Monday 30 July 2007

Trials, Tribulations and Mood-Busters

The school holidays are so far mimicking the summer; doom and gloom interspersed with bright sunshine and the faint promise of settled days just around the corner. As some of you reading this will know, I have a friend who was seriously injured in a horrible accident last week; a driver going far too fast in atrocious conditions - and having had a fair few drinks – took a corner too quickly and ploughed into her as she was walking towards her car. I feel a sense of outrage – of sheer affront – as I look at my friend – my strong, capable, funny, dear friend – lying broken in a hospital bed. Her brain is slowly starting a long process of recovery, but will have to re-learn how to speak and walk. My throat constricts as her five year old daughter announces that it isn’t Mummy lying there, and as her seven year old boy screws up his face against the world and punches a wall. I hold my outrage in my mind at the same time as I feel sheer relief and gratitude that she is, in fact, lying here alive.

We can feel so many things at the same time; I feel deliciously lazy as I spend all morning in my pyjamas with the children; mild panic as I realise that another precious day of holiday is hurtling past us with little focus or purpose; joy as we come across a young hare, gazing silently into the distance, sitting by the sundial among the herbs. I feel giggly and childish when I take the children roller-skating and my son and I collapse, again and again, in a heap on the floor, while my three year old glides by effortlessly. Our rhythm has slowed, and since picnics and parks and beaches have been a bit of a wash out, so far, we’ve just, to coin a phrase, hung out, and it’s been great.

I did promise a fellow blogger, ages ago, to come up with my top five mood-busters, and having read many other sane and sensible ways to beat the blues, here are my own idiosyncratic, but usually failsafe, ways to come out on top. I’m lucky that I’ve never suffered from deep depression, although I worry for Britain, and anxiety can often catch me unawares.

1. I indulge myself. Shocking, but true. I wallow in my own misery – but with a strict time-limit. When I was younger, and, say, mourning the break up of a relationship, I’d allow myself a whole weekend of sobbing to girlfriends, re-reading love letters, playing sad music. These days if I’m feeling down it’s more like half an hour in the bath and a quick cry before getting the tea. But I always have to acknowledge how I’m feeling and have a short burst of self-pity before I get stern and get on with phase two.

Things that help me get through phase two include:

2. Cleaning, or more often, clearing out. I am a terrible horder and attacking a room or a cupboard helps me re-direct all my negative energy. I am the world’s most inefficient and, frankly, slobby housewife, but cleaning the kitchen floor has the same effect.

3. Reading, by a real fire in winter, or in the garden in summer. If I’m feeling low, I re-read old favourites, particularly children’s books, which instantly transport me back to a safe and cosy world, where there was often someone else to sort out the problem.

4. If I’m feeling low and have that empty, nothing-new-happening feeling, I plan little tiny treats for myself, to give myself little things to look forward to. They’re rarely anything big or expensive, but it’s astonishing how the promise of a new book or a new lipstick or a trip to somewhere I haven’t been before can make me feel rich, and gives me a little marker on the horizon.

5. Gardening. My passion for gardening appeared out of the blue, and has a miraculous effect on my mood. I love walking too, but although I live in a really beautiful part of the country, there aren’t actually many good options for walks nearby – we’re mostly surrounded my farmland. So in lieu of a bracing walk along a beach, I get digging and staking and pruning and planting. I used to suffer from the January blues – now those dreary late-winter days are filled with seed catalogues and plans and promises. Anyone who loves gardening will know what I mean – I feel reconnected to the life-force, to the pulse of the earth, just by digging a little hole in the ground. Magic.

39 comments:

Elizabethd said...

Gardening and children's books...yes! I relate to this also. I re read Polly anna, and The Little White Horse, often.
What is this Rocking girl blogger?!!

bodran... said...

I know what you mean about the pace slowing down for the holidays[ sitting in my pyjamas now] mine as out of habit i think! because i should be speeding up and working harder!.. but i've decided a few days away with the youngest will be a real treat .xxoo

Anonymous said...

