27 Dec
Well thanks everyone for being so patient as I’ve coped with the increasing weirdness in my life. And a big thanks to Girl-Fren for filling in when I couldn’t be here. (She’s not lying… she does have great legs.)
I’ve been on a safari of sorts, gathering information of use to my bitter friends, as it is my life’s quest to bring all shades of usefulness and enlightenment everywhere I go.
As I didn’t take video of the event (not allowed, oddly), I’ll have to walk you through it. Imagine, if you will, a bus station. Not a truly awful bus station, but a moderately awful bus station. (I would have said airport, but the people in airports are often busy and important, and that really won’t do for this illustration.) Now imagine that the other persons in the bus station are all either sick or injured. Carry forward with the thought that you, also, are either sick or injured. (Getting uncomfortable yet?) Now for the final image… you get to sleep with a randomly chosen 5 of these people (in an “unconscious in the same room” sense, not in a red-hot-monkey-sex sense) for an indeterminate period of time. The rest of them are housed down the hall.
Welcome to an NHS hospital.
The only thing more depressing than this thought, I would think, is working in said hospital, because then even on the occasions you get to go home, you always know you’re coming back the next day. Much, I imagine, like being a prison officer doing his 25 to life.
Now, I’ve undergone this undercover undertaking for the express purpose of bringing back an account to the rest of the world. I should write a travel guide full of tidbits like what to take with you (disenfectant spray and snacks), what to order from the daily menu (nothing with meat… trust me), and what to wear (seems to be anything goes… fuzzy slippers are the current trend, along with worn terry robes and a vacant expression).
I will say that while it sounds pretty horrid, the worst part is being sick, obviously. Otherwise I think it would be a feast of humanity (so to speak… I wouldn’t recommend actually eating said roommates, as we don’t know what’s wrong with all of them) with which there really is no comparision. Sure you can people-watch in an airport, but until you’ve actually had a sleepover with someone, you don’t know them at all.
I should also report that it’s reaffirmed the fact that I really do like people. I know, I know… I’m supposed to be all bitter, and sometimes I can be, but how can you not like people after meeting dear Mrs. Boyd, who tickled the bottom of my foot with her cane as she walked by, having only spoken a couple of words in passing before that. And Anne, a 60 year old with an exploding spleen (at least that’s what I gathered through eavesdropping on her doctors) who, after a girl in her 20’s was introduced, and then forcibly removed from our room whispered, “My goodness that was dreadful, wasn’t it? I would imagine it was drugs-taking.” Then she flicked some dust off her bathrobe.
Mrs Ames seemed relatively nonplussed about the whole thing. When the doctor said “The nurse says you’re a bit confused about where you are,” she replied, “Well isn’t that impertinent!” I thought so too. Of all the nerve.
One woman spent the entire time knitting. I’m not sure she even realised she was in a hospital, as she looked exactly as I imagine she would have at home. Except at home she probably has a cat that chases her yarn as her needles clack clack clack away.
Another inmate woke me in the night to give me instructions on what to tell people if someone came looking for her. Which was sorta sweet, considering that no one had come looking for her in all the time we shared a room.
Hope is a beautiful thing, and the capacity for it is why I love people.
Look for a follow-up documentary called “Naps on a Train” to be airing on the BBC in March.

Jayne, you’re welcome. The “Turkey’s Head Cake” recipe was all I could make time for…as I was baking another cake for a Christmas Feast, that turned out to be nearly inedible. Had our host not had so quick a hand with the wine decanter, someone surely would have noticed. And thank you for confirming my claim to great legs. (I failed to tell our bitter readers that those same great legs are holding up a terrible body. Shhh. This will remain our secret.)
I LOVE the personalities and odd snippets of behavior that people manifest around you. Sharing a hospital ward with you would be like personally meeting Agatha Christy, I should think.
On the language front, I must say that was a fearless paragraph which contained “…undergone this undercover undertaking…”. You GO, girl.
Good luck with the NHS. I sincerely hope they are as effective as they are mysterious.
love this post. your character descriptions put me in a bed right next to you. i’d be the one constantly tampering with the thermostat because I was freezing.
I do hope you are feeling okay - clearly nothing about the way you write has been affected as your posts are still stellar!
I’d be the one turning the thermostat down after heather turned it up because I’d be too hot.
I, too, wish you the best of health and spirits, Jayne. Maybe the mystery has to do with secret cures and ancient remedies and suchlike.
Happy new year!
That NHS hospital sounds like The Ritz compared to the ones we have in Cheshire. Talk about the Wells of Hell. It is in my best interests to NEVER get sick here. I have a shotgun tucked away in the event that I do - Limbo is an infinitely better option than Leighton…
Hope you are on the road to recovery. Treat yourself to BUPA cover for the New Year…