Friday, 2 October 2020

The year 2020 - as seen through the eyes of Bodger, my dog.


It’s turning out to be a funny year, don’t you think?  

I mean, it started off normal enough, with Mum putting all the sparkly decorations and cuddly Santas back in the garage.  I think it’s the garage.  It used to be.  But Mum’s started calling it the utility.  I don’t know why.  I like the Santas.  I like to rip their insides out.   She threw the Christmas tree away this year.  It was massive.  Nearly touched the ceiling.  Mum said it was driving her mad because there were bits missing and it stunk of damp from the garage.  Sorry, I mean utility.

Then she went on holiday to somewhere hot.  I didn’t mind because I got to stay at Paula and Tom’s.  Paula cooks me special dinners and always gives me treats.  They live upstairs, but Paula does the washing in our gar … utility … and she’s up and down a lot.   I always come downstairs with her just to check that Mum’s not hiding from me in our place.   I can still smell her, you see.

            Well, she came back, like she always does.  I don’t know why I worry so much.  Mum says I’ve got issues.  And then the weather started getting nicer and suddenly, everything got weird.  

            The tele was on all the time.  A man with fluffy white hair was telling everybody what to do.  He didn’t look very well.  

            Chilli stopped coming.  Ellie used to bring her every day and the three of us would go on our walk, while Ellie went to work.  Me and Chilli played all day until Danny came to collect her.   Apparently, Ellie has to work from home now.  So, I’ve nobody to play with.  I miss Chilli.   And I haven’t seen Milo – he’s my brother - and Silva for yonks because Becky and Daz are stuck somewhere and not allowed to come and visit.  I miss them too.  Craig used to come every day and talk to Mum while he had a cup of tea.  But we don’t see him much now and when he does call, he stays in the garden and won’t have a cup of tea because he says he doesn’t want to give Mum something horrible that will make her die.  He says a lot of people are dying.

            Mum’s been doing a lot of cleaning.  She’s even sorted out the doggy cupboard – washed all my harnesses and coats and put my treats into special plastic boxes.  And, believe it or not, I’ve got a new toy box.  I’m sure Mum will get me some toys to put in it soon.

            She started doing strange things on the floor every day.  Well, maybe not every day.  Stuff like lifting her legs up in the air and trying to sit up.  She was making scary noises and I tried to help her.  It didn’t work so I licked her face instead.  I think she was pleased.

Our walks have been much longer than they used to be.  Mum always used to say ‘good morning’ to people we met on our walks.  Especially if they had a dog too.  But people have started crossing the road when they see us coming.  Maybe they don’t like Mum’s smell.  It must be that.  I don’t care – I bark at them.  But not Joe.  I love Joe.  Joe’s a Labrador and Mum says I fell in love with him at first sight.  I’m not, like, well – you know – I’m not anything anymore.  Not since they had my bits taken off.  Since they had me, what’s the word?  Neutralised.

            I spend most of my time on the back of the settee, looking out of the window onto the square.  It’s my job to guard the house and bark at everybody and everything that walks past.  Us schnauzers are excellent guard dogs.  It’s been a bit boring this year though.  The square is usually full of kids playing.  Sometimes there’s a bouncy castle and families have barbecues and parties.  But nothing much at all has happened for ages.  One morning there was a lady doing something.  Yoga, Mum said.  I think the lady was trying to copy my morning stretch when I push my front legs forward and stick my bum in the air.  I do it better than she did.

            A big fat dog with a matching owner walk round the square twice a day.  I think that’s the only walk it gets.  Then there’s that horrible cat.  Marmalade, Mum calls it.  It has the nerve to come in our garden sometimes, but mostly, it wanders into the square like it owns the place.  Should be spread on a piece of toast if you ask me.

Dogs aren’t allowed in the square.  I think that’s why the cat looks at me so cockily. 

Anyway, Dad took me in there once.  He was always doing naughty stuff was Dad.  Mum called him a bugger.  He loved this square.  Somehow, he always knew which tree would be the first to get its leaves.  He would park his chair thing, that moved on its own, in the bay and let me sit on his knee.  If it was cold outside but the sun was shining through the window it was exactly like sun-bathing.   He always fell asleep.   But I looked after him.  Kept guard.  One day that bloody Marmalade turned up and I barked so much Dad nearly bounced out of his chair.  I didn’t get to sit on his knee after that.  I don’t know where he is now.  He’s been gone for a long time.