Cleaning is so theraputic; very boring but does you good all the same! I join you in clearing out. I could spend a long long time clearing out the hoarded rubbish in this house.

Treats are always nice. However small. And you deserve as many as you want!

Crystal xx

Woozle1967 said...

Great list SM - and enjoyed your holiday blog too. Jimmy and I went to France for our honeymoon (Dordogne) and we went to Orador Sur Glanne (sp?)which was totally destroyed by the Nazis. The people who had taken shelter in the church were locked in and it was set on fire. Terrible. Everyone was whispering as they walked around as the place had such a profound feeling.xx

Posie said...

Oh I am so sorry to hear about your friend, that is awful, and yet, thank goodness she is still alive.
Your summer holidays with the children sound just perfect, and you capture it all so beautifully with words. I did enjoy reading it.
Good list of mood busters too. Take care, Posie x

Unknown said...

Such terrible times for your friend and her poor children. I really do feel for them. Good news that at least she is slowly getting better.

Your mood busters were very interesting. I'm hoping to start gardening (I want to grow herbs) but don't know if it'll ever get off the ground (forgive the pun)!!

snailbeachshepherdess said...

So sorry to hear about your friend I really hope she comes through this for the sake of those sooooo young children...what a nightmare.
Had to ditch the PJ's in a hurry this morning ...visitors arrived unexpectedly ...mass panic as they came up the path...do you think there are hordes and hordes of pyjama clad women at computers at the moment...well in the mornings anyway?

LITTLE BROWN DOG said...

I think those mood-busters sound great - especially the planning of little treats, and I can identify with the cleaning.

I'm so sorry to read about your friend. I hate the way some people drive around the country roads without a second thought for anyone else who might be around. I hope she makes a good recovery.

muddyboots said...

sorry about your friend, hope she makes a full recovery. interesting mood busters too.

Faith said...

Definitely know where you are coming from. I think even wriggling your fingers into the warm earth connects you.

Glad your friend is pulling through - God speed her recovery. Those poor children!

Norma Murray said...

I read your mood busters with sympathy and interest. I feel really guilty, my life is very good and I feel so sad for your friend and her family, but I can't think of any more than 2 mood busters of my own. I tend to be a real wallower in misery when the mood takes me.

Blossomcottage said...

Oh childrens books, I am addicted to them, in particular Pony Stories, I have dozens of them, when I feel a bit low, I give myslef some time out and look through them. Lovely place to loose yourself.
Enjoy the hols.
Blossom

Westerwitch/Headmistress said...

Nothing wrong with an indulgent wallow as long as there is a time limit on it and you know you are being indulgent . . sounds perfect. we can't be happy all the time.
Oh I used to regret the passing of the summer holidays as well. At the start you felt you would enjoy and hang onto every second and then suddenly they are over and the kids are away to school.

Milkmaid said...

Loved your mood busters, with you most of them
I'd been wondering a bout your friend, they had the accident on the last day of term - sending much love for a good recovery

Cait O'Connor said...

It is so sad about your friend but thank God she is alive, I feel sorry for those poor children. God speed her recovery.
Thanks for the mood lifters and very good ones they are too. I identify with them all (well I would wouldn't I?). Especially the time limit on sadness/despair/tears
Ah I see Eliz D reads Pollyanna,I love those books.
Fancy Matthew Manning living close to you, did you ever have any healing?

bradan said...

I agree with you about the clearing out, one of my favourites, too. I'm also starting to get more into gardening, but difficult as ours is more or less a wilderness!

Thinking about your friend, God bless her and her family. xx

Pig in the Kitchen said...

I'm always so happy to discover a new post of yours Suffolk Mum. Very sorry to hear about your friend, that sounds v. traumatic. Fingers crossed for her.
You capture the holiday mood so well, I'm not sure I adapt as well as you to the change in rhythm.
Very impressed by your solutions to mild blues, you are very kind to yourself, an art I must learn.
Pigx

Bluestocking Mum said...

I am so sorry to hear about your friend-only just caught up with being away. That is tragic. I do wish her a speedy recovery. You sound a lovely friend to have around and her children will be well cared for with you, bless them.

