You know things are getting bad when you’re on your third large
scotch and you start re-reading old e-mails – ones you’ve already read at least
a dozen times, ones that come from a special person whose messages you leave in
your inbox just because you like seeing the name there, ones that prompt you to
read ever deeper between the lines even though you know that the assumptions
you’re making could be hopelessly inaccurate – especially since you tend to make
good assumptions when you’re in a good mood, and bad ones when you’re feeling
negative.
And you know things are getting bad when you’re tired
through having been woken two hours prematurely by workmen next door, and the
fact that you’ve had a stressful day which has kindly donated even more reasons
to feel anxious, but you can’t go to bed because you fear you might miss
something. Like an e-mail from the special person, for example. (For example?
Right.) ‘Just one more scotch, then I’ll go to bed.’ Eventually you do.
Discontented, because your inbox still only has old messages in it.
Helen says I need a dog.
4 comments:
I thought you had a dog. :)
No, Helen. If you mean the dog in the profile pic, that's Penny who died at Christmas 2004. And just to make the story more interesting, Penny was Helen's dog, Helen being my ex.
Sorry to hear that. I have a cat aged 17, she is my failsafe. :)
The story of Penny's last Christmas is one of my favourite anecdotes. She taught me a lot, bless her. It's too long for a blog comment, though.
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