28/12/2025
Being but men, we walked into the trees
Afraid, letting our syllables be soft
For fear of waking the rooks…
Dylan Thomas
In the old Asterix comic books there was always a fear the Celts mentioned, that the ‘sky would fall on their heads’. An abundance of good fortune would always invite the opposite to swiftly distribute its energies into the community. The sheer vivacity of a decent Christmas always has me looking over my shoulder and talking quietly, evoking that brilliant Thomas line about ‘fear of waking the rooks’.
In the last three weeks three of my friends have buried their mum, step-mum and another their dad. I met the last on the street just a minute ago, and he said something like: I’d be just as sad if he’d died in April, but he’s still close right now this Christmas, so put down your bags and come to the pub. He’s brought his sorrow into the bustle and poignancy of Christmas, with rooks-a-swirl, sky-falling and all of it. Let it all in. Clink the glass, eyeball the embers, stroke the dog.
I have a bit of the old Celtic fear myself heading into 2026, being an ‘old Celt’ and all. The big book finally coming out, the tours, the work at Cambridge, the sheer degree of opportunity – modesty aside – it gets me whistling through my teeth. I can see the tent pegs of the sky being slowly removed by a spirit-hand and the whole thing preparing to land on my curly head. