A CRICKETING CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY

PART ONE: IN WHICH SCROOGE PLANS THE DEMISE OF COUNTY CRICKET

Old Marley was dead. As dead as Old Father Time’s great grandfather and, if Ebenezer Scrooge had anything to do with it, as dead as county cricket would be in just a few short years.

It was late afternoon on Christmas Eve and Scrooge was sat at his desk in a large office, one of many in the building that housed the ECB. Ordinarily he was not one to find any pleasure from the festive season but a smile was now beginning to spread across his face as he typed the concluding sentence to his manifesto for the future of domestic game. His work finished for the afternoon, he printed the completed document and placed it in his brief case.

Scrooge was the one who had been responsible for introducing ‘The Hundred’, the pernicious competition that had sickened so many genuine cricket supporters. It had been injurious to the health of many county cricket clubs too and Scrooge hoped that his latest suggestions would be the final nail in their coffin. For a brief moment he thought about his predecessor who had died several years previously. Jacob Marley had been someone who had always delighted in the longer formats of the game and Scrooge knew that, if it was possible for one already dead to be described as such, Marley would be mortified by what he was now proposing.

At that moment there was a knock on the door and Scrooge looked up to see Mr Robert Cratchit, his personal assistant, standing in the open doorway. He was wearing a novelty Christmas jumper which only served to darken Scrooge’s already black mood.

‘What is it Cratchit?’, Scrooge snapped. ‘Can’t you see I’m busy?’

‘It was just that I noticed that you didn’t join us for a drink to celebrate the festive season so I brought you a little of what was left over’, Cratchit replied, offering Scrooge as he did so what he had been holding in his hands, namely a box of mince pies and a tube of Prosecco and pink peppercorn Pringles – the latter, notwithstanding the impressive alliteration, surely an ill advised flavour choice regardless of the time of year. ‘Merry Christmas, Mr Scrooge!’

‘Bah, humbug!’ muttered Scrooge to himself as he got to his feet. ‘Every idiot’, he continued, ‘who goes about with ‘Merry Christmas’ on his lips should be forced to explain the Duckworth Lewis Method to a group of disgruntled Yorkshire fans who can’t understand how they have just lost to Lancashire despite having scored more runs than them in less overs!’.

And with that Scrooge grabbed his coat and brief case and, without so much as a by your leave, strode past Cratchit and out of the office.

***

Scrooge made his way to the car park and from there drove the few miles to his home, an old house that he’d bought some years before. Enveloped by fog, Scrooge approached the front door. And then, as he fumbled in his pocket for his key, Scrooge watched as the door knocker, usually a golden yellow colour not dissimilar to that of a Wisden Cricketer’s Almanack, transformed into a garish mix of pink and green, a colour combination so unpleasant that Scrooge was compelled to look away. After a few moments, the nausea he had felt having abated, Scrooge managed to summon the courage to gaze once more upon the marred entrance to his home and was relieved to find that the door knocker had reverted to its normal hue. Scrooge thought he must have imagined the whole affair, reasoning that nobody in their right mind would come up with such an atrocious colour mix.

Scrooge entered the house and made his way to the kitchen. Never one to spend longer on something than was strictly necessary, Scrooge took a minute or two to heat up the ready meal he had bought for his evening repast. Once cooked he took it with him to the lounge and got ready to eat it in front of the television. He briefly considered watching a film but, recognising the shortness of his attention span, chose instead to flip through the TV channels, until he eventually came across a festive edition of ‘Pointless’ and thus found himself trying to think of the name of any England batsmen who had scored an Ashes century in a Boxing Day test.

And it was then that Scrooge heard something the like of which he’d never heard before, a strange ethereal voice that seemed to Scrooge to be emanating from a world that was not the one to which he was accustomed.

‘Well, for a start’, the voice was saying, ‘there’s Chris Broad’s 112 at the MCG in 1986’.

Scrooge turned his head and froze in fear as he noticed the ghostly yet unmistakable figure of Jacob Marley.

‘Though why anyone should think such essential information ‘pointless’ is simply beyond me!’ the spirit continued, moving slowly out of the shadowy corner of Scrooge’s lounge dragging behind him as he did so, what appeared to be cumbersome segments of boundary rope.

As Marley drew closer to Scrooge he noticed a look of utter bewilderment on Scrooge’s face and explained how, whilst it was more traditional for those in the afterlife to be burdened with heavy metal chains, an exception had been made in Marley’s case in view of his lifetime commitment to the game of cricket. Marley paused a moment and took on an air of contemplation. ‘Death would be so much easier’, he remarked wistfully, ‘if only they could be replaced with those triangular foam wedges they use today.’

Scrooge, nothing if not a man of reason, rose up from his chair and spoke to the spectre in an accusatory tone.

‘I don’t believe in you!’, he said, refusing to accept what his senses were making all too plain.

‘Well as you should well know, Mr Scrooge, truth isn’t determined by what you believe, as is all too apparent given your seeming lack of belief in that most fundamental of realities – specifically the importance of cherishing those long observed cricket traditions that you hold in contempt. But the importance of such things is real, as I am too. And to convince you of this you will be haunted by three spirits that will teach you all you need to know to save the game of cricket. Expect the first when the clock strikes one.’

And with that the ghost of Jacob Markey departed, groaning incoherent sounds of lamentation and dragging the boundary ropes with him. For a few minutes Scrooge stood motionless not knowing what to make of what he’d just experienced but eventually concluded that the only possible explanation was that he’d been suffering from a severe case of indigestion on account of the ready meal he’d eaten being past its sell by date.

And so, convinced that the night would pass uneventfully, Scrooge changed into his pyjamas, slipped under his duvet and drifted off to sleep.

PART TWO: IN WHICH SCROOGE TAKES A TRIP DOWN MEMORY LANE

Scrooge woke in a cold sweat and sat bolt upright in his bed. This was not unusual for, in recent weeks, the intense criticism that had been consistently levelled at him for his insensitive attempts to reorganise county cricket had frequently disturbed his sleep. However, his thoughts of how he might best silence his critics, were soon diverted when, at one o’clock precisely, the door to his bedchamber creaked open and a strange looking fellow crept into the room. He was wearing white flannel trousers and a bright white shirt, over which he sported a cream coloured, hand knitted, Arran sweater complete with coloured stripes around the cuffs and V- shaped neck. On his head was a floppy sun hat and In his hand he held a willow bat that had clearly seen many years of heavy use.

‘Are you the spirit, sir, whose coming was foretold me?’ asked Scrooge.

‘Indeed I am,’ the apparition replied. ‘I am the Ghost of Cricket Past and I am here to show you what cricket once was. But we must fly, we haven’t got long’

The spirit held out his hand and Scrooge took it instinctively.

‘I warn you though Ebenezer,’ the spirit began, his eyes twinkling as he spoke. ‘generally I’m asked to field down at Third Man on account of my propensity to drop things. So please, do make sure you take a good hold of me!’

The spirit chuckled to himself and Scrooge was left unsure as to whether or not his new acquaintance was joking. Even so, Scrooge tightened his grip and, as he did so, felt himself being lifted, as if weightless, from his bed. The spirit led him to, and then through, the wall of the bedroom and out into the night air. As they flew over hills and dales the sky grew gradually lighter and the air temperature became steadily warmer until eventually they arrived at a cricket ground situated in the park of a seaside town.

‘Where are we?’ Scrooge asked the spirit as they landed and sat down on two of the many deckchairs that were scattered around much of the boundary edge.

‘This is Clarence Park in Weston-super-Mare.’ said the spirit, ‘and that, Ebenezer, is none other than Mr David Steele’.

The Spirit was pointing to a grey haired man who was patrolling the cover boundary just in front of where they were sitting. The hero of the previous year’s Test matches against the West Indies turned to smile at Scrooge before focusing intently on his Northamptonshire team mate Sarfraz Nawaz who, even now, was running in to bowl to the Somerset captain Brian Rose.

And suddenly Scrooge remembered. This was the first game of cricket he’d ever attended. It had been played back in 1977 and the day of his attendance had been particularly notable as it had been the one in which Rose had made his highest first class score, a magnificent 205. But the day had been special for so much more than a single players personal achievement. Scrooge remembered how excited he’d been to see so many international players, back in the days when they played for their counties between Test matches, even turning out on the day after such an international match had concluded. Other Test players that had been on show the day that Scrooge had first experienced the joys of county cricket included Peter Wiley, Wayne Larkins and Brian Close, not to mention, of course, Viv Richards and Ian Botham.

‘That was a wonderful introduction to cricket,’ Scrooge said wistfully to the Spirit who was now indicating to him that it was time they moved on. ‘Those were such happy times’.

The Spirit took hold of Scrooge’s hand again and before long they were flying through the sky once more. Soon though they touched back down again, this time on the outfield of the county ground in Taunton. It was during the tea interval and sat on a chair that had been placed in the middle of the pitch was a man for whom scores of people were queuing to meet, each hoping to exchange a few words or, by proffering before him their autograph books, becoming the proud owner of his much prized autograph.

As Scrooge looked on he thought they was something familiar about one of the children who was waiting in line. In his hand the boy held a book authored by the man who was sitting in the chair. Scrooge then recognised that the boy he was looking at was himself and he remembered how he had been a little embarrassed when, having been asked by Mike Brearley if he’d enjoyed the book, the young Scrooge had said that his favourite chapter was the only one in the book not actually to have been written by the then England captain.

‘Those were the days’, said Scrooge. ‘Back then you felt so much more connected to the England team than you do now. It was such a privilege to be able to see the likes of David Gower, Bob Willis and Derrick Randall play for their counties. It’s such a shame the youngsters don’t get those same opportunities today’.

Yet again Scrooge felt his hand being taken by the Spirit and soon the scene of his idyllic childhood was fading from sight. Moments later Scrooge became aware that he had been transported back to his home and was once again confined within the four walls of his dreary bedroom.

The time had come for Ghost of Cricket Past to leave. The spirit tried to explain to Scrooge that he’d soon be visited by a second spirit but Scrooge was too excited to pay him any attention. Instead he was busy looking for the autograph book he had had as a child and which he was sure was now gathering dust under his bed. Eventually he found it, hidden in a box along with old Playfair Annuals and an A4 file of cricketing photographs culled from the sports pages of newspapers back when they used to have full reports of every county game. Many of the faded photographs had equally faded autographs scrawled upon them. Re-emerging from beneath his bed, Scrooge stood back up and brushed the dust off his pyjama bottoms. He turned round hoping to show off his signature of Graham Gooch and only then realised that the Ghost of Cricket Past had left. Scrooge was alone again, save that is for his memories. But oh what marvellous memories they were.

Scrooge slipped happily back into bed and fell swiftly asleep hoping to dream of summers long past. But he was to be disappointed, for soon he would have to experience a less pleasant but much more present reality.

PART THREE: IN WHICH SCROOGE FACES A PRESENT REALITY

Scrooge had not been asleep long before he was woken once more. The old Grandfather clock that stood on the landing struck two and as it did so, his bedroom door opened once again and a woman entered. Like the Ghost of Cricket Past, she too was carrying a cricket bat but, unlike her predecessor, she was dressed in brightly coloured clothing and was sporting a cricket helmet.

‘Well hello there!’ the spectre said cheerfully ‘You must be Mr Scrooge!’

‘And you, I presume, must be the Ghost of Cricket Present’, replied Scrooge,

‘I am indeed’ the Ghost confirmed before proceeding to explain to Scrooge that she didn’t have a great deal of time to spend haunting as she was keen to get back home to watch the cricket highlights which were being shown that evening on terrestrial television although not until three o’clock in the morning. ‘But beggars can’t be choosers’ she continued, ‘what with the spiralling cost of dying, a Ghost’s wages, especially one of the female persuasion, are no longer sufficient to justify a subscription to that satellite sports channel which has a virtual monopoly on the broadcast rights for live test cricket. So chop, chop let’s get going!‘

Scrooge had been looking forward to more spectral flight and was a little disappointed when the Ghost of Cricket Present pointed out that such activity was something she was no longer able to offer.

‘As with much of modern life, there is no time now for such romantic notions. It’s all too expensive you see and one must always have an eye on the bottom line’.

And with that the Ghost of Cricket Present pulled out a mobile phone and called for an Uber. It was though, no ordinary Uber, for not only did it arrive immediately it was also able to transport them instantly to a cricket ground where a T20 game was being played.

Scrooge and the spirit got out of the car and made their way to a pair of seats that had been reserved for them at the back of a packed stand. Sat next to them was a family made up of Mum, Dad and a couple of young children. In the row in front were six or seven lads all of whom had clearly been drinking heavily for some time. And the more they drank the more fruity their language became. Soon the parents of the young family, who had paid a not inconsiderable sum of money to be there, felt they could no longer stay seated where they were.

On the other side of where Scrooge and his ghostly companion were sat, a couple were discussing the match and commenting on how the game, though entertaining enough, was like almost every game in the shortest format, characterised as it was by a relentless pursuit for runs from the very first ball of the innings.

‘It’s ironic when you think of it’ said one of the pair, ‘in trying to make the game more exciting, they have succeeded in making it only more boring.’

The man who was speaking was interrupted when a T-shirt, emblazoned with the name of one of the match sponsors, struck him smack in the face. After taking a moment to recover, the man continued. ‘And is it because of an inherent lack of confidence in the format itself that the organisers of these games feel they have to try and maintain our interest by blasting out loud music, sticking a camera in our faces in the hope we’ll want to perform, or imagining we are somehow excited at the prospect of wearing a T-shirt promoting a company we’ve never heard of?’ Unrolling the t-shirt which had fallen into his lap, the spectator held it up for his companion to see. ‘I mean, who on earth wants to walk around advertising ‘KP Lavatorial Cleaning Services?’

As the game proceeded in a way that few would recall with any clarity in years to come, Scrooge and his spirit guide made their way back to the Uber and were transported to another game. This time the crowd, that was healthy but far from packed, was gathered to watch a match played over 50 overs. As he took his seat Scrooge noticed the same young family he’d seen at the T20 game and noticed now that the Father was none other than his personal assistant Bob Cratchit. The children were asking where all their favourite players were and Bob and his wife were having to explain that none of them were playing as they’d all been picked to play for other made up teams that nobody really cared about in a competition that no one really wanted.

Scrooge enjoyed watching a few overs of the game before the Ghost of Cricket Present ushered Scrooge back to the car and the driver sped them away to yet another game. This time the crowd was smaller but, as the four day game that was being played proceeded, Scrooge noticed how spectators who had previously been strangers struck up conversations with one another and expressed both real interest and real knowledge in the game. The home team players were held in high affection by the crowd but those on the opposing team were greatly appreciated too. Everyone watching seemed content to let the game evolve over time and, though to the casual observer the game may sometimes have appeared slow, Scrooge recognised that as the game ebbed and flowed, it did so in ways that made it infinitely more interesting than anything else he’d seen during his time with the spirit who was herself also watching the match intently by his side.

It was almost time the Ghost of Cricket Present to draw stumps on her time with Scrooge but before she did so, there was something else that she wanted to show him.

‘Follow me’, she said and headed away from the boundary edge towards a building situated behind all the stands. Scrooge followed her as she made her way through the glass doors of what was clearly a cricket museum. ‘You see, Mr Scrooge, I may be the Ghost of Cricket Present, but who I am is made up of those who have gone before. Cricket has a history, a history that is important and needs to be preserved, in part by preserving the traditions of the past.’

Scrooge looked around him and saw bats and balls employed by former cricketing stars, scorecards of famous victories the club had enjoyed in years gone by and no end of cricketing memorabilia that made the past almost tangible. Scrooge went to pick up a framed shirt once worn by one of his own heroes, back in the days when he was at school, but as he did so his surroundings began to blur and he found himself back in his bedroom once more.

Too caught up in thinking about what he’d seen thus far and not a little anxious about what still might befall him before the night was through, Scrooge sat on his bed and waited for the final visitor of the night. He hoped the Ghost of Cricket Present had made it home in time for the highlight package she’d wanted to watch and imagined that it would be more enjoyable than what he would soon have to endure. He wouldn’t have long to wait for it was nearly 3 am.

PART FOUR: IN WHICH SCROOGE GLIMPSES THE FUTURE.

Scrooge sat motionless on his bed. At 3am the silence was briefly broken by the chiming of the the grandfather clock. It’s three chimes reminded Scrooge of the bell that is rung prior to the umpires walking out at the start of a session of play and, like on those occasions, Scrooge felt similarly now, something momentous was undoubtedly about to happen. Unnervingly though for Scrooge, the silence returned and as it did so the black night seemed to grow even more dark. Scrooge waited, expecting to be greeted by another spirit, one that he imagined would be dressed in some futuristic cricketing garb, and he was curious as to what he might look like.

Minutes ticked past with nobody arriving and Scrooge began to wonder if all he had experienced thus far had been merely a dream. Perhaps, he thought, he would be best served by trying at last to get some sleep. But as he laid his head on his pillow Scrooge realised that the gentle breathing he could hear was not his own but that of someone who was sat on the bed alongside him, someone dressed, not in whites or coloured clothing, but in a dark black suit.

‘Good evening Mr Scrooge’, said the new arrival. ‘I am the Ghost of Cricket Yet To Come’ and I have a business proposal for you.’

Scrooge could not remember ever hearing words that sounded so sinister

‘Cricket’, the spirit spat the word out as if he found the mere sound of it distasteful, ‘is a fine way to make money. Provided of course you’re prepared to say goodbye to everything that makes it the game it is.’

The Spirit of Cricket Yet To Come smiled to himself as he reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket and pulled out a sheet of paper. The spirit began to pour over what Scrooge immediately recognised as a spreadsheet, the contents of which Scrooge was unable to discern.

The Spirit looked up and sneered at Scrooge. ‘I suppose you’d like to hear how cricket will be structured in years to come’.

‘I’m not sure that I would’, replied Scrooge, ‘but I fear you’re going to tell me anyway. So do what you must Spirit, take me where you will, show me what you must’.

The Spirit of Cricket Yet To Come stood up.

‘I’ll not take you anywhere Mr Scrooge, for I have no interest in where the games are played, just so long as the stadiums are big enough to house large crowds made up of those foolish enough to pay large sums of money for shortened matches, all of which are essentially the same. Furthermore, what would be the point of taking you to all six of grounds where matches will be played when they all look exactly the same, all designed so as to comply with the ‘exciting’ new format that is ‘The Fifty’.

‘The Fifty?’ questioned Scrooge, wondering what had become of ‘The Hundred’, the format that he himself had introduced and worked so hard to promote.

‘That’s right, Mr Scrooge – ‘The Fifty’ Or as some tedious individuals are calling it, ‘The 8+2’. Well they can laugh all they like but what they need to appreciate is that the format was developed after extensive market research concluded that the time taken to play a game consisting of a total of just 100 deliveries is not only short enough to prevent even the least attentive individual from becoming bored, but also guarantees the greatest financial return in terms of alcohol, food and merchandising sales. And, as we all know, in the end it’s the bottom line that counts!’

Scrooge was horrified by what he was hearing but forced himself to ask more. ‘Six teams you say?’

