
Monday and I wake drowsy and it takes me a while to come round. By about lunch time I am ready for a trip to the garden centre to indulge in a bacon roll and a decaf coffee. Of course my partner and I wander round the plant section and plunder the end of season bargains. As we leave with our eight new plant we find the “free to a good home” trolley stacked with Dahlias. So we load up a tray and take those home as well. Its straight into the garden and some serious rescuing of the Dahlias. A complete deadhead and soaking. I prepare three small troughs with fresh compost and then my partner plants the Dahlias in the fresh troughs planters. When all is in order I put them out in the front garden, a new layer of flowers. Now its about waiting and seeing if they recover and throw more buds.

The effort has been considerable so the reward is a salad eaten on the patio and followed by the days crosswords. There I sit happily till the evening freeze turns chill before I retreat to the lounge and TV. As an adventure we watch a “Welsh noire” drama. Its a concept I had not thought about before but on reflection it makes sense. All that changing into Welsh when you walk into a shop, clearly the buggers can’t say it to your face so they are obviously up to “noire” if you ask me. As it turns out it is slow and bigoted and not very likely but I’m sure there will be a woke twist to it. Clearly the already convicted child traumatised loner did not kill the missing person, its just a matter of how long the writers drag the story out and what twist they think they can find. Strangely and probably stereotypically I’ve not spotted a single sheep in this rural tale of despair and revenge. I go to bed having taken my meds and reflecting upon an email I received from an old work colleague from my days at the Retreat York.
Tuesday and I am awake quite early, very predictable as today is a dentist day. No time for vitals or idle chit chat I get into the shower and then experience the shower cutting out with low water pressure. I improvise and tease the shower back to life long enough to get rinsed. So at a quarter to ten I am walking to the dentists having taken my days meds. My dentist is lovely and understands the issue around me being in the middle of a chemotherapy cycle. She does a quick check and says there is nothing to do other than monitor what we have been monitoring for months now. My gums could be better so she suggests that I go back to using my electric toothbrush and see how it goes. I’m up for this as the baby toothbrushes do not give me the same clean feel. I pay my fee on the way out and head for the chemist to collect my latest prescription.
Once home I fill my drugs dosettes for the next two weeks. I leave the chemo steroids out as I do not know if I am going to make cycle ten. I am listening to the Stones new album when my eldest daughter asks me if I have listened to The Wildhearts CD she bought me at one of their gigs. I said I would find it and give it a go. My partner returns from the gym and we go to our local garden centre for a bacon roll and a decaf coffee. While we eat we select our grandsons birthday presents and do the appropriate organising. There are no plants we want but as we leave we pick up three more bags of compost as we still have pots to fill.
Back home I put the The Wildhearts on and listen to them as I draft the blog. They are a direct and to the point punk band and I like them. Noisy rude and profane, my cup of tea, they are anti establishment and probably speak for a lot of people. Alienation is the name of the game and I think it speaks to a lot of people right now.

I ease into the evening and head towards the first world cup semi final between France and Spain. I also start to trawl through my latest poems in order to choose one for the poetry stanza meeting next Saturday. Its a Zoom meeting so I am hopeful of making this one having missed the two previous ones. I have a poem in mind but I am minded that it may not go down well with the real poets of the Stanza. As a diversion I take a photo of the yellow Lilies that have come into bloom. Another lovely surprise from the garden.


I move into the evening football and ultimately my night meds but I find myself reflecting on my time at the Retreat in York and wondering how we managed to lose such a powerful and historic place.























