Anne Atkins

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Cultural Appropriation

March 26, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Youngest [just home for the hols]: What’s for supper tonight?

Mother: Passover.

Youngest: Seriously.

Mother: Seriously, we’re having a Passover supper.

Second Y: The Rugby. Dad and I keep telling you we’re watching the Rugby tonight.

M: Passover is a prior commitment.

SY: No, we said yesterday we’re watching the Rugby. You didn’t come up with this Passover notion until breakfast.

M: I think Passover predates yesterday. And Rugby.

SY: It can’t be Passover tonight, anyway. What makes you think it’s Passover?

M: The Chief Rabbi, on Thought for the Day this morning.

SY: Oh, the Chief Rabbi, eh? Since when has Passover been the same night as the Rugby?

M: And Fleur. When I asked her how we celebrate it. Though it is odd, because Shaun said it’s not full moon till Sunday so it should be next week. But I thought Fleur probably knew better. And possibly the Chief Rabbi.

Y: What do you eat for Passover?

M: Boiled eggs, salt water, parsley, horseradish.

Y: I said what do you eat for Passover? What food?

M: Boiled eggs, salt water, parsley, horseradish…

Y: None of that is food.

M: Lamb, I assume. Unleavened bread.

Y: So. Eggs, meat, bread. That’s it? Parsley is not food. This is all healthy rubbish. I’ve just come home from school. I need a junk fest.

SY: Mother, you can’t just decide parsley is part of Passover because it sounds like the word Passover. That’s not how it works. Apart from anything else, it’s is a translation.

M [Rising above]: Horseradish for the bitter herbs, to remind us of the exile in the wilderness. Egg to symbolise life. Salt for the tears of, um, something or other: exile again I expect. By the waters of Babylon wait no sorry scroll back. Parsley because it’s green, and, for, you know. And unleavened bread, obviously, because…

SY: This all sounds like Cultural Appropriation to me.

M: It’s not Cultural Appropriation. I asked Fleur. I said, is this offensive, Fleur, if we celebrate Passover? And she said, why on earth would it be offensive? Jesus celebrated Passover. Not once, but three times, in John’s Gospel. Why shouldn’t you celebrate Passover? Next year, we’ll invite you for Passover.

SY: Just because one Jew, your cousin, says…

M: Anyway, what’s wrong with Cultural Appropriation?

SY: You’re such a Colonialist.

M: Are you saying we can’t eat Anglo-Indian fusion? Are you? What about jalfrezi? Are you telling me I can’t eat kedgeree? Well?

SY: Kedgeree is certainly Cultural Appropriation.

Youngest: I thought it was a fish.

March 26, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
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Is this Mothering Sunday conversation taking place in every household in the country?

March 14, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Shaun: Do you feel frightened in the evenings?

Me: Not at all. You mean at home?

S: No.

A: Oh. Out in the streets? Yes of course.

S: Really?

A: All the time. Since I was mugged, certainly.

S: I didn’t know.

A: I’m always conscious it might happen again. I avoid coming home from London by train, late at night, alone, if possible.

S: But you still do it.

A: Yes. But I’m alert, aware, all the time, till I get home, that I might be attacked any moment.

S: On your bike?

A: Yes. I wrap my handbag strap round the handlebars, or wear it across my body like the police taught me, rather than over a shoulder or loose in my basket. And bicycle down the middle of the road so I can see everything. Faster than before.

S: Are you nervous in the train?

A: Not if it’s full. But if I’m alone in a carriage with just a man… well, I make sure I’m not. And sit near an emergency communication cord. I’ve always done that. It’s second nature.

S: Have you ever been groped in public?

A: Of course.

S: Really??

A: Everyone has.

S: When?

A: Oh gosh, far too often to remember.

S: I’ve been reading this stuff – that every women you know has been groped in public – and at first I didn’t believe it. I thought it was too fantastic to be true.

A: I can easily believe that. It’s like racism. People say they experience it every day. It’s part of life, all the time.

S: But it’s terrible. Men need to know this. Why don’t you say? Why doesn’t everyone?

A: What do you think MeToo was about?

S: But why don’t you all say it more?

A: Because for centuries, millennia, women have been conditioned to please men. Please everyone. Be gentle and acquiescent and courteous and not make a fuss. I don’t even mean we’re “brought up” to do this. No one necessarily tells us. It’s just so deep down: for so long compliance has been our meal ticket, our way of being accepted, achieving recognition and status, often even our only way of being fed or housed acceptably, that it goes against everything we’ve ever learnt for us to speak out or complain. Otherwise we’re horrible harridans, aren’t we?

S: Whereas men are brought up to be aggressive and pushy.

A: Yes.

S: But it’s got to change!

A: Well, the way to do that is to teach Rose, now, while she’s still a teenager, that the moment a man touches her in the tube she should scream at the top of her voice that she’s being assaulted.

S: Or even just say it loudly so everyone can hear.

A: Yes: that would do it. Don’t you remember, years ago, when you came home after a man looked at you in a way you didn’t like?

S: It was a women. She eyed me up and down as she walked past. It was really disconcerting.

A: I thought it was a man. And you came home really quite shaken. And Serena, Bink and I all said, yeah??

S: Yes.

A: We’d experienced it all the time. Imagine how much more threatening it would have felt if it had been a man.

S: Yes.

A: After all, there wasn’t much she could do to you, was there? I’ve told you what happened to me in my first fortnight at Oxford, right?

S: Remind me.

A: I was asleep. A Second Year come into my room, got in my bed and started groping me. Inside my pyjamas. Until eventually he said, Oh, that’s why you don’t want sex: you’ve got your period; why didn’t you tell me?

S: What did you do?

A: I froze. I had no idea what to do. I just completely froze. I think he stayed all night. The next night, for several weeks, I locked my bedroom door. I heard him rattling the knob and then going away. I didn’t even tell my bedder, and she was like a mother to me. I told her when a tramp let himself into my room and I asked her advice about locking the door, and she said I should, but I never told her about him. I think the Second Years had made bets about bedding First Years.

S: Doesn’t sound like you not to say anything.

A: I was eighteen!

S: Had you had conversations with him? Had you, you know…

A: Not at all. I might have met him in the bar, briefly. I don’t remember.

S: Why didn’t you report him?

A: Report him?

S: Why don’t you report him now?

A: Can’t remember his name: I barely knew him. Come to think of it, why didn’t you? I told you about it, must have been the following year. Don’t you remember? You said it was just as well you didn’t know which team he played for because you would have broken his legs.

S: Yes… He played football, though. not Rugby.

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I suppose one advantage we have over racism is that most men live with at least one woman.

Maybe it’s time we started telling them??

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(PS Thank you for the flowers! I think I was almost glad you felt like breaking his legs – I was certainly very surprised! – but maybe it is just as well you didn’t.)

March 14, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Coronavirus cheer, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation, Gratitude
5 Comments
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Nothing else really matters in life...

February 20, 2021 by Anne Atkins

The day after the day after St Valentine’s Day… hang on a minute.

Let’s recap: thanks to my amazing financial flair, on the day before the day after the day after St V’s D, instead of red roses the day before the day before the day after-after, I received chrysanthemums.

Which should, of course, properly be chysanthemer (plural). As you’d know if you’d read an early chapter in the book I haven’t got very far with writing yet. Working title, Never Too Late. Sequel to An Elegant Solution.

Or, indeed, if you’d ever been taught by my father while he was still alive. It would be quite scary to be taught by him afterwards.


Anyway, as I say, the next day after… one of those days.

There I was, coming down for breakfast all innocent-like, and the doorbell rang. Answered by our German Artist-in-Residence.

You know how it is.

When the doorbell rings these days, it’s never a friend popping in unannounced for a casual cup of coffee. (Or selling crack cocaine, now only marginally more illegal.)

It’s always Amazon.

Largely because we’re all so bored we can’t do anything else.

On this occasion, it was (or should that be were? Obviously not, but I was so bored I thought I might as well ask you something idiotic) two large cardboard boxes.

Proper boxes, you know. Real, unexpected parcels.

With the word, Flowers, written all over them. Freddie’s Flowers. (Words, I mean.)

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Oh here we go, I said, with mock fed-up-ness. Is this what it’s going to be like from now on, I said. Secretly thinking it was rather fun. Certainly was when I was that age.

This is what it is to have a Sweet-Seventeen-Year-Old in the house.

Truckloads of Valentines all day long.

(Of which she’d already had a trickle.)

Never-ending hopefuls beating a path to the door.

(Of which she hadn’t had any. Or, as far as we’ve noticed, crack cocaine dealers.)

Secretly hoping to myself, all the while, that some distant fan had read my blog and decided I myself needed flowers.

Not that I’m hinting or anything.


There must be a card, Shaun said, pretending to look for one.

Doesn’t seem to be, I said. What did the delivery man say, I asked.

Didn’t think to ask him, said G-AiR.

Typical.

Odd, Shaun said.

No card, he said.

I’m sure I ordered a card, he said.


I should explain, if I didn’t already, that these were proper, old-fashioned, decent parcels.

Brown paper.

Organic string.

All the right trimmings.

And there were even instructions on how to arrange the flowers, and everything.


The vase was free, he confessed. Real, big, proper glass vase. The flowers will come every week, he said.

And the fourth week is free.

Though I’m not sure we can afford to keep the order going, he said.

But I couldn’t resist, he said.

(And then spoilt it all by saying, I read about Freddie and he sounded such a great guy.)

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On the day my mother died – not that we knew it was going to be the day she died: my father and I thought it was going to be just another Friday; certainly hoped it was – two things there were, spoken, I will never forget.

I got my mother a mug of tea and she and my father held it to her lips, gently, easily, and she drank.

“Thank you,” she said, as she finished. The last words she ever spoke. Indicative of her whole life and wonderful attitude towards it and why she was always so gloriously, fabulously happy. Even when life was rough with her, she was. Always grateful and always happy and always brim-full of love.

My father sat on their bed and said, “What beautiful hands.” And held them.

Friends, these hands were over ninety years old. They were… hands. She wasn’t a pianist or ballerina or anything. Just a brilliant and wonderfully kind mathematician. How beautiful can her hands have been, honestly?

And my father had been married to those hands for nearly seven decades. And I’d never heard him say that before.

But that’s love, isn’t it? On that morning, her hands were beautiful. Her dying hands.

To him, anyway.


There is one thing better than a lover who can afford to buy you flowers every week.

And that is a lover who can’t afford to buy you flowers every week.

But does so anyway.


Nothing else in life can really matter after that, can it?

Well?

Can it?

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(PS One of the many fun things about Freddie and his Flowers – along with his personal explanations; his foxy fiery colour choice for this week; the real string and brown paper – perhaps the most unusual, was that the tulips came with their own bulbs. Presumably so that I can keep them forever in the garden afterwards. To remind me of our Ruby wedding, as my parents had a red robin bush.

Why, said the seventeen-year-old, with all the romance that being seventeen imparts which is presumably why they get so many more Valentines than the rest of us, which in any other circs might seem a tad unfair, are there onions in your flowers?)

February 20, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
4 Comments
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Minuscule unforeseeable flaw in otherwise brilliant money-saving wheeze...

February 15, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Sainsbury’s had run out of red roses.

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(Actually, I believe they read my blog and threw them away at the end of yesterday. They had MASSES. About fifty bunches in our tiny little corner shop. There aren’t that many lovers in the whole of Bedford; let alone our area of it… which is mostly Care Homes, rehab and the homeless. It’s like that scheme to bring down the hedge fund managers. Someone spots financial genius, gets jealous and sets out to destroy it. I will have my comeback…)

February 15, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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I should have been an Economist, really...

February 14, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Forget scientist: how about this…

Me: I’ve just thought how to save you loads of money!

Shaun [waking up suddenly]: How?

Me: Buy up all the red roses on Monday morning.

Shaun [drifting back off]: That’s a good idea! I didn’t think of that…

What a genius I am.


Let’s just roll this out for a minute, shall we:

Give Christmas presents on 3rd or 4th day of Christmas, instead of Christmas Day.

Hmm: we do that anyway. Mostly because everyone in the family jumps on Amazon on Christmas Eve. Doesn’t seem to have made us very rich yet.

Instead, we just pay premium postage.


Mothering Sunday card on Mothering Monday. That should save a bit, right?

Except that cards are such two dimensional, flat items, I expect the card shops just put them away till next year.

In any case, they all say “Happy Mother’s Day” now, which is so like a nail across a blackboard to me that my children all know to stay well clear if they get me a card with any such wording and only Ben does it – I’d like to say out of witty irony but actually because he’s a lot bigger than me.

Last year I think it was even, Happy Mums’ Day, but he had to write that on himself because even Clinton’s isn’t that tacky.

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The principle, however, is sound. 

Buy when demand is low. Eny ful no that.

All right, how about giving me my birthday present late… or wedding anniversary…

Oh, wait.

* * * * *


Come back, Day Job: all is forgiven.

Um…

Can’t remember what my Day Job is.

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Photographer, maybe?

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February 14, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
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Good News... And the other one.

February 13, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Good News: We are in the middle of a Cold Snap. This is a Good Thing because the world in general and British wildlife in particular needs Proper Weather.

(Though it’s pretty unfair we don’t have snow.)

More to the point, it Cheers Me Up. Which is obv more important than all climate change put together. (Though it cheers me up a bit less since my children explained to me that, no, it is no indication whatsoever that the climate outcome isn’t every bit as bleak and terrible and awful as we thought it was.)

Slightly less Good N: I am now neurotic enough to wonder whether my beehives need insulation. The reason this is BN is because neurosis is very wearing. Mind you, it can also keep you alive. Or your bees.

GN: I have loads of ikky spare insulation in the potting shed. (The reason it’s ikky is because I Hate Synthetic. Feeling it, looking at it, even just thinking about it. I’ve been wanting to get rid of that spare insulation for ages.)

Also GN: Some of my bees are deffo alive. Well, at least one is. Or was.

BN: Unfortunately, that particular bee is slightly less alive than she was. I am Down by One Bee. On account of, when a bee decides to defend her colony by stinging something or someone, it is quite a costly process. For her. Personally. (Though as any beekeeper will tell you, bees don’t think or behave personally but Corporately. Or perhaps one should say, were it not such an unfashionable word these days, Colonially.)

BN: Ergo, this is doubly bad news. Tbh, I’m not sure I would have minded so much the loss of One Bee.

GN: Our German artist-in-residence friend knows What To Do About Stings. You cut an onion in half and shove it on. So says her granny and her granny’s granny before her.

Why?

Because it draws out the sting.

BN: This is obviously not based on any Scientific data whatsoever and is complete utter Old Wives’ Claptrap. (But then, let’s not be too snooty about Old Wives’ Claptrap, eh? Penicillin started life as OWC, apparently. So, in a way, when you think about it, did the entire process of vaccination. Which is why it’s called vaccination. Because it began with milkmaids. You know all this, right? Stop me if I’m getting boring.)

How do you know? ses I. After all, sucking it is supposed to draw out the sting. It never has yet. My lovely orangey essential oil in the tiny bottle in the medicine cupboard is supposed to do something or other to bee stings. Which it never does either. Though it does smell lovely. Better than onion, anyway.

How do I know? ses she. Because my mother always did it when we got stung.

Did it make any difference? ses I.

How would anyone possibly know? ses she. We got stung. We survived.

Well, quite.

Moreover it ses it here, On The Internet, ses she.

Oh well, the internet…

But garlic will do instead, ses she.

I was just about to ask, ses I. Bit less clunky to carry around. A clove of garlic makes a change to the ice cube I have to tie on my fingers and thumbs any time I’ve been anywhere near the oven, for instance to cook supper.

Back to the GN-BN dichotomy.

Very seriously GN: I just got stung, and had NO allergic reaction whatsoever. No ambulance sirens roaring. Not even a mildly swollen arm. Just a nasty sting and the back of my hand being hot and red and bumpy for the rest of the evening and a bit sore. I honestly believe this is the first time in my life I have had a Normal Reaction to a bee sting.

So, either 1., I have finally cracked this, and got lucky, and am no longer allergic. V. GN.

Or 2., the bee didn’t sting me properly in the first place… presumably because it’s winter and she was a bit groggy. Can’t quite work out whether this is G or BN. Does mean I’m One Bee Up, I suppose.

Or 3., it’s because I had the Pfizer vac yesterday and my body is so confused it’s given up fighting back. (No, of course we don’t qualify: don’t be so rude.)

Which is obviously VERY GOOD NEWS INDEED. For the whole world, Yay!!!!

Ra ra the Human Race.

(And surely, if we can crack Covid-19, and so quickly, we can crack Climate Change, eventually…?)

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(PS My bees couldn’t do that. Invent a vaccine. They only invented stings. And I have a feeling God did that for them, anyway.)

PPS Ben has been reading my blog. This is really not what it’s intended for. Members of my family spying on me. Still, noblesse oblige, what great ones do the less will prattle of, all that. He ses, you know you like the idea of overcoming natural phenomena like allergies? Have you thought of applying this more widely?

For instance, what about… hmm… let’s see… Gravity?

You want to start ambitious, though, to prove the point. Fifteen floors up: something like that.

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Or, PPPS, it’s just occurred to me (I should be a scientist like my brother, I’m so quick to spot cause and effect), 4. It was the garlic.

February 13, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
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Winning

February 09, 2021 by Anne Atkins

There has been a running sore in our lives for much of the last year. (Actually, several – sores, not years – but let’s concentrate on one for the moment.)

As is the wont of running sores, it left me with emotional-Long-Covid for most of the summer. You know: broken sleep; convoluted dreams; dark dawns; unproductive days.

All that nonsense.

Then we got away just before the late autumn lockdown, miles away, far, far away from the source of the infection, and life was pretty jolly bearable.

(The days were still fairly unproductive, tbh… but lovely.)


Then it hit again. Do sores hit? Struck, better. Erupted: that’s it.

That was when I discovered the power of wild winter swimming. 

Now, the thing about an anæsthesising wheeze like that – as you’ll know, if you’ve ever done any of those exercises to get you through labour (which, admittedly, don’t work at all: but let’s imagine for a moment they do) – is that it doesn’t take the pain away. But it ‘takes the edge off it’, as your midwife will lie to you. It enables you to run with it. (Or, in the case of labour, scream your head off and wake all the neighbours with it. Survive, more or less.)

Invigorating cold swims absolutely take the biscuit here. (Wish I could recommend them for labour, but your baby might get washed away in the fast-flowing river. Or freeze to to death, poor little mite.)