‘You sound surprised? Perhaps, Mr Scrooge, you had expected one less? Well we did consider ditching yet another team concerned, as presumably you were when you pioneered a reduced number of balls in an over, that the modern cricket spectator might not be able to count to six. But the extra team will bring in additional revenue. Each team will play every other team four times, games being played throughout June, July and August to the exclusion of all other cricketing formats. And the names of those teams? Well there’s the Birmingham Bankrollers, The Manchester Moneymakers and the The London Lucratives to name but three. I’ll leave you to guess the names of the others but you can be sure that there’s isn’t one called the West Country Worzels!‘

Clearly of the opinion that his latest remark had been funny, the ghastly ghoul chuckled merrily to himself, a chuckle that became louder and more sinister when he saw the revulsion on Scrooge’s face.

‘I don’t know what you’re looking so upset about Mr Scrooge’, the spirit went on. ‘After all, isn’t all this just the inevitable consequence of the changes you yourself have suggested in your recent report. We’re two of a kind you and I, Mr Scrooge. Two of a kind’.

And with that The Spirit of Cricket Yet to Come laughed so loudly that the windows of Scrooge’s bedroom rattled and Scrooge became so unsettled that he couldn’t stop himself from hiding himself under the duvet of his bed. He lay there for a few minutes, shaking uncontrollably until, eventually, Scrooge managed to stop his quivering and poke his head back out.

‘And the national team. How are England performing in the future?’

‘Have no fear Mr Scrooge. They have been ranked as the number one team in ‘The Fifty’ ever since the format was introduced. Admittedly England are the only country that plays the format but, even so, that’s quite some achievement I’m sure you’ll agree. And when you’re as good as England are in ‘The Fifty’, you can understand why interest in any other format has waned’.

‘And what about county cricket? How is that looking in the future?’

‘I’m sorry Mr Scrooge’, replied the Ghost of Cricket Yet To Come. ‘I’m not sure I know what you’re talking about. What is this ‘county cricket’ of which you speak. I’ve never heard of such a thing’

Scrooge could bear it no longer and once again covered himself with the bed clothes. As he hid there Scrooge pondered whether the future that had been described to him was one that was fixed or whether there was anything at all that he could do that would help avert such a disastrous outcome. Eventually, overcome by all that had taken place, Scrooge fell into a restless sleep. Any change he could make would have to wait till morning.

PART FIVE: IN WHICH ALL IS NOT LOST

Scrooge woke up with light pouring in through his bedroom window. The room seemed particularly bright and looking outside Scrooge realised that the reason for this was that the morning sunshine was reflecting off the snow that had fallen overnight and now blanked the ground as far as Scrooge could see.

In the distance bells were ringing and Scrooge noticed that several people were dressed in their Sunday best and were making their way to church. This, together with a number of children who were doing their best to push what looked like new bicycles through the icy streets, convinced Scrooge that today was Christmas Day. To confirm though that this was indeed the case, he shouted down to a lad in the street and asked him what the score was between Australia and South Africa.

‘Are you daft or something mister?’ replied the stereotypical urchin like youngster, ‘the Boxing Day test don’t start ‘till tomorrow! Today’s Christmas Day!’

Thrilled by the lad’s response, Scrooge thanked him and threw him a £20 note, urging him to put it towards junior membership of a county cricket club of his choice. Delighted though Scrooge was that he hadn’t missed Christmas Day, he was even more pleased that it seemed clear that test cricket continued to exist. And if the game of cricket was still being played over five days, thought Scrooge, then all was not lost. Filled with an inexpressible joy as a result of this wonderful realisation Scrooge ran downstairs and looked frantically for his brief case. He found it by his front door, just where he’d left it when he’d got home the previous evening.

Opening it, he took out the report he spent so long preparing and hurried back to the lounge where he immediately put it to good use, starting the fire that would keep him warm for the rest of the day. Never before had a fire made his heart glow the way the fire did that day. Next he found his phone and found the number for Bob Cratchit. He hesitated a moment not sure whether his personal assistant would appreciate a call from his boss on Christmas Day but, too excited not to convey the news, he decided to go ahead and make the call anyway.

After a few rings Bob’s familiar voice came on the line. He was clearly somewhat taken aback to hear Scrooge’s voice and more taken aback still to hear him begin by cheerfully wishing him a very happy Christmas.

‘I just wanted to tell you the good news Bob. That I’m resigning my position at the ECB and will be urging the committee to make you my successor. What’s needed now is someone who loves cricket for what it is, somebody who knows what makes the game special. And that somebody is you. The truth is Bob that I couldn’t organise the fair distribution of cakes in the Test Match Special commentary box, let alone a domestic cricket season. I might know how to make cricket bring in a little cash, but you Bob, you know how to make it flourish.’

The call over, Scrooge went onto the internet and, by way of a Christmas present to himself, took out a subscription to ‘County Cricket Matters’. And then, having contemplated the year’s worth of cricketing articles he could now look forward to, he decided to go out for a stroll before getting down to the important business of preparing his Christmas dinner. As he made his way around the snow covered streets he came across a group of carol singers and Scrooge stopped a while to listen. Standing there watching, he found himself humming merrily along to the familiar tunes. After a few minutes Scrooge continued on his way and, as he did so, amused himself by trying to come up with some alternative versions to the carols that he had heard being sung. Eventually he came up with a choice of words that he felt scanned just about well enough to have a go at singing himself, even though, by doing so, he drew some very peculiar looks from those he passed by.

God rest ye merry, cricket fans let nothing you dismay
For Andrew Strauss’ HPR won’t see the light of day
So saving us from summers when in August there’s no play
Oh tidings of comfort and joy
Comfort and Joy
Oh tidings of comfort and joy.

As he walked on a broad smile came over Scrooge’s face and he thought how there had never been a Christmas Day on which he’d felt more happy than he did on this particular Christmas morning. For this Christmas he’d received a gift like no other, he’d been given back his love for real cricket and, what’s more, secured its future so that others would be able to enjoy it for many years to come.

Heading back home he noticed ahead of him the Cratchit family who were themselves enjoying a walk in the snow. Creeping up behind them he surprised Bob with a snowball that he threw at him with the accuracy of Mike Hendrick and the speed of Shoaib Akhtar. As one might have imagined would be the case, the result of such a penetrating delivery was that Bob went reeling, just like the middle stump of a tail ender facing the likes of Joel Garner.

But no sooner had Bob hit the ground, than his son, Timothy, a lad of no great height but one who none the less possessed a fine sense of humour, signalled ‘T’ with his arms and called for a review of his father’s dismissal. DRS swung into action and subsequently revealed that the snowball that Scrooge had delivered had reached Bob without pitching and was well above waist height and was thus deemed an unfair dismissal. The ‘No ball’ signal was given by Mrs Cratchit as she made her way over to help her husband recover his upright position.

Back on his feet, Bob gathered his family around Scrooge and they all wished each other a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Bob pulled out a tube of savoury snacks and shouted, ‘Anyone for a Prosecco and pink peppercorn Pringle!’. Everyone took one and then, as you might have expected given his name and aforementioned short stature, Bob’s young son raised his ludicrously flavoured potato snack and uttered the only words fitting to end such a tale as this.

‘God bless us’, he said. ‘God bless us every one!’

THE END


To read, ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different and yet strangely similar, click here

Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘Bazball, Bazchess, Bazlife ’, click here

To read ‘Online criticism: it’s just not cricket’, click here

To read ‘Cigarettes, Singles, and Sipping Tea with Ian Botham: Signs of a Well Spent Youth!’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Historic Day’, click here

To read ‘Cricket – through thick and thin’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘My love is not a red, red rose , click here

To read ‘Stumpy – a legend reborn’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY. PART 5: in which all is not lost

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY
Part Five: in which all is not lost.

To read Part 4, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

Scrooge woke up with light pouring in through his bedroom window. The room seemed particularly bright and looking outside Scrooge realised that the reason for this was that the morning sunshine was reflecting off the snow that had fallen overnight and now blanketed the ground as far as Scrooge could see.

In the distance bells were ringing and Scrooge noticed that several people were dressed in their Sunday best and were making their way to church. This, together with a number of children who were doing their best to push what looked like new bicycles through the icy streets, convinced Scrooge that today was Christmas Day. To confirm though that this was indeed the case, he shouted down to a lad in the street and asked him what the score was between Australia and South Africa.

‘Are you daft or something mister?’ replied the stereotypical urchin like youngster, ‘the Boxing Day test don’t start ‘till tomorrow! Today’s Christmas Day!’

Thrilled by the lad’s response, Scrooge thanked him and threw him a £20 note, urging him to put it towards junior membership of a county cricket club of his choice. Delighted though Scrooge was that he hadn’t missed Christmas Day, he was more even more pleased that it seemed clear that test cricket continued to exist. And if the game of cricket was still being played over five days, thought Scrooge, then all was not lost. Filled with an inexpressible joy as a result of this wonderful realisation Scrooge ran downstairs and looked frantically for his brief case. He found it by his front door, just where he’d left it when he’d got home the previous evening.

Opening it, he took out the report he spent so long preparing and hurried back to the lounge where he immediately put it to good use, starting the fire that would keep him warm for the rest of the day. Never before had a fire made his heart glow the way that fire did that day. Next he found his phone and found the number for Bob Cratchit. He hesitated a moment not sure whether his personal assistant would appreciate a call from his boss on Christmas Day but, too excited not to convey the news, he decided to go ahead and make the call anyway.

After a few rings Bob’s familiar voice came on the line. He was clearly somewhat taken aback to hear Scrooge’s voice and more taken aback still to hear him begin by cheerfully wishing him a very happy Christmas.

‘I just wanted to tell you the good news Bob. That I’m resigning my position at the ECB and will be urging the committee to make you my successor. What’s needed now is someone who loves cricket for what it is, somebody who knows what makes the game special. And that somebody is you. The truth is Bob that I couldn’t organise the fair distribution of cakes in the Test Match Special commentary box, let alone a domestic cricket season. I might know how to make cricket bring in a little cash, but you Bob, you know how to make it flourish.’

The call over, Scrooge went onto the internet and, by way of a Christmas present to himself, took out a subscription to ‘County Cricket Matters’. And then, having contemplated the year’s worth of cricketing articles he could now look forward to, he decided to go out for a stroll before getting down to the important business of preparing his Christmas dinner. As he made his way around the snow covered streets he came across a group of carol singers and Scrooge stopped a while to listen. Standing there watching, he found himself humming merrily along to the familiar tunes. After a few minutes Scrooge continued on his way and, as he did so, amused himself by trying to come up with some alternative versions to one of the carols that he had heard being sung. Eventually he came up with a choice of words that he felt scanned just about well enough to have a go at singing himself, even though, by doing so, he drew some very peculiar looks from those he passed by.

God rest ye merry, cricket fans let nothing you dismay
For Andrew Strauss’ HPR won’t see the light of day
So saving us from summers when in August there’s no play
Oh tidings of comfort and joy
Comfort and Joy
Oh tidings of comfort and joy.

As he walked on a broad smile came over Scrooge’s face and he thought how there had never been a Christmas Day on which he’d felt more happy than he did on this particular Christmas morning. For this Christmas he’d received a gift like no other, he’d been given back his love for real cricket and, what’s more, secured its future so that others would be able to enjoy it for many years to come.

Heading back home he noticed ahead of him the Cratchit family who were themselves enjoying a walk in the snow. Creeping up behind them he surprised Bob with a snowball that he threw at him with the accuracy of Mike Hendrick and the speed of Shoaib Akhtar. As one might have imagined would be the case, the result of such a penetrating delivery was that Bob went reeling, just like the middle stump of a tail ender facing the likes of Joel Garner. But no sooner had Bob hit the ground, than his son, Timothy, a lad of no great height but one who none the less possessed a fine sense of humour, signalled ‘T’ with his arms and called for a review of his father’s dismissal. DRS swung into action and subsequently revealed that the snowball that Scrooge had delivered had reached Bob without pitching and was well above waist height and was thus deemed an unfair dismissal. The ‘No ball’ signal was given by Mrs Cratchit as she made her way over to help her husband recover his upright position.

Back on his feet, Bob gathered his family around Scrooge and they all wished each other a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Bob pulled out a tube of savoury snacks and shouted, ‘Anyone for a Prosecco and pink peppercorn Pringle!’. Everyone took one and then, as you might have expected given his name and aforementioned short stature, Bob’s young son raised his ludicrously flavoured potato snack and uttered the only words fitting to end such a tale as this.

‘God bless us’, he said. ‘God bless us every one!’

THE END


To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part One’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Two’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Three’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol – Part Four’, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

To read, ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different and yet in some ways similar, click here

Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

WORKING IN A HEALTHCARE HINTERLAND

Steve Barclay, are you listening
Have you heard, something’s missing
A lack of GPs
Means they’re down on their knees
Working in a healthcare hinterland

Nurses too, they’re unhappy
‘Taint enough, that you clap, the
Ones you applaud
They still can’t afford
Working in a healthcare hinterland

In a little while there will be no one
Wanting to work in the NHS
I’m not sure that even now I know one
Colleague who is coping with the stress

Hospitals, overflowing
Waiting lists, ever growing
It ain’t any fun
For those who’ve begun
Working in a healthcare hinterland

Those who fall and find their hip needs mending
Hope an ambulance will soon arrive
But it’s likely one won’t be attending
Not at least while they are still alive

So this year, please remember
In this month of December
Those you’ve employed
They’re not overjoyed
Working in a healthcare hinterland
Working in a healthcare hinterland
Working in a healthcare hinterland


Other posts related to Christmas:

To read ‘Twas The NHS Week Befor3 Christmas – 2022’, click here

To read ‘How the Grinch and Covid stole General Practices Christmas’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Paddington and the Ailing Elderly Relative’, click here

To read ‘A Merry and Resilient Christmas – a personal view’, click here

And for are some other medically themed songs, follow the links below. Performances of cover versions are available for those marked with an asterisk.

A Hard Year For Us All*

What A Wonderful Job This Can Be*

Baggy White Coats*

The Wild GP*

GP Kicks*

The Very Model Of A General Practitioner*

I’ve Got A Little List*

Stuck In The Middle With You*

Three Lockdown Songs*

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY. Part Four – in which Scrooge glimpses the future.

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY
Part Four: in which Scrooge glimpses the future.

To read Part 3, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

Scrooge sat motionless on his bed. At 3am the silence was briefly broken by the chiming of the the grandfather clock. It’s three chimes reminded Scrooge of the bell that is rung prior to the umpires walking out at the start of a session of play and, like on those occasions, Scrooge felt similarly now, something momentous was undoubtedly about to happen. Unnervingly though for Scrooge, the silence returned and as it did so the black night seemed to grow even more dark. Scrooge waited, expecting to be greeted by another spirit dressed, he imagined would be in some futuristic cricketing garb and he was curious as to what that might look like.

Minutes ticked past with nobody arriving and Scrooge began to wonder if all he had experienced thus far had been merely a dream. Perhaps, he thought, he would be best served by trying at last to get some sleep. But as he laid his head on his pillow Scrooge realised that the gentle breathing he could hear was not his own but that of someone who was sat on the bed alongside him, someone dressed, not in whites or coloured clothing, but in a dark black suit.

‘Good evening Mr Scrooge’, said the new arrival. ‘I am the Ghost of Cricket Yet To Come’ and I have a business proposal for you.’

Scrooge could not remember ever hearing words that sounded so sinister

‘Cricket’, the spirit spat the word out as if he found the mere sound of it distasteful, ‘is a fine way to make money. Provided of course you’re prepared to say goodbye to everything that makes it the game it is at heart’

The Spirit of Cricket Yet To Come smiled to himself as he reached into the inside pocket of his suit jacket and pulled out a sheet of paper. The spirit began to pour over what Scrooge immediately recognised as a spreadsheet, the contents of which, though, Scrooge was unable to discern.

The Spirit looked up and sneered at Scrooge. ‘I suppose you’d like to hear how cricket will be structured in years to come’.

‘I’m not sure that I would’, replied Scrooge, ‘but I fear you’re going to tell me anyway. So do what you must Spirit, take me where you will, show me what you must’.

The Spirit of Cricket Yet To Come stood up.

‘I’ll not take you anywhere Mr Scrooge, for I have no interest in where the games are played, just so long as the stadiums are big enough to house large crowds made up of those foolish enough to pay large sums of money for shortened matches, all of which are essentially the same. Furthermore, what would be the point of taking you to all six of grounds where matches will be played when they all look exactly the same, all designed so as to comply with the ‘exciting’ new format that is ‘The Fifty’.

‘The Fifty?’ questioned Scrooge, wondering what had become of ‘The Hundred’, the format that he himself had introduced and worked so hard to promote.

‘That’s right, Mr Scrooge – ‘The Fifty’ Or as some tedious individuals are calling it, ‘The 8+2’. Well they can laugh all they like but what they need to appreciate is that the format was developed after extensive market research concluded that the time taken to play a game consisting of a total of just 100 deliveries is not only short enough to prevent even the least attentive individual from becoming bored, but also guarantees the greatest financial return in terms of alcohol, food and merchandising sales. And, as we all know, in the end it’s the bottom line that counts!’

Scrooge was horrified by what he was hearing but forced himself to ask more. ‘Six teams you say?’

‘You sound surprised? Perhaps, Mr Scrooge, you had expected one less? Well we did consider ditching yet another team concerned, as presumably you were when you pioneering a reduced number of balls in an over, that the modern cricket spectator might not be able to count to six but the extra team will bring in additional revenue. Each team will play every other team four times, games being played throughout June, July and August to the exclusion of all other cricketing formats. And the names of those teams? Well there’s the Birmingham Bankrollers, The Manchester Moneymakers and the The London Lucratives to name but three. I’ll leave you to guess the names of the others but you can be sure that there’s isn’t one called the West Country Worzels!‘

Clearly of the opinion that his latest remark had been funny, the ghastly ghoul chuckled merrily to himself, a chuckle that became louder and more sinister when he saw the revulsion on Scrooge’s face.

‘I don’t know what you’re looking so upset about Mr Scrooge’, the spirit went on. ‘After all, isn’t all this just the inevitable consequence of the changes you yourself have suggested in your recent report. We’re two of a kind you and I, Mr Scrooge. Two of a kind’.

And with that The Spirit of Cricket Yet to Come laughed so loudly that the windows of Scrooge’s bedroom rattled and Scrooge became so unsettled that he couldn’t stop himself from hiding himself under the duvet of his bed under which, for a few minutes, he could be seen shaking uncontrollably. Eventually Scrooge stopped his quivering and poked his head back out.

‘And the national team. How are England performing in the future?’

‘Have no fear Mr Scrooge. They have been ranked as the number one team in ‘The Fifty’ ever since the format was introduced. Admittedly England are the only country that plays the format but, even so, that’s quite some achievement I’m sure you’ll agree. And when you’re as good as England are in ‘The Fifty’, you can understand why interest in any other format has waned’.

‘And what about county cricket? How is that looking in the future?’

‘I’m sorry Mr Scrooge’, replied the Ghost of Cricket Yet To Come. ‘I’m not sure I know what you’re talking about. What is this ‘county cricket’ of which you speak. I’ve never heard of such a thing’

Scrooge could bear it no longer and once again covered himself with the bed clothes. As he hid there Scrooge pondered whether the future that had been described to him was one that was fixed or whether there was anything at all that he could do that would help avert such a disastrous outcome. Eventually, overcome by all that had taken place, Scrooge fell into a restless sleep. Any change he could make would have to wait till morning.

