I’ve Got a Gal in Tiramisu
By Turlough
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1 January 2026, Thursday
Emerging from my chrysalis of December gloom I’d become a new superior lifeform. Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, I leapt from the bed and ran round the house rejoicing the arrival of January, a month named after Janus, the Roman god of beginnings, transitions and warehouse clearance sales. The sun shone all day.
I resolved to give up hope of the world ever being a better place, so effectively I’d given up my panic-infested insomnia. In Pavlikeni market I bought a tee-shirt with ‘I surrender’ printed in eight languages to welcome whoever chooses to invade us.
Gh géillim!
2 January 2026, Friday
In winter, groups of elaborately costumed men known as Kukeri perform traditional rituals to scare away evil spirits. Folklore experts say they’re a remnant of a Thracian cult of the god Dionysus. Tonight we watched them dance in the square beneath the fortress. They impressed and entertained but failed to scare away the five-year-old monster in pink that ran around on the wall only centimetres in front of us, restricting many people’s views.
Due to a combination of supply problems and a nation’s reluctance, we haven’t yet been able to spend a physical euro. People without bank cards will perish.
3 January 2026, Saturday
The first week of January’s traditionally the time when people return to the shops all the dodgy stuff that’s come their way during the festive period. What better time than now for President Gobshite to hand back his FIFA Peace Prize? Perhaps he could exchange it for vouchers or a FIFA Violating International Law Prize.
I like to think that getting his heavy mob to blast Caracas to bits and kidnap the Venezuelan president was a dress rehearsal for a raid on Tel Aviv to bring Adolf Netanyahu to justice.
In the meantime, I hope his next shit’s a hedgehog.
4 January 2026, Sunday
I usually ignore the pop-up advertisements that pop up when I turn on my computing machine. Years of waiting for one advertising pop-up toasters were in vain, but should I ever need split-crotch surgical support tights, a sit-on lawnmower in the shape of Harry Potter’s car, or a device for scratching my arse without getting up from the chair, then I know exactly where to find them.
Today there popped up a short video of a Bulgarian woman asking me in her native tongue if I’d like to learn to speak English. I was overcome with feelings of cultural assimilation.
5 January 2026, Monday
Bemoaning bodily weight gains, we questioned how this could have happened. Our diet consists of healthy, fresh, locally-produced, home-cooked ingredients that give a wholesome glow during preparation, consumption and digestion. Perhaps we’d been too wholesome.
Local restaurant food is equally good. We know the staff and they know us. Their provocation with delicious morsels, often free of charge, is downright wicked but nice. Shopska salads and grilled fish at restaurant ‘Etno’ are irresistible but so is their freshly made tiramisu. Even our socks have felt too tight so sacrifices must be made. Either the tiramisu goes or the socks go.
6 January 2026, Tuesday
Barry’s Irish tea isn’t grown in Ireland and it’s not sold in Bulgarian shops. It starts off in East Africa, gets shipped to Cork for packaging, and then people in Canada buy some to sell online to international tea drinkers like me. So, the contents of the teapot that sat on my desk as I wrote this had travelled more than 25,000 kilometres. I was pleased it was perfect because sending it back would have been a right old rigmarole.
Eight packets (i.e. two kilograms) arrived today, on Bulgarian Orthodox Christmas Day. I must have been on Santa’s nice list.
7 January 2026, Wednesday
The euro is at last seeping into our society. A woman complained on Facebook she’d bought some Bulgarian produced vegetables in the market, paid for them with Bulgarian euro but was given change in French and German euro. ‘Why can’t all these countries in the European Union keep themselves to themselves?’ she asked in bitter upper case to emphasise her fury.
Elsewhere a man was arrested for trying to pay for a drink with a forged fifty euro note. Hats off to him for showing willingness to embrace the togetherness of our European cousins, albeit in his own unconventional way.
8 January 2026, Thursday
I learnt a new word. Not a Bulgarian one, but sort of English. America’s new word for kill is unalive because they’ve worn out the old one. I tried it myself with I could unalive a cuppa tea.
America’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (known as ICE though they’re not at all cool) unalived thirty-seven-year-old Renee Good in Minneapolis as she drove away from them. Trump called her a domestic terrorist. If he ever had a brain in the first place someone must have unalived it.
Former Leeds United star, Terry Yorath, died under completely different circumstances. Sad but civilised.