            I’ve been groomed!  First time in months, although it feels like years to me.  I’m glad, I thought I was going blind.  Mum’s had her hair cut too and she says things are starting to get back to normal.  Or, the new normal.  Whatever that means.    We’ve had gatherings.  Becky and Daz have been back home with Milo and Silva and we have met up for walks on the beach.  All the family has been together again at last.  We’ve had fun and been happy.   We’ve even been to the pub.

            But things are not quite like they used to be.   The man with the fluffy white hair says we still have to be careful.  Everybody has to wash their hands a lot, wear masks and stay away from each other.    ‘Hands, face, space,’ is how you remember it, says Mum.  Craig’s got a black mask with a big yellow smiley mouth on it.  He looks really odd, especially when his eyes are angry.  Mum’s got flowers on hers.  

            Mum won’t leave me outside a shop anymore in case some thieving bastard comes along and steals me, she says.  I’m precious, she says.  Not that Mum goes to the shop much.  A man usually brings everything to our house.

            Things have changed again.  The man has made a new rule.  Rule of Six.  Mum got really cross the other day. What’s the point of six when there’s around fourteen of us at Christmas time?   She says he might just as well cancel Christmas.  

‘Pan-fucking-demic!’ she said.

I’ve never heard that word before – demic.   

I wonder if she’ll bother getting a new Christmas tree?  Or if the Santas will come out of the utility?  I hope it isn’t cancelled, because it’s not just the cuddly Santas in the utility.  That’s where Mum keeps all the leftover food.  And all the beer and wine.  Somebody always gets drunk and forgets to close the door - and Chilli – she’s the brave one – sneaks in and grabs whatever she can.  Last year we had a whole gammon!  

            Oh, it’s got worse.   Nobody is allowed to go to anybody else’s house.  It’s banned.  But it’s OK for Paula to still come to ours, I heard Mum say, because we don’t live in a house.  We live in a bubble.  I didn’t know that.  But Mum can’t go to Craig, Ellie or Becky’s house and they can’t come to us.

            Mum’s on her own a lot now.  So am I.  Our bubble is very quiet.  She doesn’t have the television on anymore.  She says she can’t stand it.  She sits for hours at her lap top thing.  It’s not too bad because I have a nice bed behind her chair and she keeps talking to me.  I’m lucky, I’ve got three beds.  One behind her chair where we spend a lot of the day, one in the kitchen where Mum drinks wine in the evenings, and the big one in our new room - the room that used to be Dad’s.  I remember he spent almost all his time in that room. When he was poorly.  It’s ours now.  Sometimes I think I can still smell him.

            I think Mum can too.

 

 

            

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, 21 September 2020

21 September 2024 - A glimpse into the future


There were extraordinary scenes in the Commons today, when Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, swept aside the Despatch Box and dashed into the outstretched arms of Labour Party Leader, Sir Keir Starmer, where the two adversaries embraced in a massive bear hug.   Parliamentarians from all parties scrambled over benches in their haste to get to the front to shake the hands of colleagues and opposition members alike.  There was a great deal of back slapping and an astonishing degree of cheek kissing.  Ed Milliband had tears in his eyes as he grasped Boris’ hand in both of his in an energetic and heartfelt handshake.    The Speaker launched a flurry of MPs questions into the air as he gleefully jumped up and down on his chair, while Nicola Sturgeon danced the Highland Fling on the central table.  The hallowed Chamber resounded with joyful cries of ‘hurrah!’ ‘bravo!’ and ‘well done!’ The House, united in jubilant celebration of its unparalleled success.  

Covid 19 is dead!  Conquered!  Defeated!  Done!

Of course, triumph over the deadly coronavirus does indeed warrant expressions of jollification unprecedented in the House’s history but what, four years from the onset of the pandemic, has become of us.  

            Suicide rates have more than doubled.  From 11.2 people per 100,000 in 2019, the figure now stands at 24.  Average life expectancy has fallen from 81 to 69.  Only one in four people aged between 20 and 35 have a job.  Homelessness has quadrupled. Hordes of homeless people are crammed into deserted shopping centres with just a few ghostly mannequins for company.  They are fed once a day.  Wetherspoons, the only surviving pub chain, now granted charitable status, is expected to provide one free breakfast – so long as everybody obeys the rule of four, remains two metres apart, and eats outside.

