A few weeks ago jersey gave way to fleece. Now I am sporting both. As I face ‘homeless’ winter number 11 after giving up my job teaching, overwhelmed by debt and depression, I know that layering clothes is the key to keeping warm. At night I sleep under my 10-tog duvet, fully clothed with my feet toasted by thermal socks the size of unfashionable wellies. I slumber soundly, feeling lucky that for the last 10-plus years I have had a car to kip in.
Christmas on the road is a bit of a nightmare: parking becomes more difficult, laybys are busier with more delivery trucks. I have to change my daily shop to weekly because the shops get too busy, and my diet slightly changes as I can store food in the car longer due to the cold. Nearer Christmas week, every aisle is clogged with overfilled trolleys. There is no way any human can eat that much food. The waste is inexcusable. These people should be made to live in a car until they learn to temper their intake.
Every morning my insides react to a mix of roughage and coffee in predictable ways. I have to calculate which toilet is the nearest and how long it will take. In December I have to factor in an exponential timeframe, influenced by how close to the seasonal apocalypse we are. It’s a horrible feeling sitting in a line of cars, trying to get into a supermarket car park with your tearful inner child screaming: “I need a poo!”
Christmas on the road is a bit of a nightmare: parking becomes more difficult, laybys are busier with more delivery trucks
No matter what the temperature, as a musician I still have to practise and study. I practise in the morning and try to work (composing, writing, studying) at night, preferably in the warmth of a pub. As pubs become busier, it is nigh impossible to find a socket to charge my laptop or smartphone, so I have to plan my work very carefully. I can charge electronics in my car but I have to be careful not to drain the battery. You don’t want to be stuck in a remote layby, in −17°c with a flat battery (trust me).