So come the late autumn and the next spurt of the sore (a rather disgusting metaphor, this… but I’ve started so I’ll finish) I was only reeling and wobbly-kneed for a week or two. Not months.

Mostly thanks to the swimming.


Next flare-up, week or two ago, toppled me sideways for twenty-four hours. Couldn’t write. Couldn’t sleep. Couldn’t think of anything else.

After which, somewhat surprisingly perhaps, I emerged blinking into another bracing and beautiful winter’s day.

You do see what’s happening here? My lovely encouraging gentle hypnotherapist friend asked me, when I confessed yet again that I didn’t have Chapter Twelve to share with him at the end of the day.

You were only incapacitated for a day and a night.

Oh yes, I said.

So I was.

Thank your unconscious self that you are in charge, and that next time it will be even shorter.

Ok, I said. I will.

He is very clever, my lovely encouraging gentle and kind hypnotherapist friend. He teaches me how to hypnotise myself. By saying things to my conscious self, which my unconscious self then obligingly makes happen.


Last night the suppurating little volcano spurted and farted and burped again. 

Wham.

Ow.

Ouch.

I can’t write anything today, I told my friend. Hammer-smashing-me-in-the-head time. Sandbag over the back of the cranium.

Again.


And what do you know?

He was right.

Subconscious in charge here.

A couple of gins, half a packet of peanuts (no supper thanks: too churned up), a brief romp through my Bach musette a few times (don’t stop, Shaun says when he comes in the room… but it sounds so awful, I say… well, I enjoy listening to you – a shame Ben doesn’t, but you can’t win ’em all) unsweetened cocoa with double cream, an early night and dawn with birdsong and a longish WhatsApp chat with a friend whose life is a lot more full of hurt than mine and who also wakes at six, and only about fourteen hours later, I feel fantastic.

Comparatively.

Which, I believe, is what’s called a Winning Streak.

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And, just in case you thought you’d got away with a short post for once, there is something else going on here, which is called Prayer.

As it happens, I have a lot of issues with the Almighty when it comes to prayer and the Trades Description Act.

He promised always to answer prayer. Was my impression when I signed up anyway.

Hmph.

If you’ve ever tried praying for anything in the slightest specific, you will know what I mean over this. God has, let’s call it, His own very individual and creative way of interpreting what answer exactly means. Members of the jury.

Try praying for someone to bring you a cup of tea first thing tomorrow, just how you like it and just when you want it, the moment you think of it.

Go on. Try it. Now…

Thank you.

Right. Will it happen?

Nope.

Take it from me. That cup of tea ain’t never going to appear early in the am, just because you’ve prayed it into some mythical existence this pm.

Even though there is no caveat in the small print that I am aware of, that His promise to answer prayer only applies to Sensible Prayers.

Prayers He Agrees With. You know.


For a lot of last year I was praying that this running sore would soon heal.

By Christmas, for instance. Last Christmas. The one just gone.

Which seemed more than reasonable, last summer.

I’m sure I specified last Christmas. Not next, or the one after. I’m virtually certain I did.

And even if I didn’t, even if I forgot that itsy little mini detail in the clause, that I was thinking of December 2020 not 2030 or beyond, He surely knew what I meant. On account of He is God.

Omniscience being part of the job description.

Well, now…

As you have correctly surmised, God didn’t “answer” that prayer. Not in the way we mortals would have thought consistent with the Trades Description &c. Nor any normal understanding of the word, answer.

And this is where He can be so Irritatingly Right.


No, the running sore is not gone. Not even the slightest sign on the horizon that this extremely painful Vesuvius in our lives is having any thoughts whatsoever of calling in its retirement clock and having a farewell party with its colleagues and going home to tend its roses.

Not in the tiniest whit.

And yet… and yet…

I admit it.

God has innovative ways of keeping His promises.

I am becoming more robust to deal with it.


So, Running Sore of My Life, you can drag on for years if you like. I expect you will anyway, with or without my say-so.

And next time it will only need twelve and a half hours and one gin.

(As long as it’s a big triple, spread out over a couple of dry Martinis. With roasted cashews on the side.)

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February 09, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
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Oh me of little faith

February 01, 2021 by Anne Atkins

There’s a thing about bees.

Which I didn’t know until just now.

They can be dead as… well, as has been observed around this time of the year (given that we’re not at Candlemas until tomorrow and we’ve definitely established that we’re still in the season of Christmas until we are) there is no particular reason to assume a door nail any deader than any other nail, and a coffin nail might be more apt. But the wisdom of our ancestors is in the simile.

As has been said before. (As I said before.)

Anyway, I had several hives full of door nails, as you know.

Then the snow fell, huddling the world in soft blanket.

Then the snow melted, swamping the world in wet swamp.

Then the me came out into the rather thin and naked winter sunshine, needing a bit of that free mental health we’ve mentioned already, which means you don’t have to go to the gym.

Though it does make me feel I must be perilously near middle age. I mean, it’s almost as embarrassing as jogging, isn’t it…

“Gardening…”??

You even have to say the word at the back of your throat, as if bearing down on it with detached contempt. GARRdening.

Not anything I’m ever caught doing, says your tone of voice.

(Almost as bad as cleaning. Shaun has just posted on my Facebook page – for those of you who haven’t come to this via my FBP – Anyone who has time to clean isn’t reading nearly enough.)

The stately and impressive Dean in the cathedral where our youngest daughter sang as chorister announced he was leaving and would henceforth “give far more attention to the roses”. 

Which means that now, every time I think of deadheading a few of my adored display, planted in my mother’s memory, as I walk past, I feel like a retired cleric.

Not a look that suits me.

So please don’t tell anyone that I do this.

But it is quite a decent work-out, if you go to it with attack. (Though you may find a spade more use, ba boum.)

And a lot more productive than jogging.

As we were, then: I decided to reorganise my beehives. Given that they were full of door nails. Which, whether we argue that they are more, or less, dead than coffin nails, I hope we are all agreed are less likely to sting me than bees.

And obv, the thing about door nails in the shape of bees is that there’s no point in putting all that anti-bee paraphernalia on, however allergic you are to them when they’re alive, if they ain’t.

I mean, is there?

You agree, right?

So I hauled those hives about and moved them hither and thence and changed their orientations and decided that wasn’t quite how I wanted them either and this one was wasn’t level and that one was too close to the compost and what about swapping the big one from the front to the the back wouldn’t that look better and I’ll just dig up all this cloggy, heavy soil all around so I can scatter the seeds for my summer wildflower garden – well, thank goodness they were dead, eh? Otherwise, I could have ended up looking like a cross between a very large beach ball and an outbreak of measles. If they’d been full of live bees, that is – until I noticed one or two dazed and rather undead scouts coming out to inspect at the door of the hive.

‘Ello ‘ello, they seemed to wave their antennæ at me.

(Looking a bit hungover, to be honest.)

This is winter.

Our seasonal lie-in.

So would you mind very much and very kindly not waking us up. On account of it gives us a headache. Specially what with you banging about like that and nearly knocking our house over and taking the roof off so it’s cold in here and hitting the walls with a spade by mistake.

And when we have a headache, what do we do? Like anyone would, we take it out on someone else.

You inviting us to sting you? Well? Are you? Are you?

At the point in the story, reflecting that this might be one of those rare occasions in life when discretion arguably has a bit of an edge on valour, I nipped to the back of the hive pretty smartish.

And hid.

And when they’d calmed down a bit and staggered back to bed, had a peek in the window.

Gosh.

Well, blow me down. That’s a turn up for the old thingamabob.

One colony still alive.

They’ll swarm at midsummer, with any luck, and then another hive can be populated.

So with luck, it might only take me about three more years to have four thriving hives again.

Because the others are all dead, aren’t they?

I mean, I’m not such a hopeless and inexperienced apiarist that I can’t tell a dead bee from one flying around, sniffing the nectar and stinging me.

On the other hand, I don’t normally go sticking my nose in my beehives in winter on the off-chance they might be expired and it is an ex hive of bees. I normally very respectfully leave them alone.

So I opened up another window, and… blow me down a second time.

Last thing I expected to see in my beehives at this juncture was bees. But there they were. All of them. Every one chock full of bees. (Except the one that was empty of bees in the first place.)

Just been having a little nap.

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So the moral of this story is:

Bash your life about a bit and knock it around and nearly topple it over and change your mind again, preferably being as noisy and irritating as you possibly can, and you may find the situation not nearly as desperate as you thought it was.

In fact, the situation may just be huddling in the middle of itself for warmth.

Come the spring; come the first sunny day thereof; come the protective bee-kit in the shape of the Vaccine – here the metaphor is starting to break down a bit but I’ve started so I’ll finish – and it might all just buzz into life once more and go sniffing all the flowers.

Amazing what you can learn from bees.

February 01, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Coronacheer, Optimism in isolation
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Triumph

January 27, 2021 by Anne Atkins

A pattern is emerging here.

I would never claim about my father – as I do, frequently, of my mother – that he was perfect.

Most of us are not. (Except, of course, my mother.)

He would never have claimed this of himself. Indeed, he was the last person in the world to have done so. He often said true artists are those who are never satisfied with their work. And the same could be said of saints: the best are those most aware that they are not.

My father was inspiring; kind; generous; enlightened; self-giving; dedicated. A visionary. Way ahead of his time. And showed very good taste when he fell in love.

