I know I did it!
How sure we are of what we have said or done. Our conviction is unmoveable, our belief unassailable.
Recently, I packaged a couple of Advent calendars for my two youngest grandchildren and sent them to my daughter. Speaking to her a few days later, she thanked me for ‘it.’
I said, ‘There were two in the parcel, one for each of the boys.’ She said she’d go and check the package, as maybe she’d thrown one out, though that didn’t seem very likely.
I was cross, very cross. I would have stood in a court of law, under oath, and sworn I had sent her two calendars. I could visualise myself wrapping them.
A day later, Barry came out of the dining room with an Advent calendar in his hand. It had been on the table under one of his coats. (We don’t just have coat hooks and wardrobes – we have chairdrobes and tabledrobes, sofadrobes and top-of-the-dog-cratedrobes, and sometimes, floordrobes. If you have OCD, steer clear of our house!)
I could have wept! I was upset that only one calendar had been delivered, and worried that I was losing my mind. After all, I haven’t much to occupy it these days, not like when I was working full-time, with a husband often far away on business, four children, elderly parents, and umpteen animals.
Life should be a doddle, and mostly it is, but somehow the Season of Lights and Advertisements and Pleas for Donations, combined with darker days and longer nights, make ordinary things extraordinary. Every year, I declare that Christmas will be welcomed calmly in a well-ordered house. Every year, it isn’t!
The end-of-term three-week headache is absent now, but the simplicity of ordering maybe a little more than usual develops into a marathon of wondering if x, y, and z have been accomplished. In my saner moments, I realise that the smaller details don’t matter in the grand scheme of things.
I can totally relate to this Janice. I have been doing similar. I was well organised in November this year & got lots done but even so - it is still going to be "a mad dash to the finish line" come the 25th. Next year I think I'll just sleep through it all (in a cave) 😉🎄
ReplyDeleteIs it because the advertising starts so early in the year that we feel bludgeoned?
DeleteOh no! I do that all the time and have done for years. One year for Christmas I was so sure I had bought a desired video game, but could I find it? Nope. Did I buy it? Well, I'd still swear I did but I've never found it!
ReplyDeleteOne year, when I was a young girl, (younger than 10) I lost the gift I had for my father. I was so worried he would think I had forgotten to find him a present. It turned up after Christmas.
DeleteI have a wardrobe and a "back of chair jacket space", that's it. I do know several people who have all those extra "robes" and when I visit I reall want to pick up everything and hang it all on hangers, but it isn't my place so I stuff my hands in my pockets. I bought supermarket advents this year and put them all straight into the trolley/cart I would be taking stuff in so none were lost. If I order them online, I have them delivered straight to the recipient.
ReplyDeleteYour fingers would itch in my house. I know mine do!
DeleteIt could happen to anyone and It does happen to me too.
ReplyDeleteGlad you found it -
I know I'm not alone, but it's still irritating.
DeleteThis is why we should be careful about relying on witness testimony in court.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right!
DeleteWe are same same- though when company comes I toss everything under. the stairs or in bags and boxes to be stashed in invisible corners. and then ...I am effed because I can't find anything, ever again- though the house looks acceptable. it is not. I have done the same thing with fancy Christmas cards- I swear i sent them only to find them months later, envelopes still un licked.
ReplyDeleteOur house becomes unrealistically tidy when we have company, with 'stuff' bunged under the stairs, into spare rooms, to be discovered many days/weeks later . . . possibly!
DeleteCan I match your story with one of my own. I was invited to a Swiss restaurant. I looked at the venue, the Swiss Club, and then the menu at the restaurant, Edelweiss. Somewhere I saw apple strudel on a menu. Yum. My friend who invited me said no, it doesn't serve strudel. I reckon I spent half an hour in total looking for strudel at the venue, and I could not find it. It particularly stuck in my mind because it was spelt strudl. I said to him that I felt like I was being gaslit. But my mind did go to my sister, her wife and their daughter who are travelling in Germany at the moment. Was that where I read it? On her itinerary or something she had posted online? I decided I had wasted enough time on strudel and strudl, and gave up. But I did see it somewhere. I would be more doubtful had I not noticed the spelling. I'll just sink gracefully into my early onset dementia.
ReplyDeletePS I like your header photo
DeleteThat is a wonderful story. What a shame to be denied your strudl though.
DeleteThank you.
DeleteI am learning not to get too vociferous in declaiming my certainties, as yet again I have to climb down and ea t humble pie... all that adrenaline is bad for me...
ReplyDeleteI'm not good at eating humble pie, though I get plenty of practice . . .
DeleteI no longer trust my memory. I now have a compulsive need for order and tidiness otherwise my brain descends into a state of panic.
ReplyDeleteIt's much more relaxing to be tidy and ordered.
DeleteWell at least you realized it did not get thrown away at your daughter's house or even your own. We get frustrated by things that we lose track of though don't we.
ReplyDeleteIt's easy to think our minds are going . . .
DeleteFar too many times I have swore that I did something only to find out later that I hadn't
ReplyDeleteIt's much more common than I realised! 😁
DeleteI have done that, too. How annoying!
ReplyDeleteIt is aggravating, to say the least.
DeleteYou made me go check that I really have TWO big envelopes standing on the chest of drawers in my hall waiting to be posted, not just one... (I know I did prepare them both yesterday, but still...)
