I don't know why I refer to them as "the holidays," given that Mr WithaY and I no longer work a standard Monday to Friday pattern. Every day we're not working could be described as a "holiday."
Anyhoo. We had all kinds of plans for Christmas, all sorts of parties and events we were planning on going to, or hosting. Day trips, even.
Mr WithaY and I went to the Bath Christmas market, where we bought gee-gaws and trinkets and trumpery*. These included:
- A wooden trivet made of slices of wood all set in some sort of resin, which looks like an arty photograph. I love it.
- Some beautifully soft grey and blue lambswool fingerless mittens which I wear almost constantly outside,
- A stained glass Christmas tree decoration from a very young, very silent, Belarusian nun.
- A wreath made from dried apples, oranges, cinnamon sticks and (I think) Scotch Bonnet chillies, which now hangs in the front porch.
We shopped for food, we made sure there was Champagne for Christmas Day, we moved furniture to ensure the tree would fit in the sitting room. The decorations went up, the house looked festive, we were ready.
The majority of the family went to their respective homes again, leaving just Mr WithaY and I, and my lovely Mum here for the Christmas period. The first few days were perfect. We went out a bit, drank lots of tea, ate lots of delicious home-made food, watched some Christmas TV, and looked forward to the Big Day. I went to work on Christmas Eve, Mr WithaY and Mum stayed in and watched a DVD together.
By the time I finished work at 6pm, I was feeling very odd. Dizzy. Hot and cold. Headachy. I got home, and the others were feeling much the same. And that, dear readers, was that. We all went down with the flu as if felled by hammers, and for the next three or four days hardly moved.
Mr WithaY and I, whilst feeling dreadful, were able to eat a little, and even make cups of tea and so on, but poor Mum just got worse and worse, to the point where she ended up staying with us for an extra week, and was then only taken home on New Years Day to go straight into hospital. Thankfully, after a week of top-notch care, she has returned home and seems to be much better. but it was a horrible time for all of us.
Mr WithaY and I have both been left with horrible racking coughs, and intermittent high temperatures, but we are both much better than we were. I have no energy, and even walking the dog around the village, or pushing a shopping trolley round the supermarket leaves me shaking and exhausted, but hopefully in a few days that will pass too.
The good news is that I have lost a stone, for the first time ever over Christmas, and am definitely less podgy than I was. A few days of eating normally will probably put paid to that, but it's nice to begin a New Year feeling like I am already on the right track.
Other news: Prior to the Great Flu Outbreak, I was the proud winner of this:
The Stonehenge volunteers had their Christmas party, and held a Great British Bake-Off competition, where people were invited to submit cakes for JUDGEMENT.
I made this, a coffee cake with home-made apricot jam in the middle, and butterscotch chocolate ganache icing. Mr WithaY added the Neolithic deer drawing:
And it won! I assumed, when Mr WithaY came into the pub to tell me (I was at the work Christmas meal, so wasn't at the Stonehenge event, clashing dates, sadly) that there had only been one or two entries, and we'd all won a cup.
Oh, but no. No.
There were apparently about 30 entries, and the judges did it all very seriously, tasting everything and making their decision very carefully.
AND I WON!
Hurrah! Here's the glorious cup in situ, dominating the room:
I am hoping I get to keep it forever, rather than having to return it next year. That reminds me, I must add it to our insurance.
So. The flu. A quiet and very worrying Christmas. A lingering annoying cough. No other news.
Here's a lovely picture of the dog that my Middle Sis took on one of our family walks. I really, really like it. It shows you exactly what a friendly, sweet-natured girl she is. And the dog is nice too.
Here's to a good New Year, and that nobody gets the flu again.
Oh, and once again there was no Dinotopia on TV. Outrageous.
*you have to talk like that in Bath. It's the LAW.
4 comments:
Goodness, your poor mum! And poor you. I was also grim over Christmas, as I went down with Gastritis on 21 November and am only just now coming out the other side, 6 weeks later. I also lost 8lbs in weight but as a diet, I don't recommend it.
Congrats on the cake, but i have to say i don't recall you saying you volunteered at Stonehenge in previous posts - had I known, I'd have come down and said hello. Actually, being an ex-archaeologist, it's pretty shameful i've not been to see the new layout & buildings, especially as I did my Master's thesis on the history of the site, but there you are. Maybe i'll pop down and throw some buns at you.
(Beautiful doggy, by the way, such a happy smile!)
All that Mrs Jones said, I hope you're fully fit again soon.
I judge the home economics class at the next village's summer show (I have no credentials for this) and I taste everything too and often, to decide between the top few, taste two or three times. This sounds wonderful but actually I feel quite queasy by the end, by the time I've tested all the jams and pickles!
Everything I've heard about the flu this year is horrible. And my son came home with it today.
Relieved that your mum made it through okay. Frightening.
Thank you all for your kind words. Sorry not to have replied earlier.
Z, we're having a village Flower Show in August. I'll keep you posted!
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