By the time you read this, there will only be six more sleeps until Christmas. And before you all run off to check the date, no, I haven’t lost my mind or opened too many doors on my advent calendar. Because Franki is going to spend Christmas with her partner’s family in Wales, we are celebrating Christmas Day on Saturday 17th December – a week sooner than everyone else. Yes, the time has come when I must share my progeny at Christmas.
When we discussed it way back in September, Franki said it made more sense for me to have them the week before Christmas and then for Mx R’s family to have them from Christmas Eve until New Year. She is correct. I must be at work by 10:30am on Boxing Day and will then be working right through until the new year, so if they were here I would hardly see them, let alone be able to celebrate.
Hence why our Christmas Day will be next Saturday. This is great but means I have a week less than everyone else to prepare. That’s fine though because it’s not like it was suddenly sprung on me, I have known for months that this is the case. Am I ready? Sort of, yes. I will be. Most of my presents are here and wrapped. There is one more thing to come from Amazon – oh, and a tiny stocking present that they’ve gone very quiet about, and I have no idea when or even if it’s turning up. Nearly everything is wrapped, all my cards are written, with many handed out already and all that needed posting went last Monday. What with all the postal strikes sending early seemed wise. All non-perishable food has been slowly bought over the past month or so. I have a huge grocery shop to collect tomorrow morning. A menu planner and the last-minute list have been written. The one good thing about celebrating Christmas on a normal day is that all the shops are open so if anything has been forgotten someone can pop out and get it.
So, yes, I am as ready as I can be a week before Christmas.
When we last spoke, I was on the verge of doing the two-day Maker’s Christmas Market. So, how did I do? I’m happy to report that I did phenomenally well. Way better than anticipated or hoped for. Saturday was an insanely busy day. The town was packed solid with people looking for the big pre-Covid Christmas Fayre Bury St Edmunds used to hold. I think there was some confusion with the bus companies, who have been accused of misleading people. I know some people had come a long way expecting the third biggest fair in the country, only to find four or five venues holding markets and a few stalls. Still, it meant bigger crowds for us and a lot more sales for me.
As I walk to the market pulling my little trolley with two boxes of books and all my stall paraphernalia I was limited as to how many books I could take but honestly didn’t expect to make much of a dent in my stock. At lunchtime, when we had a brief lull, I had to run home and grab another bag of books because I was almost out. By four when the market officially closed, it looked like a plague of locusts had gone across my stall. In all, I took 36 books on Saturday and at the end of the day I had only three left. The table resembled how a table should look at the end of a very successful dinner party – all crumbs and wine stains.
I trundled my trolley with two empty boxes home ready to fill up for Sunday.
Sunday was another busy day although not as manic as Saturday, and I sold 19 books that day. In total, I sold 52 books, £320 worth. Which is incredible! To put this into perspective, my most successful sale so far had been at the Norwich Comic-Con. I sold £318 worth there, which is good, but the stall cost me £75 plus petrol money there and back. In comparison, the Maker’s Market cost me £10 and no petrol because I walked there.
I have some books left, of course. Back in the summer, I made the rookie mistake of ordering the same amount of each of the books in the Blackwood Family Saga and the Perennials Trilogy. If I’d stopped to think about it I would have realised that I was never going to sell an even amount. People aren’t going to take a chance on a whole series by an unknown author, they will buy book one and see how they get on. Even though I did order a few more copies of Becoming Lili and Lost & Found – books one of the Perennials and the Blackwoods, I still ended up selling out of them. Once book one was sold out, I had to take the rest of the series off of the stall. But it doesn’t matter, there will be other sales in the new year, and I will sell them then – once I’ve got more copies of book one.
Monday arrived and with it the new bed for the basement. I was pretty sure it would fit, but there was some doubt in my mind about the headboard because it’s quite large. The two-man delivery team arrived, and I showed them the basement. They sucked in their breath doubtfully. We’ll see if we can get the headboard in, they said. Get that in, and the rest will be easy.
They pushed and shoved, there was a moment of panic, and then it was down. Now, I’m not going to say too much about the bed in this blog because it’s a bit of a surprise for Franki when she gets home for Christmas. She knows there is going to be a new bed, just not what it’s like. I haven’t taken any photos of it yet, so I don’t slip up and accidentally post it on social media. All I will say is it’s gorgeous and I’ll show you next time what it’s like.