I share many of your mood lifters, especially the cleaning and wallowing!
Like you, I tend to be more of a worrier/anxious than depressed...now that is ANOTHER blog...

warmest wishes and to your friend

xx

Kitty said...

Summer hols should be about just relaxing and 'hanging out' rather than the frenetic round of sports and activities we tend to try and squeeze in to what should be 'leisure' time!
Long live the pyjama mornings, we enjoy those too!
But at last some sun, so maybe a few picnics and days at the seaside, just pottering may be in order.

Posie said...

Oh am hoping you do step off that ferry one day and come on over, it would be lovely to meet up. I am of course commenting on your lovely comment on my blog. Cheers. Posie.

@themill said...

I'm rather fond of cleaning the kitchen sink, myself. And the walk on the beach.
I'd like to be a keen gardner, but I'm afraid I'm a 'do-it-because-I-have-to'

CAMILLA said...

I love gardening and children's books. I think I have always been a child at heart. Wind In The Willows, by Kenneth Grahame is a favourite, so too The Secret Garden. Agree with your list about buying something for a pick-me-up, even if it is only a new lipstick or a new book, it cheers me up.

Do hope your friend makes a good recovery from that most horrific accident, the children are so lucky thakfully that their Mother is still alive, people drive much too fast these days.

Camilla.xx

Chris Stovell said...

I'm deeply sorry to hear about your friend and angry for her children who are having to see their mummy in such a state because of someone else.

Moodbusters _ I'm with you on the wallowing!

Frances said...

Good evening from New York.

Well, here I was, getting my words ready to thank you for what you had written on my site. And then. I had the valuable time this evening to actually get over to read all the beautifully put words that you have written. And now, I have much to reply to.

First of all, I do wish that all of us lived near enough to gather for a cup of tea or a glass of wine, or just be able to really get to know each other. It is a bit tantalizing to sense a pal across the Atlantic, and still think ... we might never actually meet.

So. Anyone who likes the film Local Hero is someone I would like to meet. I first saw that film after taking a (sudden, faux) sick day off from another part of my not so wondrous career. I absolutely loved the movie and have enjoyed seeing it again every five years or so, whenever it crosses my path. I love all of its suprises, and revelations about human nature.

After that confession, I do offer best wishes to you on the danger to your friend. This past week I have heard of the deaths of two older, than me even, folks that I hold dear. Both were treasures, and I am so glad that they got to have long lives.

Now. The beautiful photo of the child with the menhir. Those stones are something that I have used many times as subjects for my paintings, particularly watercolors. Perhaps I may eventually post one of the watercolor paintings. Just love the idea and reality of mysterious giant stones. Mysterious anything, really.

Moving on to real, contemporary life, I so thank you for your comments on the new mum in my life, my assistant manager. This morning, before going into work, I left yet another phone message for her, and still hope that she will call me back. I just want to speak with her, and to let her know that I am so happy that she has her beautiful son. And that she is well now, and can enjoy that baby.

(I am childless, never married almost senior citizen, who really always wanted to be married with children, so it is a bit painful to be reaching out again and again to this new mom, and not getting a reply.)

Good mood enhancers. Got to agree with the notion of grand clear-outs, and even more to reading by the fire, if you have a fire to read beside. If not, just reading!

This comment has gotten way too long. I did just want you to have a sense of how welcome are comments and how incredible a site this is as it stretches across oceans.

Best wishes to you and your beautiful family.

xo

annakarenin said...

Glad to know we aren't the only family wasting away the summer slobbing around in pj's but it is hard to banish that sense of wasted time, oh why oh why do the hols and days in general zoom by so quickly.

Big gardening fan, while away many a miserable day reading gardening books and mags and catalogues when I can't get out there.

Do so hope your friend continues making progress toward a full recovery. Her poor poor children.

Elsie Button said...

really sorry to hear about your friend, what a thing to go through. wishing her a speedy recovery.

thanks for the mood lifters. i can relate to all of them!

countrymousie said...