To be continued…


To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part One’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Two’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Three’, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

To read, ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different and yet in some ways similar, click here

Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

ADVENT 2022: PART 4: JOY

Well the wait is almost over, and I don’t mean either the end of the World Cup or the completion of this series of blogs. On the contrary, what with this being the last Sunday of Advent, it won’t be long before the last doors will be opened on a million ‘Sleeps ‘till Santa’ calendars. The choice this year has been huge. Believe it or not, today you could be opening drawers or pulling back cardboard squares to reveal nail varnish, Play-doh, or the components to build an FM radio. My favourite though has to be the ‘Drinks by the Dram’ Calendar, sold on Amazon for six shillings short of £10,500. Who wouldn’t want to start the day with a 60 year old Glenfarclas to accompany their Coco Pops? But don’t worry if you’re a traditionalist, there have still been plenty of calendars out there that retain the true meaning of the holiday season and counting down the days with chocolate impressions of characters from Star Wars has remained an option. There’s no doubt about it, it’s beginning to look a lot like Winterval.

As the year draws to an end it’s inevitable perhaps that one looks back at what that year has brought. Without doubt it’s not just been me, my friends, colleagues, and patients who have known sadness and difficulty these past twelve months. For many the suffering continues still. But, regardless of whether or not it’s a bad time for you right now, I’d like to wish you all, as I do a very Merry Christmas.

Today is the fourth Sunday in Advent and depending on which order you take these things, for some the focus is joy. When life is characterised by sorrow and despair, however, the forced jollity of Christmas is frequently unwelcome and few of us are up for a party in such circumstances, regardless of how many amusing Christmas jumpers are on display. It has been suggested by some that we should no longer wish others a ‘Merry Christmas’ since to do so risks being insensitive to those who are experiencing difficult times. But to suggest as much is to misunderstand Christmas, to consider it nothing more than an excuse for overindulgence as we try to deny the vicissitudes of life.

One of my favourite carols is ‘God rest ye merry, gentleman’ – note the position of the comma. For many years I misunderstood this carol, imagining that the words were expressing the hope that God would give a bunch of already merry gentlemen a well earned rest! This is not the point at all, as the position of the comma makes clear. Whilst rest would undoubtedly be welcome, what is being hoped for here is not that God would organise a couple of days off work for these men of gentle disposition but as yet undisclosed happiness, but rather that he would render them merry.

Whether you are a person of faith or not, and regardless of what that faith might look like, my wish for you is that you will rest merry this Christmas, that you will know some happiness this coming week, even if it has to be experienced alongside enduring sadness.

For many though, Christmas is just too busy to be enjoyable. Some of us, perhaps, long for the Christmases of our childhood, fondly remembered as magical times when we believed in a red suited figure who insisted on bestowing upon us one kindness after another without us doing anything whatsoever to deserve it. Now though, as adults, we have lost sight of any transcendence that Christmas once held and, rather than resting in the generosity of one greater than ourselves, find ourselves burdened with a list of a thousand things we must do if we are to be deemed acceptable celebrants of what a consumerist society has made of Christmas.

Wouldn’t it be lovely if we could experience Christmas, indeed experience life as a whole, as we did when we were little, with that childlike faith that someone other than ourselves would be kind to us and see to it that everything worked out just fine in the end.

Perhaps that sounds like heaven, something that appears too good to be true, especially at a time when, as well as our own personal problems the world too has seen seemingly insurmountable difficulty too, more than enough to understand why some see little cause for merriment this Christmas.

Of course it can be tempting to try to distance ourselves from all the pain, and hold on to the lie that it couldn’t happen to us – until of course it does. For many it already has. In the week before Christmas, do we simply pay lip service to how dreadful it all is before pushing it all to the back of our mind, and continuing on our merry way – unchanged, unmoved, unaffected. After all – what’s suffering got to do with Christmas?

And therein lies the problem with Christmas, or rather the problem with the Christmas that we have created. As with life, we struggle to conceive that the realities of hate, pain and suffering sit alongside those of love, joy and peace, that these things, to a greater or lesser extent, are present in all our lives, present indeed, even in ourselves. We have marginalised the horror of the Christmas story, preferring the sanitised version that fits better with our over optimistic outlook on life and the over optimistic view we have of who we really are. ‘It’s all good’ we try to tell ourselves but the truth is rather different – we exist in a world of good and evil.

Life can be filled with overwhelming joy.
And yet, life can be hard, very hard. For some, impossibly hard.
And for many the sadness is just too much.

Regardless of whether or not you are somebody who believes the Christmas story, it none the less reflects the reality that this life is a mix of the good and the bad. The joy of the birth of Jesus, and the hope that his arrival brought, is mixed with the abject poverty into which he was born, the rejection experienced by his parents and the murder of the innocents at the hands of Herod. And, of course, what began in ‘O little town of Bethlehem’ continued to ‘a green hill far away’ where the baby whose birth we celebrate at Christmas, having grown up, suffered the horror of crucifixion.

The Roman orator Cicero described crucifixion as ‘a most cruel and disgusting punishment’ and suggested that ‘the very mention of the cross should be far removed, not only from a Roman citizen’s body, but from his mind, his eyes, his ears.’ That is the world we live in, joy and sadness, pleasure and pain – we cannot have one without the other. Indeed for me the two are inextricably linked to each other. The existence of suffering is, I believe, why we need a redeemer, one who, through the suffering he endured, ensures the suffering that we all still share in will one day come to an end.

‘Sorrowful yet always rejoicing’. These are words, written by the apostle Paul, that I find helpful to reflect upon. We cannot expect to live trouble free lives. Hardships and calamities will befall us all and when they do they will bring with them great sorrow. Yet despite those hardships, despite the awful suffering, there is, I believe, still hope in Christ and, therefore, a cause for rejoicing. Leonard Cohen said it well:

‘There’s a lover in the story but the story’s still the same
There’s a lullaby for suffering and a paradox to blame
But it’s written in the scriptures, and it’s not some idle claim’

We live in the tension of ‘the already and the not yet’. For those who believe these things, Jesus’ life, death and resurrection, and the redemption that he thereby achieved, has secured the future – a future so certain that we can count on it as if it were ‘already’ here. We can live rejoicing in the confidence of its inevitability whilst, at the same time, honestly acknowledging that it is still ‘not yet’. We live in the very real pain of today, the heart breaking awfulness of now. Even as we rejoice in the joy of Christmas, and the hope that still remains, we dare not tell ourselves differently. To do so is to delude ourselves, and ensure disillusionment and despair when eventually the truth can no longer be denied.

Joy then is not the absence of sadness just as sadness is not the absence of joy. Though a paradox, we can be happy and sad at the same time.

Faith brings with it the realisation that, when I’m overwhelmed it’s not all down to me. It gives me the encouragement I need to keep on going in the face of ongoing difficulty, and reminds me that hardships really are to be expected. And when life itself is just too sad, it gives me the assurance that even as we suffer and are sorrowful we can still hope and rejoice in the better future that I believe is surely coming.

And so I’m not embarrassed to say that I really do believe the message that the angel brought to the shepherds that first Christmas night.

Luke 2:10-12

‘Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, who is Christ the Lord.’ [Luke 2:10-11]

So often at this time of the year I hear that ‘Christmas is for the children’ and yet, as the angel said, the birth of a Saviour is good news ‘for all the people’, even for those of us who are worn out and exhausted. Indeed it is, perhaps, when life is at its hardest, when sadness and suffering are all around, that our need for Christmas and the hope it brings is most evident.

Because Christmas really can cheer the broken-hearted, and rest merry even the most downcast. And I pray that this year it will for you.

Now, where’s today’s shot of Pappy Van Winkle’s 23 Year Old Family Reserve.


Other related blogs:

To read Advent 2022: Part One: Hope’, click here

To read ‘Advent 2022: Part Two: Peace’, click here

To read ‘Advent 2022: Part Three: Love’, click here

To read ‘Rest Assured’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when I’m gone’, click here

To read ‘Everything is Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

PADDINGTON AND THE AILING ELDERLY RELATIVE

It was Christmas Eve and Dr Mungo was writing up what he hoped would be the last consultation of the day. As he did so he reflected on what had been an eventful twelve months. A year previously he’d been a partner at Portside Medical Centre but when several doctors left and nobody could be found to replace them, the practice had eventually collapsed. And so, when Bob Cratchit had got in touch and asked whether he would like to join his practice, filling the vacancy created by the untimely death of Dr Ebenezer Scrooge exactly one year ago, Dr Mungo had jumped at the chance.

The last few weeks though had been incredibly difficult. The demand for appointments had never been so high with duty doctors regularly being asked to manage more than a hundred requests for urgent medical attention a day. No wonder he was looking forward to a few days off over Christmas.

But then the phone rang. Dr Mungo picked up the receiver and heard the familiar voice of one of his receptionist.

‘I’m sorry to bother you Dr Mungo but we’ve just had a ‘walk in’ who says he’s worried about his Aunt. He says he tried to phone but, what with us taking so many calls this afternoon, he couldn’t get through. I should add, Dr Mungo, that the person with me in reception…well…he’s not a person at all. He is in fact…a bear!’

‘A bear you say?’

‘That’s right. And he says he knows you’.

‘Does he now?’ said Dr Mungo beginning to smile. ‘Is he by chance wearing a blue duffel coat and sporting a red hat?’

‘As a matter of fact he is. How did you know that?’

‘Because one doesn’t get to meet too many bears, not, at least, in this part of the world. It can only be Paddington. And yes I do know him well. What’s more I will be forever indebted to him as a result of his coming to my rescue when the CQC paid a particularly stressful visit to my old practice. Please, show him through’.

And so a minute or two later Paddington was stood in the doorway of Dr Mungo’s room.

‘Good evening Dr Mungo’ he said, lifting his hat as he did so. ‘It’s very kind of you to see me so late in the day. And on Christmas Eve too’

‘Not at all Paddington, it’s my very great pleasure. Now, how can I help?’

‘It’s my Aunt Lucy, Dr Mungo. She’s not been in the best of health for a while and has been in residential care for some years, living in a home for retired bears in deepest, darkest Peru. But she’s always wanted to visit London and the Brown’s very kindly said she could come and stay for Christmas. But this week she become more unwell with her breathing getting steadily worse. She didn’t want me to bother anyone but today I’m very worried about her. Could you possibly come and see her?’

‘Of course Paddington’, said Dr Mungo noticing the clock was showing that it was now past six thirty. ‘I’ll come straight away. Have you got your car?’

‘Sadly not. I had to stop driving a couple of months ago following an episode when Mr Brown panicked and took me to casualty because he sought I’d had some kind of absence attack. It was eventually put down as an unprovoked syncopal episode though in reality it was merely that I was experiencing a moment of ecstasy after tasting Mrs Bird’s steamed marmalade pudding’.

‘Oh I am sorry Paddington. But never mind that now, we’ll go together in my car. Follow me’

Dr Mungo grabbed his medical bag and exited the building, pursued by a bear. Paddington’s home was a few minutes drive away and so Dr Mungo took the opportunity to ask Paddington what he’d been up to since last they’d met.

‘Oh nothing much’, Paddington said, ‘though, having said that, there was that one occasion when I had tea at Buckingham Palace. I met the Queen there, a lovely lady and, do you know Dr Mungo, she told me she once did a parachute jump?’

‘I did hear something about that’ replied Dr Mungo, pulling up outside 32 Windsor Gardens as he did so.

They got out of the car and headed into the house whereupon Paddington led the way to the downstairs room where his ailing aunt was lying in bed. The room was in darkness and the only sound that could be heard was the obviously laboured breathing of an elderly omnivore. It was immediately clear to Dr Mungo that Paddington’s Aunt Lucy was in urgent need of medical attention and wasted no time in pulling his phone from out of his pocket and dialling 999.

The phone rang…and rang…and rang. But nobody answered. Eventually, when nearly ten minutes had past, Dr Mungo, knew he could wait no longer. Lately he had had patients experience long delays for ambulances and he was, therefore, all too well aware of how stretched the emergency services were. And so he decided he and Paddington would have to try and get Aunt Lucy to the hospital themselves.

Kneeling down next to her bed, he asked if she thought she could try to make it to the car. Aunt Lucy indicated her willingness to try with an almost imperceptible nod of her head and so began the painful process of sitting her up in her bed, easing her legs over the edge of the bed and then, with all her weight supported upon Dr Mungo’s shoulders, slowly walking her out of the room, across the hall and out onto the street. Finally, having manoeuvred Aunt Lucy into the backseat of his car and strapped Paddington safely in beside her, Dr Mungo got into the driver’s seat and set off for the hospital. As they arrived it was beginning to snow. Dr Mungo found a wheelchair that they could make use of and before long he was wheeling his ever more breathless patient through the doors of the A&E department.

Inside, the waiting room was packed. Patients were sat on every available chair and many more were sitting on the floor. A television screen attached to the wall indicated that the average waiting time was seven hours. Dr Mungo said that he’d stay with Aunt Lucy and suggested that Paddington should join the queue to tell the receptionist of their arrival.

In front of him was a man he recognised as his perpetually complaining neighbour, Mr Curry. Eventually he made it to the front of the queue and glared at the young woman who was doing her very best to enter everybody’s details on the hospital computer system.

‘Call this the National Health?’ Mr Curry began. ‘More like the national disgrace. You should all be ashamed of yourselves’

The receptionist tried to ignore his unpleasantness and enquired how she might help.

‘I want to see a doctor and I want to see one now’

‘Well as you can see sir, we are very busy. But if you could tell me what the problem is we’ll do all we can to help you just as soon as we possibly can’

‘I’m not telling someone who isn’t medically trained my problems. Get me a doctor this minute’

As he said this he felt a tug on his sleeve and turned to see Paddington looking at him intently. Suddenly he felt somewhat hot about the collar.

‘Why are you looking at me like that…is it me or is it hot in here… why am I feeling so uncomfortable…so flushed…so queasy?’

‘It’s a hard stare Mr Curry’ replied Paddington. ‘My aunt taught me to do them when people had forgotten their manners’

Suddenly Mr Curry forgot what aspect of his health had been concerning him and he wandered away from the reception desk leaving Paddington at the front of the queue. The receptionist smiled at him and thanked him for his patience.

‘That’s totally OK’ Paddington said, ‘I can see that you are busy, it must be very hard for you’

‘It is a little – especially when not everyone is as understanding as you are’

‘Aunt Lucy always says that if you look for the good in people, you’ll find it.’

The receptionist, unaccustomed to being spoken to so kindly, looked for a moment that she might cry.

‘Your aunt sounds like a very wise and exceptionally kind lady’ she said. ‘Perhaps she should write a book containing all the beautiful things that life has taught her’

‘That’s a lovely idea’ said Paddington, ‘but first I think she might need to see a doctor. She’s over there in the wheelchair. She’s very weak and she can hardly breathe’.

The receptionist looked across to where Paddington was indicating and saw immediately that Aunt Lucy needed urgent attention. She promised Paddington that she would get her seen as soon as possible and hurried off to find a nurse. Moments later one appeared and Paddington and Dr Mungo watched as she wheeled Aunt Lucy off to a separate room, explaining as she did so, that she’d be back as soon as she had any news.

It was now nearly 8pm and Paddington told Dr Mungo to go home explaining that he’d be fine now by himself. He explained the Browns would all be home by now and they would be able to collect him when the time came. Dr Mungo conceded that there was no more that he could do at present and so said his goodbyes but not before making Paddington promise that he would call if there was anything he could do to help.

Once alone, Paddington realised he was thirsty and he noticed that there was a machine that dispensed hot drinks standing in the corner of the waiting room. He briefly considered making use of it but, with the memory of an encounter he once had with a defibrillator still fresh in his mind, he dismissed the notion, recognising how, whenever he tried to make use of any electrical appliance, disaster seemed to inevitably ensue. On this occasion however he needn’t have worried for the machine was out of order and had been for some while.

Paddington then went for a walk around the emergency department. Amongst those waiting for treatment it seemed to Paddington that there were a great many who didn’t really need to be there at all and he wondered how the doctors and nurses coped in the face of such demand. Wandering further he passed through some double doors and found himself in a room where a doctor was sat at a desk with his head in his hands. And Paddington suddenly realised that not all doctors and nurses were coping.

‘What’s the matter?’ he asked the doctor who looked like he might have been crying.

‘Oh nothing’ the medic replied. ‘It’s just that sometimes it all feels too much and that I’m just not good enough’

‘My Aunt Lucy says that we should never blame ourselves for what isn’t our fault.’ said Paddington. ‘She’d say that you were undoubtedly doing your best in sometimes impossible circumstances and that’s all anyone could ever ask of you’.

And with that Paddington lifted up his hat and pulled out a marmalade sandwich. ‘Before he died, my Uncle Pastuzo used to say ‘A wise bear always keeps a marmalade sandwich in his hat in case if emergency’. Well it seems to me that this is just such an emergency.’

Paddington held out the sandwich. ‘Take it’ he said. ‘It’ll do you good. You know, one marmalade sandwich contains all the minerals and vitamins a bear needs for a whole day!’

The doctor took a bite and as he did so he felt instantly better. It wasn’t that he was suffering from any nutritional deficiency, nor was it that he liked marmalade, on the contrary he found the taste particularly unpleasant. But the kindness with which the snack had been offered was sufficient to lift his spirits’.

‘Thank you’ the doctor said, putting what was left of the sandwich on the desk. ‘I guess I had better see another patient. It’s just such a shame that we sometimes have to see so many that don’t really need to be seen at all’.

And it was then that Paddington had an idea. He made his way back to the middle of the waiting room and then, having taken a big breath in, gave the biggest ursine growl of his young life. And then, as the sound of his exhalation rattled the windows of the waiting room, something remarkable happened as dozens and dozens of patients whose medical needs were not worthy of their attendance in an A&E department decided they would rather not wait any longer and simply left, leaving only those who were truly in need of medical attention.

The medical staff were delighted at the effect of Paddington’s intervention and set about their work with renewed vigour. But even as they did so, Paddington noticed that his efforts hadn’t been sufficient to encourage Mr Curry to leave.

‘Are you aware there’s a bear in your department’ he said to the receptionist before turning towards Paddington and approaching him with such a frown on his face that it was all too apparent that he’d found yet another thing he could complain about.

‘Well I wouldn’t exactly call that benevolent, roaring so loudly and scaring so many needy people away. I’d say it was rather hypocritical coming from bear who is always insisting that we should always be kind. What would your precious Aunt Lucy say about that I wonder!’

Paddington paused a moment to consider his response. ‘I think, Mr Curry, that she’d say that kindness isn’t simply a matter of being nice, that sometimes it’s also about being fair, and that what’s fair isn’t always what everyone wants’. And then Paddington gave another of his hard stares, one that was so hard that even Mr Curry couldn’t help but turn tail and head out of the casualty department and into the cold night air.

Exhausted by his endeavours, Paddington sat down in one of the now numerous empty seats. He watched as all around him the NHS did what it does best, namely providing care that is free at the point of need to those who required it. And he wondered how Aunt Lucy was getting on and whether or not she’d be all right.