The bed was assembled, and I ran around the house tidying everywhere. I rushed to the shops and bought things for dinner. My friends were arriving on the 6:30pm train and I knew that Ms E was having a big posh lunch with her brother in London, then meeting Mr J and they were travelling down to Bury together. So that meant she wouldn’t be hungry, but we’d be starving. The answer was obvious – a charcuterie board.
I bought nice pate, French bread, brie, mature Cheddar, Cornish Yarg, and goat’s cheese with parsley. There was an assortment of salami, olives, fresh rocket leaves, redcurrants, and grapes. With a nice bottle of wine and a tiramisu for dessert, I thought it would satisfy everyone’s appetite no matter how big or small.
They got here safely, and it was wonderful seeing them after such a long time, we sat by the fire with candles flickering and ate and drank and talked until I was falling asleep in my chair.
Tuesday morning, we had breakfast, then Mr J was going to Harwich for the day on the train to meet up with a friend, whilst Ms E and I were going to wander about town, do a little shopping, and have a light lunch. They were taking me out to dinner that evening so we wouldn’t want much. My cousin arrived unaware that Ms E was there and was so surprised to see her again after such a long time. We worked out that the last time they met was at Franki’s christening over eighteen years ago. I ground coffee beans and made big cups of coffee and we talked, and the years simply fell away as if they’d never been. I think it’s important to have friends who knew you way back when, because they remember you as being young and silly and still see you that way.
After my cousin left, Ms E and I wandered uptown and did some serious charity shopping and mooching about the small artisan shops Bury is lucky enough to have. I took her to the Market Cross where we had a lovely lunch and a big glass of mulled wine each.
I then had an absolute win. I needed a new winter coat because mine wasn’t thick enough for the cold weather forecast to come our way. I also needed boots that didn’t leak. My old ones were worn completely through and were beyond saving. In one charity shop, I found a pale grey Marks and Spencer fully lined wool coat that fitted me to perfection for only £14, and then in another, I found a pair of brown real leather ankle boots for only £6. Brilliant. I then blew £14 on a scarf to go with the coat, and £44 on a pair of Mustang sneakers to replace my fifteen-year-old pair that had cracked across the soles. Oh well, you save where you can in order to spend where you must.
We went for dinner at Edmundos which was lovely, but every time someone came in or out of the doors a blast of frigid air came gusting in. After dinner, we walked about Bury and looked at the lights and decorations, before winding up in the Dog & Partridge for a nightcap and then making our way home.
Sadly, I had to work on Wednesday. My friends were going to a nearby small town to visit Ms E’s father and said they would cook me dinner that night. It was so nice coming home to a warm and lit house, with people pleased to see me and cooking me a steak. It was a lovely evening, and the meal was delicious.
I had to work again on Thursday so said goodbye to my friends in the morning because they would be gone by the time I got home. It was a lovely visit and we agreed it mustn’t be so long next time.
I had Friday off and my new table and chairs were delivered in the morning, and I had an authors’ zoom meeting in the afternoon, so didn’t get a chance to put them together until Saturday. The instructions said it was a two-man assembly and that it would take an hour. Nope. One determined woman thirty minutes. I love the set. It’s only a small set, the same size as my old table and chairs, but less chunky and more elegantly shaped so they appear smaller. The tabletop and chair seats are natural wood, and the rest is painted pale grey so it fits nicely in my new dining room – as you can see from the picture.

If you’re wondering what that is standing on top of it, that is the hamper I’ve made for my in-laws. I make them one every year for Christmas because they neither want nor need “stuff”. Instead, I buy all the things I know they will enjoy and then make a hamper from an old box. It looks great and rather than simply buying a food hamper which would be a lot more expensive and contain mostly things they don’t like, it’s custom-made for them.

In my last blog, I said I was on the hunt for a new hearth rug and curtains for the dining room. Well, here they are. A luxurious silver-grey fur rug which is lovely and soft, and a pair of beautiful silver damask curtains with the most outrageous tiebacks ever.



I had to work Sunday, but only six hours and honestly, it was hardly worth me being there. We are in our slowest time of the year now. No one is thinking of buying a new bed or mattress this close to Christmas and, if they are, they’ll wait until the sales start on Boxing Day. Luckily, I’d had a customer comeback during the week, so I was well and truly through my target – in truth, I think I’m through until Christmas – so I sat back and let my two colleagues take point.