            In 2021, the government introduced the rule of one.  This means that no family is allowed more than one child and no child is allowed more than one friend.  Parents are allowed to hug their children once a month, but only after testing negative for the virus, all must be wearing full PPE and must be outside.  Grandparents can see grandchildren every three months – wearing full PPE and behind a glass screen.  They must adhere to the rule of three – one grandchild to two grandparents or two grandchildren to one grandparent.  

Unless it’s for work, nobody is allowed to travel more than five miles from their home and can only do so on foot or bicycle and in accordance with the rule of two – no more than two people may be allowed to walk or cycle together.  Pets, with the exception of dogs, are banned.

            Children under the age of eleven attend school every seventh day and are taught in groups of five, according to the rule of five, unless a child has a twin, in which case the rule of five and a bit applies.  All secondary and further education is delivered remotely, and all homes must install a sterile bubble in which learning can take place.  No parent or teacher is permitted to enter.

            Schools and universities offer a limited curriculum specifically designed to support essential key sectors, the most essential, heading up the list:

·      Politics

·      Design and manufacture of face masks and PPE

·      Warehousing and Distribution

·      Science

·      Police and Security Services

·      Armed Forces

·      IT

·      Funeral Services

Tens of thousands of nurses have been made redundant and surgeons play poker in redundant operating theatres.  Airline pilots have ditched the skies in favour of the roads, where the average delivery driver earns more than the Prime Minister.   DPD is listed amongst the top ten companies in the UK.

            We have, as a nation, worked tirelessly in our determination to rid our shores of this dreadful disease.  And this determination has paid off.  All that’s left for us to do is address the catastrophic collapse in the economy and see if we can reverse our plunging fortunes over the next ten years.  Or possibly, fifteen.

Some of you, on reading this, may remain sceptical.  You may not believe everything written here.   You may decide it can’t all be true.  And you would be right.  

That bit about the jubilant scenes in the Commons – 

-       I made that bit up.

            

 

Monday, 13 April 2020

Lockdown Lunacy


There are worse places to be imprisoned than our homes.  

Like, prison.

Yet as we enter the fourth week of lockdown, it’s possible that some of us have started to go just a teeny bit mad, in spite of intense efforts to side step the insanity that, to be honest, we might just as well embrace until all this is over.

My decline started in week one, with cleaning.  

Maniacal cleaning.  

Every room.  Every corner.  Every cobweb.  Every cupboard.

My wardrobes have been cleared of clutter I haven’t worn for years.  Well, not completely cleared.  I retain some of the contents for when they fit me again, a proportion of garb yet to adorn me and all of those few but precious garments that I only ever wear.   I have left a few things hanging there simply to make the wardrobes feel useful and the rest now linger in bin bags until charity shops and tips reopen.

Woodwork has been washed, cornices cleared of cobwebs and light-fittings polished until they sparkle.  Admittedly I didn’t wash the bulbs.  But they did get a thorough bashing with a feather duster on a stick.

Whatever the disgusting concoction may be that lurks in the shower drain has been banished and tiles and grout bleached to the point where it’s difficult to breathe.

My disorderly kitchen cupboards have delighted in the attention they have received, with all items now having their own personal space.  I have even freed and binned the tin of golden syrup that has been welded to its particular shelf for many years.  I have filed my spices in alphabetical order.  I actually considered arranging my tinned food in the same way.  But I didn’t.  That would be weird.

So, onto week two …  

Shopping and food.

I was not part of the panic-buying brigade that bought all the pasta and loo rolls.

No, wine and hair dye were my obsessive purchases.  Thankfully I am a member of a wine club and excellent customers like me are being very well looked after thank you very much.

But food and all things foodie have suddenly become one of the most interesting aspects of all our lives. 

Daily conversations with family members run something along the lines of, 

‘What’re you having for tea?’ 

Along with a disproportionate interest in how the food for tea was actually acquired.  

‘How was the supermarket?  Busy?’  