9 January 2026, Friday
I’ve always taken pride in my own personal symmetry. I dribble from both sides of my mouth at the same time, both of my feet are useless at football and there are exactly 623 hairs on each side of my philtrum.
What’s puzzled me lately in this respect is why the painful arthritis in my carpometacarpal joints rips through both thumbs with equal intensity when it’s the right one that does all the work. They’re only ever in action together when I’m practising my gymnastics routine on the parallel bars, working a nightshift at Mucky Monika’s Massage Parlour or typing.
10 January 2026, Saturday
We spend very little money in cold weather, not because we’re canny with the cash, but because Bulgarian shopkeepers set their heating to gas mark Saudi Arabia. In Billa you could take a Findus frozen ready-meal for one (if they sold them) and it would be warm enough to eat before you reached the checkout. So when rugged northern types arrive, such as us, suffocation can only be avoided by either stripping down to vests and pants at the door or just nipping in and out sharpish to grab absolute essentials. Today I lost consciousness whilst buying a pork Viennetta.
11 January 2026, Sunday
I watched the snow falling. Intricately woven crystalline discs of virgin white delicately floating from sinister black skies.
I watched a garden disappear and four old episodes of Father Ted. I watched eight cats, two dogs and a European female sleeping. I slept myself, briefly.
I watched the pot on the stove so long that I saw it boil and I watched the contents of the food cupboard dwindle.
I watched the place beyond the trees where I’d have seen the sun set had it made an appearance at all.
I watched the side of our valley disappear. Everything disappeared.
12 January 2026, Monday
I watched the snow falling.
I washed old fountain pens I’d discovered in a box brought from England ten years back. Holding them underwater to squeeze the rubber part of barrels blocked and blacked with dried up ink left over from stories written long ago, I saw a frenzied attack of wrathful squids in my kitchen sink. Childlike satisfaction in the absence of candlewax to peel from a wine bottle neck.
A reminder of the pleasure to be had from writing on a sheet of paper with a fountain pen. A reminder of an Irish country schoolroom in another age.
13 January 2026, Tuesday
I considered going out into the garden to build a snowman but then I remembered that I was no longer six years old so the associated level of excitement would be virtually nil. And even if I had been six, or even eight, I would have returned to the house twenty minutes later feeling cold and wet and wishing I hadn’t bothered because my icy creation would have looked nothing like a real man, or even a real snowman, and it would melt within a couple of days making everybody sad and weepy like the kid in the Snowman film.
14 January 2026, Wednesday
The highlight of the day was the point in the mid-afternoon when the temperature on our terrace reached minus 6°C, having risen dramatically from the minus 14°C it had been at the point in the morning when I rose somewhat less than dramatically from the warm sanctuary of the bed. Had I known how the day was going to pan out I probably wouldn’t have gone to the trouble of rising at all.
The newsreader lady on the telly listed the names of the countries that Trump was going to bomb, invade or mispronounce, and Bulgaria wasn’t one of them.
15 January 2026, Thursday
Despite the day’s Arctic conditions, the Quink in my recently rediscovered fountain pen hadn’t frozen. The pen had become a necessity as my computer had fallen ill and needed to visit the menders whose shop sits at the top end of a precipitous street where car parking is impossible even on warm days. The snowplough’s deposits would have filled all vacant spaces and destroyed all hope. Two doors along from the computer shop there’s Mucky Monika’s Massage Parlour with a parking space to the front that’s constantly empty because people won’t use it for fear of wagging tongues, myself included.
Image: My own photograph of one of the Kukeri performing traditional rituals to scare away evil winter spirits.
Part Two
I Feel Like I’m Fixing to Tie-Dye My Raggy Socks
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Comments
Wonderful. I love the mix of
Wonderful. I love the mix of the personal, local, global, universal and surreal in these. Makes me think of Alan Bennett's diaries. Wonder what the Trumpians will come up with next in their mangling of truth and language.
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Dorking
When I worked for an insurance company in Salisbury we were taken over by a company from Dorking.
Not being very happy about the takeover, we used to mutter behind the backs of employees from the new company that Dorking was an adjective describing someone being a dork, as in 'That Dorking manager'.
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I wonder if there's
I wonder if there's nominative determinism about places of birth...
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And the truth is, he did make
And the truth is, he did make exceedingly good cakes.
I used to work in a shop where one of the regular customers was a Miss Wanklin. She was a lovely woman who never once thought of changing her name.