Half an hour had passed when Paddington heard a familiar voice. Looking up he saw it was his good friend Mr Gruber, who, he remembered, had taken a job as a hospital porter to supplement his income now that, as a result of the economic downturn, his antique shop was no longer an establishment that made a profit sufficient to live on.

‘Master Brown’, he said ‘I have been twisting my knickers looking for you. Aunt Lucy has been moved to a side room in a ward elsewhere in the hospital. The doctors are saying you can see her now. Follow me’.

Mr Gruber led Paddington down a long empty corridor till they came to the ward where Aunt Lucy had been taken. On the left there was a side room, the door of which Mr Gruber opened and ushered Paddington in. Aunt Lucy was lying in a bed, her breathing less laboured. She appeared to be asleep

‘The doctors, they soon will be here’ said Mr Gruber quietly. ‘When they arrive be careful not to be forgetting your queues and peas’. He smiled at his friend and then slipped out of the room.

Paddington sat down on the chair next to the bed and waited. After a few minutes the door opened and in walked two women both with stethoscopes draped around their necks. The taller of the two approached Paddington and introduced herself.

‘Hello Paddington, my name is…’

‘The same as mine’. The voice was barely audible but unmistakably that of Aunt Lucy. ‘I can see it written on your badge’

‘That’s right’, said the woman, turning to Aunt Lucy. ‘I’m a consultant who specialises in elderly care. And this is a medical student who’s working with me this evening. Her name’s…’

‘Judy’, exclaimed Paddington excitedly, suddenly recognising Mr and Mrs Brown’s daughter who was, he remembered, nearing the end of her medical training. ‘It’s so good to see you!’ He slipped off the chair and gave her a big hug.

The consultant smiled at them as she watched them greet each other. She sat down on the edge of Aunt Lucy’s bed and waited for small bear as he climbed back onto his chair. As he did so, Paddington watched the consultant intently and wondered what it was that she would have to say.

‘How is she Doctor?’ he asked.

‘Well Paddington, I’m afraid your Aunt is very old now. As you know she’s been becoming frailer of late. And now she’s really quite poorly’ The consultant turned to Aunt Lucy and placed her hand on her paw. ‘We’ve done some tests, an X-ray and some scans, and we’ve found that there is a growth on her lungs. The kind of growth that is going to get bigger, the kind of growth that we can’t do a great deal about’. The consultant paused a moment, allowing Paddington to take in the enormity of her words. ‘Do you understand what I’m saying?’ she asked gently.

‘Are you saying, she’s got…’ Paddington paused, not wanting to add the word he knew he must. ‘Cancer?’

‘I’m afraid I do’

All was quiet for a few moments. Nobody spoke. Eventually Aunt Lucy broke the silence.

‘It’s all right Paddington’, she whispered. ‘It’s all right. It’s my time’.

Paddington slipped back down from his chair and climbed up onto Aunt Lucy bed and kissed her, a solitary tear rolling down his cheek. He looked back at the consultant.

‘Is there nothing you can do?’ he asked quietly.

‘Oh yes, there’s a lot we can do…but we can’t cure her.’

Again the consultant paused and Paddington looked down at Aunty Lucy again

‘We can’t cure her Paddington, but we can care for her’

Paddington looked up again as another tear began it’s long journey down his cheek and along his nose before falling silently to the floor. He wasn’t sure what to say.

The consultant turned again to her patient. ‘What’s important to you Aunt Lucy’ she asked.

‘Being with Paddington’, Lucy replied, taking her nephew’s paw in hers as she did so. ‘And marmalade of course!’ she added, managing a slight chuckle.

The consultant smiled again. ‘Would you like to go home?’

‘I rather think I would. You’ve been very kind, but I’m not sure I like being in a hospital.’

‘Then that’s what we’ll do. We’ll get everything organised for you to go home where you’ll be more comfortable. We’ll speak to Dr Mungo and make sure everything is properly in place. I’m sure that he and the district nurses will be able to provide all the support you’ll need’.

The consultant stood up and checking that nobody had anything else they wanted to ask made to leave. At the door she turned and asked Paddington whether perhaps she could ask him a question.

‘Of course!’, he replied

‘That time you met the Queen – did she really have a sandwich in her handbag?’

Paddington smiled. ‘Oh yes!’ he said earnestly. ‘And she used to make her own marmalade too. I’m sure that is the reason she lived to such a ripe old age. Is that a possibility?’

‘Well,’ replied the consultant, ‘I couldn’t say for sure, but I understand that marmalade is a good source of vitamins and minerals so it certainly won’t have done her any harm. Perhaps I should start carrying a marmalade sandwich in my medical bag – just in case of emergencies!’

And with that the consultant left the room, indicating to Judy as she did so that she should stay with Paddington and Aunt Lucy.

For a while none of them said anything, choosing instead to hold each other and share the preciousness of those few moments in each another’s company

‘Judy’ began Paddington eventually, ‘the consultant you’re working with, she is a good doctor isn’t she?’

‘Oh yes Paddington. She’s one of the very best. Like your Aunty Lucy she is very wise and exceptionally kind. She always knows what’s best – sometimes I think she must know everything that there is to know.’

‘Perhaps she should write a book’

‘Perhaps she already has!‘

Paddington’s eyes widened.

‘That’s right Paddington. And a very good book it is too. In fact it’s the book about getting older. You should read it one day!’

‘Perhaps I will’ said Paddington, ‘but first I think we should ring your parents. They’ll be wondering where I am. It’ll soon be Christmas Day and I wouldn’t want them to worry about me! And besides, I have a question I need to ask them’, he added, looking at his dear Aunt Lucy. ‘Would they please look after this bear!’

*****

Far, far away, yet somewhere unimaginably close, Dr Ebenezer Scrooge is walking across beautifully green fields. Alongside him is Mrs Gray, his former patient, who had died only a year or two before the former GP. They are laughing together

Up ahead is a wood – a vast unexplored wilderness. There they meet a bear whose name is Pastuzo. He tells them how a new room has been built on the tree house where he lives and that recently a huge preserving pan has been delivered full to overflowing with perfectly ripe Seville oranges. He says that it’s almost as though a place is being prepared for a new arrival with everything that they could ever possibly want being made ready for them.

Pastuzo wonders who it might be. He says he thinks he knows. And now he can barely contain his delight.

THE END


The above story serves to complete both ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’ and ‘The Dr Mungo Chronicles’, the latter being made up of ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, ‘A GP called Paddington’ and ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’. Links to all these stories can be found below together with a review of ‘The Book About Getting Older’ written by Dr Lucy Pollock. You’ll also find links to a number of other GP related tales and some attempts at Christmas Comic Verse.

*****

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Book Review: The Book About Getting Older’, click here

To read ‘How the Grinch and Covid stole General Practices Christmas’, click here

To read ‘Twas the NHS week before Christmas – 2022’, click here

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Three General Practitioners Gruff’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

‘TWAS THE NHS WEEK BEFORE CHRISTMAS – 2022

‘Twas the week before Christmas, and all through the land,
People got poorly in ways they’d not planned,
With hospital doctors and GPs not liking,
How sharply their rates of consulting were spiking.

An ambulance called for? – it might not attend,
Cos sometimes there wasn’t one free they could send,
So frustrated managers tore out their hair,
Trying to manage what’s no longer there.

The folk sick in casualty, now had to face,
Long waits, as wards, tried to find them a space,
Cos ‘bed-blocking’ patients could not go home yet,
Said services social, ‘Their needs can’t be met!’

To find penicillin, the pharmacies tried,
(As those in high places a shortage denied),
And those referred urgently often weren’t seen,
In two week wait windows they once would have been.

And nobody working in the NHS,
Could ever remember a time of such stress,
No wonder then many said, shedding a tear,
‘I’m a health care provider – get me out of here’

Still medical centres were all hard at work,
And phones in reception were going berserk,
With calls to be taken from those indicating,
The hue of what they had been expectorating.

With seasonal sickness at an all time high,
No wonder some duty docs started to cry,
As calls kept on coming, they looked with alarm,
And wondered just how they would cope with demand.

As EVERYONE contacted their health care providers,
Knowing that they were the licensed prescribers,
To getting appointments they showed dedication,
‘Twas simply a must to have right medication.

The clinical leads, they checked protocols twice,
(Ensuring compliance with guidance from NICE)
Relaying their learning to practice clinicians,
On management options for Christmas conditions.

There’s a tablet for when you’re deficient in joy,
A tablet for when you’re not given that toy,
A tablet to counter the courage that’s Dutch,
A tablet for when you have eaten too much,

A tablet to keep you awake for the King,
A tablet that makes you believe you can sing,
A tablet for all of the stress of the crackers,
A tablet to give to the washing up slackers,

Whilst sitting on sofas and watching TV,
And longing for chocolates that hang on the tree,
By taking these tablets, nobody need fear,
You’re sure to stay healthy right through to New Year,

On Codeine, on Senna, on Brufen, on Zantac
On Statin, on Zoton, on Calpol, on Prozac,
And so that the cooking, guilt free you can shirk,
There’s a note can be given, to say you can’t work.

The Medicine Management Advisor’s away,
I don’t think he’s working on this Christmas Day,
But I heard him exclaim, ‘ere he drove out of sight,
HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ALL AND TO ALL A GOODNIGHT.


Other posts related to Christmas:

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Paddington and the Ailing Elderly Relative’, click here

To read ‘How the Grinch and Covid stole General Practices Christmas’, click here

To read ‘A Merry and Resilient Christmas – a personal view’, click here

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY – Part Three: in which Scrooge faces a present reality.

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY
Part Three: in which Scrooge faces a present reality.

To read Part Two, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

Scrooge had not been asleep long before he was woken once more. The old Grandfather clock that stood on the landing struck two and as it did so, his bedroom door opened once again and a woman entered. Like the Ghost of Cricket Past, she too was carrying a cricket back but, unlike her predecessor, she was dressed in brightly coloured clothing and was sporting a cricket helmet.

‘Well hello there!’ the spectre said cheerfully ‘You must be Mr Scrooge!’

‘And you, I presume, must be the Ghost of Cricket Present’, replied Scrooge,

‘I am indeed’ the Ghost confirmed before proceeding to explain to Scrooge that she didn’t have a great deal of time to spend haunting as she was keen to get back home to watch the cricket highlights which were being shown that evening on terrestrial television although not until three o’clock in the morning. ‘But beggars can’t be choosers’ she continued, ‘what with the spiralling cost of dying, a Ghost’s wages, especially one of the female persuasion, are no longer sufficient to justify a subscription to that satellite sports channel which has a virtual monopoly on the broadcast rights for live test cricket. So chop, chop let’s get going!‘

Scrooge had been looking forward to more spectral flight and was a little disappointed when the Ghost of Cricket Present pointed out that such activity was something she was no longer able to offer.

‘As with much of modern life, there is no time now for such romantic notions. It’s all too expensive you see and one must always have an eye on the bottom line’.

And with that the Ghost of Cricket Present pulled out a mobile phone and called for an Uber. It was though, no ordinary Uber, for not only did it arrive immediately it was also able to transport them instantly to a cricket ground where a T20 game was being played.

Scrooge and the spirit got out of the car and made their way to a pair of seats that had been reserved for them at the back of a packed stand. Sat next to them was a family made up of Mum, Dad and a couple of young children. In the row in front were six or seven lads all of whom had clearly been drinking heavily for some time. And the more they drank the more fruity their language became. Soon the parents of the young family, who had paid a not inconsiderable sum of money to be there, felt they could no longer stay seated where they were.

On the other side of where Scrooge and his ghostly companion were sat, a couple were discussing the match and commenting on how the game, though entertaining enough, was like almost every game in the shortest format, characterised as it was by a relentless pursuit for runs from the very first ball of the innings.

‘It’s ironic when you think of it’ said one of the pair, ‘in trying to make the game more exciting, they have succeeded in making it only more boring.’

The man who was speaking was interrupted when a T-shirt, emblazoned with the name of one of the match sponsors, struck him smack in the face. After taking a moment to recover, the man continued. ‘And is it because of an inherent lack of confidence in the format itself that the organisers of these games feel they have to try and maintain our interest by blasting out loud music, sticking a camera in our faces in the hope we’ll want to perform, or imagining we are somehow excited at the prospect of wearing a T-shirt promoting a company we’ve never heard of?’ Unrolling the t-shirt which had fallen into his lap, the spectator held it up for his companion to see. ‘I mean, who on earth wants to walk around advertising ‘KP Lavatorial Cleaning Services?’

As the game proceeded in a way that few would recall with any clarity in years to come, Scrooge and his spirit guide made their way back to the Uber and were transported to another game. This time the crowd, that was healthy but far from packed, was gathered to watch a match played over 50 overs. As he took his seat Scrooge noticed the same young family he’d seen at the T20 game and noticed now that the Father was none other than his personal assistant Bob Cratchit. The children were asking where all their favourite players were and Bob and his wife were having to explain that none of them were playing as they’d all been picked to play for other made up teams that nobody really cared about in a competition that no one really wanted.

Scrooge enjoyed watching a few overs of the game before the Ghost of Cricket Present ushered Scrooge back to the car and the driver sped them away to yet another game. This time the crowd was smaller but, as the four day game that was being played proceeded, Scrooge noticed how spectators who had previously been strangers struck up conversations with one another and expressed both real interest and real knowledge in the game. The home team players were held in high affection by the crowd but those on the opposing team were greatly appreciated too. Everyone watching seemed content to let the game evolve over time and, though to the casual observer the game may sometimes have appeared slow, Scrooge recognised that as the game ebbed and flowed, it did so in ways that made it infinitely more interesting than anything else he’d seen during his time with the spirit who was herself also watching the match intently by his side.

It was almost time the Ghost of Cricket Present to draw stumps on her time with Scrooge but before she did so, there was something else that she wanted to show him.

‘Follow me’, she said and headed away from the boundary edge towards a building situated behind all the stands. Scrooge followed her as she made her way through the glass doors of what was clearly a cricket museum. ‘You see, Mr Scrooge, I may be the Ghost of Cricket Present, but who I am is made up of those who have gone before. Cricket has a history, a history that is important and needs to be preserved, in part by preserving the traditions of the past.’

Scrooge looked around him and saw bats and balls employed by former cricketing stars, scorecards of famous victories the club had enjoyed in years gone by and no end of cricketing memorabilia that made the past almost tangible. Scrooge went to pick up a framed shirt once worn by one of his own heroes, back in the days when he was at school, but as he did so his surroundings began to blur and he found himself back in his bedroom once more.

Too caught up in thinking about what he’d seen thus far and not a little anxious about what still might befall him before the night was through, Scrooge sat on his bed and waited for the final visitor of the night. He hoped the Ghost of Cricket Present had made it home in time for the highlight package she’d wanted to watch and imagined that it would be more enjoyable than what he would soon have to endure. He wouldn’t have long to wait for it was nearly 3 am.

To be continued…


To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part One’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Two’, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

To read, ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different and yet in some ways similar, click here

Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY – Part Two: in which Scrooge remembers the good old days.

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY
Part Two: in which Scrooge remembers the good old days

To read Part One, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

Scrooge woke in a cold sweat and sat bolt upright in his bed. This was not unusual for, in recent weeks, the intense criticism that had been consistently levelled at him for his insensitive attempts to reorganise county cricket had frequently disturbed his sleep. However, his thoughts of how he might best silence his critics, were soon diverted when, at one o’clock precisely, the door to his bedchamber creaked open and a strange looking fellow crept into the room. He was wearing white flannel trousers and a bright white shirt, over which he sported a cream coloured, hand knitted, Arran sweater complete with coloured stripes around the cuffs and V- shaped neck. On his head was a floppy sun hat and In his hand he held a willow bat that had clearly seen many years of heavy use.

‘Are you the spirit, sir, whose coming was foretold me?’ asked Scrooge.

‘Indeed I am,’ the apparition replied. ‘I am the Ghost of Cricket Past and I am here to show you what cricket once was. But we must fly, we haven’t got long’

The spirit held out his hand and Scrooge took it instinctively.

‘I warn you though Ebenezer,’ the spirit began, his eyes twinkling as he spoke. ‘generally I’m asked to field down at Third Man on account of my propensity to drop things. So please, do make sure you take a good hold of me!’

The spirit chuckled to himself and Scrooge was left unsure as to whether or not his new acquaintance was joking. Even so, Scrooge tightened his grip and, as he did so, felt himself being lifted, as if weightless, from his bed. The spirit led him to, and then through, the wall of the bedroom and out into the night air. As they flew over hills and dales the sky grew gradually lighter and the air temperature became steadily warmer until eventually they arrived at a cricket ground situated in the park of a seaside town.

‘Where are we?’ Scrooge asked the spirit as they landed and sat down on two of the many deckchairs that were scattered around much of the boundary edge.

‘This is Clarence Park in Weston-super-Mare.’ said the spirit, ‘and that, Ebenezer, is none other than Mr David Steele’.

The Spirit was pointing to a grey haired man who was patrolling the cover boundary just in front of where they were sitting. The hero of the previous year’s Test matches against the West Indies turned to smile at Scrooge before focusing intently on his Northamptonshire team mate Sarfraz Nawaz who, even now, was running in to bowl to the Somerset captain Brian Rose.

And suddenly Scrooge remembered. This was the first game of cricket he’d ever attended. It had been played back in 1977 and the day of his attendance had been particularly notable as it had been the one in which Rose had made his highest first class score, a magnificent 205. But the day had been special for so much more than a single players personal achievement. Scrooge remembered how excited he’d been to see so many international players, back in the days when they play for their counties between Test matches, even turning out on the day after such an international match had concluded. Other Test players that had been on show the day that Scrooge had first experienced the joys of county cricket included Peter Wiley, Wayne Larkins and Brian Close, not to mention, of course, Viv Richards and Ian Botham.

‘That was a wonderful introduction to cricket,’ Scrooge said wistfully to the Spirit who was now indicating to him that it was time they moved on. ‘Those were such happy times’.

The Spirit took hold of Scrooge’s hand again and before long they were flying through the sky once more. Soon though they touched back down again, this time on the outfield of the county ground in Taunton. It was during the tea interval and sat on a chair that had been placed in the middle of the pitch was a man for whom scores of people were queuing to meet, each hoping to exchange a few words or, by proffering before him their autograph books, becoming the proud owner of his much prized autograph.

As Scrooge looked on he thought they was something familiar about one of the children who was waiting in line. In his hand the boy held a book authored by the man who was sitting in the chair. Scrooge then recognised that the boy he was looking at was himself and he remembered how he had been a little embarrassed when, having been asked by Mike Brearley if he’d enjoyed the book, the young Scrooge had said that his favourite chapter was the only one in the book not actually to have been written by the then England captain.

‘Those were the days’, said Scrooge. ‘Back then you felt so much more connected to the England team than you do now. It was such a privilege to be able to see the likes of David Gower, Bob Willis and Derrick Randall play for their counties. It’s such a shame the youngsters don’t get those same opportunities today’.

Yet again Scrooge felt his hand being taken by the Spirit and soon the scene of his idyllic childhood was fading from sight. Moments later Scrooge became aware that he had been transported back to his home and was once again confined within the four walls of his dreary bedroom.