So sorry about your friend. How dreadful for her immediate family with the huge struggle ahead of them.

It will have made you treasure even more the summer with your littlies. It just as well we dont know whats round the corner, or we would never set one foot in front of the other would we.
Almost got a tan this week with the sun - so excited it was shining I got burnt!! Stupid I know, but I cant explain why I needed to do that - at my age and all!!
Liked your list too. mousie xx

Sally Townsend said...

At the risk of repeating myself....I love your blog. Why does cleaning lift our mood, what are we, crazy ? Hoping that as each day goes by your friend is on the way to recovery.

Fennie said...

Always such magic in your blogs and such happy writing that fills me with joie de vivre. I think I shall tell Cait to include reading your blogs as a mood buster in itself. Alas I'm not as disciplined as you when it comes to breaking out of the self-pity stakes. I may tell myself to get on with things but there's this tape replaying endlessly in my head whose volume it seems I am powerless to control. But I subscribe to all your ideas, even to cleaning our cupboards!

Pondside said...

I loved your mood-busters - so down to earth and realistic. I shall borrow a couple!
I am so sorry to hear about your friend's terrible accident - so difficult for her with children to think of and worry about.
I have a huge box of books from my childhood. They've gone through my children and there have been many lovely additions to the box - now it's ready for the arrival of our grandchild!

Anonymous said...

I hope your friend will make a full recovery. Just going outside the hall door these days can be a life threatening event. Lately our Govt has sent out a hand book on the rules of the road to every household, [as far as I can gather], but the boy racers, the "must be 'there' in five minutes having left 50 mins too late' and the "lets mobile phone chat while driving" idiots probably will never take these books out of their plastic wrapper. A close friend of mine lost her mother about seven years ago to a "blonde bombshell" who was applying her mascara, while driving by holding the steering wheel by the knees and making sure she didn't smudge her lashes. What price a life. You have my heartfelt sympathy.
Love your mood busters, same precisely as my own; another treat is a cup of hot chocolate on nights when the wind is howling round the gable end of the house and you're home alone!
Enjoy the drifting days of school hols, we used to do this with our pair, and they still refer to those hols as the best they ever had. When life gets frenetic for your children, and they are rushing from A-B, these are the golden days they will treasure, and they'll remember it was Mum that gave them these memories and bless you for it.

Elizabeth Musgrave said...

was shocked on my return from holiday to read about your friend. i do hope she recovers well.
i am with you on all the mood busters but would also offer you Georgette Heyer, first read at 13 and never failsto entrance me and cheer me up.

Stay at home dad said...

Your poor friend. The powerless anger you and her son feel is well put and understandable.

Grouse said...

Hope you realise how fortunate you are-knowing the importance of when self- indulgence is appropriate. Allowing yourself to be sad, but specifying a time to put it behind you, recognising the simple pleasures that are there to make you happy.......You are fortunate because you will always make your own luck. Your kind of spirit is indomitabel and will find joy whatever life throws at them

Tattieweasle said...

Speedy recovery for your friend. I am sure she will pull through. Hardly a Boden Blog this - a thoughtful delight. Glad you felt about KM as I do.. being a bit flippant I have tried to laugh it off...it niggles. Bugger! I hate niggling things. But never stop writing whatever these maloeuffs say...

Poetess said...

Oh your poor friend.Thats terrible.

Poetessxxxx

Suffolkmum said...

Hi Poetess, yes it was a terrible thing, at least there are signs that she is recovering, but it reminds you again how fragile our existence is.

annakarenin said...

I missed all the article business till this morning. Mike is on hols so not on the site much. I would have been so angry and it has given me a bit of a scare. I know the internet is not a private thing but it is so vast that the chances of being spotted as such are like finding a needle in a haystack. For somebody to put your blog out in the public domain like that without your permission is horrendous. It is such a shame but I can totally understand why your photos have gone and I am now a little worried that the site is going to become high profile and a little too noticeable for what I want out of mine and my boys blogs. Horrid woman couldn't even be bothered to find out anything about the bloggers she listed either which does show her up as the idiot she is.

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