So what’s the deal with winter anyway?
Trite opening I know but it bears some discussion. Exactly what is it about those winter months that makes an already-curmudgeonly old git like myself into a regular Sad Sack? I refuse to believe there’s not an answer beyond “it’s cold” because I’m not the only one it happens to.
Case study number one: my very good friend, who we’ll just call “E” in case she minds being used as a case study, cited the example to me that every bad breakup she’s ever had took place in the month of December, almost without fail. Is this a symptom of the winter blues or just a coincidence? Whatever it is, it’s made her just as distrustful of the month of Our Lord’s birth than I am.
Who knows. All I know is that it’s dark in the morning when I go to work, often dark in the evening when I return. The general public are in that irritatingly frenzied state of “panic buying” – because some people still aren’t aware that most shops are shut on Christmas Day after all – and all those little annoyances about the general public that you already notice more than the average man in the street when you work in retail suddenly become ten to fifteen times worse. (I have no scientific basis for quoting that figure, I just thought I’d channel the arseholes who come up with make-up “fake science” adverts for a moment – they’re gone now, don’t worry.)
Last year I had the most miserable Christmas of my life. My wife-to-be had departed for Bolton to spend Christmas with her family (duty calls and all that) and I was scheduled to work.
But I had ‘flu (and don’t even get me started on that “man flu” bollocks that is such an unfunny running joke in this country), so I was confined to bed, unable even to go to work and spend time with the few buddies who were still here. Nope, instead I lay in bed on Christmas Day until about 3pm, only rising to make a Beechams Hot Lemon drink when the banging headaches and joint pains were getting a bit much.
I know there’s people out there who have far more miserable Christmases than that, but this is my rant and god-dammit if I’m not going to be a bit selfish! (I also hate how political correctness dictates the necessity of a paragraph like this one, but that’s another post all of its own)
Anyway. This Christmas is fortunately shaping up to be a lot better, as my now-wife Jane and I are spending our first Christmas on our own as a married couple.
It’s not that I don’t like spending time with people, you understand.
Actually, that’s a lie. It’s EXACTLY that I don’t like spending time with people. Especially stressed-out people which, it often seems to me, is becoming more and more a part of the holiday season. The clue’s in the name, people! A holiday should be a break, not an excuse to panic over a fat-ass turkey and whether or not you’ve got enough bloody vol-au-vents to feed Uncle Boggart.
Breathe.
So, there you have it.
I hope you, if you’re reading this, have a better experience in the wintertime than either I or several of my friends have had or, in some cases, are having.
And if you do have friends who are having a tough winter, give them a hug. Sometimes it’s all you need to let someone know you care, and it immediately makes things feel that much better.
I know, I’m a big girl, but I don’t care.
Merry Christmas.
HUMBUG!!!
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/hug AngryJedi
This is my 20th (!) Christmas in the retail trenches, and I can honestly tell you I’ve never had it be less busy and more hostile at the same time.
Best we can do is stick together in our Humbuggery. Up the irons!
It’s no phenomenon, my friend. Winter time always sucks balls no matter how you cut it. Every year I get Seasonal Affective Disorder (aka SAD…awww, pouty face) right around this time of year. It lasts until about March when the sun comes out. However, this year I’m taking medication for said ailment and haven’t had nearly the problems that I’ve had in the past. Yay for (legal) drugs!
I can’t imagine having to work retail during this time of year. I had to do it once when I worked at Toys R Us as a teenager. I don’t remember much about the experience except for a few things:
1) My consistantly applied response of “No, we do not have the Micro Machines Van City and won’t until next year.” which was quickly followed by the internal monologue of “…unless, of course, a spare unit arrives with a bomb attached. In that case, I’ll gladly FedEX it to your door so lil’ Jimmy can suck on shrapnel.”
2) Every God Damn word of “Save the Best for Last” by Vanessa Williams thanks to our corporate-provided holiday-mix CD that HAD to be played on repeat for extra-crunchy, torturous goodness.
3) Watching a creepy, 50 year old, chain smoking, life regretting, Toys R Us veteran hang out in the break room and laugh at the holiday hires all day. I affectionately dedicated “Working Man” by Rush to his memory (much to your brother’s dismay, I’m sure).
…however, all was not bad. Being an avid toy collector at the time, I got first dibs on lots of “rare” action figures and learned all of the creative ways to hide said merchandise away from the hungry public. Heh-heh-heh…
As for today, remember this…2009 will rock undeniably and the Great White North is right around the bend. 🙂 Hug it out, mang.
It’s dark, and it’s Christmas. What worse combination could there be…? I personally have attempted to solve the problem by hibernating, literally staying at home since October ;o) It doesn’t seem so bad to me this year! No doubt that will change when I have to go out to work in the cold from January though ;O( I have a 4 year pattern (since I came back to the UK from Italy, actually – coincidence? I think not!) of quitting my job in December!