Driving home from work on Sunday it was great to know I had the next eight days off, but boy, did I know they were going to be busy ones.
Monday morning, I was up early. There had been so much packaging around my table and chairs it filled half the dining room and there was no way it would fit in the bin, so I’d booked an 11am slot at the recycling yard. I had my grocery shopping to collect between 11am and midday, plus I needed to find chair cushions. My new chairs were lovely, but my word they were hard on the bum. I’d looked online but couldn’t see the colours clearly as I wanted to try and tone in with the sage green on the walls. I searched locally – Dunelm Mill had some nice green and white gingham ones that looked perfect for £10 each. I work next door to Dunelm so normally would have been able to pop in during my lunch break and collect them. But I wasn’t at work, I had a week off, and I couldn’t wait until I got back because I had a friend coming for dinner that evening so needed them ASAP. Maybe I could jump on the bypass between dumping rubbish at the skip and picking up my shopping. Yeah sure, I thought, I can manage that. I can’t miss my slot at the skip, but the shopping I had until midday to collect. So, be at the skip bang on 11am, then five minutes on the bypass would get me to Dunelm Mill. Charge in, grab cushions, back to Tesco. Yep, totally doable.
I checked stock at my local branch of Dunelm, and yes, they had at least four of the cushions in. Would I like to buy and pay for them online, the website enquired, then collect them at your leisure? Ooh, that’s a good idea, oh wait, leave at least four hours before being able to collect. Bugger! It’s now almost ten so that’s no good. I’d just have to go and hope they still had four in stock. I loaded my car with all the packaging, my old stereo system I was getting rid of, the old sofa cover, plus a bag of tatty old bedding I had finally asked myself what I was keeping it for. It was 10:30, I had time to quickly rush across the road to Wilks and get more Christmas cards and a few other bits and bobs. Dropping moisturiser into my basket I happened to glance across at their homeware section and you’ll never guess what I spotted. Only the sage and white gingham chair cushions I was planning to dash to Dunelm to buy. They were the same but were £6.50 each so considerably cheaper. There were four left. I grabbed them. And I saw a pack of four placemats and coasters which were the right shade of grey for the dining room – additional note, when I put them on the table that evening, the dim lighting in the dining room made them look sage green, so that is brilliant.
Time saved is a truly wonderful thing. Thankful I didn’t have to make the trip to the other side of town now, I drove to the skip and enjoyed immensely throwing things in the dumpsters. Then to Tesco to grab my shopping, home, unpack it, and then across town to Marks and Spencers to collect a present I’d ordered for someone. It’s been a while since I ordered anything to collect, and I dashed up two flights of stairs to where the collection point always used to be. Nope, it was the bureau de change now. Umm, okay. I wandered about before finding an assistant. Oh no, she chirped, it’s all the way back down on the ground floor now, in the corner, by knitwear.
I trailed all the way back down. In the corner, by knitwear, a long line of pissed-off and weary-looking women waited, phones clutched in hand. Silently they shuffled forward and showed the man in the little hatchway their collection number on their phone. He disappeared into the bowels of the shop and his place was taken by a bored-looking teenager. The next woman shuffled forward as the first stepped aside. She showed her phone to the teenager who also vanished as the man came back with a parcel, handed it to the first woman, as the next in the queue shuffled forward and showed him her phone. And on. And on. Until it was my turn to present my phone and receive my package.
Then I had to brave the food hall.
Originally, I was going out to dinner with a friend that evening. Then she texted at the weekend saying wouldn’t it be nicer to cook at mine? Umm. Nicer for whom, exactly? I did get her point about eating out being so expensive though. She suggested pizza but, to be honest, I’ve never been that keen on pizza and since Covid, it’s always a coin toss as to how disgusting it’s going to taste. I decided to cook my signature dish which is chicken in creamy white wine and tarragon sauce. I checked my cupboards. I had the tarragon – a good start – and there was a bottle of prosecco in the fridge left over from my birthday in the summer. I could use that instead of white wine. So, all I needed from the food hall was two chicken breasts with the skin on, cream, new potatoes, and nice veg of some kind. My friend was bringing dessert plus wine. Easy. A quick dash about the aisles and I’d be done and on my way home.
