The ‘ber’
months
I don’t live
under a rock, but the expression, ‘the ber months’ is new to me. Until a couple
of weeks ago, I had never heard it, but now it’s cropping up everywhere, and
today it appeared on the front cover of our community magazine, Crowthorne Eye.Though
the cover adjures readers to ‘Enjoy the ‘Ber’ months, there is nothing inside
to encourage that, apart from one sentence that says, ‘. . . it won’t be
long before our beautiful County turns golden, the best time of year to enjoy
the outdoors with so many woodland walks on our doorstep.’
It is
true that we are blessed with acres of woodland, and surprising that more people
don’t take advantage of them. It’s still commonplace to take long walks in this
busy county without seeing another soul.
However, I
started thinking about other conceivable aggregations of months, but there is
only one, the ‘ry’ months of January and February. If the ‘ber’ months conjure
up images of golden leaves and fiery sunsets, the ‘ry’ season, at least in the northern
hemisphere, promises, or threatens, biting winds, driving rain, ice, frost,
snow, and fog. There can be bright days, with thin sunshine in an arctic blue
sky, but they are overwhelmed by the dark hours and the gloom, and the very
real desire to reach home, close the curtains and soak up comforting warmth.
We try to
cheer each other up by saying, ‘February is a short month,’ but really we’re
fooling ourselves. It would be more accurate to define it as ‘shorter.’ For
three out of every four years, February has twenty-eight days, but in a leap
year, it has twenty-nine. So, it’s two or three days shorter, depending on which
month it’s being compared to. That’s the equivalent of a weekend, even a long
weekend, or possibly half a working week, so not to be sneezed at. It does not,
however, compensate for the sheer bone-chilling, soul-sapping misery of
February.
January
enjoys the afterglow of the ‘festive season,’ even when the bills come in, and
there may be momentary regrets about the overindulgence that was enjoyed.
February has nothing to recommend it. The children contract every indisposition
known to mankind and generously pass them on to their nearest and dearest. More
than one child in the family means there will be a recurring circus of
infection.
If a
doctor’s appointment is required, and you are actually able to meet a medical
professional face to face, you will discover that they fall victim to even more
germs than the average family. You leave the surgery feeling very sorry that
you’ve troubled such an obviously unwell adult with your problems.
All bad
things come to an end. The ‘ry’ months are soon forgotten in the bold and
blustery month of March, when signs of spring are all around . . . and so the
year progresses.