Hello everyone. Welcome to 2024. How has the new year been treating you so far? Me? Not so well. I began 2024 with a kidney infection, my tumble dryer was condemned, and there is another ongoing matter that I can’t discuss yet. But there’s nothing that can’t be fixed. By the time you read this my new tumble dryer has been delivered — thank heavens for store cards with twelve-month interest-free credit options — and a hefty dose of antibiotics has cleared up the infection. As for the other matter, only time will sort that out.
Anyway, how was Christmas for you? Exhausting, expensive, and over in a flash? Yep, same for me. It was lovely having Franki and Rys home and it was even more wonderful not having to work whilst they were here. We had some lazy days of chilling out together which were great. We went to the pantomime which was fun, visited friends and family, had a little party on the 30th of December, and had my parents over for a quiet Christmas day.
Big news! I got a new computer for Christmas! Was so not expecting that. My incredible child and her partner saved her wages for months and bought me a fabulous fancy pants new computer which they set up for me on Boxing Day. As I may have mentioned, my old laptop was on its last legs. Slow, unreliable, and with a liking for the blue spinning doughnut of death, it was so unusable that I haven’t been able to even think about writing another book on it. At least that was my excuse. After they had safely returned to university on Tuesday, I spent Wednesday packing away Christmas and cleaning the house, and then on Thursday I sat down and began to write book six of the Blackwood Family Saga. So far, I’ve written 10,000 words which is incredible. It feels so good to be writing again after all these months.
So, looking back on 2023 what kind of a year has it been? Changeable, I think is a very good word for it. So many things have happened, my life has completely altered course and I barely know where to start, so I’ll begin at the beginning — January 2023 — with a look back at the good, the bad, and the downright ugly events of last year.
January saw me still working for the major bed retailer where I had been for over six years. I remember standing in the empty shop on Boxing Day, looking at the peed-off faces of my colleagues who’d all been forced to give up being with their families to come to work for minimum wages. I remember vividly thinking — I will not be here next year. I don’t care what I must do, I will not be here next year.
In January I had a five-day visit from Franki and three of her friends. They were using me as a base to visit two zoos and a sea life centre nearby. Duly I made up beds and it was lovely to have the house full of young people. I had to go for lots of blood tests as diabetes runs in my family, so they were checking for that. They also wanted to see how my anaemia was progressing and generally gave me an over 50 Well-Woman check-up. I also started writing my new book, Mage Quest, the sequel to Erinsmore and was enjoying being immersed in writing.
February the results from all the blood tests were back. There was good news and bad. The good news was my anaemia was gone, my levels were fine everywhere else, and I did not have any signs of diabetes. Good. But I had an underactive thyroid gland which explained so much. The fatigue and trouble sleeping, the inexplicable weight gain, hair loss, weird stomach pains, aching joints, and so many other things I had attributed to my age, stress, etc. Nope, they were all the result of my thyroid not producing enough of whatever it is it produces. They placed me on medication which I will be on for the rest of my life.
I had a week’s annual leave in February and used it as an “at-home” writing retreat, during which I did nothing but write achieving a whopping 42,000 words on Mage Quest. It was great, but being at home made me understand how much I disliked my job. I was beginning to realise this was a major issue in my life.
In March we had the first Makers Market of the year. This was the artisan and craft market held once a month in a lovely coffee shop and venue in the town centre. These events were great for us authors. The pitch fees were low so despite only selling £50 or so each time I always made a little bit of profit. I could walk to the event, and it was wonderful chatting with local people and selling my books. Little did we know that this would be the last such market because the coffee shop would be forced to close due to rising energy prices and increased local business rates. It was such a shame and a real blow for my writing group.
Work went from bad to worse. Retail was a terrible industry to be in with the cost-of-living crisis biting hard. Long days without a single customer led to a drop in sales and therefore a drop in commission. Yet our targets were raised, and pressure was applied to make us perform. I was growing increasingly unhappy there and knew I needed to make good on my Boxing Day promise to myself.
April brought the shocking news of my boss’s resignation. To say I was speechless would be an understatement. In that instant, sitting there as he told me was leaving soon a little voice inside my head said — so am I. In that environment of toxic masculinity, he was the only voice of reason and stood between me and my male colleagues, very often sticking up for me. With him gone working there would no longer be possible. I knew that. Something had to be done. So, I brushed up my CV and started looking on Indeed for another job.
