My readers are a pushy bunch. In the last week I've received all sorts of cajolancies and admonitions about my decision to allow Much Malarkey Manor to slip quietly into the sunset.
'But,' I say, 'my creativity has died. It has been sucked from me by my return to teaching. I stagger home from work, after a 45 minute walk, tired and bad-tempered, lugging bags of shopping from my detour to Sainsbugs because I've got to cook dinner when I get in. I no longer have time to be a-blogging.'
'We don't care,' say the readers. 'We miss you. You make us laugh. You entertain us. Can't you just write a teeny, tiny, teensy bit just once in a while? PLEEEEEEEEEEEEEZE....'
'I'm not going to be held responsible for the quality of my output,' I say. 'My sense of humour has been replaced by a sense of exhaustion and, this week, tonsillitis.'
'That's okay,' say the readers. 'We'll read any old rubbish. Look, we've even got a copy of this week's 'Hello' magazine on the coffee table. And the coffee table needs dusting. In fact, it needs dusting even more than your coffee table needs dusting.'
'Shut yer face, readers,' says I. For another thing I don't need pointing out is the sluttish approach I've had to take to housework, now I no longer have the pleasure of leisurely pootling around with a hoover in between writing a bit here and writing a bit there.
I mean, you'd think the cats would clear up a bit, now I'm out the door at 7.30 and not home until 5.30.
'I can't work without rubber gloves,' says Phoebe. 'I can get one on, but then I lose my grip with the other. You can't do cleaning wearing only one glove.'
This sounds a feeble excuse.
'I can do housework without rubber gloves,' says Tybalt. 'But my big frilly blouse gets in the way.'
'What's housework?' says Pandora, flicking another empty can of Red Bull across to the rubbish bin and missing by a mile.
Okay, the truth is I miss writing this blog. But I find it frustrating I don't have the time to do a good job and I fear also that I'll end up writing about school related tripe. Sometimes school related tripe can be entertaining, but mostly it is boring, and can so easily turn into a bitter, acidic tirade.
For example, this week a 12 year old told me to 'go f**k yourself.' Not funny. Wearisome. And sadly, increasingly indicative of the society that is breeding in this progressive, illuminative 21st century. But then the five 15 year old lads in my form group informed me they were going to create a boy band, and I could be their manager. 'Thanks,' I said, 'but you can't actually sing.' 'It doesn't matter,' they said. 'We're going to enter the X Factor.' The ensuing conversation about lycra based costumes was highly entertaining.
And I ended the week coming down with a dose of tonsillitis. I've never had tonsillitis in my life. I don't like it. I sit here now with what feels like a couple of holly covered golf balls down my throat, and the feeling I could choke to death any minute because I can't swallow properly. Will I take time off work? Of course I won't. I intend to seek out the child who coughed the germs at me in the first place and cough back twice as hard. And then set them a detention.
I've been trying to organise a 'do' for my Mum's birthday. She's going to be 70 at the end of February, and has gone to great lengths to tell me she DOES NOT want a party OR a fuss OR any extravagant amounts of money spent upon her because she DOES NOT LIKE the idea of being 70 at all, NO NOT ONE JOT.
Well, I can't afford to take the risk of doing nothing (the easy option given the shrinkage of available time to perform these social niceties), so I've booked a restaurant for a birthday dinner. I have invited Mum's sisters, Auntie Nece and Auntie Pollie. I have invited my brother and his family, even though we don't get on because I think Mum would like to see us all in the same room being civil to each other. (I have already told Chris and Heather that if they fall out I won't be expecting any similarly conciliatory offerings, because, let's face it, you can't help who you're related to.)
The restaurant lady said, 'How many guests?' I said, '13. Unless my son and his girlfriend go into labour early, in which case there will be 11.' 'Or 14,' said the restaurant lady. I agreed. How odd, to think that by the time my Mum is 70, I could be a granny and she a great-granny.
I've located a cake company for the cake. Lovely brightly coloured cup cakes, full of ADHD additives (I don't have time to make a cake myself. Number of cakes made in this house since I went back to work? Zero.) I've got flowers and balloons sorted. I'm still working on transport. I'm thinking classy and vintage, rather than the back of our Picasso.
And so I plod on. But along with tonsillitis, I also got a wage slip this week. Which means the Bank of Me looks healthy once again.
Going back to work has had its advantages. But only one.
Hi Denise, so good to see you are back, I understand how dificult it is finding time and have only managed to blog so often recently due to the snow preventing me from getting to work! I think most of your followers would be happy with even the occasional post from you perhaps a monthly treat, whatever, it's a great blog that I hope will continue.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes
Di
Hooray - much malarky lives. You cant stop good writing. At the very worst you can demote it to footnotes.
ReplyDeleteBlob and Bob are both ecstatic. Well Blob is. Bob appears to be asleep whilst roasting his tummy on the woodburner.
PLEEEASE don't stop writing, Denise! I've been on my hols, and missed your 'farewell' post ... I love reading this, even if you can only blog once a week please keep going! And don't give up on 'Indigo, Antfarm ...' either - five rejections, pah, that's nothing.
ReplyDeleteI can't tell you how delighted I am that you are blogging again....I was very, very upset to read you were putting it on hold....
ReplyDeleteYou cheer up my days hugely...
Where did you select for your Mums "do"?
Moira