The food hall was horrible. Jammed solid with miserable-looking shoppers, we moved with a herd mentality trying to get to the shelves. I couldn’t find the cream, they’d moved it, bastards. Veg baffled me. My brain seized and I couldn’t think of what to get. In the end, I grabbed a pouch containing broccoli, carrots, and baby corn, thinking that will do. I picked up a bag of salad potatoes. Now, chicken. I fought my way through the masses to the meat aisle. Plenty of chicken. Plenty of packs of chicken breasts. None with the skin on. The skin is essential in the recipe, you season it and brush it with honey before roasting. Nope. Pack upon pack of naked chicken.
I gave up and headed for the tills. Each one was choked with a long line of fed-up shoppers. It was too hot in the shop. We were all wrapped up for the bitter cold outside so faces were red and bodies were beginning to steam. I tried the self-serve tills. Managed to get to one declaring it was cash only. That was okay. I had lots of cash left from selling various bits of furniture and from the Maker’s Market.
Are you sure you want to use this till? The message flashed up.
Yes, I’m sure.
Are you really, really sure?
Yes. I’m. Sure!
It is cash only; did you notice that?
Oh, for f**ks sake, just put my food through!
The till shut up and let me put my shopping through, then had a conniption when I told it I didn’t have any bags because I had my own.
Unknown object in the bagging area! It shrieked.
Yes, it’s a bloody bag!
Next to me, a woman was trying to convince her till that yes, bananas were a real thing, and it absolutely could scan them.
We looked at each other with a shrug of weary resignation.
I hate these bloody machines, she muttered.
We looked about. The shop was heaving, and the queues were buckling around the deli aisle. An assistant strode by, studiously not looking at the self-serve section in case anyone needed help.
Excuse me, I called. Reluctantly, he came over and waved his magic card at our tills to get them to calm the heck down and do their jobs.
With great relief, I grabbed my offending bag and left the shop.
Butchers, on the way home.
Two chicken breast fillets with the skin on, please.
Certainly, madam.
That made me feel a little better.
Home. The house was basically tidy, it only needed a quick vacuum. I prepped dinner, laid the table, and put a crackle log in the fireplace. If you don’t know what one of those is, it’s this kind of log thing that you put in the fireplace and set fire to. It gives you three hours of fire-like effect without the mess, fuss, and heat of a real fire. You need a working chimney or else it will smoke you out, but they’re brilliant when you want a fire, but you don’t, if you know what I mean.
Dinner was cooked and in the hot trolley, the dishwasher loaded and on, the kitchen cleared, relaxing music on the stereo, and candles lit, I was able to breathe for the first time that day. My friend turned up clutching dessert and another bottle of prosecco, and we had a lovely evening. It was nice not to have the noise and fuss of a crowded restaurant or the mahoosive bill at the end of our meal.
Tuesday I began decorating the spare room. Yes, yes, I know I said I wouldn’t do any more until after Christmas, but it’s a very little room and I’m only putting a coat of paint on the walls, oh, and painting the bedside cabinet and chest of drawers. I worked all day and was pleased with how much I got done.
On Wednesday I drove out to a friend’s house in the countryside and spent the day with her. We had a lovely lunch, and as she is a fellow author a wonderful chat all about books and all things writerly. Normally, I don’t leave hers until three but as it was getting dark and cold, I left at two to get home earlier and avoid the school-run traffic. It also meant I had time to go shopping and pick up the last bits of Christmas shopping. That evening I sat and wrapped almost all my presents – and then the lounge needed vacuuming again.
Thursday my parents called around for coffee and a chat, and then I spent the whole afternoon decorating, and the evening finishing wrapping presents.
Friday, I had a doctor’s appointment first thing, so of course, I overslept and had to rush out of the house with my hair still damp from the shower. Franki had asked me to check with the dentist that they had picked up her message cancelling her appointment on the 5th of January. It had been made way back at the beginning of the summer when they thought they would still be home for Christmas. But plans have changed, and they will be back at university by then. Franki had left a message, but no one had returned her call so she was worried the appointment hadn’t been cancelled and she might be fined.
The dentist is close to the doctors, so after my appointment, I went there and enquired. Yes, I was reassured, the appointment has been cancelled. Would she like to make another one? Well, unless you can fit it in over Christmas, then probably not, I laughed. We can see her first thing on the 22nd of December, they told me.
I dithered. I knew that was the day they were leaving but wasn’t sure what time their train was. I tried messaging her, no reply. I phoned and left a message. Unsure what to do, I made the appointment figuring if it was no good I could cancel it. I checked that as a full-time student she is still entitled to free dental check-ups. She is.