I went down with a rather nasty tooth infection this month and had to take massive doses of antibiotics to bring the infection down. The tooth must come out, the dentist told me. Gulp, umm, okay. I also attended the Indie Authors Book Fair at the end of April, and it was a howling success. I sold a lot of books and met a lot of lovely people. I’ve already signed up to do it again next year.
In May, I finally published Mage Quest and launch day was reasonably successful and the book has received lovely reviews since then. I had planned to release at least two books during 2023 but life and my aged laptop had other ideas and Mage Quest was the only book I wrote during the year. As you know, I was job hunting and had several interviews, but nothing was quite right. I was so desperate to leave my current employment that I was prepared to accept almost anything else. Finally, I was offered a part-time job at a tile retailer. There would be a lot less pressure and the all-girl team seemed lovely. The manager promised me weekends off whenever I needed them so long as I gave enough warning and it all looked good, but I would be taking a drop in pay, quite a big drop in pay. Regretfully I turned the job down. The numbers simply didn’t stack up.
Fate has a funny way of working out though. Thinking and thinking about it, I ran the numbers again of what I could realistically make if I let out the basement room through Airbnb. Allowing for non-occupancy and only being able to let the room at the most three days a week and adding in things like constant cleaning, bed changing, and laundry, I would be earning less than if I simply took in another lodger. I searched Spare Room for anyone looking for a room in my town. I found three women who seemed to fit the bill so messaged them. One responded, came to view the room, liked it, and planned to move in the following week. I went into the tile shop, accepted the job, and once I’d received my formal offer of employment handed my notice in at the bed store. The relief was unbelievable.
At the end of May and the beginning of June, Franki came to stay for a lovely surprise visit. It was wonderful to see her, especially as I had two weeks off between finishing at the bed store and beginning my new job. The weather was gorgeous, and we decided to invite everyone around for a barbecue. It was a lovely event, although an expensive and exhausting one. Barbecues are such hard work. Much more hard work than a buffet or even a dinner party. The work is so ongoing. I didn’t sit down for the first hour because I was constantly on the go ferrying out meat, and sorting drinks and food out, it was non-stop. Whilst Franki was home we also had a good clear out of old books, toys, and other stuff, taking a carload to the skip, donating some to charity, and doing a couple of car boot sales.
My toothache came back, and I had to bite the bullet and book an appointment for it to be extracted. Not fun. A whole lot of not fun. But it healed okay and at least it won’t get infected again. I started my new job at the tile retailer. At first, I thought it would be okay. My new colleagues were wonderful — fun and kind and laid back and not as toxic as my previous ones — but I soon realised that the work was going to be too physically demanding for me. Lugging 28kg bags of grout is no fun. Shifting great pallets of tiles about is also no fun. Doing it in 30+ degrees heat is miserable. I was coming home from work hot, sweaty, and exhausted. It also looked like there was going to be an issue with weekends. I had been promised weekends off whenever I needed them so long as I made up my hours during the week, this turned out not to be the case. I was going to have to work most weekends, and bank holidays. The only things my job change had brought about were nicer colleagues and a calmer working environment, no working Boxing Day, and a large drop in pay. Hmm.
For the rest of June and all of July, I was busy completely decorating both the spare bedrooms. The back one was to make a nice bedroom for Franki, and the middle room was to become a cosy single bedroom/sitting room/library. Because I was doing the work on days off and in between all my other chores, this was an ongoing job that took about six weeks to complete. July was also my birthday — and the wettest July since records began.
I had been thinking about looking for another job when Indeed sent me details of a part-time receptionist job in the town centre that looked perfect. I applied for it and to my delight, had a telephone interview, then went for a formal interview, followed by a trial run on the morning of my birthday. Delighted when they offered me the job, I handed in my notice at the tile store and had seventeen days off between jobs, which was great. I was not sorry to be leaving retail. It is hard and thankless. The idea of no more weekends, no more bank holidays, no more Boxing Day, a five-minute walk to work, coming home for lunch, being able to wear nice clothes, no sales targets, no rude customers, no pressure from head office to sell, made me dizzy with delight. At the end of the month, Franki and Rys arrived to spend the rest of the summer with me.
August was mostly a wet and gloomy month. I had two weeks of intensive training at my new job before being left to get on with it by myself. It was fine. I loved the job and like to think I’m very good at it. It was great having the girls home and being able to spend time with them. It was Franki’s 20th birthday. I can’t believe I have a twenty-year-old, where did that time go? When I began writing this blog, she was still fifteen.