It so happened that he often claimed, in old age, to have reached a time in life when he had learnt to do as he was told…

Well, ahem, Lord Copper. Sure. When it was something he didn’t care about at all. What he ate for dinner, for instance. Or… let’s see… what kind of whisky he drank.

In other ways, he could be the mountain Mohammed needed to go to.

This much has been obvious already, right? Someone who goes in the sea when it’s snowing is possessed of a steely nerve.


Now, this could be both a good thing… sometimes. Often indeed. Mostly, I’d say. And then again, occasionally… if not exactly a bad thing, certainly a tad trying.

Let me tell you, those of you who are near the point of giving your parents who are full of years somewhere to end those years.

Doing so is a Very Good Thing. Indeed.

But there will come days…

I haven’t done the in-depth statistical research yet to demonstrate this as conclusively as I would like, but I’ll bet you a lot more than I would put on any horse tipped by Gary Richardson on the Today Programme, that parents who are fortunate enough to live with their offspring have a life-expectancy staggeringly higher than those who don’t.

For the simple reason that part of your job, when you house your parents, is to save their lives on a regular basis.

I lost count of the threatening letters I fired off to the GPs’ surgery offering to report them for the statutory £100 fine that would land on their mat if they didn’t have a doctor in our house by lunchtime and I had to call an ambulance instead.

Yes, that is the law. Or a directive that applies to GPs’ surgeries anyway. There are all sorts of services we are legally entitled to that the Cerberuses on the doctors’ Reception Desks are doggedly determined to deny us.

On one occasion, a doctor asked me if my father’s home visit could wait till tomorrow. I mean, what a thing to ask! How do I know? That’s what the doc himself spent years of taxpayers’ money training to discern, surely?

Well, I said. Tomorrow will do fine, I said. If my father’s still alive.

Less optimal if he dies tonight.

Which frankly, I said, I suspect he quite likely might.

And he would have done. By the time we reached hospital that very same evening, a few hours later, his pulse was seventeen.

For the non-medical of readers, that is on the low side. If your heartbeat is currently measuring seventeen to the minute, take it from me: you’re unlikely to reach the end of this post.

(And when it gets to nought to the minute, you haven’t.)

Put it another way: they wheeled him off pretty smartly to under the nose of the pulse consultant after they measured it. As if propelled by a horse not tipped by Gary Richardson.

Thing is, it’s all very well doing battle with the services.

But quite often, we’d have to be doing a different kind of battle altogether, with my father himself. And this was a lot trickier. 

As has been observed by someone slightly more successful than I:

he hates him,
That would vpon the wracke of this tough world
Stretch him out longer.

The last thing any of us wants is to prolong the life of someone we love, through an increasingly incapacitated, painful and extremely old age, when he’s dying (as it were) to be off rejoining the love of his life on another shore.

So we were constantly having to weigh this up.

Which was why my heart leapt for joy and far more surprise, given how much my father moaned from time to time about still being alive while my mother wasn't, when the first thing he asked that cardiologist was, Can you do anything for me?

And the cardiologist said, Easy peasy, matey. We’ll shove a pacemaker in you in a jiffy, and you’ll be home for breakfast.

Yes, cardiology is like that, my cardiologist friend said. Ticker on the blink. Have a new ticker. Very simple and successful process.

So my father obviously wanted to live a little longer. And indeed, after that night and fright, I don’t believe he ever moaned again. Not about being alive, anyway.

Until he was actually dying, and couldn’t understand why it took God until Monday to call him home when he’d had his heavenly baggage packed since Friday. I did explain in a previous post that he was never a patient man.

However, he hated hospital with a passion. Like me, he loathed being bossed about. So every time we saved his life, we had to take on my father himself.

And that was a formidable task.

Nevertheless, every time I did so – every time I had to overcome my father’s obstinacy, stubbornness and colossally powerful will to get him to accept medical help to prolong his life – I realised that this was why his life was so long in the first place.

Because he he had such an admirably strong will, and character, and independence. Because he jolly well did things his way. (He was a Conscientious Objector in the 1930s, for goodness’ sake. Which believe me – like old age – was not for sissies.)

Because he was not going to lie down and die until he himself was ready.

(Which happened to be when God was busy for the weekend.)


Tum-te-tum and tra-la…

Genes are a funny thing.

They come out in the next generation. Or so.

I’ve described my astonishment at realising that I, too, had swum (well, dipped) in the outdoor waves, in snowy weather. Just like my father.

I will not give up keeping bees even though their stings have been known to bring me out in anaphylactic shock, and always swell me up for a week.

Do we detect a familial theme?

So here we have a picture of our Burns’ Night supper. 

First course, Scots mussels.

To which I am also allergic. Well, not to their ethnicity, strictly speaking. Any mussels will do it.

First and second time I tried them, they very violently returned from whence they came.

However, given that I have inherited my father’s, um, bloody-mindedness for want of a better term. 

Was I going to give up?

Was I!

Ever since that first and extremely unpleasant experience, when I was thirteen, I’ve been dabbling with the things.

Can I eat one, without being extremely ill? Yup. One seemed ok.

What about three or four? Slightly queasy stomach.

In my thirties, I found myself having to eat a whole plateful of them. Tricky situation. I was the only guest at a very small supper party and my hostess’s sister, over from Italy, had made a very special treat for me… I had just seconds, when the platter was brought in to the fanfare, to decide which way to jump.

Honesty? Or manners? 

I opted for the latter, just managed to get through the film we went on to together, got home and threw up all night until morning.

So then I had to start the regime all over again. Paella? I’d put half of them on the side of the plate and risk the other half.

I never actually enjoyed the slimy things. The thought of what they might do to me in an hour or two was always slightly off-putting.

But the thought of being beaten by them was far more of an anathema.


So it came about that on Burns’ Night, when Shaun served a huge great big dish of them as the first course (yes, of course, knowing the effect they have on me) I thought, let’s go for this.

Now or never.

And for the first time in my life – certainly since I was thirteen, when I can’t remember the experience of actually eating them because the ensuing night’s agony blitzed out all lesser memory – I found them tasty. Delicious. And the wine juice they were served in was gorgeously slurptious.

I believe in listening to my body. At least, when it’s telling me what I want to hear.

So I had a whole grown up bowlful.

And then I had seconds.

And loved them.

And I wasn’t ill at all. In fact, I was so not-ill, that I’ve only just remembered this morning that I ate loads of mussels on Monday night, just like a normal person, and they haven’t done anything to me since…

(PS Funnily enough, after re-reading this, I’m feeling just slightly peculiar…)

January 27, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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It's official

January 25, 2021 by Anne Atkins

When I was a small child I witnessed a sight that even I, young as I was, realised was a tad eccentric.

We were on the beach in North Norfolk, where we used to holiday… and indeed still did, right up until last summer… if only, last summer, to say goodbye to the house we’d holidayed in since long before I was born and which we took my father to every August for the last decade of his century, after my mother was no longer available to go with him.

He tried on his own, the spring after she died. Our son Alexander said, Grandfather, if you wait a few days I can take half a week off work and go with you. One of the most endearing and rather more infuriating traits about my father was his impatience.

(My brother once said, impatient people get things done. My father did.)

So off he went on his own, muttering about nobody being available to go with him… and came back after twenty-four hours, white as the proverbial g and admitting he would never do that again.

Which meant we had ten glorious Augusts by the coast, looking after him there. And until he was nearly a hundred (and had a pacemaker which would have taken fright at the cold long before he did) he went in the sea at least once a day.

Anyway, this memory I’m telling you about was long before that.

We stood on the beach. (As in a dream, I can’t remember who “we” was. Except that I was one of the we. And very little.)

It was snowing.

And my father went in the sea.

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Frankly I thought he was as raving bonkers as he was almost stark.

Young as I was.

There was even a kind of sneaking sense of silence afterwards that perhaps he thought so too. He never did it again.

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There has been much talk in the media… well, I say that. A few mentions in recent months. About the advantages of cold swimming.

I’ve referred to it myself. There came a point in November when I said to our eldest, this stress I’m experiencing is so unbearable, I want to drink half a bottle of whisky or something. But even I had a vague idea that half a bottle of said stuff wouldn’t necessarily improve the situation permanently.

In the long run.

So she told me to go in the sea.

The remarkable thing was that it genuinely helped.

(Yes, I know we’ve been through all this. It’s what they call a recap, for those who missed that episode. Just be patient, will you, for those who are new to this blog.)

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(This is the pool I shouldn’t have shut this winter. If I’d known in October what I know now.)

After that, believe it or not, I went in pretty well every day before breakfast. If only for a few seconds.

Which, to be fair, was all my father did, that time when I witnessed him going in when it was snowing.

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Now, there came a morning, as they say in the old færy tales and Bible stories, when I went in as usual – I have an idea Serena might have been with us by then; and joined me in the cold water herself; though not, by chance, on that particular morning – and I ran back to the house as usual. And put the kettle on as usual. And got dressed as usual. And went out to hang up my swimming togs… &c and so on.

And what do you know?

Well naturally you don’t. Because I haven’t told you. But it’s reasonable to assume you might have guessed.

It was snowing.

Just after I come out of the water.

So there we are.

It’s official.

I’m as nuts as my father.

(And let’s hope, one day, tough. And determined. And in love with a bracing cold splash about.)

And he lived to a hundred and two. And a half. Don’t forget the half.

Though sadly, decided to leave us just before lockdown. 

Which was quite sensible really.

In his last years, he didn’t appreciate the cold.

Not if he wasn’t swimming in it.