ReplyDeleteWe doubt ourselves too easily, don't we?
DeleteI SO relate to this! I'm trying to learn (at this late date) that the little errors really don't matter much. Take note if there's a lesson to be learned and then MOVE ON. My latest "episode" was a frantic search for the Christmas card labels I printed, only to realize that I had already put them on the envelopes. 😕
ReplyDeleteOh, that's wonderful, Stephanie.
DeleteI will not use your blog to tell all the crazy things I do now, but you are not ALONE... if I can remember the things I might do a post.
ReplyDeleteI am OCD, and was raised in a home that had all the draped surfaces, mother hates housework, daddy was the draper. He actually put suits, and shirts on hangers and hung them on the edge of the mantle, more hung her collections , example being, plastic mislttoe from lamp shades OV VEY. my room was the only room the bed was made, the things were where they went, each doll had its own place on the bed. the closet was crowded because as long as I can't SEE things its ok to stuff them in drawers and closets.
5 months ago, when the hospital bed and SUPPLIES, hundreds of supplies moved in the living room, I nearly stroked out. nothing in the room was where it belonged. in the past 3 weeks I have found time to empty closets of everything I have no used in the past 2 years and move all the supplies into closets and I hid the things I have to keep behind the sofa so that only the bed and things beside it are there. its still bothers me but not nearly as much and I have found myself draping sweaters on chairs by the back door, and actually able to leave something where it does not live...
It must have driven you mad, to live in such a mess. Whose genes did you inherit Not your parents', clearly. Maybe a grandparent.
DeleteSo many times I am sure of things that turn out never to have happened, or been said... not necessarily by myself, but also by others. One example was even on my blog not long ago, when I wrote about the tiny nativity scene my sister had made when she was 9 or 10 years old, and the story why there is an elephant in it. I was so convinced my Mum had told me one thing, but when my sister told me her version of the story, it turned out my Mum had told me exactly that, and not what I had included in my blog... It was quite embarrassing.
ReplyDeleteThat is such a lovely anecdote. It's strange how family reminiscences can vary so wildly.
DeleteI know that’s frustrating. I have done very similar things. Each year I tell myself I will start the preparations earlier but that’s definitely not this year. Onward and upward!
ReplyDeleteI've had moments like that too, wondering if I'm losing my mind. Fear not! It's just the craziness of day to day life! At least your daughter now knows why the kids initially only got one calendar.
ReplyDeleteShe ended up eating the chocolates, and buying one for each of her children.
DeleteLots of us are feeling exactly what you have described Janice, small comfort I know x
ReplyDeleteAlison in Devon x
Actually, it is quite comforting to know that we're all going round the bend together.
DeleteIt's the time of the year with so much happening and so much crazy in the world.
ReplyDeleteIt's certainly an upside-down world.
DeleteSo relatable, both the error and the desire to make grandchildren happy.
ReplyDeleteHey ho, we've all done it, apparently . . .
DeleteAlthough I'm fully aware that the smaller details don’t matter in the grand scheme of things, they do keep occupying my mind. Especially if you're ever so slightly OCD like I am. Jos, on the other hand, isn't, so that the battle against chairdrobes Etc. is real :-) xxx
ReplyDelete😳😁😂
DeleteSorry to hear about your issue, but in the scheme of things it's not worth getting worked up over.
ReplyDeleteQuite right. 😁
DeleteI've done similar things. It happens.
ReplyDeleteIt does - too often!
DeleteIt's so frustrating ... and something many of us can relate to.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
I understand your dilemma. Sometimes I think my mind is just mush. I hope you have a great weekend.
ReplyDeleteThank you. 😊
DeleteIt is annoying and frustrating but lots of seem to be in the same place as you. I know I am.
ReplyDeleteIt's quite comforting to know I'm not alone in this.
DeleteSo easily done. I guess it is a sign that you have too much on but there's not much you can do about that. xx
ReplyDeleteVery true!
DeleteOh no!!!! Poor you! My house is utter chaos- we'd get on well in real life!!!
ReplyDeleteMy husband had two moments like this today. This morning, I had to get up early to go to church in my old town. He asked what time my train was. I said it was 8.30 but I'd have to leave at 8.20am to cycle to the station. As I was rushing around getting dressed, I asked him what time it was and he said 8.10. At 8.15, I asked again, as I was ready except for socks. He told me I was not going to make it. I said I was fine. He got really annoyed and told me, it was impossible to get to the station. I told him I do it every day and he was really frustrated! We suddenly worked out that he thought the train was at 8.20am. He insisted I'd told him that. This afternoon, he was in the loft getting the Christmas decorations out. I told him I thought they were in a black cotton bag. He said there wasn't one and handed down a white one and other bag and box. I said I must have got the colour wrong and I guess that was it. He told me that the decorations weren't in the bag and insisted the decorations must be in the spare room. I assured him they weren't. He got annoyed and told me to look. I did it to humour him. I knew they weren't. He then told me that the good decorations weren't in the bags and I must have the bag somewhere. I told him it must be in the loft. Later, he told me the decorations he wanted weren't in the bags we had down and insisted I look again. I looked again and ten told him they must be in the loft. He went to the loft and out of curiosity, I looked in the bag downstairs...and found the aforementioned decorations!!!!
Arggh! This all sounds so familiar.
ReplyDelete