiar head, you do.”

“I know.  Never quite sure if it’s the rain or the poems. The result is strange, anyway.”

Something else to dust

I’m not sure there’s any such thing as a second childhood.  It’s more a matter of a continuous childhood with a bit of a break somewhere in the middle.  Leastways, that’s how I comfort myself when I’m plainly exhibiting the symptoms of increasing simplicity.

That and reminding myself that Thoreau, among others, urged us all to simplify.

So, anyway, I’ve learned that that moment of panic when waking in a darkened room, collecting the shadows of the night together until I remember where I am is nothing new, and certainly nothing unique.  For as long as I can remember, when I stay in a hotel room I leave the light on in the bathroom, pulling the door almost but not entirely closed.  Makes waking less of a panicky moment, I’ve always found.

Now, though, when I wake, there are still streamers of my dreams hanging in the dark, and I am liable to experience a short but painful moment of ‘where the hellami’?  The answer comes soon enough but if there’s a bit of light in the room, it’s short and relatively sweet.

So, since we moved here, I’ve taken to leaving an ultra-low voltage light on by the side of the bed.  It helps but does nothing for the aesthetics of the room.

“Surely you can come up with a less ugly way of tackling it than that,” Graham said a few weeks back.

“Well, I could go for a kid’s nightlight, I suppose.  Something cute, perhaps?”

“That’s a great idea.  Something vintage.  Something retro-chic.  What sort of thing?”

“Oh, a lighthouse, perhaps.  Or a little house with lighted windows.  Or something out of Disney.”

“Leave it with me.”

And so I did.  Thought nothing more of it, to be honest.

Then, this morning, a large pre-loved postal box turned up and, on opening it I discovered a wonderful lamp from the early 50s (I think) in the form of Donald Duck.  It’s a bit battered and worn, like me, and needs rewiring, and heaven knows I could do with that, too.  But I do believe I’ve fallen in love with it already.

Hey ho.  Something else to dust before the business of the day.

 

A friendly face in the dark

A friendly face in the dark

Leave of absence

Taking a day off.  Play nice.

Can’t win ‘em all

Monday has become our favourite day for lunch because our once a week shopping regime means it’s the only day we get crispy crunchy bread.  And I love crispy crunchy fresh bread.

What makes it harder to bear is that we’re entering into fresh salad vegetable season and the two together are close to my ideal meal.

So, with a little gentle persuasion, we’ve dug our Panasonic bread making machine out of the cupboard, recharged our stock of raw materials, and the house is filling gently with the wonderful smell of fresh bread.  There’s nothing more homey than the smell of baking and of hot black coffee and this evening we got the lot.

Yummity.  Scrummity.

And, on much the same subject, I was given to a little schadenfreude at lunch time when the heavens opened and smashed us all with a truly grand hail storm.

“Well, that’s gratifying,” I said.

“How’s that, then?”

“If I’d given in to neighbourly persuasion I’d have planted out my veggie seedlings by now, and this lot would have hammered them into the ground.”

“Ah.  When we go out to buy your seedlings we’d better get some fleece, then.  Protect them from hail storms as well as greedy birdlings.”

“Good thinking, little nibble person.”

“You’ve got salad cream all down your front.”

“Can’t win ‘em all.”

The sex was fabulous, dahling

I’m wriggling with happy anticipation at the prospect of the political week ahead. Well, you do have to find what joy you can, where you can in times like these, don’t you?

It’s our fabulous baby-faced Leader of the Opposition–David Cameron MP–what’s done it for me and got me chuckling over my mug of cheap-o coffee [can't afford my favourite brand any more].  He’s a rich git, born of wealthy parents, privileged childhood and automatic entry into a top university.  Never known a day of hardship in his life.  And here he is today, telling us that we’re about to enter into a new ‘age of austerity’ and that we need to change our ways.

Oh, boy!  [Pause to dash tears of merriment from jaundiced eyes with generic tissue.]  Talk about shades of Marie Antoinette:  ”Well, let them eat cake!”

I await the humour from the political commentators, especially the stand-up kind, with great pleasure.

Cameron is, of course, too young to remember the last ‘age of austerity’ but I do.  I remember food and clothing rationing.  I remember shortages of essentials.  I remember power cuts and rolling gas pressure reductions.  Cameron has been insulated from all that.

Hey ho.  Have to be grateful, though, for the upper-class twit has given me a good old-fashioned giggle today.

Austerity wasn’t all gloom and misery, though.  People took a pride in making a little go a long way, in supporting one another when times got tough, and laughing at upper-class twits.  Everyone learned to make a joint of meat last best part of a week for a family of four, and to produce three decent meals a day on pennies.  Everyone learned to dance, and went out dancing at least once a week.  Remember music you could dance to, and the songs you could sing along to?

You made what fun you could out of precious little.  Me, I remember that the sex was fabulous, dahling.