I hesitated, then decided to go for it and ask.
This is the dental practice I’ve been with for over forty years. A while back they went private with a mere check-up costing £90. A bit beyond my pocket. Luckily, because I had a child under the age of eighteen and was on a low income I got my dental for free. Then Franki turned 18 and that all stopped. I was told I was now a private patient liable to pay private fees.
I stopped going to the dentist. I haven’t been for eighteen months. I explained the situation to the nice lady.
I’ve been coming here since I was a child, I said. I really don’t want to go elsewhere. Do you think you could see your way to…
Taking you on as an NHS patient. Absolutely, I can see how long you’ve been with us, and you’ve never missed a check-up, so … there you go, that’s done. Would you like to book an appointment?
Umm, okay. When is the next available one?
9:30 next Monday morning?
That’s fine. I’m off that day.
Perfect, there you go.
I left in a bit of a daze. For almost two years I’ve fretted about not having a dentist and then by asking in person it was all sorted.
Oh, and in case you were wondering. Franki isn’t leaving until the 23rd so the dental appointment was fine.
At home, I got into my scruffs and did a bit more painting, before stopping to get ready for my work’s Christmas dinner. There are only five of us so it’s never going to be an uproarious, photocopying your arse, shenanigans in the stationery cupboard kind of party. And anyway, head office wouldn’t cough up that much. We get £25 per head to spend on a meal. This year, my male colleagues wanted to go to a Mexican restaurant in town. They said it was good and I really didn’t care, so a table was booked.
How was it? Umm, disappointing. For a start, my boss fell ill so couldn’t come. Normally, we are the only ones drinking so split a bottle which doesn’t make it too expensive. Without him there I was facing the options of a whole bottle to myself or paying £7.50 for one glass! I stuck to water. The restaurant was crowded and very noisy, every table full of pissed-up people having office Christmas meals. It was a freezing cold night and although the restaurant was warm, once again we were near the door which let in gusts of frigid air every time it was opened. I was in a flimsy velvet top and by the time our starters came was shivering and wishing I’d worn a vest.
The food was okay, and I mean just okay. Everything on the menu came wrapped in a giant, stodgy tortilla, and my beef enchilada was served with what looked like a pile of baby sick, but I was reassured was refried beans. Either way, it was sloppy and tasteless. We were served at 7:30, by 8:45 I was home and in my PJs and dressing gown trying to get warm and feeling very unwell. Far from a wild night out, all my colleagues wanted to do was neck their food as quickly as possible and get home. To be fair though, two of them had been in the shop all day, and two of them had to work the next, so weren’t up to a night of revelry.
I was quite unwell in the night. Dodgy food? Chill in my stomach? Who knows. But I felt better by the morning so luckily it was only a temporary ailment.
And that brings us to Saturday. A day spent mostly painting, although I did have a long video chat with Franki first thing, during which she received a message from the rail company stating their trains home on the 15th had all been cancelled due to strike action! Panic ensued and Franki ended the chat to try and figure the situation out.
She called me back an hour later. She’d managed to get practically the last two tickets on a train coming south on Monday – so three days earlier than planned. It means she will be missing a couple of lectures, but the teachers will simply have to understand. She’s booked the tickets, and we’re praying these trains aren’t cancelled as well. If they are, I really don’t know what we will do. I’m working Tuesday and Wednesday, plus I’m not confident enough to drive my new car on a busy motorway in bad weather conditions. I will keep you posted,
And now I really must stop talking. I think this is the longest blog I’ve ever written for which I apologise, but there was so much to catch you up on. Now I need to go and put a coat of varnish on the bedroom furniture, then sort out dinner for myself. At least I won’t have to worry about food tomorrow because I’m going for a very posh Christmas lunch at my brother’s lodge – which I’m sure will be heaps better than last night’s meal.
Take care everyone. There will be no blog in two weeks’ time because it will be Christmas weekend and I’m sure you will all have more important things to do. Instead, there will be a special “round-up of 2022” blog on New Year’s Day.
I’d like to wish everyone who reads this a very Merry Christmas. To be honest, I have no idea how many of you there are, but whoever and wherever you are, have a fabulous holiday season and I will see you in 2023.
Julia Blake











































