I received an amusing email from Blighty life friend, Jane. She’s a policy manager in health and social care and is involved in making difficult decisions about how to deal with the biggest crisis in the public purse since Good Queen Bess inherited an empty treasury from Bloody Mary. Last year I read in The Times that 75% of the great British public believed that the fiscal deficit could be resolved by efficiency savings alone. Slashing the Town Hall biscuit budget was never going to do the trick.
Jane wrote:
“Have basically been working like some sort of cart horse – on spending cuts, cuts, cuts – so many people have left (some running out of the door with big packages) the remaining chumps have to make do with the leftovers. Work all rather unpleasant – have been involved with reducing our social care eligibility – just finished work on the consultation (why the f**** hell do we have to ask people “Do you mind awfully if we remove your social care?”) Still “we are all in this together”, “the vulnerable won’t suffer”, “how can I step down I am not a leader I have no position” (or is that Gaddafi?) and the Big Society is no doubt just saddling up and will be riding to the rescue.
Some of the responses we have had from the true bluers made me laugh – from the classic “I didn’t vote Conservative for this!” to suggesting (from the mad UKIP fringe) that we could make the £80m savings by stopping our twinning arrangements with European cities (how much do they think we spend on charming spotty 14 year olds from Ghent?) Today we had the protests and the petition – all very chaotic – how is a girl meant to navigate round the wheelchairs and sticks with a grande latte answering a blackberry for chrissake?!
I’ve got a stinking cold and this really cheered me up!
Setting the spat aside, we celebrated
Charlotte and Alan realised that we were no longing tailing them and returned to find us. They parked up on the opposite side of the road and crossed over to our car leaving Lucia in the front passenger seat. Within minutes, like a set piece from ‘Casualty’, a car sped around the same bend, skidded on the same oily wet patch and hurtled towards Lucia. The car ricocheted off the driver’s door and crashed into the ditched verge. Liam fretted that the driver had not survived the impact and ran to the rescue. Others ran towards Lucia fearing the worst. The ditched man climbed unscathed and smiling from his battered Fiat. It seemed he rather enjoyed the theatre of it all. Before we knew it we were all up to our ankles in mud attempting to haul his sorry wreck back onto the road. Lucia was extracted unharmed, a little shaken but otherwise in fine fettle. As the fiasco unfolded more cars joined the elaborate ice dance, skids and near misses piling up like a scene from ‘Wacky Races’. Fearful that she might join the casualty count Karen sensibly disappeared into the woods for safety. Lucia joined her.
In honour of
Our début soiree was well graced. Liam and Karen prepared a delightful spread of cold meats, cheeses, mezes, breads and objects on sticks. Karen mingled amiably with 






I bored the drawers off