The time had come for Ghost of Cricket Past to leave. The spirit tried to explain to Scrooge that he’d soon be visited by a second spirit but Scrooge was too excited to pay him any attention. Instead he was busy looking for the autograph book he had had as a child and which he was sure was now gathering dust under his bed. Eventually he found it, hidden in a box along with old Playfair Annuals and an A4 file of cricketing photographs culled from the sports pages of newspapers back when they used to have full reports of every county game. Many of the faded photographs had equally faded autographs scrawled upon them. Re-emerging from beneath his bed, Scrooge stood back up and brushed the dust off his pyjama bottoms. He turned round hoping to show off his signature of Graham Gooch and only then realised that the Ghost of Cricket Past had left. Scrooge was alone again, save that is for his memories. But oh what marvellous memories they were.

Scrooge slipped happily back into bed and fell swiftly asleep hoping to dream of summers long past. But he was to be disappointed, for soon he would have to experience a less pleasant but much more present reality.

To be continued…


To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part One’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Christmas Carol: Part Two’, click here

Or the whole story can be read here

To read, ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different and yet in some ways similar, click here

Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

ADVENT 2022: PART 3: LOVE

‘All you need is love,
All you need is love,
All you need is love,
Love
Love is all you need’

So the Beatles sang, and so the theory goes. But what exactly do we mean when we say ‘All you need is love’? Do we mean that we simply need to show love, or is it just that we need to be the recipients of love? The answer of course is both, we need to love and be loved which begs the question as to how successful we actually are in these twin endeavours.

On one famous occasion Jesus summarised God’s law with these words: ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbour as yourself.’ [Matthew 22:37-39]. We could, perhaps, paraphrase Jesus’ words like this: All you need to do is love. Whilst some may question our need to love God, most perhaps would agree that we should, ideally ‘Do unto others as [we] would have them do unto [us]’. The problem however is that , however much we might like to agree with such a notion, nobody is wholly successful in living in such a way. If then we want to get into God’s good books we had better not rely on how well we love others, for not even the kindest person that ever there was measures up to the standard of love that God demands of us. As such we have all failed to keep God’s law.

So what is the answer if the love we show to others is not enough? What if we need more than the love we have to give? The answer I would suggest is this: that all we need is love to be shown to us by one who is truly loving.

The focus of the third Sunday in Advent is love. but what is love and where is it found?

When we talk of love, more often than not we tend to focus our thinking on the one who is being loved rather than on the one who is doing the loving. That is, when we say that somebody is well loved, we tend to be making a comment about how wonderful that person is perceived to be rather than how wonderful it is that such an individual is shown love in the way that they are by another.

This is largely because we live in a world where love and acceptance have to be earned and, as a result, too many of us feel burdened with a need to promote ourselves in an attempt to be constantly admired by others. The truth though is that, in a world where there are far too many who do not know what it is to be loved at all, none of us need universal adoration. Neither are we happier or healthier when we are constantly striving to convince others that we are somehow worthy of their love.

We need to learn that, rather than being admired by strangers on account of our striving to be somebody we’re not, it is better to be loved by somebody who knows what we’re really like and continues to love us just the same. Because love that is conditional on performance is not real love at all and having to constantly portray ourselves as better than we really are gets in the way of receiving the unconditional love that we all so long for and thus deprives us of the joy of knowing true love and acceptance.

For us to be truly loved, therefore, we need someone who is truly loving, one who, by loving us enables us to become more lovely. We do not improve by being constantly criticised for what we fail to achieve and having acceptance denied us until we perform better. On the contrary, it is only by being accepted that we are motivated to grow into the human beings that we would like to be.

So we and those with whom we live alongside, need to be kinder to one another. We need to stop insisting that we must all be more than we actually are. But as I have already suggested none of us are up to the task of giving such unconditional love.

If then we can not find such a love in ourselves, where might we find it? 1 Corinthians 13, a passage frequently read at weddings, gives us some pointers:

‘Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. [1 Corinthians 13:4-7]

True love, then, is patient towards those whose behaviour requires patience to be shown and is kind towards those who do not deserve kindness. True love bears what is uncomfortable to carry, hopes for what is not currently present and endures what has to be endured.

Only Jesus loves like this. And his perfect love was such that it endured even a cross. [Hebrews 12:2]

As somebody who is far from perfect, Jesus’ love is the kind of love I need. I believe that God loves me, not because I am lovely but because he is loving. I believe the glorious truth that, in Christ, I am accepted by God and, as a result of the indwelling Holy Spirit, I consider that there is hope that I might yet become the person that I am called by him to be, someone who is a lot more like Jesus than I currently am. Only then will I be fully able to love as God demands.

Because, whilst it is true that we all, created as we are in the image of God, have some capacity to love as God does, we are nonetheless, because of our fallen nature, unable to love as fully as we ought. My selfishness and pride invariably creep in and spoil anything of merit that I may achieve. I am grateful therefore to be married to a wife who graciously puts up with me the way she does.

Now don’t get me wrong, I believe that, just as a good Father is pleased with his child’s efforts to please him, so God delights in my efforts to try to please him. Furthermore, as the good Father I consider him to be, I believe he withholds none of his love when my efforts fall short of the mark. Even so, this does not change the fact that I ought to be more loving than I actually am. But if I am to have a perfect love for anyone else, a love that is not in the least dependent on the merits of the one I show love towards, a love that bears, hopes and endures as God has had to bear, hope and endure with me, it will require a love that originates from somewhere other than within myself. It will need a love that originates from the source of all love, namely from God himself, the one who IS love. [1 John 4:16].

The scriptures remind us, ‘In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.’ [1 John 4:10-11]. That is, Christ died for me, not because of my merits but because of my need, not because of his obligation but because of his kindness. Only by understanding this and realising my dependence on the one who showed me the love, the one who, though perfect, died in my place for my imperfections, can I hope to show genuine love towards others.

Even so, I ought to love, because, as the scriptures go on to say, ‘beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another’. [1 John 4:10-11]. Not in order that I might be loved, but rather on account of my being loved already. This is, of course, something that I sadly still fail to do the way I should but, even so, the promise remains ‘that he who began a good work in [me] will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ’ [Philippians 1:6]

How then can we love others more? By first resting in the love that God has shown to us. ‘When I am weak, then I am strong’, [2 Corinthians 12:10]. Just as those who realise how much God has forgiven them know what it is to love him more, [Luke 7:47], so too those who recognise the depths to which God has loved them can begin to truly love others, not on account of their merits, but on account of their need.

Earlier I said that not even the kindest person that ever there was measures up to the standard of love that God asks of them. Of course there was one – and his name was Jesus. So I am grateful that ‘love came down at Christmas’, that Christ Jesus, came into the world to save, not those who deserved to be saved, but sinners – like me. I am grateful that I am well loved by Jesus. I am grateful that God’s love is patient and kind, that his love does not envy or boast. I am thankful that his love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, and endures all things.

And above all I am grateful that God’s love will continue, throughout Advent, on through Christmas and the New Year. I am grateful that, come what may, God’s love never ends. [1 Corinthians 13:8].

All I need is his love – and his love is all I need.


Other related blogs:

To read Advent 2022: Part One: Hope’, click here

To read ‘Advent 2022: Part Two: Peace’, click here

To read ‘Rest Assured’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when I’m gone’, click here

To read ‘Everything is Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY – Part One: in which Scrooge plans the demise of county cricket.

A CRICKET CHRISTMAS CAROL: A GHOST STORY
Part One: in which Scrooge plans the demise of county cricket

Old Marley was dead. As dead as Old Father Time’s great grandfather and, if Ebenezer Scrooge had anything to do with it, as dead as county cricket would be in just a few short years.

It was late afternoon on Christmas Eve and Scrooge was sat at his desk in a large office, one of many in the building that housed the ECB. Ordinarily he was not one to find any pleasure from the festive season but a smile was now beginning to spread across his face as he typed the concluding sentence to his manifesto for the future of domestic game. His work finished for the afternoon, he printed the completed document and placed it in his brief case.

Scrooge was the one who had been responsible for introducing ‘The Hundred’, the pernicious competition that had had sickened so many genuine cricket supporters. It had been injurious to the health of many county cricket clubs too and Scrooge hoped that his latest suggestions would be the final nail in their coffin. For a brief moment he thought about his predecessor who had died several years previously. Jacob Marley had been someone who had always delighted in the longer formats of the game and Scrooge knew that, if it was possible for one already dead to be described as such, Marley would be mortified by what he was now proposing.

At that moment there was a knock on the door and Scrooge looked up to see Mr Robert Cratchit, his personal assistant, standing in the open doorway. He was wearing a novelty Christmas jumper which only served to darken Scrooge’s already black mood.

‘What is it Cratchit?’, Scrooge snapped. ‘Can’t you see I’m busy?’

‘It was just that I noticed that you didn’t join us for a drink to celebrate the festive season so I brought you a little of what was left over’, Cratchit replied, offering Scrooge as he did so what he had been holding in his hands, namely a box of mince pies and a tube of Prosecco and pink peppercorn Pringles – the latter, notwithstanding the impressive alliteration, surely an ill advised flavour choice regardless of the time of year. ‘Merry Christmas, Mr Scrooge!’

‘Bah, humbug!’ muttered Scrooge to himself as he got to his feet. ‘Every idiot’, he continued, ‘who goes about with ‘Merry Christmas’ on his lips should be forced to explain the Duckworth Lewis Method to a group of disgruntled Yorkshire fans who can’t understand how they have just lost to Lancashire despite having scored more runs than them in less overs!’.

And with that Scrooge grabbed his coat and brief case and, without so much as a by your leave, strode past Cratchit and out of the office.

***

Scrooge made his way to the car park and from there drove the few miles to his home, an old house that he’d bought some years before. Enveloped by fog, Scrooge approached the front door. And then, as he fumbled in his pocket for his key, Scrooge watched as the door knocker, usually a golden yellow colour not dissimilar to that of a Wisden Cricketer’s Almanack, transformed into a garish mix of pink and green, a colour combination so unpleasant that Scrooge was compelled to look away. After a few moments, the nausea he had felt having abated, Scrooge managed to summon the courage to gaze once more upon the marred entrance to his home and was relieved to find that the door knocker had reverted to its normal hue. Scrooge thought he must have imagined the whole affair, reasoning that nobody in their right mind would come up with such an atrocious colour mix.

Scrooge entered the house and made his way to the kitchen. Never one to spend longer on something than was strictly necessary, Scrooge took a minute or two to heat up the ready meal he had bought for his evening repast. Once cooked he took it with him to the lounge and got ready to eat it in front of the television. He briefly considered watching a film but, recognising the shortness of his attention span, chose instead to flip through the TV channels, until he eventually came across a festive edition of ‘Pointless’ and thus found himself trying to think of the name of any England batsmen who had scored an Ashes century in a Boxing Day test.

And it was then that Scrooge heard something the like of which he’d never heard before, a strange ethereal voice that seemed to Scrooge to be emanating from a world that was not the one to which he was accustomed.

‘Well, for a start’, the voice was saying, ‘there’s Chris Broad’s 112 at the MCG in 1986’.

Scrooge turned his head and froze in fear as he noticed the ghostly yet unmistakable figure of Jacob Marley.

‘Though why anyone should think such essential information ‘pointless’ is simply beyond me!’ the spirit continued, moving slowly out of the shadowy corner of Scrooge’s lounge dragging behind him as he did so, what appeared to be cumbersome segments of boundary rope.

As Marley drew closer to Scrooge he noticed a look of utter bewilderment on Scrooge’s face and explained how, whilst it was more traditional for those in the afterlife to be burdened with heavy metal chains, an exception had been made in Marley’s case in view of his lifetime commitment to the game of cricket. Marley paused a moment and took on an air of contemplation. ‘Death would be so much easier’, he remarked wistfully, ‘if only they could be replaced with those triangular foam wedges they use today.’

Scrooge, nothing if not a man of reason, rose up from his chair and spoke to the spectre in an accusatory tone.

‘I don’t believe in you!’, he said, refusing to accept what his senses were making all too plain.

‘Well as you should well know, Mr Scrooge, truth isn’t determined by what you believe, as is all too apparent given your seeming lack of belief in that most fundamental of realities – specifically the importance of cherishing those long observed cricket traditions that you hold in contempt. But the importance of such things is real, as I am too. And to convince you of this you will be haunted by three spirits that will teach you all you need to know to save the game of cricket. Expect the first when the clock strikes one.’

And with that the ghost of Jacob Markey departed, groaning incoherent sounds of lamentation and dragging with the boundary ropes with him. For a few minutes Scrooge stood motionless not knowing what to make of what he’d just experienced but eventually concluded that the only possible explanation was that he’d been suffering from a severe case of indigestion on account of the ready meal he’d eaten being past its sell by date.

And so, convinced that the night would pass uneventfully, Scrooge changed into his pyjamas, slipped under his duvet and drifted off to sleep.

To be continued…

To read Part Two, click here

Or the whole story can be read here


Other Cricket related posts:

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’, click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off’, click here

To read ‘On passing a village cricket club at dusk one late November afternoon’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch stole from county cricket…or at least tried to’. click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

To read ‘The Dr Scrooge Chronicles’, something completely different, yet in some ways similar, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

ADVENT 2022: PART 2: PEACE

It was back in the 1970’s that John Lennon first urged us all to imagine that there was no heaven. It would be easy, he said, if only we’d try. In the week that it has been reported that, in England and Wales, those who identify as Christian are now in the minority, it would seem that many have followed the former Beatle’s advice.

But for me, despite it’s pleasant melody, ‘Imagine’ is a deeply depressing song for, with no heaven to look forward to, all that we are left with is what we have at present. Now don’t get me wrong, we all need to try to be kinder to one another. This week I watched Mark Gatiss’ superb stage adaptation of Charles Dickens’ ‘A Christmas Carol’ and was reminded again of how the weakest in society need the kindness of the strongest if they’re to survive in what is often a hostile world. But I suspect that all of us are weaker than we would sometimes care to admit, and none of us are always as kind as we need to be to make the world a genuinely safe place to live. And so, left to our own devices, any philosophy that encourages us to believe that we can bring about a perfect society by our own efforts, ultimately becomes, not only another in a very long list of ‘just try harder’ religions, but also an experiment in altruism that is simply bound to fail. I don’t know about you but, when I look at the current state of the world in which we live, I can’t help thinking that it’s time to give up trying to go it alone – I for one need the hope of outside help and the prospect of a place to live better than I’ve ever known before.

Of course my hoping for heaven doesn’t mean that heaven exists. Nothing becomes true simply because it is imagined to be so, no matter how strongly some claim the contrary. Likewise, whether something is true or not is not determined by how many people believe it. Rather than being determined by what is currently most popular, truth is determined by the facts.

And so it is with Christianity. The truth of Christianity depends, not on any warm feelings that I may get from considering a God of love but rather on the veracity of Christianity’s historical truth claims. To be specific, Christianity stands or falls on whether or not Jesus Christ died on a cross, was buried, and, three days later, rose again from the dead. If these things did not take place then I am deluding myself and, irrespective of how comforting I may find my Christian beliefs, I am wasting my time attending church each Sunday morning. On the other hand however, if the resurrection is true, then it really does change everything and gives us all good reason to confidently hope for that brighter future we all so long for.

Christianity is unique amongst the worlds religions in that it makes such historical truth claims, claims which not only can be tested but which stand up to intense scrutiny*. For me, therefore, the death and subsequent resurrection of Jesus is not so much a matter of faith but more a matter of historical record, attested to by reliable eye witnesses who were present at the time. Faith then comes in when we believe as true what God says about the meaning of those events and, as a result, entrust our lives to Him.

So what is the meaning of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ? Last Sunday was the first Sunday in Advent when Christians traditionally remember the hope that they have in Christ. Today, the second Sunday in Advent, is a day when Peace is the traditional focus. And Peace is one of the many benefits that the death and resurrection of Jesus brings about.

As we are all too well aware, war is very much part of life, with numerous conflicts currently taking place right across the world. Jesus himself said that in these days there would be ‘wars and rumours of wars’ [Matthew 24:6]. But the Bible also speaks of a time when all conflicts will end, when nations will ‘beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into pruning hooks’. Furthermore we are assured that a day is coming when ‘nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore’, [Isaiah 2:4]. One day there really will be peace on earth.

But this isn’t the only peace that the Bible speaks of. More significantly we are all offered individual peace terms with God, terms by which all hostilities between ourselves and God come to an end. And amazingly, despite it being our rebellion which has soured the relationship between ourselves and our creator, rather than something being asked of us to put things right, it is God himself who fulfils all the requirements of the peace treaty.

For on the cross, our sins were paid for when Jesus took there the punishment we deserved. As the prophet Isaiah makes plain

…he was pierced for our transgressions;
he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
and with his wounds we are healed.
’ [Isaiah 53:5]

Because of the cross, all the causes of enmity between God and man have been dealt with.
Because of the cross the war that raged between us is over.
Because of the cross we really can know peace with God.

What Jesus suffered for us was truly awful. Even before being nailed to piece of wood and left to die he suffered horrendously at the hands of those whose true nature was being given free reign. As Matthew records

‘…the governors soldiers took Jesus…They stripped him and put a scarlet robe on him, and then twisted together a crown of thorns and set it on his head. They put a staff in his right hand. Then they knelt in front of him and mocked him. “Hail, King of the Jews!” they said. They spat on him and took the staff and struck him on the head again and again. After they had mocked him, they took off the robe and put his own clothes on him. Then they led him away to crucify him’ [Matthew 27:27-31]

Paradoxical though it undoubtedly is, that such violence should be the path to peace is nothing short of astonishing. Even so, that is what it took. Furthermore it was even for those who inflicted such suffering on Jesus that that peace was secured. For even as he hung on the cross and yielded up his life, Jesus prayed for those who were treating him with such disdain. ‘Father, forgive them’, he said, ‘for they do not know what they are doing’. [Luke 23:32-34].

And we too can be included in his prayer. Hear God’s words spoken to you through the Old Testament prophet Isaiah:

Comfort, comfort my people, says your God.
Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
and cry to her
that her warfare is ended,
that her iniquity is pardoned.
[Isaiah 40:1-2a]

These are indeed comforting words, spoken by ‘the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort’ 2 Corinthians 1:3]. And they are words that were later reinforced by the apostle Paul when he wrote that

there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus’. [Romans 8:1].

No matter the depth of their wrongdoing, those who accept God’s terms of peace, those who surrender to the one who overwhelms them with love, those who are gladly conquered by one so much greater than they are themselves, they are the ones who, because of the cross, are completely forgiven, they are the ones who really can know ‘the peace of God that passes all understanding’. [Philippians 4:7]. And what a peace it is – one that will never ends and one that sustains in even the most unsettling of times.

And so, as Christmas draws nearer on this, the second Sunday in Advent, all I am saying is, like John Lennon before me, ‘Give peace a chance’.