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My father's stories too !
My father's stories too ! From when he did his National Service in the RAF just after the end of the war. I've written them all down because I don't want them to get lost. A whole load of working class teenage boys who had never been away from home before, I think they were the happiest years of my dad's life.
On a similar them to your learning how to kipple, I remember he told me about one Warrant Officer who told them "I want to see you all dismantle that radio and mantle it back up again".
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When my mum was learning
When my mum was learning computing, I encouraged her to write down her childhood memories. She did it for a while, but then got disillusioned. 'They don't go anywhere. They're just memories.' Bless her, she thought she had to give them a plot to make them interesting. I gave her a memory stick to save them on, but was never sure if she used it. Then the disaster happened. Her laptop crashed one day. I took it to the repair shop, and they said the hard drive was dead. They tried getting data off of it, but it was fried. I was heart-broken. All those memories, lost. Then, a few weeks after she'd died and I was going through her things, I found the memory stick. With shaking fingers, I opened it. There was one file on it. 'Memories'! She had used it, after all. I keep it as a precious possession, having made several copies. It's all about life as a child in the '30s in London, then later her experiences as an evacuee. Only a dozen pages, but priceless. I also still have that hard drive.
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Just read you comment Harry.
Just read you comment Harry.
Instead of my suggested blog being specifically about National Service, why don't we have one about what ordinary people were doing round about the time of WWII, like your mum, my dad, and Turlough's father-in-law ?I
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Tales of National Service blog
We're absolutely on the same wavelength here Turlough. I don't have any children, and my Yorkshire-born-and-bred niece has no interest in the Southampton side of the family.
I have been wondering how I can get my dad's recollections into the public domain somehow, so when I get run over by inevitable Grim Bus, his stories will live on. I did write them up and send them to The Oldie, because I thought that would be a receptive audience, but I just got back an email saying "We've already done an article on National Service".
So maybe you and I could have a "Tales of National Service" blog here on ABC, and post my dad's and your father in law's stories on it ? Anyone else of our generation who has fathers (I don't think women did it) who did National Service would be welcome to contribute.
And BTW my dad is stll alive and very much kicking at 97 ! He remembers all his stories very well. My favourite (nothing to do with National Service) is when he was a boy of 12, waiting to cross the River Itchen on a clanky old chain driven ferry called The Floating Bridge (still going in my day). The Luftwaffe roared in out of nowhere and bombed the riverside Supermarine factory in Woolston, which produced Spitfires. (I wonder if he is the last person left alive who actually saw that). When I asked him what he did he said "Ran away !".
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The British Library collects
The British Library collects these stories and they have the most amazing archive that anyone can go along and listen to:
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Thanks Claudine I'd never
Thanks Claudine I'd never heard of that. I'll have a listen.
Are you politely hinting that you don't think ABC is the appropriate place to have a blog about these stories ? No problems if that's the case, it was just an idea.
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No not at all! It's just a
No not at all! It's just a great place to visit and you can listen to them all there yourself. Really worth going just for that, but the collection of books they have is wonderful too. It's just down the road from Kings Cross. They might still be collecting if you contact them about your father's memories.
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Years ago, for a school
Years ago, for a school project, my son taped an 'interview' with my Mum and Dad about their lives during the war. Last minute as ever, he took the tape into school before I got the chance to hear it, so I asked him to make sure he kept it safe. Needless to say he lost it, I was cross, it got forgotten about. Last year he found it. Now both my parents are gone, it was amazing to hear their voices again. Much blubbing, and much joy, all round.
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Really cheered me up as
Really cheered me up as always, Turlough. I too remember learning to write with scratchy school pens and ink in leaky inkwells that sat in a hole in the top right hand corner of your desk. (Inconvenient if you were left handed, but then if you were left handed you were subjected to correction therapy to make you right handed). If you were good, you were appointed ink monitor for the day whose job it was to go round with a large bottle of the stuff and pour it over people's desks. I believe the Rorschach inkblot test was invented in the primary schools of the 60's.
Here's something to cheer you up, although you may have seen it already. An American judge has ruled that the small boy wearing the blue bunny hat and spider man backpack must be released.
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Same here, Kat. The ten years
Same here, Kat. The ten years of nightmare I remember as school. I think I actually left knowing less than I did when I started. I'm sure I was regarded as the perfect test model for Applied Behaviour Analysis!
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