Tuesday, 9 October 2012

A seasonal thought


Today's the day I may finally have to admit to myself what I have begun to fear but have been refusing to accept.

It’s a  beautiful autumn morning: blue sky, weak sun, cold enough for some people to be in coats and scarves, not so cold for others still in shorts or T-shirts. It’s the sort of day that makes you feel glad to be alive. And even though you’d rather be somewhere else – on a Scottish mountain or a Cornish beach – you can walk from the station to the office feeling pretty good about the day.

But then you hear the sound a moment before you see its source. Ho, ho, ho. There’s a man dressed as Santa Claus outside a tube station. No, wait, there are seven – seven! – people dressed as Santa Claus outside a tube station, all shouting ho, ho, ho and handing out flyers.

My mood evaporates.  It’s not even mid-October, the clocks haven’t gone back, half-term is still a few weeks away. Christmas should be a speck on the horizon, but the dimwits of marketing have decreed that this is an appropriate time to put on a red coat and a false beard while rustling up some  false jollity to sell .. what?

I don’t know as I refused to take a leaflet.  Even if it was something I was interested in I would make a point of  ignoring it because of this premature intrusion of Christmas. Understand that I have nothing against Christmas, or retailers’ efforts to sell a few presents. But I loathe the way the commercialisation of what used to be a 12 day season  keeps forcing itself into our consciousness earlier and earlier.

Even that might not be enough to make me a grumpy old man. But I think mouthing ‘fuck off’ at the lead Santa – an excellent lip-reader as it happened - probably is.

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