*The evidence for the resurrection is well documented and a couple of links follow for those interested can be found below:

http://www.desiringgod.org/articles/historical-evidence-for-the-resurrection

https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/article_resurrection_anderson.html


Other related blogs:

To read ‘Advent 2022: Part One: Hope’, click here

To read ‘Rest Assured’, click here

To read ‘In Loving Memory of Truth’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when I’m gone’, click here

To read ‘Everything is Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

To read ‘Three Lockdown Songs’, click here

ON PASSING A VILLAGE CRICKET CLUB AT DUSK ONE LATE NOVEMBER AFTERNOON

Now the cricket season’s over,
And the football’s on our tellies,
And with outfield’s under water
Any fielders, they’d need wellies
So there’ll be no pitch inspections
No the umpires won’t be seen
Cos light meters they’re not needed
When it’s dark by four fifteen

The weather’s too inclement now
For games played dressed in white
And players playing in the snow
They’d simply fade from sight
And cricket grounds that do not have,
For covers, enough riches
Will face, come spring, what Boycott loves,
Those tough uncovered pitches

When Christmas comes the days are short
And temperatures grow colder
But I’ve decided that this year
With Santa I’ll be bolder
So when on Christmas Eve he asks
What gift I’d most adore
I’ll answer him politely ‘Please…
…just scrap the sixteen-four!’

[The photo above is of Plush Cricket Club in Dorset]


Other cricket related posts, starting with ill advised attempts at poetry!

To read ‘How the Grinch Stole from County Cricket – or at least tried to’, click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Brian’, click here

To read ‘I’ve got a little CRICKET list’, click here

To read ‘At Season’s End’ click here

To read ‘A Day at the Cricket’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deseted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Brian and Stumpy visit The Repair Shop’, click here

To read ‘A Tale of Two Tons’, click here

To read ‘A Somerset Cricket Players Emporium’, click here

To read ‘The Great Cricket Sell Off?‘, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Taunt’, click here

To read ‘Frodo and the Format of Power’, click here

To read ‘A Cricket Tea Kind of a Day’, click here

To read ‘Life in the slow lane’, click here

To read ‘If Only’, click here

To read ‘Eve of the RLODC limericks’ click here

To read ‘It’s coming home…’, click here

To read ‘A Song for Ben Green’, click here

To read ‘Enough Said…’, the last section of which is cricket related, click here

A Jack Leach Trilogy:

To read ‘For when we can’t see why’, click here

To read ‘WWJD – What would Jack Do?’, click here

To read ‘On Playing a Blinder’, click here

To read ‘Coping with Disappointment’, click here

And to finish – a couple with a theological flavour

To read ‘Somerset CCC – Good for the soul’, click here

To read ‘Longing for the pavilion whilst enjoying a good innings’, click here

a positive post…because not absolutely everything about General Practice is bad

Conscious of having written too many negative blogs of late, here is a desperate attempt to be more positive! Just after midnight on New Year’s Day 2019, I posted a blog in which I stated that the job was becoming harder by the year, that bad times were unquestionably ahead and that during the next 12 months life would sometimes be difficult. I also predicted there would be times when, in the face of overwhelming demand, some of us would hold our head in our hands and wonder if we could keep on going. But the point of that blog was to suggest that, amidst all the very real problems, there would be good times too, some of which I listed. I thought it would be good, if even for just one day, to look forward to all those good things that the year would bring.

Nearly four years on, my prediction of how things would get worse was right but I hadn’t expected them to have worsened to the degree they have. But in an attempt to remind myself that there are still positive moments in general practice, here is my list of things that I was looking forward to on January 1st 2019, with a tick next to those that I have experienced this past year. I hope you can tick a good number too!

Here’s to the young couple who, consulted together, excited about their expecting a baby for the first time. ✅

Here’s to the anxious parent we were able to reassure that their child hasn’t got meningitis and is going to be just fine. ✅

Here’s to the depressed patient, who after months of support, we saw begin to smile again. ✅

Here’s to the early diagnosis we made in a patient who went on to make a full recovery. ✅

Here’s to that restorative cup of tea the receptionist brought when we were running an hour behind.✅

Here’s to the laughs we shared with colleagues – and to those we shared with patients.✅

Here’s to the advice and support we received from our secondary care colleagues.✅

Here’s to the blood sample which, allegedly, no one was able to get as well as we could. ✅

Here’s to the ‘thank you’ we received from a genuinely appreciative patient.✅

Here’s to the empty waiting room we were pleased to see at the end of the day.✅

Here’s to the practice nurse who managed our patients with chronic disease better than we ever could and who reapplied a dressing we’d just undone, and here’s to the HCA who squeezed in an ECG because they were only too happy to help.✅

Here’s to the patient we reassured wasn’t ias mad as they thought they were. ✅

Here’s to the prescription we wrote that the pharmacy had in stock and which actually did make our patient better.✅

Here’s to the patient we encouraged back to work.✅

Here’s to the couple who, for want of knowing where else to go, did us the honour of coming to see us because they thought we might just be able to help them sort out their differences.[Not this year for me]

Here’s to the practice manager who solved problems before we even knew they existed.
Here’s to the patient who will not have a stroke because of our urging them to stop smoking twenty years ago. [Not possible to say for sure – but perhaps ✅ ✅ ✅

Here’s to the patient who we were able to tell that the scan that they were so concerned about was normal. ✅

Here’s to the lonely who found in us a friend.✅

Here’s to the colleague who helped us out when we were struggling.✅✅✅

Here’s to the terminal patient we enabled to stay at home to die.✅

Here’s to the secretary who transformed our mumbled dictation into a letter that made sense and who understood referral pathways however many times they changed. ✅

Here’s to the prompt emergency treatment we gave ensuring a patient arrived safely at hospital. [Can’t recall a particular instance of this for me this year]

Here’s to the one with whom we simply sat and listened – the one whom we were privileged to be allowed, just a little, into their sadness.✅

Here’s to those who passed their CSA and welcomed welcomed into the practice with open arms.

Here’s to those who, at the end of a hugely worthwhile career characterised by care and compassion, reached retirement and were sorely missed.✅ ✅

Here’s to those times when we somehow found ourselves bringing comfort, offering hope, and sharing joy.✅

Here’s to the times we will knew that, against all the odds, we really made a positive difference.✅

Here’s to when we were glad we did a little more than was required of us just because we could.✅

Here’s to the job that is unlike any other and still has the capacity to be among the best in the world. [Sadly I fear this may no longer be the case]

I’m well aware there is a much longer list that could also be written of what is bad in general practice, but, as we approach what is likely to be a very hard winter, perhaps it’s still worth reflecting that there are still positives

I at least need to be reminded of this. Because not absolutely everything about General Practice is bad.


To read my original post, ‘Here’s to 2019’, click here

Related blogs regarding the difficulties with the NHS:

To read ‘On being overwhelmed’, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when we’re gone’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – still a sweet sorrow’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – is time running out?’, click here

Other tales of former Secretaries of State for Health’

To read ‘GPs are responsible – it’s time they went’, lick here

To read ‘At last…an explanation’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

And some more unlikely stories of GP life:

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

ADVENT 2022: PART 1: HOPE

Life is full of ups and downs, happinesses and sadnesses, good times and bad. In each passing year there is ‘a time to weep and time to laugh’ [Ecclesiastes 3:4] and this year has been no exception, a truth epitomised by the way it has included both the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, complete with that joyous film of her taking tea with Paddington Bear, and then, just a few weeks later, a period of national morning culminating in the solemn state funeral that followed her death.

The Queen and Paddington taking tea together
The Queen’s coffin lying in state at Westminster Hall

We can not deny the existence of sadness but even in the sadness we cannot deny the existence of things that make us happy. Perhaps it’s true to say that we need the pain of sorrow to enable us to know what happiness really is, just as sorrow itself, if it is to be fully felt, requires the memory of the temporary nature of happiness. If, then, we are to be happy, it must be alongside our sadness and we dare not wait for the absence of sorrow before allowing ourselves to be happy. It is not that we can not be happy because we know sadness, nor that we can not be sad because there are things to be happy about. Paradoxically, we can be happy and sad at the same time. We can smile – even as we cry.

Today marks the start of the church calendar and as has been the case in recent years, the beginning of Advent offers the opportunity to look back on 12 months that, whilst no doubt containing moments of happiness, have nonetheless been far from easy, characterised as they have been for many by sadness, suffering and death. This year, amongst many other tragic events, there have been earthquakes in Indonesia, China and Afghanistan, floods in Pakistan and Bangladesh and bush fires in Australia. Add to this the war in Ukraine, the current breakdown of public services and the worldwide economic downturn and the subsequent spiralling cost of living, and one can understand why, for some this year, Christmas feels more like an ordeal that has to be endured than an enjoyable celebration that is to be looked forward to with excited anticipation.

The aftermath of the Indonesian Earthquake
Scenes of flooding in Pakistan

Even so, despite the genuine concerns of many, Christmas will soon be here and its true meaning remains unchanged. And so, despite the very early sadness, Christmas can still be celebrated this year no matter the circumstances that we will find ourselves in come December 25th.

Because at Christmas we recall the ‘good news of great joy’ that the angels brought to the shepherds concerning the birth of Jesus.

Traditionally the focus for the first Sunday in Advent is Hope. Many today will be hoping for a better future, for a time when their current sorrow will be over. The Christmas message brings with it that hope, hope of a joy that will last, not just for tomorrow but for all eternity. For, as we all so long for someone who can rescue us from the current chaos, the good news heralded by those angels that first Christmas is that Jesus is that someone, the saviour we all need, the one who ‘came into the world to save sinners’.

Because Jesus didn’t remain a baby lying in a manger. What began in the little town of Bethlehem led to a green hill far away where Jesus, having grown up and lived a perfect life, was crucified. And when he died on the cross he did so in our place, paying the penalty for all that we have done, and will ever do, wrong. And with our sins paid for, we can joyfully stand in the presence of the God who loves us so much that he allowed his own dear son to suffer and die on our behalf.

The Cross – from where all hope derives

And because of his subsequent resurrection, we can be certain that Jesus’ atoning sacrifice really does secure for us peace with God. And, as a result, despite the difficulties that 2023 will still no doubt throw up, we nonetheless can look confidently forward to that promised time when God will wipe away every tear from our eyes and death shall be no more.

Today is Advent Sunday, the beginning of advent and on Thursday many will start the countdown to Christmas by opening the first door of their advent calendars. But Advent is a time when we look forward to more than just Christmas. It’s a time when we look forward to celebrating not only Jesus’ birth but also his coming again, when those better days that we all so long for will finally fully arrive.

So in this season of Advent, let’s not give up hope. Let’s celebrate despite the sadness, because, for those who hope in Christ, better days really are on their way!


Other related posts:

To read ‘I’ll miss this when I’m gone’, click here

To read ‘Everything is Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss her now she’s gone’, click here

To read ‘The Queen who has a King’, click here

And finally, to read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

Hoping to maintain resilience

If there is one thing that is common to all patients that consult me, it is that they want things to be better for them than they currently are. They would like me to do or say something that would ease their pain, relieve their anxiety, alleviate their distress. They want me to change their future because their present is not to their liking. If on leaving my room they already feel better, it is simply because they have been given some hope that things will improve.

Hope. Patients need it – doctors and nurses need it – I need it. Hope keeps us going in the face of problems which seem insurmountable. Like Seligman’s dogs, who in his experiments on ‘learned helplessness’ were put in adverse situations they couldn’t change, without hope we become resigned to never ending difficulty and tend towards depression and passivity.

Jurgen Moltmann writes, “Present and future, experience and hope, stand in contradiction to each other”. He suggests that “hope is directed to what is not yet visible… and brands the visible realm of present experience…as a transient reality that is to be left behind”.

Some are uncomfortable with our constantly living in the hope of a better tomorrow. They suggest we spend either too much time living in the past, remembering what was, but is no longer; or too much time living in the future, hoping for that which is not yet. Bemoaning such behaviour, Blaise Pascal wrote “We do not rest satisfied with the present. We anticipate the future as too slow coming, as if in order to hasten its course; or recall the past, to stop its too rapid flight…We scarcely ever think of the present; and if we think of it, it is only to take light from it to arrange the future…So we never live, but we hope to live; and as we are always preparing to be happy, it is inevitable we should never be so.”

Pascal would, I think, have approved of mindfulness, the psychological process of bringing ones attention to experiences occurring in the present moment. Now, whilst mindfulness may have its place when we are overwhelmed by unnecessary anxiety concerning the future, grounding us, as it does, in the here and now and helping us appreciate what we have and can currently enjoy, if we imagine we can sort our very real problems by considering the intricacies of a tree, then surely we are mistaken. T.S.Eliot penned, “The knowledge derived from experience…imposes a pattern, and falsifies”. What we know from what we encounter is not enough to understand fully. We need to draw from outside of ourselves if we are not to be misled. The present requires the context given it by the past and is tempered by what is expected in the future. A powerful illustration of this is provided by John Piper. He asks us to imagine that, whilst walking through a hospital, we hear the screams of somebody in pain. He suggests that how we feel about what we hear will differ greatly depending on whether we are on an oncology ward or a labour ward. The future matters – it changes our present.

As a doctor, I am in the business of changing the future for our patients – offering a promise of a better tomorrow for those with whom I consult. I seek to envisage what currently can’t be seen and then endeavour to bring it into reality for them. Moltmann again: “Hope’s statements of promise…stand in contradiction to the reality which can at present be experienced. They do not result from experiences, but are the condition for the possibility of new experiences. They do not seek to illuminate the reality which exists, but the reality that is coming.” So, for example, when I issue a prescription for an antibiotic, it is the proffering of a hope, that the cystitis will come to an end. It’s a promise that what is not true now, will shortly be so.

But changing the future is an act worthy of the divine. Nonetheless, having too often in the past arrogantly acted as if we were God, increasingly, it seems, it’s now being demanded of those working in healthcare. And our attempts to satisfy that overwhelming demand is dragging us under because, of course, not all hopes can be so simply realised by the prescribing of a course of antibiotics. Furthermore, we can strive all we like to live in the moment but, as temporal creatures, we cannot escape the future. Not least, we cannot deny that we are cognisant of our own mortality. Death is a problem we all have to face and one which medicine, despite its best efforts, still can’t solve. To quote Moltmann once more, “The pain of despair surely lies in the fact that a hope is there – but no way opens up towards its fulfilment”. What then can we do when faced with the problem of death. Must we, if we are to carry on at all, agree with L.M. Montgomery that ‘life is a perfect graveyard of buried hopes’? Should we, with Dylan Thomas, “rage, rage against the dying of the light” or comfort ourselves with mere mindfulness as we “go gentle into that good night”.

Death is the one thing we can be certain of and yet, desperate that that were not so, too often we mindfully focus our attention on the detail of the here and now of our patients’ clinical parameters in an attempt to pursue and push eternal life. Not only is this unhelpful for patients weighed down by a medical profession too scared to address its own limitations, it’s also bad for doctors who are burdened with the Sisyphean task of delivering the undeliverable.

Regardless of what we may or may not believe about what happens after death, what is certain is that everlasting life is not a gift that is medicine’s to give. I and my patients, need to stop pretending otherwise.. If my colleagues and I are not to make an almighty mistake, we need to stop playing God and instead acknowledge our remarkable ordinariness, the ocean of our ignorance and, what Atul Gawande calls, our ‘necessary fallibility’. We are not the answer our patients are ultimately looking for.

But death is not the only future problem my patients face that medicine cannot solve. Many of my patients have lost hope of things ever being better – the future is something only to be feared. We live in an increasingly anxiety ridden society. Henry Thoreau wrote “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation, and go to the grave with the song still in them.” But Thoreau was wrong – the desperation is deafening.

Many of us will also know what it is to have a difficulty which appears beyond us, which wears us down and threatens both our present happiness and the happiness we desire for tomorrow. If then we are to solve the problem of the future, we must either limit its’ importance and be content to be satisfied by the joy of the present, or struggle to find the antidote to despair that is the hope of something better. There is much that medicine can do but we must not imagine that it is the only thing in which we should place our hope. Often that hope would be better placed elsewhere – after all, a misplaced hope is a false hope, and a false hope is no hope at all. We all need to be directed towards a real hope that can lift us above the suffering of the here and now, something we can look forward to and which, despite everything, will keep us going; something which, even if it can’t get us to the top of the mountain we face, manages to draw us up a little higher and puts us in a place where we are able to at least imagine what the view from the top might look like.

When life is hard, whether at work or elsewhere, we all want things to be better – it’s then, more than ever, that we need a hope for the future to keep us keeping on, The exact nature of that hope will be different for each one of us. For some, the hope will sometimes be but modest – indeed when life is at its hardest, modest may be all we can muster. For others, or at other times, the hope may be more extravagant – transcendent even. But big or small, dependent on us or others, we need a hope that sustains us.

Despite our difficulties, we must make room for hope

We need to search it out knowing that, though we may not find it medicine or ourselves, there is always hope to be found.

And when it seems there isn’t, we need to hope against hope, that hope somehow finds us. Because, even then, though not, perhaps, in a form we once expected, a hope that does not give up still remains.


Related blogs:

To read ‘Hope comes from believing the promises of God’, click here.

To read ‘Hoping in the one we fear’, click here

THE THREE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS GRUFF – IT’S NO FAIRY TALE.

Once upon a time there were three General Practitioners Gruff. They all worked together in a pleasant little practice situated on the side of a valley. Every day they worked hard trying to meet the needs of an increasingly demanding practice population with their ever more complex medical problems and every evening, when all the patients had been seen, the last blood tests filed and the final medical reports completed, they would stand together outside their own medical centre and gaze across the valley to the hillside opposite and imagine how much greener the grass must be at the practice that was located there.

One day, after a particularly stressful on call day which had seen him deal with so many sick and anxious individuals that he felt he could no longer continue the way he was, the youngest of the the three partners decided to move to the neighbouring practice.

But no sooner had he started to make his way across the old wooden bridge that spanned the river that separated the two health centres, than an ugly old troll appeared in the water beneath him.

‘Who’s that trip trapping over my bridge’, said the troll as he hauled himself on to the bridge to block the young GPs path,

‘I’m a GP who has not long ago started as a partner and I’m off to join the practice on the other side of this bridge.’

‘What’ asked the troll menacingly, ‘and abandon all those patients at your current practice? Have you no compassion? Is it perhaps because you know how badly you’ve managed those you have seen, how far short you’ve fallen from treating them in strict accordance with the latest NICE guidelines. Turn back at once and carry out a detailed review of every consultation you’ve carried out these past six months.’

And with that the young GP returned from whence he’d come and the very next day, so overwhelmed by the anxiety he experienced at perhaps not having done as good a job as he felt he ought to have, he began a period of extended sick leave due to work related stress.

A week later, having been unable to find a locum to cover for her absent younger colleague, the second General Practitioner Gruff decided to try her luck at the practice on the other side of the valley.

But no sooner had she started to make her way across the old wooden bridge than the ugly old troll once again emerged from the river beneath.

‘Who’s that trip trapping over my bridge’, said the troll as he clambered again onto the bridge and proceeded once more to block the path of anyone wishing to cross it.

‘I am a GP who is mid-way through my career and I’m off to join the practice on the other side of this bridge’

‘What’, growled the troll once more, ‘and renege on your responsibility to undertake an extended hours session this evening? And don’t forget you’ve promised to review your prescribing habits in for the medicine management advisor, not to mention the fact that the CQC could schedule a visit at any time and you’re far from sure that your protocol for the safe overnight storage of prescription pads is up to date.’