Actually, the social distancing measures in supermarkets have improved the experience immeasurably.  The queue outside is now a source of interest and entertainment, many participants sporting the most imaginative homemade facemasks, with one or two actually wearing proper ones.  

People feel compelled, regardless of mask, to discuss the strangeness of these times with fellow queue members, and some just can’t stop themselves from spouting their ill-considered opinions for the rest of us to benefit from their perceived wisdom.

 ‘It’s all a plot, this virus.  A deliberate invention by the Chinese because we weren’t buying their phones!’ said one fella.

Once inside, you politely try to avoid other shoppers but end up buying whatever you can reach on the shelf, regardless of whether or not you want it, in order to maintain your two-metre distance.   It’ll come in, you think.  There’ll be a recipe for it somewhere.

And that’s the thing.  We are being much more adventurous in our cooking and spending so much more of our time doing it.

‘I managed to get some flour today,’ goes the conversation.  

‘So, I’m going to bake a cake.  Victoria sponge, I think.  Or, I might make scones.  Fruit or cheese?   Or, possibly both.  Or even bread.  Or … sod it … I’ll make everything.’

The flour mills are working twenty-four hours a day to try to keep up with the nation’s desire to bake and post pictures of their efforts on social media.   

I could murder a treacle tart.  If only I hadn’t freed that golden syrup.

But all this eating comes at a price.  Weight.   So, onto week three …

Exercise.

My poor little dog, Bodger, is exhausted.  

Not so long ago he would drag me out of the house bursting with excitement at the prospect of a little exploration.  A gentle meander to the beach and back, say hello to one or two dogs along the way.  Home.  Brekky.  Sleep.  Job done.

Not any more.  Now he cowers at the door as I get him ready for our morning marathon.   We march – and I do mean march - up, down, round and round again on every path and stairway leading to every spot of beach or garden that Scarborough has to offer.  

And it has many.  

I’ve tried to explain to him that our time out of the house must be valuable.  It’s precious now.  Important.  His walk has to count.  

I think he hates me.

My phone is complicit in this torture as it obligingly counts the steps we are taking and we are not allowed to return home until an acceptable number has been reached.

So does it end there?  A good walk, then get home and do normal stuff like read a book, watch television, bake everything you can think of?  

I wish.

Facebook is full of advertisements for exercise gadgets and programmes that promise to transform your entire body, with hardly any effort, in just thirty days.  Which of course will ensure that I emerge from this lockdown looking like a supermodel.

There are bits of kit that will flatten your stomach in just ten minutes a day!   (I’m unconvinced as to why I need to adopt such a speedy approach when all I have is time, however.)

So, have I been gullible enough to fall prey to this advertising?

Of course I have.

My new possessions include a Yoga mat; a Pilates magic circle; a tension rope and a Pilates stick.

I have found individual workouts utilising each piece of my new kit on YouTube and made up a timetable based on variety, interest and level of skill.

And when the aches and pains in my lower back disappear, I’ll give them a go! 

But apart from the potential madness, for those of us who are lucky enough to have a home in which to be imprisoned, there are benefits to be had.

Once you’ve been to the shop and/or had your marathon dog walk, you can get your PJs back on.

You can grow Dennis Healey eyebrows and leave those whiskers on your chin unattended to for days.  You can even wait until you’re as grey as my schnauzer before you dye your hair.

You can get all those jobs done that you’ve been threatening to do for years.  By week five I reckon the leaves on the plants in the garden will all have been nicely washed and my new pieces of exercise kit will have joined the long since discarded kettle bells in the garage.

Most importantly, we can prevent that feeling of isolation by keeping in touch with family and friends on social media.  

We can admire images of all the exciting stuff that people are about to eat, watch videos of friends and family doing whatever it is they do to stop them going nuts.  Whether that’s singing, drumming, drawing, dancing, cooking, baking, engaging in on-line quizzes, planting carrot tops or watching your pot plants grow.

It’s the least we can do.   Those of us at home, or working from home, are the lucky ones.

By the end of this, in spite of the home exercise regime, most of us will have gained a little weight.  

For very few, weight might be the only thing they’ve lost.  

All of us, without exception, will have lost something.  

Many businesses will have gone bust.   Many will have lost money, income and customers, perhaps even jobs.  

Some of us will have lost a loved one.

But, many others, will have lost their lives.