
Iām bored. Are you bored? I am like, SO FECKING BORED. Covid. Brexit bollocks. More Covid, except more contagious and a new strain, FFS. Restrictions. Lockdown 3 (or is it 4? Iāve lost count). Ā Actually I am not just bored, I am bored and agitated.
Now Iām not bored because I have nothing to do-I’ve just lost the will.Ā Ā I am fed up with it all. I am fed up with the Small Child following me into the loo and the Older One melting my head about the quality of entertainment that’s on offer. I’m fed up with cats demanding food as I make the morning coffee. Iām also bored with myself. Take this tale as an example. Brace yourself.
I went a massage a few weeks ago because I felt like a ton of crap.
āHow was it?ā asked LSB as I came in, dropping my bag in the hall.
āSplendid,ā I replied.
I could have told him how the wonderful Tina of Natural Roots Wellness eased my knotty neck and stiff shoulders. But I didnāt. I could have told him how I almost floated down the stairs of the salon, out into the street and the velvety black skies and twinkly lights of Stranmillis. But I didn’t. Instead, I chose to labour the point about overpriced vegetables.
To save my newly kneaded neck from the trials of Forestside carpark, I nipped instead into a convenience store for the few items I needed. One of these was a cucumber*. To my display though, the cucumber was a startling Ā£1.65. This was over a pound more than in Sainsburyās, thereby 107.25% more expensive. (See, I told you to brace yourself. I even did the maths.) I had, however, already lifted the cucumber, and in these days of Covid safety measures, I felt I ought to purchase it. This irked me greatly. Iām still not sure Iām over it, to be honest. LSB, is definitely not over being regaled with the tale.
āThat was some story,ā he said, when I drew breath.
‘It almost rivalled yours about the lights on the Ormeau Road that take an age to turn,’ I retorted.
āThe ones at the junction at St Johnās?ā he replied.
āNo, I thought you said they were the ones near the park, opposite Candahar Street?ā* *
āAh yes, those lights. I hate getting stuck at them,ā he muttered darkly. āThe dog does too, she complains at them.ā
See? Do you see what 2020 has reduced us to? A pair of boring bastards. Iāve written about this before, how we see so much of each other that we run out of things to say, and thus fill our craic vacuum with banalities of this ilk.
Itās the last day of 2020, and while Iām not expecting the New Year to bring about anything drastic, Iām daring to hope for better things.
In 2021, Iāll write more, Iāll whinge less, and for LSBās sanity Iāll not get so wound up over cucumbers.
*According to Michael Ball on Radio 2 on Sunday, cucumbers are actually a fruit, not a vegetable. Did anyone else know that?
**If you are very bored you can read how there used to be a dairy farm here and a load of cows during WW2.

IĀ know itās Christmas Eve and thereās lorry drivers stranded in Kent and NHS staff whose arses havenāt sit a seat since March. Not to mention Santa: I mean, weāve just checked the ‘










3. Now you’ve probably guessed if you have looked on my 

Thereās a scene in Channel Fourās Catastrophe, where Sharon Horgan is wide eyed and terrified at 4am, her mind whirling with all the horrors that could possibly befall their unborn son. āThe worldās a TOILETā she declares to Rob Delaney, who is attempting to sleep beside her. There is a tragic resignation in her tone. LSB would be quick to relate to Delaney, because similarly he is is often awoken by my stirrings, as I lie, consumed with dread, because a quick look at the headlines at any time, in any country and on every f**king continent seems pretty bleak right now. Until yesterday. Because for a few hours at least, I let myself believe that if the world is still a toilet, and you had to take to cleaning it with a scrubbing brush, it would be slightly less daunting. Iām thinking today, it would less resemble the worst toilet in the world as depicted in Trainspotting,Ā and Ā more like one in a student flat in Reading if all the lads in The InbetweenersĀ were room mates. In other words, pretty rotten, but you wouldnāt require hospitalisation after the job: rubber gloves, Domestos and a stiff G&T Ā afterwards would see you right.