And with that, the middle aged GP forlornly returned from whence she’d come. Feeling completely bogged down by all the red tape that was now associated with her work, she decided to go part time and so, at the earliest opportunity, she happily took a drop in pay and reduced the number of days she worked each week.

A month later, and with no cover for either his colleague who had reduced her hours or his junior partner who was still off sick, the third General Practitioner Gruff made his way to the old wooden bridge that crossed the river at the bottom of the valley.

But once again, no sooner had he started to make his way across, than the ugly old troll made yet another unwelcome appearance.

‘Who’s that trip trapping over my bridge’, said the troll as he dragged himself out of the water and took up a position that barred the way forward of the one approaching.

‘I’m a GP approaching the end of my career and I’m considering my options’, said the oldest General Practitioner Gruff.

‘Considering your options eh’, snarled the troll as he himself considered what options he might have to dissuade this latest visitor from continuing on their journey. But before any words came to the hideous creatures mind, the GP himself had some things to say.

‘I’ve been a GP now long enough to realise’, the last of the General Practitioners Gruff began, ‘that being made to feel guilty for things I can’t control is not fair. There is no shame in being asked to do more than one is capable of and only being able to do what one can. And, as well as much of what we are now asked to do having absolutely no value, too much of what we do that is important can’t be done properly on account of how little time we have to do it.’

‘So you’re off to join the practice on the other side of this river because you think things will be better there I suppose’, sneered the troll.

‘On the contrary’, replied the oldest General Practitioner Gruff. ‘Things will be no better there than they are at my current practice, they may even be worse. Rather, because the job has become so intolerable, and because older GPs are not being encouraged to remain in practice by a system that seems set on destroying what once was considered the jewel in the crown of the NHS, I, like many of my older colleagues, am heading off to find something genuinely worthwhile that I can spend my few remaining years trying to do well’.

And with that the oldest General Practitioner Gruff ran towards the troll and, swinging the latest missive form NHS England like a cricket bat, struck the troll smack between the eyes sending him soaring into the sky until he finally disappeared from view beyond the brow of the hill on the far side of the valley.

And then, with the trolls jibes never to be heard again, the oldest General Practitioner Gruff continued on his way, across the bridge, past the neighbouring practice (which had in fact been forced to close down for want of staff) and on into early retirement where he lived happily ever after, until of course he became ill himself and there was no NHS left to treat him and a complete lack of social care to look after him.

Because not every story can have a happy ending.


Sadly, this is no fairy tale. According to The Health Foundation REAL Centre, the NHS in England is facing a crippling shortage of GPs and general practice nurses over the coming decade with projections showing that the shortage of qualified, permanent GPs is set to get substantially worse over this decade.

There is currently a shortage of around 4,200 full-time equivalent [FTE] GPs, which is projected to rise to around 8,900 FTE GPs in 2030/31, relative to the number needed to meet the rising need for care. This means that without a change to current workforce trends and policies, close to 1 in 4 of the 37,800 general practitioner posts needed to deliver pre-pandemic standards of care would be vacant.

However, if an increasing number of GPs leave the profession due to burnout and if newer roles are not successfully integrated in multidisciplinary general practice teams, the projected shortfall could increase to 18,900 FTE GPs, or around half of posts being vacant, in 2030/31.


To read some more unlikely stories:

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

I’m a Government Minister…hold me accountable for my actions!’

Matt Hancock finally met his match in the latest episode of the popular reality TV programme, ‘I’m a Government Minister…hold me accountable for my actions!’

Having impressed many viewers with his ability to cope with spiders, snakes and scorpions, the one time Secretary of State for Creepy Crawlies, was last night once again selected to undertake one of the show’s famous challenges. But charged with running a government department proved just too terrifying for Matt. After just a couple of minutes, during which time those watching his performance looked on in abject horror, he could take it no longer and he chose to abandon the task. CCTV footage subsequently revealed him being consoled by a former aide.

The public are expected to vote him off the show at the next available opportunity.


Other tales of The Secretary of State for Health:

To read ‘I’m a GP…get me out of here!’, click here

To read ‘GPs are responsible – it’s time they went’, lick here

To read ‘At last…an explanation’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

And some more unlikely stories:

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

And finally, to read ‘General Practice – is time running out?’, a blog written following the resignation of Liz Truss as Prime Minister, click here

HAIKU

Said I to myself
After undue exertion
‘I haiku over’

Said the duty doc
After umpteen urgents seen
‘I haiku on call’


Other less than prosaic pieces:

To read ‘Poor imitations’, click here

To read ‘How the Grinch Stole from County Cricket’, click here

To read ‘How Covid-19 stole the the cricket season’, click here

To read ‘Spare me a doctor’, click here

To read ‘The Old Surfer’, click here

To read ‘If’, click here

To read ‘I knew a Man’, click here

To read ‘Room Enough’, click here

To read ‘Old Hands’, click here

To read ‘Beaten’, click here

To read ‘Resting in Pieces’, click here

To read ‘Crushed’, click here

To read ‘Masked’, click here

To read ‘Patient’, click here

To read ‘Yesterday and Today’, click here

To read ‘Smoke Signals’, click here

To read ‘Someone left a cake out in the rain’, click here

To read ‘At Land’s End’, click here

To read ‘She’s The Patient You Don’t Know You Have’, click here

To read ‘She’s the patient you still don’t know you have’, click here

To read ‘the wrong patient’, click here

To read ‘together in line’ click here

To read ‘Desolation Row’, click here

To read ‘A Lonely Heart’, click here

To read ‘A Silent Tear’, click here

To read ‘Moving Closer’, click here

And a couple of Christmassy rhymes:

To read ‘Twas the week before Christmas 2020’ click here

To read ‘How the Grinch, and Covid, stole General Practices’ Christmas’, click here

ON REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY, IS IT ENOUGH TO JUST REMEMBER?

‘Show me the place, help me roll away the stone
Show me the place, I can’t move this thing alone
Show me the place, where the Word became a man
Show me the place, where the suffering began’

from ‘Show me the Place’ by Leonard Cohen

Today is Remembrance Sunday a day which, like Remembrance Day itself, offers us the opportunity to together remember those who have died, not only in the Great War but also the many subsequent conflicts that have been, and indeed, continue to be waged until this very day.

It is of course good to remember. More than that it’s important that we recall all those who paid the ultimate price in securing the freedoms we enjoy. But, I wonder, is simply remembering enough? Is it sufficient to merely bring to mind the suffering experienced by others and to say to those that we know are facing unimaginable difficulty that we are thinking of them? Because more than wanting to remember those who have suffered, don’t we long for the suffering to finally come to an end?

I’d like to think there was more that could be said. And, for what it’s worth, I believe that there is, for the Bible, far from denying its existence, has a great deal to say about suffering and offers us hope even when we find ourselves in its midst.

Life really can be hard sometimes and, contrary to what some believe, this is the case for Christian believers every bit as much as those who have no faith. In his second letter to the Corinthians, the apostle Paul writes that he was so utterly burdened beyond his strength that he despaired of life itself [2 Corinthians 1:8] and similarly, so overwhelmed was Job by his own pain and loss, that he expressed the wish that he’d never been born when, in Job 3.1, he curses the day of his birth. Jesus himself wept [John 11:35] and is described as a ‘man of sorrows’ who was ‘acquainted with grief’ [Isaiah 53:3], and the Psalms too are full of examples of those who acknowledge that their souls are sometimes down cast within them. [Psalm 42:5].

So if you are facing trials the like of which you have never known and feel totally unable to carry on, know you are not alone in feeling the way that you do. And know too what the psalmist knew, that ‘the LORD is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.’ [Psalm 34:8]

At the risk of repeating myself can I say how I love the honesty of the psalms? I love the way they reflect the reality of how we sometimes feel. But even as they do so the scriptures assure us that the current unsatisfactory state of affairs is but temporary. The day is coming when our tears will be wiped away and death shall be no more. [Revelation 21:4]. Soon the former things will have passed away.

I do not know your current circumstances. Nor do I know how long you have experienced your present sadness. Perhaps far from seeming ‘light and momentary’, your suffering has felt to you both intense and prolonged. Maybe having already suffered for such a long time, you question how the psalmist can speak of all being well ‘in just a little while’. [Psalm 37:10]. I can only suggest that the answer comes when we step back and consider the future and recognise that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us. [Romans 8:18] Furthermore that glory that will one day be fully realised will be one that lasts for all eternity. [2 Corinthians 4:17]. And just as our future glory will be immeasurably greater than our current suffering, and our future joy will be immeasurably greater than our current sadness, so too will eternity be immeasurably longer than the time we now spend in this vale of tears.

So whilst weeping may tarry for the night time joy really will come in the morning [Psalm 30:5] even if for you the night has already been long and the day still seems a long way off. In just a little while, the sun will rise.

So do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light and momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal.’ [2 Corinthians 4:16-18]

Jesus himself says, ‘Surely I am coming soon.’ [Revelation 22:20] and when he returns we will see, and feel, what currently we can not. And whether his return is in our life time, not for another thousand years, or so far into the future that we can’t begin to imagine such a length of time, what we will see and feel on that great and glorious day will be infinitely worth our ‘momentary’ wait. For the ‘little while’ we have waited will not be worth comparing with the time we have to enjoy being home at last in the presence of our loving Heavenly Father.

Another Christian believer who experienced overwhelming sorrow, so great that he frequently knew the anguish of suicidal thoughts, was the renowned English poet and hymn writer William Cowper. Perhaps the words of one of his own most famous hymns will be as great a help to you as they have been to me in my own times of sorrow.

God moves in a mysterious way
His wonders to perform;
He plants His footsteps in the sea
And rides upon the storm.

Deep in unfathomable mines
Of never failing skill
He treasures up His bright designs
And works His sov’reign will.

Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take;
The clouds ye so much dread
Are big with mercy and shall break
In blessings on your head.

Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust Him for His grace;
Behind a frowning providence
He hides a smiling face.

His purposes will ripen fast,
Unfolding every hour;
The bud may have a bitter taste,
But sweet will be the flow’r.

Blind unbelief is sure to err
And scan His work in vain;
God is His own interpreter,
And He will make it plain.

So, as well as looking back and remembering what is past, it’s important too to look forward to the future, to a day that is surely coming, guaranteed as it is by another sacrifice that was also made to secure our freedom. That sacrifice is one that Christian’s remember, not annually, but weekly as they share the bread and wine. This they do in remembrance of the death by crucifixion of Jesus Christ, a death that paid the penalty for all our sins and ensures that, not only we, but the whole of creation will one day be redeemed.

For as Christians celebrate the Lord’s supper they proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes again. [1 Corinthians 11.26]. Jesus is coming back and when he does absolutely everything will be made right. Then there will be no more pain, no more death, and no more sorrow. Even wars will come to an end for on that day swords and spears will be beaten into plowshares and pruning hooks, nations shall not lift swords up against nations and nor shall they learn war anymore. [Isaiah 2:4]. Of this we can be certain, because this is what God has promised.

Today then we rightly look back and remember with genuine gratitude all those individual sacrifices that have been made on our behalf. But as we do so let’s also look forward with confidence to a wonderfully bright future as we hope in the God who makes all things new, the God whose promises are sure.

So then, irrespective of the trials we may currently be experiencing, may we all know the joy of the salvation that is surely ours in Christ Jesus. May the LORD bless us and keep us; may the LORD make his face to shine upon us and be gracious to us; and may the LORD lift up his countenance upon us and give us peace. [Numbers 6:24-26].


Related posts:

To read ‘Everything is Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read, ‘Real Love?’, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

AT HALLOWEEN, O DEATH WHERE IS YOUR VICTORY?

This week it’s Halloween, a contraction of All Hallows’ Eve which itself proceeds All Hallows’ or All Saints’ Day, an annual Christian celebration dating back to the first millennia when loved ones who have died in the faith are remembered and comfort is drawn by those who remain from recognising that, because of the sure and certain hope of the resurrection, death holds no fear for those who believe the Christian gospel and put their trust in Jesus Christ.

Over time this solemn remembrance of the dearly departed extended to include the night before and children would dress up as ghosts and such like in order to take part in a ‘Dance macabre’ to celebrate the victory Christ won over the forces of darkness. Far then from celebrating evil, the original point of Halloween was, for some at least, to poke a little fun at death in much the same way that the apostle Paul does in 1 Corinthians 15:55 when he taunts that last great enemy with the words ‘O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?’.

And this is why I am not as entirely negative about Halloween as some of my Christian friends. Admittedly, whether it is by wandering the streets dressed as zombies or by attending parties in the guise of vampires, most people who mark Halloween these days do so without giving any thought to Jesus’ wonderful victory over death. But just because it has been so commercialised that it is now the third highest grossing festival of the year, that doesn’t mean that Christians should have nothing to do with Halloween. Far from it! For if that were the case, then surely Christians should also refrain from celebrating those other great Christian festivals which have been similarly secularised and today are enjoyed by many who do not find time to reflect on the glorious fact that ‘the word became flesh’ at Christmas and, having been crucified on Good Friday, rose to life again on Easter Day.

But of course, just as Christmas can become all about acquiring everything on your Amazon wish list and Easter nothing more than an opportunity to eat too many chocolate eggs, not everything about Halloween is to be commended. Evil should not be celebrated and the intimidation of vulnerable people by those who go trick or treating in such a way that some are forced to switch off all the lights in their house and pretend they’re not at home is, of course, totally unacceptable. Even so, it is nonetheless true that, done in the right spirit and remembering what Halloween is really all about, trick or treating can actually help bring communities together.

Furthermore, just as fairy tales serve the very useful function of allowing children to face up to the darker aspects of their lives and, through those stories, see that the things they are frightened of can be overcome, so too some appropriate recognition of the existence of evil can help children see that, with Jesus a reality in their lives, they have nothing to fear. Pretending that evil does not exist does not help our children. Rather then than being concerned about how Halloween may adversely affect our children, perhaps we should be more concerned about the very real harm Disney films can do them with their insistence that everyone is awesome and their dishonest assurances that we can all be whatever we want to be whilst minimising the very real existence of pain and disappointment.

So, whilst I understand why some Christians are uneasy about Halloween, concerned as they are that it may encourage an unhealthy interest in occult practices such as endeavouring to communicate with the dead, something which, incidentally, the Bible expressly forbids, for me Halloween is an opportunity to talk about Jesus’ sacrificial death on the cross, a death that paid the penalty for all our sin, and assures us that when we die, rather than it being the end, it will be but a gateway to eternal life with God, a never ending existence in a new heaven and a new earth where our loving Heavenly Father will wipe away our every tear and ensure that death and evil will no longer have any place in our lives.

And so until then I will, on occasions, enjoy poking a little fun at death whilst never forgetting that my confidence for so doing comes only from knowing that ‘He who is in me is greater than he who is in the world’ [1 John 4:4].

And likewise I will not be afraid to die confident as I am that at the cross Satan was so completely defeated that we can all be absolutely sure that ‘Death [really has been] swallowed up in victory’ [1 Corinthians 15:54].

And with that in mind I hope you all have a very happy Halloween!


For anyone interested here’s how I enjoyed myself last Monday evening…we’ll it amused me!


Related spooky posts:

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Mystery of the Deserted Cricket Ground’, click here

To read ‘Monsters’, click here

And finally a selection of other Christian posts

To read ‘Everything’s Alright’, click here

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read, ‘Real Love?’, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

I’M A GP…GET ME OUT OF HERE!

Having heard how a certain former Secretary of State for Health has given up his work responsibilities in order to take part in a TV programme, I thought I’d bring to your attention something I saw being advertised in the most recent edition of my television listings magazine. Here’s what was written:

This week sees the start of a new series of the long running survival reality show, ‘I’m a GP…Get me out of here!’ in which a group of family doctors are taken out of their comfort zone and dumped in the middle of a sometimes dangerous NHS where, in order to survive, they are forced to undertake a number of unpleasant tasks many of which leave an unpleasant taste in the mouth.

‘It’s a jungle out there’, said one of this years contestants after being asked to manage the ever more complex medical needs of an ailing population without the usual support of a fully functional health service. Other tasks the contestants will have to face include coping with the vagaries of ambulance response times, negotiating with those in political power, some of whom bite, and fending off the all too frequent attacks of a hostile press.

Each week will see a number of doctors leaving the profession until eventually there’ll be just one left to provide primary health care services for the whole nation.

This series, which is set to be the last, is expected to run until the middle of next month. The show airs daily and can be watched at medical centres up and down the country.’

Anyone interested? I thought not.


Related blogs regarding the difficulties with the NHS:

To read ‘On being overwhelmed’, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when we’re gone’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – still a sweet sorrow’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – is time running out?’, click here

Other tales of former Secretaries of State for Health’

To read ‘GPs are responsible – it’s time they went’, lick here

To read ‘At last…an explanation’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

And some more unlikely stories of GP life:

To read ‘Dr Jonathan Harker and the post evening surgery home visit’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

EVERYTHING IS ALRIGHT

A boy has died. Without telling anyone why, his mother sets off to visit Elisha, the man of God. As she does so she tells her puzzled husband, who hasn’t yet learned that his son’s headache has had fatal consequences, that ‘it’s all right’. [2 Kings 4: 23]. Later when she reaches the home of the man of God and is asked if everything is alright, asked specifically even if her son is alright, the woman insists that he is. ‘Everything is alright’, she says [2 Kings 4:26]

What is going on here? How can she say that ‘everything is alright’ when it so self evidently is not? In her distress has the dead child’s mother lost her mind?

Far from it. In her distress she has done the most rational thing possible. She has turned in faith to God and has continued to believe that the Judge of the whole earth will do what is just. [Genesis 18:25]

Where God is sovereign everything is alright because everything is alright where God is sovereign.

Or at least it will be. Weeping may tarry for the night time but joy comes with the morning. [Psalm 30:5] The current distress is real but the prospect of a bright tomorrow is so certain that, no matter how dark the night is, or how far off the day may still seem, we can still say that everything is alright because God is in control. The sun will rise.

Because God has promised a day when all our tears will be wiped away, a day when death will be no more [Revelation 21:4], there is a sense in which ‘everything is alright’ even as our tears continue to flow and daily we are surrounded by death and disease.

When the woman reached the man of God she took hold of his feet. The man of God’s servant tried to push her away but the man of God was content to let her come to him in her distress. [2 Kings 4:27]. This reminded me of that time when a woman caused something of a scene when Jesus went to dinner with a Pharisee. The woman, brought an alabaster jar of oil and anointed Jesus’s feet with it. As she did so she wept, wetting Jesus’ feet with her tears and wiping them with her hair. [Luke 7:38]

The woman, we are told was a sinner. [Luke 7:37]. As such everything was not alright. But in her distress she did the most rational thing possible. She turned to the true man of God, to Jesus, the one who, as God, always does what is just. She believed what is absolutely certain – that ‘if we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.’ [1 John 1:9].

And so, as it was for the mother who clung to Elisha’s feet and had her son restored to life, so it was for the sinful woman who anointed Jesus’s feet with her tears. She was forgiven – her sins were washed away as surely as her tears turned to joy.