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January 25, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Coronacheer, Optimism in isolation
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Remember this?

January 20, 2021 by Anne Atkins

Scroll back – if you can be bothered… on second thoughts, that’s far too much hassle.

I’ll recap:

28th December.

“On Christmas Day, diminished as we were: only three of us available to sing. The Coventry Carol. Ben on the bass. Lara gamely sight-reading the tenor line. (Only I, with the tune, kept getting it wrong. The other two never thought to tell me we were singing the alternative version.)

“I had asked on the local neighbourhood forum.

“Does anyone know of anyone who might need a carol beyond the doorstep over Christmas?

“Yes! My neighbour is alone and widowed, wrote a stranger back. I am stuck in Tier 4 elsewhere. This is his address.

“So we went. And we sang.

“(And, sad to say, the old man looked terrified rather than cheered. But he left the door ajar so the sounds could drift in.)”

We really didn’t do a particularly good job of it.

Not that this matters, to most people: outside in the cold; muffled in one’s mufflers and holding music in one’s fingerless mitts; dark gathering; all seasonal, and all.

The effort in itself is usually greatly appreciated.

Plus the bar (no pun i.) is often set quite low…

Years ago, when we were first married and I happened to be alone in the house, I heard a ring at the door and a strange, slightly strangulated sound beyond, as of a few small animals being inappropriately handled.

I opened.

Mercifully, the noise stopped.

And there were three lads, rattling a tin.

We’re carol singing, they said. And rattled the tin again, expectantly.

Go on, then, I said encouragingly.

Wot? They asked, confused.

Sing me a carol. That would be lovely, thank you.

Never in the history of the world at large and Christmas in particular has a more inappropriate adjective been employed by man or beast.

Waddya mean?

You said you’re carol singers. Sing me a carol!

(I admired their pluck. But I did think, as a point of principle, it should be tested a little further.)

Oh. Yeah. They shuffled a bit and looked at each other.

I smiled brightly. I thought this might help.

They looked down, and up, and at each other again.

A slight cough. Playing for time.

Nervous glance. Ragged breath. While shepherds watched. They intoned vaguely.

Sadly the conventional Latin alphabet cannot adequately convey the approximate nature of that attempt to aim at a normal E major key. If, indeed, that’s what they were aiming at. Rather than something pentatonic or chromatic or tetratonic or goodness knows what creative and obscure musical system.

Possibly hieroglyphics have this flexibility, lost to modern Western literacy. Or Chinese characters. But not any symbols this text is written in.

And? I said.

Continue! I urged.

They tried again. While shepherds… urble urble urble.

One of them, thinking of a way out, rattled the tin once more.

Can you sing any more of it?

Er… 

Their sheeps, or somefing, innit? The better educated of the three hazarded.

I tell you what, I said kindly. You go away and learn a carol. And come back and sing it to me. And then, if it’s good enough, I’ll pop something in your tin.

I thought this might inspire some endeavour. Moral fibre. That sort of thing.

Actually, there’s a better carol singing anecdote than this.

I think I’ve indicated before that my father was head master of the choir school in Cambridge that provides the music on Christmas Eve that we’re all so familiar with. And that he was very old friend of David Willcocks who wrote all the arrangements we’re also all familiar with. (Even those of us who haven’t heard of world famous counter tenors and don’t recognise the name of the most well-known carol arranger ever. I’m not making a point. We all move in different circles. I’m probably not up-to-date with the latest… You know. Coding inventor person.)

My father and David Willcocks were students together; then close colleagues and also neighbours, for years. We all knew each other very well.

Every year the Willcockses had a Christmas party for the choir, which I often attended: I was at school and university with their daughter, also Anne. We’re still very good friends.

Charades. Quizzes. Treasure hunts. All wholesome stuff. Mince pies and mulled cheer. When Shaun first took over as Chaplain of Bedford School, Anne gave me lots of ideas for games for Christmas parties for young choristers.

And one year, during this party, while the sixteen boys with the most divine treble voices in the world were having a whale of a pre-Christmas time, the Willcockses’ doorbell rang too. Presumably with similar tortured sounds coming through their letter box.

David had an ever-twinkling sense of humour. And a staircase that went round and up and up and round and round and up, all the way to the top of their three storey house.

Quick, he said to everybody. Up the stairs! So they all went up and hid behind the bannisters.

Come on in, David said warmly at the door to these enterprising carollers. Who, by all accounts, were considerably better than the songbirds at my door but nevertheless still quite small and nervous. With absolutely no idea whose door they’d just rung at.

They, too, embarked on relating what the shepherds did while they were tending their ewe-lambs on the mountainside.

Got several verses in.

And just as they reached the part about the angels bursting into heavenly song, whether David gave his choir some kind of sign or they all simply knew how his mind and jokes worked, this is what those songsters suddenly heard, lifting the roof of David and Rachel’s house a few inches off the walls: scroll forward to 2’ 28” in, turn the volume full on and imagine yourself in the shoes of those young entrepreneurs who, until that moment, probably thought they were doing rather well. Here.

Anyway, the point being that you don’t have to be terribly good to be better than some of the rival artistes out there.

The fact that you are attempting SATB is usually enough to put you in the top one per cent.

Although, as I believe I’ve also established, we were merely attempting STB. Seeing as there were only three of us. Two of us being normally smack-bang in the middle of the second (rate) sop section. And the bass properly a counter tenor himself.

We rang on the doorbell, too. But no, we didn’t have a tin to rattle. We were simply spreading seasonal whatnot.

I’ve never seen anyone look so scared. I think he vaguely muttered that he couldn’t come near, on account of there was a world-wide pandemic out there.

He said he’d lost his wife. And also mislaid his neighbour, not that he was putting them in the same category.

We only sang him a couple of verses. We thought that was probably enough suffering for someone we’d never met.

Then we wished him a Happy Christmas and beat a hasty exit.

All the way home saying nothing to one another.

All thinking the same thing.

Wondering why we’d been quite so cruel to a complete stranger we had nothing against. Who had already lost his wife, as if that wasn’t enough.

Dear Michael

We went to your neighbour today and sang to him. 

He seemed very nervous and a little anxious. I told him his friend Michael had suggested he might enjoy a carol, and he pointed to the house next door – but seemed a bit confused as to where you were, so I said you'd found yourself locked-down in Tier 4 elsewhere.

He also told us his wife had died.

I hope it was some comfort to him to hear a little singing... but I'm not sure it was!

Very happy to oblige again next year, DV.

Anne

Dear Anne

Sorry for not responding sooner. 

Yes, he's had a terrible year and he's feeling the strain.

What I can say is that he was absolutely overjoyed with your performance and has talked about it every time I've seen him since. He really loved it but I daresay was initially confused and taken aback when you showed up – I should really have told him about it first. I can't emphasise enough how cheered he was by it during a time of need.

But yes, if you can see him again next year I know he'd be thrilled. 

Thanks again

Michael

So there we are.

How a very, very tiny (not to say, tuneless) act of neighbourliness can go a very, very long way.

Indeed.

January 20, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down, Surviving Covid-19
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Every silver lining has a cloud.

January 18, 2021 by Anne Atkins

I love the cold.

In winter, mind you.. 

Not so much in summer.

In my Gap Yah – though we didn’t call it that then: I think we called it Seventh Term Oxbridge Entrance… followed by anything you like – I directed a Cambridge May Week play. Private Lives, it was. In Clare College Gardens. 

As any ful no, Cambridge May Week is what it says on the tin: so called because it describes several weeks in June.

Full of music, dancing, champagne, ball gowns, close harmony on the river… and, if you call Coward culture, Culture.

Anyways, I had a load of fun directing this.

(And just to drop a name because I’m not doing much else at the moment, my juve lead went on to become the world famous counter tenor Michael Chance. What you do mean you’ve never heard of him? How many world famous counter tenors have you heard of? There you are then. Point proved I think.)

It was outdoors, of course. On account of it was going to be lovely balmy May Week. Every night for a week. At 11 pm. And all the women wore diaphanous Twenties silk chiffon gorgeous floaty frocks with almost nothing to them. The men were slightly better clad, but not much.

Achingly romantic. 

I had an amazing ASM, and I insisted – absolutely insisted – that in the closing breakfast scene there must be HOT scrambled egg. As well as hot tea and coffee and so on. I said, the audience will be able to tell. If it’s congealed and sticking cold to the plates… ugh yuk.

Since the nearest kitchen was (in those days anyway; accessible to undergraduates anyway) a good ten minutes’ walk away across Queens’ Road, she resourcefully supplied this from a series of wide-mouthed thermoses. Clever girl. Though I wouldn’t have called her that in those days because I was younger than she was.

Which was just as well. That she was clever, I mean. Absolutely just as well. The audience could most certainly tell. The steam coming off that breakfast could have been cut with one of the knives on the breakfast table and eaten with one of the forks.

Because on the first night. Monday of May Week. In, as I’ve said, Flaming June.

It snowed. It ruddy snowed.

(Though we still sold out.)


So when I say I love the cold, what I mean is, I love the cold in the right place. In my G&T on a long summer’s evening in the garden. On the slopes when you’ve spent your life’s savings on a week in Verbier. In the steely look from your barrister (provided he is yours) when questioning the guilty slimebag in the dock.

And at the New Year. In January. Definitely. Or better still, on a white Christmas.

