Good Riddance
Like every new year, January started off with so much promise. After it did its best to impede my ability to breathe let alone exercise by knocking me down with a never-ending head cold and then spent most days tossing rainwater from the sky, I can't say I'm sorry to see its departure. Of course there were the good bits, like my nephew's wedding and our week away in the Lake District, but generally speaking I confess I'm just glad it's gone. Restored and revitalised, I want to get out and attack life again.
However, I've read so much of late written by people decrying the month of January that I can't help wondering if I'm simply living in an echo chamber. After all its hardly fair to blame a period of 31 days banded together under no more than the name of a month for either my woes or the weather.
Yes, as retirement advances so does acceptance. Old enough now to embrace my own imperfections and failures, recognising too that illnesses happen and life doesn't always run smoothly, I've surely learnt enough not to attribute responsibility to January nor indeed to any other external body or concept. "Mea culpa," goes the cry.
If in retirement the constraints of a 9-5 clock do not apply and there are no work imposed deadlines looming, the need to count the hours or minutes is rendered obsolete. Why, therefore, feel hamstrung by or beholden to monthly intervals? Night follows day, and because activities are planned around the light and the seasons, I imagine retirement is never going to transcend time. Yet, logically, getting hung up over one particular month makes no sense at all. That said, I'm still glad it's over!
Comments
I envy the friends of ours who have the wherewithal to head off to warmer climes for a few weeks but we soldier on here (in France this winter) and battle through a list of DIY and housework jobs.
I am always glad when January is over. February is not much better IMHO bit at least it's a few days shorter and spring seems just around the corner.
What a shame that we write off two months - one sixth - of the year! I don't remember it bothering me so much when I was working as indoors was nice and warm but now we're retired I feel it stops me from doing so much!
A huge bonus of being retired is that when the weather is good you can make the most of it and when it's bad do the housework!