My author’s life was not going so well. Apart from blogging, I had not written a word since the release of Mage Quest. There never seemed to be any time plus my old laptop made writing hard work.
At the beginning of the month, I attended the Legends Comic-Con at Stonham Barns. Despite the rain of almost biblical proportions, it was a great weekend, and I sold a lot of books. We had a major scare when our cat disappeared for three days. We worried she was lying under a bush dead somewhere and it was a huge relief when she reappeared thin, dusty, hungry, and thirsty. To avoid this happening again we fitted her with a GPS tracking device. Well, that didn’t go to plan. She lost it twice and the second time we couldn’t find it and then the batteries died on it, and it was lost forever. I still think she did it on purpose. My fridge/freezer died and there was a panic buying a new one and getting it delivered. Kind neighbours divided our frozen food between them so it wouldn’t spoil.
September came along. Longtime friends came to visit for five days which was wonderful. We spent a day in Cambridge visiting museums and another at a local stately home. We cooked big meals, went out for dinner, did a pub quiz, and drank lots of wine. The weather was glorious, so we ate almost every meal in the garden. All too soon though, summer was over, and I was driving the girls back to university for the new academic year. It’s surreal that it’s Franki’s last year. It feels like only yesterday I was driving a nervous eighteen-year-old up north for the first time. The last weekend in September it was Norwich Comic-Con again which was fantastic and even more successful than 2022.
October. Freakishly warm weather, which was lovely. The first-ever literary fringe festival took place in my town during the first weekend. It wasn’t as well attended as we’d all hoped, but it was a lot of fun, and I did sell a few books and met several wonderful authors. I continued to work hard and enjoy my new job. And my printer gave up the ghost entirely.
At the beginning of November, I drove my parents up north to attend Franki’s graduation. As it’s quite a distance, we booked an Airbnb cottage for three nights. I don’t think it stopped raining the whole time we were there, but the graduation was lovely. Although I didn’t manage to write anything new during November, I wasn’t completely idle. I reformatted and republished Eclairs for Tea and other stories with a gorgeous new cover and released it as a beautiful hardback edition containing two bonus stories. They proved to be very popular at the Stonham Barns Christmas Fair I did during the last weekend of November, and I sold every copy I took.
During November I had the unexpected expenses of a new battery for the car and a £155 vet bill for the cat, which I needed like a hole in the head. I also had to give in and buy a new printer. I did as much overtime as I could at work to try and replenish funds for Christmas which was creeping ever closer.
December rolled in. I don’t trust December; it does this weird time thing where it’s the first day of the month and there’s still plenty of time before Christmas and then suddenly it’s Christmas Eve. The girls were arriving on the 22nd of December so that acted as a cut-off point for me. Everything had to be ready by then. I tried to cut down on spending, I really did. I didn’t buy a real tree, instead used a little artificial one I had in the cupboard. I did not spend anywhere near as much as I would normally on presents. Yes, the girls got a lot of gifts but most of them were small and inexpensive things. I spoke to a couple of friends, and we agreed not to do gifts for each other this year. And I did try to cut down on food. But everything is expensive and seems to be twice the price at Christmas. I didn’t go overdrawn though, so at least there’s that.
And that brings us up to now. It’s the first weekend of the new year and so far, 2024 has not impressed me. I wonder if it’s too late to send it back and ask for a refund. Ending a year during which, I’ve changed jobs twice, taken on a lodger again, and had to replace my fridge/freezer, printer, computer, and tumble dryer, and have redecorated two rooms, it has felt like a very changeable year.
There have been a lot of ups and downs, my health has been a cause for concern although that seems to be under control now. I only published one book, which was disappointing, but I did find more local live events to attend and next year am planning to do as many as possible.
I think the most important thing though is that I am here, still fighting, still struggling on and yes, it has been a year that has tested me in many ways, but I came through. Am I better off than I was this time last year? Financially, probably not. In terms of being happy with my work, definitely. I am also richer timewise than I was at the end of 2022. My health issues have hopefully been resolved for now, and I have a new computer thanks to my generous and hardworking child. So, I am taking that as a win.
If you have made it to the end of this impressively long blog, then all that’s left is for me to say thank you to anyone who continues to read my ramblings and rants about the hot mess that is my life. For once, it would be lovely to know if there is anybody out there and I would be so grateful if you could simply drop me a message or even just comment with your name.
Happy New Year, my friends and I hope 2024 is a good one for us all.
Julia Blake

