So when we had what they call a veritable Cold Snap a week or two ago, was I rejoicing? Was I! (That’s a yes.)

This is Saving The Planet, I said merrily to myself. This will cheer the old polar bears, I thought happily, sweating away in their big fur coats on the shrinking ice caps. 

Er… said our middle daughter. I’m not sure it quite works like that. A spot of cold weather doesn’t suddenly reverse Climate Change. And by the way it’s b***** cold in here so I’ve turned the thermostat right up.

Um… said our eldest. We’re spending £100 a week on firewood because we’ve got such inadequate heating. And by the way, this is what chilblains look like, apparently…

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(Look quickly because I may have to delete these pretty little tootsies, as I don’t have her permission. I have asked, obv. And after waiting an absolute age and at least several minutes, realised the quickest way to get an answer is post the picture anyway.)

Ohh… said our youngest. Why is it so FREEZING.

Because, I said pompously and predictably, you don’t come out for your daily exercise in the garden and DIG with me. That would soon warm you up. For the rest of the day.

So there I was, proving my point, turning the earth manically just in order to prove the point… when I went over to check on my bees…

Oh WOE. I hate the cold, suddenly.

Every one of my three thriving summer beehives was dead as… well, as a cold, empty, deserted comb of dirty old wax.

Nothing.

No activity.

No happy sotto voce winter mild zzzzzing just to keep going.

No being stung because I wasn’t togged up in my bee armour being careful enough, and then being whizzed off in an ambulance with blue lips and my speech all jumbled up because I keep bees even though I’m allergic to the stings,

What on earth has happened, I asked my new fellow beekeeping friend. They had plenty of food. I’ve never had varroa in any of them, as far as I know.

Did you insulate the hives, he said. (He’s a bit fanatical.)

Insulate? I said. I’ve never done that before. (Never heard of anything so wet, I thought to myself.)

Ah, he said.

There you are, he said.

If only I’d known, he said. Now with his wife chipping in, on speakphone: if only we’d known. We’ve just thrown away all our spare insulation.

For goodness’ sake. I’ve been keeping bees for decades. They only started last summer. Practising on my bees. Mind you, he does read all the stuff and know stuff.

We insulated ours, they both said in unison.

January 18, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronacheer, Coronavirus cheer, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down, Surviving Covid-19
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Dawn

January 11, 2021 by Anne Atkins

First day back at school.

Upper Sixth to be dressed and ready by 8.30, cameras kept on all through class. So no sweetheart, you can’t be in pyjamas all day like last time. Yes, really.

Breakfast at eight. We’ll wake you at a quarter to…

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Where’s the cream cheese can anyone tell me where the cream cheese is haven’t we got any cream cheese you’re going to have to wake me every day my alarm just doesn’t work it’s ridiculous where IS the cream cheese in this fridge no please don’t I’ll have humous it’s fine Dad where have you put the bagels you bought me bagels didn’t you where are they is this toaster working can you make me a coffee obviously because I don’t know how to yes I do hate it but these are desperate measures do you realise I’ve had just half an hour’s sleep I agree tea isn’t quite as revolting but it’s not as effective either is it what do I do with that what’s a cafetière am I just supposed to pour it or what where’s the sugar what do you mean we don’t have sugar I need sugar if I’m going to drink coffee oh this is so revolting how to people ever drink this stuff I obviously need a sixth spoonful of sugar no I don’t want tea three mugs of tea did you say three why would I drink three mugs of something quite unpleasant instead of just one mug of something utterly revolting it’s too hot oh this is so so bad why would anyone drink this really seriously why on earth haven’t we got cream cheese yes I know you offered but I couldn’t wait five minutes for you to go to the shop no you couldn’t have done it by now look it’s been nearly five minutes already who’s that at the door our lodger did you say do we have a lodger I didn’t know that why on earth is he up at this ridiculous hour what do you mean going to work it’s the middle of the night come to that why are you two up you haven’t got any reason to be up do you mean normal people get up at this time on an ordinary day I mean are the streets full of people while it’s still dark that’s insane my school is so stupid I’ve got a meeting with my housemistress at the same time as my tutor and half my physics lessons clash with other lessons and I’ve got fourteen lessons today what do you mean hockey at two of course I can’t play hockey at two with no one to play it with no I don’t want to play hockey with you and Dad thanks a lot can’t think of anything worse in the summer I had cricket scheduled into my timetable and I was the only one learning cricket and they honestly expected me to play cricket ON MY OWN with no bat ball wickets or anyone else and I don’t even know how to play cricket do you realise we’ve got Chapel Choir on Friday how on earth are we supposed to do that you’re joking surely we don’t still have Scholar Cantorum I’m not turning up I’m just not turning up I’m not singing on Zoom I would die I know I’ll get one of those recordings of building work going on and tell Sir I’m really sorry but we’ve got renovations in the house so I’ll have to turn off my microphone I need snacks why haven’t we got any snacks how am I supposed to get through this nightmare without any snacks I’ll see you later why is it so cold in this house…

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PS Below my study, coming up through the floorboards, more online school… No. No no no. STOP. Do you want me to explain this? Just listen. No, just stop and listen. Good. No, that is not a minor third. Listen. Can’t you hear that? THIS is a minor third. That’s a diminished… right. Well done.

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PPS You will note an empty doo’cot. Avian flu.

January 11, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
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The end of Christmas... Or what you will.

January 06, 2021 by Anne Atkins

It seems to me – tedium alert! Extremely unprofound and boringly obvious truism if not downright cliché about to be revealed – that whereas scientists draw solace from the future, artists do so from the past.

(I’ve also wondered whether people with happy childhoods naturally tend to vote conservatively, whereas those who were brought less cheerful may be instinctively more sympathetic to change. I expect I could get a whacking research grant from Ipsos Mori if I shared this extremely valuable political insight.)

Anyway, being the latter (as in, artist: rather than unhappy-childhood person) I’m a sucker for tradition. 

My Thought for the Day producer, when asked to assess me years ago, said, “Anne thinks in centuries.”

(Shaun, of course, being both historian and theologian, presumably considers centuries far too frivolously brief for any consideration .)

This being the case, in the days when we had a neighbour who made Hyacinth Bucket seem slapdash in her concern for the image of the street, I received a telling-off because our Christmas wreath wasn’t on the door by the beginning of December.

I beg your pardon, I would have said if my mother hadn’t brought me up never to use words like pardon. 

Our Christmas decorations go up on Christmas Eve. 

Oh, she said. Looking as if she’d sucked on her own holly.

Well, your bins have been out for three days, anyway.

(Touchée, I would have said, if I’d thought there was any point.)

The only snag of this delightful custom being that Christmas decorations, if done properly, take a bit of time to put up.

And a lot more time to tire of.

Obviously if you’re one of those shops that puts them up in August, you’re likely to be thoroughly sick of them… well, probably by August. After all, if you’ve got such bad taste in timing, the decorations themselves are presumably also tacky beyond belief.

But if you put them up properly, according to this hallowed practice, on what is the beginning of Christmas in most of Europe and Christmas Eve in England, then by Twelfth Night – whether or not that was last night or is tonight being a whole new argument which I suppose we might touch on if you’re not also thoroughly sick of me before another paragraph or two have whizzed by – I’m still enamoured of the mistletoe, which looks as fresh as two week old mistletoe. And the tree, which is still looking as spruce (see what I did there…? On second thoughts, never mind) as ever it did a fortnight ago.

And saying to myself, well, we can surely leave them till our Burns’ Night party.

And when that’s done, a bit beyond, perhaps…

So imagine my utter glee, a few years ago at exactly this time of year, when some helpful Reverend Blimp told us, on that outlet that is my main if not entire source of news aka the Today Programme, that we should really be keeping the springs and greenery and whatnot up till Candlemas.

So I did. 

Got some funny looks from all the Hyacinths walking down the street, looking in through our window and thinking what sluts we were. Small price to pay for Being Right, eh?

(What was slightly more annoying is that the dustmen stop collecting unwanted Christmas trees around the end of December and certainly aren’t going to remove a dead eight-footer dropping all its needles on the pavement at the beginning of February. But hey: I believe in recycling. I’m not going to complain that I had to spend hours and hours and hours stripping and sawing and getting my fingers jabbed, to put on the fire.)

Funnily enough, this year, for the first time in my life, I would happily have taken everything down before even New Year. Given that I couldn’t have a party on my birthday and there’s no one here to share anything with anyway. Apart from the half-dozen or so people I live with.

And would have done… but that we had the same assurance on yesterday’s Today Programme, from some geezer from English Heritage.

Christmas decorations come down on Candlemas Eve, he said with all the nerdy authority of E Heritage: 1st February.

It’s official. Spread the word.

Jolly holly till Feb, and may it cheer us all!

The only fly in the ointment being that he then completely undermined said authority by saying Twelfth Night is tonight.

Whereas, as any ful (and our in-house theologian, who is Always Right) no, Twelfth Night was last night. On account of Christmas Day being the first day of Christmas, not the minus-one day, obv. And tonight being Epiphany, not Twelfth…

Zzzz.

Yes, I thought you might have tired of the arguments by now.

January 06, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation
3 Comments

My new friend

January 05, 2021 by Anne Atkins

The other day was my birthday.

For many years, I hated my birthday. So much so, that all our children were born in late spring or early summer.

As a child, I never, ever had a birthday party. My parents were teachers; living in a choir school (where home was work, as in a vicarage); working up to and including Christmas Day. So as soon as that was over we went away and didn’t return until the beginning of term.

