The pollen count must be up or something but in the last day or so, I've been plagued with a vague sense of free-floating anxiety about nothing in particular.
If I focus, I find I'm worried about:
the bees;
Peak Oil;
being thrown in jail for being a wildly politically incorrect Christian;
rising food prices;
the possibility of the village post office being closed by the government;
my council tax bill (which is odd, because I just paid up in full);
the fact that there was nowhere to go for Triduum that wouldn't send me into a blinding fury and make me want to raze the church to the ground with my bare hands (I realize now, I should have taken a day trip to Birmingham...next year);
the fact that Gordon Brown is going to be Prime Minister without-a-mandate for at least another year;
the fact that, despite his good looks and charm, moderate intelligence and vague good will, I really don't think David Cameron is up to the job;
the fact that despite all the evidence that it was a Really Bad Idea, women still have the vote;
the fact that the ancient system of English Common Law is being systematically replaced with a European/French/Napoleonic concept of law in which citizens only have the rights specifically detailed in legislation...all other activities and thoughts are outlawed by default;
the state of the trains;
the fact that every time I read a passage from Hansard, it becomes more obvious that the Honourable Members and Peers are totally barking mad;
the fact that Britain seems to have fallen under some kind of mass enchantment that seems to be equal parts pathological indifference to civic life, cultural amnesia, and rabid addiction to pleasures of appetite.
and the general nightmare horribleness of everything in the modern world.
Today I did a bit of shopping and the person I went with bought a little flannel for her grandson who likes Winnie the Pooh. But he doesn't like the Winnie of A.A. Milne and E. H. Shepard. He doesn't know about that Bear. He only knows Disney's nasty greedy Americanised cartoon. That's all you can get in shops if you look for Winnie stuff.
Is the real England in hiding? Is it living in caves in the hills waiting for rescue?
"Narnia was a sad country. Taxes were high, laws were harsh and Miraz was a tyrant."
So what was the matter with Mouldsworth - just up the road from you, where a Priest from the ICKSP celebrated the entire Easter Triduum eh? One of the two places outside of London that was done in the EF!
ReplyDeleteUngrateful wench.
Anne.
The matter is no car, no scooter, no buses, nothing but my feet, and "just up the road" might mean ten minutes in the car, but three hours either way on foot.
ReplyDeleteIt's a lot further to Birmingham on foot!
ReplyDeleteBut at least there is a train that goes there fairly regularly, and a bus that goes to the train. It is an odd fact about Britain that without a car, things that are only five or ten miles away and are small and a bit off the main track, are further away than things that are fifty miles away and big.
ReplyDelete