I haven't yet achieved artisan bakery appearances but it tastes fantastic. In fact sourdough bread, by itself, may be the reason I have put on four pounds since the lockdown started.
I have also finished the jacket which I put to one side in 2012. I am quite pleased with it although it is truly a winter jacket and with luck won't get much wearing over the next few weeks. Now I have another request from four year old granddaughter for a summer dress for her baby doll so that should keep my hands occupied for the coming days.
I find myself thinking about what I want do if and when this lockdown is ever lifted. There is an interesting tension in the press and on the television between the demands of the economy for a restart and the sense that, in the absence of ideally a vaccine or at the least a wide spread testing and contact tracing programme, a relaxation might be followed by a second wave of infections. My own thinking is that the pressure for a release of lockdown will lead to some sort of staged programme of lifting the restrictions but I can't imagine a return to anything like normal life until or unless there is a vaccine.
But what would I like to do if I could go out? I think this is on my mind because I have been learning this form in Spanish: ¿si pudieras salir hoy, qué harías? "If you could go out today, what would you do?"
Well there are big things and little things. The big thing is to see our children and grandchildren and to laugh and hug and have a child on your knee for a cuddle. Our children and grandchildren are spread out over the country so if the lockdown were lifted entirely tomorrow it would still take us nearly a week to get to everywhere and see everyone. But that is the big thing which cannot be thought about for too long because it is not possible. Suppress the thought, steady the heart, calm the breathing, one day at a time.
But there are the less huge things which come tumbling out in a cheery line, waving and shouting "Pick me! Pick me!"
A cup of coffee and a newspaper in a coffee shop, watching the world go by.
A drive to the sea to sit on the sea wall with an ice cream, watching the tide moving on the sand.
A meal in a pub or dinner with friends round a table full of conversation.
A choir rehearsal in full voice filling the church with sound.
The gentle sociability of a Pilates or yoga class.
The deep Devon lanes, studded with wild flowers.
Driving up and over the Denbigh moors, the road climbing ever higher and and west to the mountains and the sun shining on the Mawddach estuary.
And I haven't even got further from home with a train or a ferry and the delights of travel.
But for now I will go and make Ian a cup of good coffee and sit outside with it watching the swallows swooping over the stone pigsties. Later I will facetime a daughter or son. I will make a carrot soup and work in the garden. I will read "The Diary of a Provincial Lady". And for dinner we will have roast chicken and afterwards we will light a fire and have a glass of wine. One day at a time.
How about you?
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