I can remember my mother saying, as if it were a badge of honour: you’ve never had a birthday at home.

My brother gave me one side of an LP for Christmas and the other side for my birthday. Surpassed only by the other brother giving me the second glove of a pair.

I did somehow have a low-key dinner party for my twenty-first, a dozen of us round the table, presumably after the event.

No huge dances filling a marquee in the garden, like some of my friends.

My first birthday at home was in my mid-thirties: my first party in our London vicarage.

Shaun took me out for a drink in the early evening, to the pub across the Green. He got a call from one of the children, we went home and the house exploded with corks and shrieks and friends and party poppers.

The thing about surprise birthday parties is they become more challenging year on year.

Even last year they managed to pull it off. I knew something was afoot: of course I did. And the quick drink with Shaun in the pub all those years ago, had turned into a hugely expensive clay pigeon shoot to keep me out of the house.

What took me aback was the scale of it.

The entire close harmony group staying on for Beef Wellington, twenty-six of us in evening dress around the table, Shaun not getting a bite because my father decided to stay downstairs with his carer (which would have been delightful except it was one of those evenings when my father decided to be miserable… and he hated rare meat anyway) and there simply wasn’t space for another plate or chair, or another slice of the boot, so Shaun waited on the rest of us.

Ben said afterwards it would have been a lot cheaper to pay his musician friends than feed them…

What I can’t quite recall is the exact year when it tipped over.

When I realised that, far from being at the worst time of year, my birthday is the best.

All the decorations still up. Lots of food left over from Christmas.

The family still at home.

Everyone off work.

And – lucrative bonus – we can let our house out for the most popular night of the year – thus paying for all of Christmas and my birthday, both – and not mind at all, because we celebrate the New Year two nights later.

Erm… Hmm.

The more astute of you may have spotted a disconnect there. True, we still have decorations… a few, from our sadly scaled-down Christmas. And food, ditto.

And some of us in the family still have work.

You change your perspective, don’t you?

Whenever I’m feeling particularly a failure, or dissatisfied, or unfulfilled, I say to myself:

Suppose I’d spent five years in a concentration camp, and just been released. I’d be pretty happy now, wouldn’t I? Simply hearing the birdsong. Being allowed a glass of water. Sleeping without terror. Or fleas.

I wouldn’t beat myself up that I hadn’t written a world-shattering symphony.

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So it was on my birthday.

Alexander gave me double-ditzy daffodil bulbs for Christmas.

Six months ago, I would have thanked him and immediately thought, how can I pay someone to shove these in the ground for me? So I get the fun of seeing the flowers come up, without the chore of digging and delving and all that dross.

Now, I see this as at least half of the present, half of the pleasure, half the perk.

I spent a good two hours of my birthday, and of the few days beforehand, alone outside, churning over the soil. Breathing the exercise and fresh air deep into my soul. Enjoying the cold sun in the bare branches. Free mental health without the bore of joining a gym.

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And making a new friend. 

In a time when we’re not allowed new friends.

Here he is…









January 05, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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Glorious New Year!

January 01, 2021 by Anne Atkins

If you’ve ever been the victim of low mood, you may know that mornings are often the hardest time of day.

In my experience this is because I can’t control my thoughts before my brain emerges for its first breath of air.

Once the consciousness is in control, one has more opportunity to pull oneself together, yank one’s socks in a Northerly direction, buck oneself up, give oneself a thorough talking to and all the other strategies that have been so unfashionable since psychotherapy walked the earth and upper lips became soft, sensitive and soggy… and yet can prove so surprisingly effective.

(Ok, ok, this robust approach can sometimes be very dangerous and destructive when administered by others. Please, no hate mail on this first day of a new beginning.)

In addition and coincidentally, I was brought up with no radiator in my bedroom and all my father’s theories about open windows and fresh air.

Serena says our bedroom is kept several degrees colder than outside even when it’s snowing and you’d be able to see your breath form icicles if it hadn’t already been knocked out of you by the shock of entering the room. (And that’s even though her house is saving the polar bears all on its own, she is so passionately committed to cooling the planet.)

Which temperature is very good for one’s health – mental, physical and soporific – but it does means you start the day with your very first challenge: getting out from under at least eight inches of duck down.


So there I was, opening my eyes around the same time the sun peeped out from under its own dark duvet, and feeling my heart sink.

Day. Life. S***.

Sigh.

Even my bedside radio broke around Christmas time.

Wait a minute… Christmas time. Christmas… We’ve done that one. It was actually rather fun. If briefer than usual.

Then Boxing Day. That too. We even had the kitchen tidy by mid-morning because the house was strangely empty of the usual stragglers from the day before and early arrivals for the afternoon’s hockey match in the park.

What came next?

New Year’s Eve, wasn’t it?

I even managed that.

Often I find bed and a good book (or companion; or preferably both) very considerably more attractive than some pointless countdown and tuneless drunken crowd sing-a-song of Auld Langs. But last night we all watched a moderately decent film together; and half way through, Rose and I ran upstairs to watch the fireworks, yammering and bursting 200º around the horizon from the top balcony. Bam. Pow. Wow.

So… if we’ve done that one… oh glory!

It is New Year’s Day. I feel like Scrooge on Christmas morning.

We’ve left 2020 behind us.


Let’s admit it.

I know this is a blog about optimism but true hopefulness springs from honesty, as I believe I’ve said before.

Last year was b***** awful.

I mean, it was, wasn’t it? I’m not imagining this?

Ok, I have one close friend – our gorgeous cleaner – who found a new man in 2020. She smiles at some of the memories.

Everyone else – everyone else – has had a truly s*** year.

If I were the teatowel-caption-writing-entrepreneur-type, I would patent the logo, Keep Calm and Blame the Virus.

I know we can’t blame Covid-19 for all of it:

One of my bestest friends lost her sister.

I lost my father.

Our daughter remains extremely ill.

But we can certainly blame the virus for the unemployment, redundancy, loss of income, loneliness, stolen opportunities and most widespread depression I for one have certainly ever witnessed.

And that rubbish, awful, lousy year is over.

Good riddance.


D-Day.

I’ve heard preachers – or perhaps, to be honest, just Shaun – compare Christian life-before-death with life-after-D-Day. We know the victory has, essentially, been won. But there will still be casualties, hardship, stuff to get through.

The virus has, essentially, been beaten. 


A previous New Year, 2009, was pretty awful for us. A lot worse than this. Shaun was suffering a devastating breakdown. Naturally, therefore, his cut-throat employer took the opportunity to trump up frankly staggeringly unbelievable charges against him. Which he was too ill to realise were fake. We had no future elsewhere. If we didn’t fight – and Shaun couldn’t; and more to the point didn’t win – we faced certain homelessness again… and this time permanent.

It was not a good New Year for us.

And yet 2009 turned into one of the best years of our lives.

The flowers you see here are from the all-year-round rose-and-clemetis garden I planted in my mother’s memory after that year. Picked this morning as I let the hens out in their new lockdown-secure run from their new hen house. After I emerged from a quietly sleeping house into an entirely sleeping world.

True, I lost my dear mother in that year of 2009: a loss I will never get over. Not this side of Heaven.

But it was also the year we turned the tables on Shaun’s employer and the default responsibility of generations and housed my parents, before my mother left us, to care for them and give them a glorious old age.

What a year!


So roll on 2021.

It can only get better…

January 01, 2021 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Surviving Covid-19, Coronacheer, Optimism in lock-down, Optimism in isolation, New Year 2021
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Suffused with service

December 28, 2020 by Anne Atkins

There was an item on this morning’s Today Programme about the Wellcome Trust choir, singing in hospital wards. (1’44” in, here.)

It brought back sharp memories. When my father was a Conscientious Objector serving in the Medical Corps, he formed a choir of the doctors and nurses, and the Ministry of Defence paid for part-song music which they sang, unaccompanied, to the sick on the wards.

Decades ago he passed the music on to us and, as a family, we have sung from the torn and battered sheets more often than I can remember. Often with my father.

Often without.

Just over a year ago, the choir I sing with met in our house instead of the vestry we usually use, needed for political hustings. I asked the conductor if we could leave the doors open, so that my 102-year-old father, now room-bound upstairs, could hear us.

If he could.

His hearing had long since grown dim.

After an hour and a half I went up to him. His face shining. His carer, too, effusive. They’d heard every word and it was like the voice of angels to them. He was overwhelmed when I said I’d also asked if a few could kindly stay behind and troop upstairs to sing for him specially.

In fact, everyone stayed.

We stood in a crowded semi-circle.

The tears streamed down his face as we sang. He grasped the hand nearest his – the conductor’s wife’s – and said,

In the war, we sang to those on the wards.

I had no idea… no idea at all… until this moment. How much it meant to them.

How much.

We asked him to choose. Steeped in carols all his life as he had been, his mind went blank.

Three King’s From Persian Lands Afar.

(One of my favourites, with its beautiful baritone solo.)

I sang that solo myself, my father said as we finished. In the BBC recording of the Nine Lessons and Carols.

In about 1937.


Because of that night, we sang to my father often again. So easy. So simple. So significant.

I invited other choirs to come to the house.

We sang to him as a family two nights before he died.

Our son Ben invited his semi-professional choir the next night.

All of us, round his bed, singing.

To thy rest.

Goodnight, sweet prince.


