And Away

 

The dawn chorus was loud this morning
I was awake well before five and it was cold enough for the dogs to caterpillar their way under the duvet in order to keep warm.
Before getting up for work, I read a little more of Bob Mortimer’s And Away…. Autobiography , which is a cracking read.
The snow that fell last night had gone from the lane but it remains cold  
I’ve chugged my bucket of coffee this morning which I lace with agave nectar, whilst listening to Steve Allen on LBC radio. He’s an old waspish Queen and his complaining wakes me up nicely.

On Line

It was snowing here this evening 
Not a great deal, but enough to be noticed 
I spent most of the day on line , a fact that gave me some admiration for people who spend their working day glued to a screen 
I found the day generally productive 
Lots of boxes ticked
Lots of positives felt.


I sorted out a nice hotel for gorgeous Dave and I on our mini trip to Rome in June and before that , just after my 60th birthday, I’ve arranged to travel to the Catalonian coast south of Barcelona for a few days on holiday alone and booked a private tour of la Sangrada Famalia as well as a three hour tapas & Wine walking tour .
I found a dog carer who will pamper Dorothy in their own home then organised to meet my friend Alex from Poland in London in three weeks time.
We have got tickets for the Emlyn Williams play The Corn Is Green, with Nicola Walker at the National which will be a real treat. 
I’ve booked the nice hotel z in Covent Garden again.

I picked my bathroom suite , tiles , and accessories and let my little bathroom man know messenger then sorted bills and banking out before booking myself on an online Course exploring Pre war German History 
I can thank seeing Cabaret for that one.
I’ve been in a very bad place until yesterday 

Normal Programming Has Been Resumed

 


Back to normal today. The weather has turned colder and wetter and on our walk this morning, I regretted my decision to wear shorts only a minute into the amble.

I finished my film studies course yesterday and in the late afternoon met a friend to see The Phantom Of The Open. A comic version of the later life of the Walter Mitty character Maurice Flitcroft a working class crane driver who fraudulently entered the British Open Golf Tournament in the search of fame and fortune. With the delightful Mark Rylance in the lead role, Phantom is a frothy, light film about nice people being nice to each other. Wrapped up as almost a fantasy film, with splashes of Amelie and Forest Gump it gives Flitcroft a wry, gentle and somewhat warm persona, a man who adores his slightly dim wife and family, but who wants and needs some sort of fame ( this motivation is not explained in the movie at all by the way)
I enjoyed the humour of the piece but was left feeling somewhat uneasy at the end of the film when clips of the real Maurice Flitcroft were shown. This character seemed much darker and more serious than the one portrayed by Rylance and his presence hinted at darker motivations and even mental illness behind the eyes.
It’s interesting, but my friend thought the same 


After a couple of days in work from tomorrow, I have quite a few jaunts booked from Saturday 
An afternoon concert at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall, a real ale pub visit with a couple of work mates, two plays at Theatre Clwyd and a cabaret cult night out celebrating Kate Bush.
Hopefully Choir will return on Tuesday too after being cancelled for three weeks due to increasing covid numbers .
Like I said
Normal Programming Has Been Resumed  

It’s 20.50 pm and it’s snowing

 

Onwards




 Up early today to beautiful sunshine again, even though the forecasts were gloomy. 
In Dyserth on the walkway there was a cool sea mist which was invigorating in short sleeves.
I met Chic Eleanor not long after nine, well before the sun burnt off the haze.


There are few people that you can have an authentic conversation with, I always think.
A honest and sincere interaction that is both supportive but challenging at the same time
I had one of those conversations this morning
Chic Eleanor knows me well. 
We have similar coping mechanisms, similar places we go when we are hurting.
Similar behaviours we revert to.
She knows how I tick and today we talked about forgiveness  and letting go of things.
It was a necessary and serious conversation 

And when we parted, we hugged long and hard like friends sometimes do
Her warmth reminded me of being worthy

And I can still smell her gentle perfume and feel the softness of her hair on my cheek.




Fuck Sad



I expected to feel somewhat low today
I’m not.
I don’t want to be.
The valiant muscari Armeniacum  which had been potted up on the front garden table could not look any more cheerful and after a winter of lying dormant the delicate Sea Pinks in the French Basket by the front door have just started to flower again after I rehydrated them back to normality.
After nights,
I’ve let my little bathroom man have the details of my bathroom choices and have opened the cottage windows wide as I play loud cheerful radio 2.
Fuck the incessant yappy Yorkshire terrier in the new build 
Bra straps pulled up with a massive hike
I’ve washed clothes, changed bedding, put all of the houseplants out into the spring sun and watered them with rainwater
All before the weather changes tomorrow,


Sourdough bread is in the oven 
I have just enough butter left to enjoy it 
Hey ho

(Finlandia by Jean Sibelius)


Sublime moments happen rarely 
Last night in the wee small hours at work, it was nice to have a brief break outside and take in the air as it breezes in from the Irish Sea.
In the hospice garden, you can’t see the sea but you can taste and smell it and that feels cold and wonderful after a few hours clinical work especially when listening to this version of This My Song to Finlandia, a song we sing in choir

Listening to Sibelius in the dark.
And feeling a bit ….well….weird 

Hattie & Mary


 Animals have friendships just as humans do
Mary and Hattie are a perfect example of this 
Hattie, as you may remember is the young nurse who used to live in the village by the old post office.
She energetically threw herself into every social activity going. Singing in the community choir, supporting the Women’s Institute and being one of the street wardens during covid as well as being my Church bell co ringer when people used to clap for nurses and every week she used to take Mary out for a long walk and a cuddle.

Hattie and I at the Folk Weekend in the Hall


During lockdown she and her boyfriend moved to the next village in a new build where they’ve had Baby Freya and her absence and cheerfulness has been greatly missed .
Mary hasn’t seen her friend for a year now and went absolutely mental when Hattie leant over the kitchen wall yesterday afternoon to say hello.
Very gently she sniffed at Freya and joyfully joined the family for a long walk, her tale whirling like a helicopter as they made their way down the lanes to the West.

What was that Scarlett ?


After All Tomorrow is another day…..

 It’s a beautiful sunny day here in Trelawnyd .I’ve moved my little blue table into the front garden to get away from the yapping dogs in the new build and am enjoying Almond Coffee eggs, and hot hot buttered toast -  with my own butter.

I’m ok . 
Yesterday I bought a new lamp for the living room and in a fit of middle aged gay frenzy bought a whole set of plain black accessories for  the new bathroom which will be mostly white with black trim.
I also bought a couple of zombie movies, one of which Infection wasn’t a half bad version even though it had been banned for showing in its native Venezuela.
I binged the movies , ate sushi from the sushi shop outside chester and drank too much gin last night.
Like I said, I’m ok . 
I emailed my ex husband too and wished him and his fiancé well.

The village is busy this morning. There is a coffee morning in the Hall and the shenanigans between the Community Council and the Community Association over the future of the hall seems to be quietening somewhat so I hope the recent discourse is approaching its end. 
There was some talk of it at the shop which now seems to the hub of informal meetings .
On the way back I spied The Velvet Voiced Linda , crossing the road by the hall, bunches of flowers in hand to decorate the tables.
She waved and beamed her big smile.

Affable Despot Jason has just stopped , he’s out walking with Liv and his dogs and took  the piss out of my Italian coffee pot and obvious pretensions 
No brexit here , I told him.
It was nice to see him

Hattie and her new baby are calling up later to pick Mary up for a walk,
My friend Nigel is calling for a chat at 2pm
I’m on nights later 

It’s a nice day x