I first heard the quote that gives the blog
post its title from the novel The Day of
Small Things by O. Douglas (sister of John Buchan), encountered by me when
I was about ten in my great-aunt’s house; it and her other titles have been on
my comfort-read list ever since.
She got the quote from the Bible,
Zechariah, iv. 10: ‘Who hath despised the day of small things?’
I have never been more grateful for the
‘small things’ than in these recent, unprecedented, days.
My daughter and I went out a drive on Mother’s Day (22 March) into the beautiful Border country around Peebles. We admired
the scenery, including newborn lambs, without getting out of the car. A lovely
memory to have – and not an experience that will be repeated anytime soon,
because the day after that came the lockdown.
No going into shops for us for health
reasons. So we are very fortunate that many local small businesses have stepped
forward to be a lifeline in delivering food to the door – fruit and veg boxes,
bread, milk, eggs, other groceries, butcher meat and fish.
One company delivered the goods and after that phoned for payment which
restored my faith in human nature to quite a tearful extent.
On second thoughts keeping people fed is no
small thing – it’s massive and I’m so
grateful, and for:
WhatsApp – for keeping in regular touch with family
and friends, whether for reassurances regarding health and well-being, doing
silly little quizzes together, dress-up Friday photographs and much more
FaceTime
phone calls
email
zoom – for enabling meetings of book group
and writing class
Face Book (keeping in touch plus there have
been some very funny memes and black humour and many heart-warming stories; I don’t read the negative stuff
or click through to the horror/tabloid stories)
friends’ blogs showing what their daily
lives are like at the moment: Anne Stenhouse and Anne Stormont
cooking something with substituted
ingredients that turns out well (those food deliveries, wonderful though they are, are unable to supply plain flour or yeast;
who’s got it all?)
Richard Osman’s House of Games – 6pm BBC2, brain-teasing fun
blossom
teddies and rainbows in windows
(and in my
son’s Greater London street on Easter Sunday painted eggs for children to ‘hunt’)
I can read all day if I want to (and I do),
currently the rather wonderful Where the Crawdads Sing and, alternately, a comfort read
Mrs Pooter’s Diary.
Joe Wicks’ YouTube exercises (to help keep
reader’s bottom at bay)
exercise bike (ditto)
early morning walks through deserted
streets (ditto, and for fresh air, and to feel some sense of normality while marvelling at the changed, almost vehicle-less,
city)
free theatre productions on YouTube
Malory Towers on iPlayer
large garden (communal,
south-facing)
sleep (previously I could lie awake
worrying about various things but now with these being eclipsed I’m sleeping like the proverbial log – perhaps some form
of defence mechanism kicking in?)
time to put together a new anthology Still Rocking and other stories– watch
this space.
(all images courtesy of Pixaby)
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