Far from home as we were when Advent descended, our daughter insisted we go next door and sing to the great-grandmother stranded alone.

She was so overwhelmed she couldn’t respond straight away. But later left a voice message. We had made, absolutely made, her Christmas and nothing else could possibly be as meaningful or comforting for her.


On Christmas Day, diminished as we were: only three of us available to sing. The Coventry Carol. Ben on the bass. Lara gamely sight-reading the tenor line. (Only I, with the tune, kept getting it wrong. The other two never thought to tell me we were singing the alternative version.)

I had asked on the local neighbourhood forum.

Does anyone know of anyone, I had written, who might need a carol beyond the doorstep over Christmas?

Yes! My neighbour is alone and widowed, wrote a stranger back. I am stuck in Tier 4 elsewhere. This is his address.

So we went. And we sang.

(And, sad to say, the old man looked terrified rather than cheered. But he left the door ajar so the sounds could drift in.)


My father was marinaded in music from birth. His mother a pianist. His father a hymn-writer. He a Chorister then Choral Scholar then Master Over the Choristers himself.

But even more than music, his life was saturated with service.

Every day, even unto the day he lay dying, he looked for ways to give his life to others.

His music, his gift to the world.


December 28, 2020 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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Surprised by joy

December 27, 2020 by Anne Atkins

I was dreading it. Utterly dreading it.

I love Christmas. 

Seldom have I looked forward to it less. 



The only Christmas I can remember not enjoying was when I was a teenager and for some lunatic reason opted to stay with my French exchange friend’s family over Christmas.

No carols from King’s.

No parties with my friends from the choir.

Not even my family (though I minded that a lot less).

To top it all, my hosts served a huge bucket of fresh, live mussels on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve… which was when I discovered my violent allergy to shellfish. Most particularly fresh live mussels.

Never again.

But at least that Christmas I hadn’t dreaded beforehand.



(Actually, sorry, there was another Christmas that was seriously dire. By December 2005 we had been homeless for four months: in which time I’d been living hundreds of miles away in Scotland; three of the children extending their accommodation at university; one prolonging his stay at boarding school; and Shaun, first sofa-surfing then staying with kind friends forty minutes’ commute from the church that had tipped us out onto the streets in the first place. The only way we could be together at Christmas was by borrowing three homes in succession, from extremely generous people we didn’t even know.

That was a pretty bad Christmas… Though one of the two moments I remember most vividly was of Ben making us all laugh round the borrowed kitchen table till we were doubled up, weeping, aching and snorting through our noses. He does that, Ben.

The other was of being so distraught and distracted I nearly drowned our youngest.)



The more friends I talk to this winter, the more I feel the misery hanging like a dank cloud over the country, pregnant with more unspent tears.

Loneliness, frustration, even anger…

Locked-down throughout London. Locked-down here in Bedford. Locked-down almost everywhere and at the last minute.

(And, I confess… I’m sure… friends who have never broken the law in their lives before…  doctors hugely sympathetic to the measures… pillars of the community… extremely moral members of churches… dashing to pick up family… planning a quiet flight on Boxing Day… sneaking out to go to aged and alone parents before midnight when another law falls.)

Christmas loomed without half our family. And, for the first time in my life, without either of my parents.

And the prospect drear beyond bearing.


A few weeks ago I read the letter from our daughter (the one who is extremely ill) with her wish-list for Father Christmas.

First item.

Communion with her family…

(She who finds church so formal and cold, she hasn’t been since I can remember.)

There must be advantages to having a man of the cloth in the family. Not many, perhaps. And none financial.

But still…


So there came a moment, around lunchtime on Christmas Day, when I looked up and out through the window, and saw sun on the bare branches and a bird hopping.

And suddenly realised,

This is all right.

This is fine.

This is really, seriously, ok.

The fire was crackling.

The candles were lit: four for Advent and one for Christmas.

We had just been singing carols by my father’s close friend and colleague David Willcocks: Ben on the piano; the other parts as best we could.

Shaun was now speaking the dear, familiar words of the Book of Common Prayer.

There was a simple goblet half-filled with port on the coffee table (left over from making my cranberry sauce) and a plate of seeded brown bread with the crusts cut off (surplus from my bread sauce).

Our daughter had her wish.

And I, far more than I had even asked for.

We have not been struck by Covid.

We have not lost our home.

We have plenty to eat.

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Some time around nine o’clock on Christmas night we started playing charades and laughed so much we woke our ill daughter and she came downstairs again.

You’ve got to give me a title, she said.

Come on then: out in the hall.

Cæsar’s Gallic Wars, I said.

Cæsar’s what? You’d never know she read Classics at the same college as my father.

Well, there’s not much that rhymes with Gallic. And what does is quite rude.

(* See 18+ footnote)

And that was after we’d been through strings of garlic and baguettes and moustaches and Ben’s even ruder French joke that we all know better than we wish we did.

We laughed even more than we had in 2005.


It took for ever.

It always does when she enacts them. Last year we were half an hour shouting out Always Look on the Bright Side of Life before it transpired that this miserable image hanging by its arms was not in fact a human crucifixion victim but a very depressed albatross shot by an Ancient Marriner.

Eventually Shaun: Are you trying to say, Cæsar’s Gallic Wars?

Yes! Well done!

You morons. It’s not called Cæsar’s Gallic Wars.

Oh?

It’s De Bello Gallico.

Of course.

(Ok. You try enacting, Sounds like, Hello phallico.)


Do you know, my daughter said at the very end of the day…

I think that’s one of the best Christmases we’ve ever had.

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(Christmas flowers from Shaun)

(*Adult gloss.

Sounds like masturbation? Shaun asked at one point.

Oh yeah, Ben said.

Like all the other words that rhyme with masturbation…)

December 27, 2020 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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Christmas has not been cancelled.

December 24, 2020 by Anne Atkins

Christmas has not been cancelled!


Hands up who thinks this the best Christmas they’ve ever had?

Hmm…

Ok, let’s try another one.

Hands up who struggled to get out of bed this morning, wanted to burst into tears, can’t bear one drop more rain, has a screaming overdraft and redundancy on the shoulder and no immediate prospect of anything, is missing family so it hurts and wishes Christmas would just go away?

I wish I could talk to my parents. How did they get through Christmas 1939? Or indeed any of the next five…

I woke up today and realised the only presents I’ve managed to organise are for people I’m not allowed to see.


A few days ago my daughter Serena posted this on her Facebook page:


My mother tells a story of the year she wept in the stairs on Christmas Eve when she suddenly realised she’d had so much to do she’d completely forgotten to buy any presents at all.

The way she tells it, we all gathered around her and told her don’t worry mummy, we don’t mind about presents. This makes us seem like adorable little cherubs when in truth, as any of my contacts on here who knew us at the time (probably ranging in ages from 3-ish to 10-ish) will tell you, we were pretty feral. But I believe the story, because the not minding about presents bit was absolutely true.

Christmas in the house I grew up in was utterly magical, and it really had very little to do with presents. We had carols, nativities, Christmas services, games, family, friends.

So if you are that parent this year, crying on the stairs because you were planning all your Christmas shopping in the next few days (having been rushed off your feet before then); if you’ve just had all the presents sent to an address that you’re now not allowed to visit, and your heart is breaking for the children you feel you’ve let down: summon up all the things that made Christmas magical for you as a child, and I bet you the presents will not be the first things that come to mind.

Decorate the tree. Bake gingerbread. Light candles. Put cinnamon on EVERYTHING (come on now, name one situation where the addition of cinnamon makes anything less good). Visit a church service or stream one online (even if that’s not normally your thing). Sing carols. Or enact a pagan sun-rebirth ritual if you prefer 


Play parlour games (charades is much funnier, by the way, if you make the actor perform a mute precis of the book/film/whatever). Wear Christmas jumpers. Mourn for your Christmas if you want; the parents, siblings, nieces and nephews you’ll miss seeing. Maybe even the 20 minutes peace on Earth you were desperately hoping for while Grandfather entertains the ankle biters. But if the presents are bothering you, please don’t let them. They’re really not the ingredients required for a special Christmas.

X


Curiously, that was after we were all locked in our houses and realised we couldn’t see one another for Christmas.

December 24, 2020 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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In it together.

December 19, 2020 by Anne Atkins

Shaun has just been out to buy the Christmas goose and turkey. 

Yesterday I bought a whole deer for the freezer, so excited was I at my family’s coming home. 

Months ago, I turned down a booking of our house for Christmas – money that we desperately, desperately need this year – because I judged we needed each other even more…


And London and Bedford have just been put in lockdown, minutes ago, so no Christmas together after all.


LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE!


None of us has Covid-19 (yet) and we’re not at war.


And… um… I haven’t just lost a leg. Er… or a million pounds. The dog hasn’t died. I haven’t been sick today. Nor has anyone else in the family.

I expect I could keep this up for quite a long time and bore everyone a lot.


Anything you don’t thank God for today, you should be willing to lose tomorrow.


And if you’re free at 6 o’clock this evening, or any time hereafter, you are most welcome to join the choir I sing with for a compilation put together by our brilliant son Ben. 

Who, incidentally, was recently commended in the Royal Philharmonic Inspiration Awards for one of his earlier compilations.

December 19, 2020 /Anne Atkins
Cheerfulness in a time of Corona, Coronavirus cheer, Coronacheer, Surviving Covid-19, Optimism in isolation, Optimism in lock-down
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