And so it will be for us. No matter the difficulties we currently face, no matter the sadness that daily fills our lives, we can be sure, that God is in control. As the psalmist remind us, God has promised that if we call upon him in the day of trouble, he will deliver us. [Psalm 50:15]. It’s as certain as that!

Because at the cross our sins were atoned for, because of the cross we are reconciled to God, because of the cross nothing can separate us from the love of Christ. Not tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword. [Romans 8:35]. Furthermore we know that ‘for those who love God all things work together for good’ [Romans 8:28]

Because the Son has risen, we can be sure that God is for us. And if God is for us then ‘everything is alright’.

Even when it isn’t.


Related posts:

To read ‘Order out of chaos’, click here

To read “Hope comes from believing the promises of God”, click here

To read, ‘But this I know’, click here

To read “Suffering- A Personal View”, click here.

To read “Why do bad things happen to good people – a tentative suggestion”, click here

To read “Luther and the global pandemic – on becoming a theologian of the cross”, click here

To read ‘Covid -19. Does it suggest we really did have the experience but miss the meaning?’, click here. This is a slightly adapted version of “T.S. Eliot, Jesus and the Paradox of the Christian Life’.

To read ‘The “Already” and the “Not Yet”’, click here

To read ‘The Sacrifice of Isaac – Law or Gospel?’, click here

To read ‘on being confronted by the law’, click here

To read ‘Good Friday 2022’, click here

To read “Easter Sunday – 2021”, click here

To read, ‘The Resurrection – is it Rhubarb?’, click here

To read “Waiting patiently for the Lord”, click here

To read, ‘Real Love?’, click here

To read ‘Real Power’, click here

DR JONATHAN HARKER AND THE POST EVENING SURGERY HOME VISIT

JONATHAN HARKER’S JOURNAL – OCTOBER 28TH 2022

It has been another long hard day at the practice and one made harder still but my colleague Dr Mina Seward not arriving for work this morning. As yet I have not heard from her and so can only imagine what dreadful fate may have befallen her. I can’t help but wonder if the cause of her non attendance is the same that as has resulted in the mysterious disappearance of so many GPs and practice nurses from medical centres up and down the country these past few years.

I long now to go home but I still have work to do. As has always been the case, many of my patients have been presenting lately saying that they feel persistently tired but, unlike times past when blood tests were almost always normal, latterly I have seen more and more results indicating iron deficient anaemia as a cause for their malaise. I was just dealing with two such results and hoping that 6.30 would arrive without any further calls when Lucy, one of our wonderful receptionists, appeared at my door.

‘I’m sorry to disturb you Dr Harker’, she said, grimacing a little as she watched me grab a clumsy bite from the chicken and garlic mayo sandwich I’d brought for my lunch but had, up until now, been too busy to eat. ‘But there’s a Mr Renfield on the phone asking for a home visit for the elderly man he cares for. The gentleman is question has only this week registered with the practice having moved here from Eastern Europe. From Romania I believe.’

I sighed heavily and asked Lucy to put the call through to me. She hurried off and a moment later the phone on my desk was ringing. I picked up the receiver and asked the caller how I might help.

‘You must come at once’, came the reply, ‘my master is in need of a doctor.’

Somewhat unsettled by the guttural tones of the voice on the end of the line and the unusual title he had given the man for whom he was seeking help, I asked the man to give a reason for why I should attend.

‘He is so dreadfully pale’, the man explained. ‘And he has been unrousable all day.’

‘All day?’ I replied, my tone of voice failing to conceal how irritated I felt that he’d waited until now, just minutes before we were due to close, to request a visit. ‘Why didn’t you call earlier?’

‘My master is sometimes a little batty and he doesn’t like to be disturbed in the day on account of his severe dislike of bright lights’ the man explained. ‘So, please, come quickly. I will see you in my master’s ancestral home shortly’ he added before abruptly ending the call without affording me the chance to ask anything more.

And so, resigning myself to a late end to the working day, I phoned reception and asked Lucy to bring me a printout of the patients details. She was trembling when she arrived back at my room.

‘You will be careful won’t you Dr Harker?’ she quivered as she handed me the single sheet of paper, marking herself with the sign of the cross as she did so. Her behaviour unsettled me still further, but when I looked at the details of where I was to go, my sense of unease turned to one of dread for the address which Lucy had circled with a bright green marker pen was nowhere other than Castle Dracula.

And so it is that I complete this entry in my journal not knowing when I will write in it again.

JONATHAN HARKER’S JOURNAL (continued) – OCTOBER 29th 2022 – 2am

The details of my visit to Castle Dracula are such that I can barely bring myself to put them down on paper. I long for my bed and the refuge of sleep but, recognising the importance of having contemporaneous records should this nights events ever be questioned, I make this entry in my journal and hope that those who read it do not doubt my sanity.

After wishing Lucy a good night and promising her I’d see her on Monday, I made my way to my car. I entered the postcode of Castle Dracula into the sat nav and set off at the mercy of that ubiquitous electronic device. It wasn’t long before the streets with which I was familiar were far behind me and I found myself directed along a road I’d never frequented before. Trees loomed over me, the moonlight casting sinister shadows as it shone through their gnarled and twisted branches, and I thought I could hear the baying of wolves in the distance. Later I passed through a tunnel and, emerging on the other side, was on a drive bordered by great frowning rocks. And then, all too soon, Castle Dracula emerged through the mist and the inappropriately upbeat voice of the sat nav confirmed that I had indeed reached my destination. I left my car and, with my medical bag in my hand, made my way across the courtyard to a large wooden door. There was no response to my knock but the ever efficient Lucy had provided me with the number of the property’s key safe and so I was able to unlock the door and swing it wide open.

Passing through the thick stone doorway I found myself in a cavernous hall. Though I was clearly completely alone, I nonetheless felt that I was being scrutinised by one more intent on causing me harm than even the most officious of CQC inspectors.

I tried to call out a greeting but my words, so laced with fear, seemed hesitant to leave my mouth. ‘Is anyone there?’ I murmured, ‘It’s the doctor’.

The sound of footsteps caused me to turn and then I saw him, slowly descending the great stone staircase that dominated the space in which I stood. He was a tall man, clean shaven and, save for the blood red lining of the cape he wore, clad all in black from head to foot.

‘Good evening, Dr Harker. I am Count Dracula – I’ve been dying to meet you. Welcome to my home. It is good of you to have come.’

‘Not at all’ I replied, endeavouring to hide the frustration I felt having seen the man appear so well and, therefore, not someone who was in need of a home visit. ‘How can I help?’

By now Dracula had made it down to the bottom of the stairs and had positioned himself alongside me. He put his arm around my shoulder and ushered me to an armchair and indicated that I should take a seat. He picked up a decanter of red wine that stood on the sideboard.

‘Would you like a drink Dr Harker?’ he asked, before adding ‘I never drink wine myself but you would be most welcome to a glass’

I thanked him for his kindness but declined his offer and expressed instead my eagerness to get on with the work in hand. Dracula sat in a chair opposite me and smiled. And it was then that I first saw them – his set of teeth dominated as they were by oversized and sharply pointed canines.

‘I don’t mean to be rude’, I said, indicating by way of waving my finger in the general direction of my own mouth that I had noticed his distinctive dental disposition. ‘But have you seen a dentist about those?’

‘Are you kidding me’, Dracula replied, stifling a laugh. ‘You can’t get to see a dentist on the NHS these days, not for love nor money. I’ve tried the dental helpline no end of times and they’re no help either. And not even I can afford to go private. Have you seen how much they charge to just see the hygienist?’

‘I can sympathise with you there. But I trust it’s not dental advice that you are looking for from me because I’m not a dentist and those who think I’m able to help with dental problems leave me climbing the walls’

‘You climb the walls too Dr Harker? You surprise me, I thought that was something only I could do. Even so, do not fear. My concerns are not of a dental nature. Rather I am concerned that I may be anaemic and in need of another transfusion.’

‘Another transfusion you say. Is that something you need frequently?’

‘Almost daily’ Dracula replied. ‘Can I ask you something Dr Harker? Are you diabetic? And do you by any chance take statins?’

‘Why do you ask?’ I replied, unnerved by the way the consultation was progressing.

‘Oh no reason’ Dracula replied. ‘It’s just that I’ve something of a sweet tooth and, for a while now, have been trying to follow a low fat diet. One’s got to try and maintain one’s figure’. The strange man muttered something about hoping that I didn’t have high blood pressure because he’d only just had the ceiling redecorated before smiling at me again though, this time, there was a sinisterness to his way he curled his lips and I thought I noticed, albeit for only a moment, a look of malevolence in his eyes.

Seeming to want to restore the former conviviality, Dracula then asked me how things were going in General Practice and I indicated to him how some days it felt as though one was banging one’s head against the wall. Dracula’s eyes lit up as if seeing the opportunity he’d been waiting for to shoe horn into the narrative a line he’d had planned for some time.

‘Ah yes’, he said. ‘I once went to see a doctor who was as frustrated as you indicate you are. When I arrived he’d banged his head against the wall so hard that he had knocked himself out. Ironically, because he was on anticoagulants, the very thing that made him such a pleasure for me to visit, he had been taken to casualty for a precautionary head scan and so wasn’t in the surgery that day to see me’

‘You mean…’

‘Yes, that’s right. He was out for the Count!’

Dracula laughed rather more than his attempt at humour warranted before, suddenly no longer amused, he fixed me with his steely eyes.

‘But enough of this idle chit chat, Dr Harker. It is time that you gave me what I need. It is time that you gave me your blood’,

With that he rose from his chair and took a step toward me. Then, bearing his teeth, he stooped forward and brought his mouth ever closer to my neck as I sat there, motionless, too terrified to move. But just as I began to feel his breath on my skin he suddenly recoiled from me and took two paces back.

‘What is that on your lapel Dr Harker. It’s disgusting’ he hissed.

I looked down at the gloopy mess that had congealed there and recognised it as a dollop of the garlic mayonnaise that had once been an integral component of my long delayed lunch. I made my apologies for my unprofessional appearance as Dracula, regaining his composure, sat back in his chair once more.

‘Never mind, Dr Harker. The life may be in the blood but there are other ways to suck the life out of you, just as I have from countless other medial professionals before you.’

‘What do you mean?’ I asked incredulous now of what I was hearing.

‘Oh it is so simple. First I like to suggest that everyone is awesome and that they can all be exactly what they want to be. Then I encourage the medicalisation of normality and make those who deliver health care responsible for solving problems which aren’t theirs to fix. This propagates the notion that every ill can be fixed by a visit to the doctor and soon the burden on those working in healthcare who come to believe that the happiness of the whole world depends on them, becomes intolerable. Throw in the consequences of a worldwide pandemic, insufficient social care and and ever longer waits for ambulances, outpatient appointments and surgical procedures, and it is only a matter of time before medial personnel are falling by the wayside and not being replaced. And don’t forget a hostile media. Did you hear my very own press pack baying at you as you arrived here tonight?’

‘But why would you do such a thing?’ I asked Dracula, the life ebbing from me and my thoughts turning to early retirement as his words began to do their devilish work within me’

‘Quite simply – because I’m evil’, he replied. ‘I can’t help it Dr Harker. After all, I’m only inhuman’

Dracula laughed again, a wicked, gleeful laugh the like of which I’d never heard before.

‘You fiend! It’s about time you took a long hard look at yourself in the mirror’

‘That’s not going to happen’, the Count replied. ‘It’s simply not possible. Reflection never was my thing! Rest assured though, Dr Harker, I will bleed the NHS dry, on that you have my word. I’ve already destabilised the system by working my way through no end of Health Secretaries. Recently I’ve been particularly successful and have caused the demise of several in a matter of just a few weeks. Like so many healthcare professionals, most have gone forever and will never be seen again. That said, one Health Secretary has returned to his post after I preyed on him some weeks ago. But no matter – it’s good to have one of the undead stalking the corridors of power!’

By now Dracula was pacing around the hall ever more exhilarated by what he was telling me. In his excitement, however, he hadn’t noticed that, though desperately weakened by all that was being described, I had managed to get back onto my feet and make my way to the door where I had left my medical bag when I had first entered the castle. Realising what it was I needed to do, I pulled from it a sharp wooden object and made my way slowly towards the man I now recognised to be nothing less than a vampire.

‘There is one thing though that you have forgotten Dracula’, I shouted. ‘I am a stakeholder!’

Dracula turned to look at me. Horrified by my words his eyes were now wide open and filled with unbridled rage

‘And I’m not on my own’, I continued. ‘All those who work alongside me, and every patient too, we’re all stakeholders in the NHS and we will overcome your evil plan.’

Mustering every ounce of the energy I possessed I threw myself at Dracula and knocked him to the ground whereupon I drove the wooden peg straight through the monster’s soon to be no longer beating heart. Were he still able to feel such irritation, the upshot of my actions would have particularly irked the Count because, as a result of his recent poor compliance with antihypertensive medication, the ceiling was now, once again, in need of a clean.

The deed done, I collapsed into the armchair in which I’d previously sat. Despite the horror of all that had taken place I was left with a deliciously sanguine feeling as it dawned on me how, by single handedly vanquishing a great evil, I had simultaneously secured the long term future of the NHS. I looked over towards the sideboard and, noticing that the decanter of wine was still there. thought to myself that I would, perhaps, have a drop of the red stuff after all.

EXTRACT OF THE MINUTES OF A PRACTICE SIGNIFICANT EVENT MEETING – OCTOBER 31st 2022

Dr Harker presented the case of Count Dracula who had requested an inappropriate home visit claiming the need for blood products when in fact his desire had been nothing short of bringing down the whole of the NHS. Despite a complaint having been received from Mr Renfield regarding Dr Harker’s behaviour on the evening in question, all those present at the SEA agreed that Dr Harker had acted entirely appropriately throughout. Though it was understandable why he hadn’t, it was however noted that Dr Harker had failed to sever the head from the body of his patient and stuffed its mouth with garlic as per the most recent NICE guidelines on the management of vampiric manifestation. Dr Harker promised to reflect on his error of omission and assured everyone that he would discuss it formally at his upcoming appraisal.

Anyone wishing to apply for the vacancy created by the disappearance of Dr Mina Seward will find the job advertisement by clicking on the link below. Please be assured that local vampiric activity is now in decline!

https://www.bmj.com/careers/job/158777/salaried-gp-gp-partner-6-sessions-east-quay-medical-centre/


And some more unlikely stories:

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Paddington and the Ailing Elderly Relative’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘the day LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD got sick’ click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘The Dead NHS Sketch’, click here

To read ‘Monty Python and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘The Four Clinicians Sketch’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Mr McGregor’s Revenge – A Tale of Peter Rabbit’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

To read ‘Dr Wordle and the Mystery Diagnosis’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The Scrooge Chronicles’, click here

To read ‘Jeeves and the Hormone Deficiency’, click here

To read ‘General Practices are Go!’, click here

To read ‘A Mission Impossible’, click here

To read ‘A Grimm Tale’, click here

To read ‘The General Practitioner – Endangered’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

Related blogs regarding the difficulties with the NHS:

To read ‘On being overwhelmed’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – is time running out?’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – still a sweet sorrow’, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when we’re gone’, click here

And finally, to read ‘Monsters’, click here

GENERAL PRACTICE – IS TIME RUNNING OUT?

As you’re all probably aware, on Thursday lunchtime Liz Truss resigned! In the speech she gave outside 10 Downing Street she said the reason she was leaving was her recognising that, given the situation, she could not deliver the mandate on which she was elected by the Conservative party.

I know how she feels. I too recognise that, given the situation, I can not deliver the mandate that I have been given as a GP, namely that of providing good medical care to my patients.

Despite the strenuous efforts being made by those I work alongside in primary care as well as those of my colleagues who work in hospitals, social care settings and the emergency services, I daily see an NHS that is on its knees. Much like all GPs, this year I have experienced:

  • social services ringing me to inform me of their regret that they are unable to provide care for frail elderly patients who live alone and are unable to look after themselves
  • occasions when patients I have referred into hospital for urgent medical attention have had to wait for up to 19 hours for an ambulance
  • on call days which have been frankly unsafe during which I have personally had to manage over a hundred separate patient interactions without a break
  • excessively long waits for my patients to be offered outpatient appointments including somebody whom I suspected of having a progressive neurological disease who had to wait months to see a consultant and then wait months more for a letter telling me that my suspicions were probably correct and that I should treat her myself despite in times past that treatment being within the realm of the specialist
  • countless situations when alternative drugs have had to be issued because the medications patients’ need, including on occasions such basic medicines as penicillin, have not been available in local pharmacies
  • patients who, after approaching two years, are still waiting to be seen by those delivering speciality services to those with complex mental health needs
  • a GP practice within the town where I work collapse and 1500 of their patients being reallocated to my practice with just two weeks notice. Months later we have not had a single application in response to the job advertising for the additional doctor we require to adequately provide care for these patients.
  • hospitals repeatedly failing to meet the target set to ensure that patients with possible cancer diagnoses are seen in a timely fashion
  • hospital labs not being able to provide certain specific blood tests for want of the required resources for that test to be done

Now don’t get me wrong, the NHS continues to do sterling work, but all the above reflect the degree to which it is now struggling. I could of course go on, as I am sure could all my colleagues, but the above is sufficient to make clear that the many high profile cases that have been reported in the media really are just the tip of a very large iceberg. And with an already understaffed NHS being made up by doctors and nurses who are leaving their respective professions in droves, the situation seems certain to only get worse.

The day before she resigned, the soon to be former Prime Minister said that she was a fighter, and not a quitter. I like to think that, for today at least, the same is true for me. But like Liz Truss, somebody who perhaps believed her words were true even though, a mere twenty-fours hours later, circumstances proved that they weren’t, I too must recognise that circumstances may yet dictate that my capacity to fight may not last as long as I would like. My time as a doctor is inevitably limited, perhaps more limited than even I currently realise. Even so, despite being told to try harder and do better by those who seem to have little understanding of the pressure the NHS is already under, I do intend to carry on for at least a little longer.

I am though no fool. I am not the answer. Nor is any individual GP. And that is something we must hope that the press, the public and our political leaders recognise too.

Because if they don’t, time might be running out, not just for this government, but for General Practice too.


Related blogs regarding the difficulties with the NHS:

To read ‘On being overwhelmed’, click here

To read ‘I’ll miss this when we’re gone’, click here

To read ‘General Practice – still a sweet sorrow’, click here

To read ‘Mr Benn – the GP’, click here

To read ‘A GP called Paddington’, click here

To read ‘Scooby Doo and the Deserted Medical Centre’, click here

To read ‘Bagpuss and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘A Dream of an Antiques Roadshow’, click here

To read ‘The NHS Emporium’, click here

To read ‘Jeepy Leepy and the NHS’, click here

To read ‘The Three Little GPs and the Big Bad Secretary of State for Health’, click here

To read ‘The Happy Practice – A Cautionary Tale’, click here

To read ‘The State of Disrepair Shop’, click here

This blog is an adapted version of a blog written yesterday entitled ‘Friday Bloody Friday’. Unlike the above version which was intended for a specifically medical readership, the original concluded with a specific Christian viewpoint. That original blog can be read here.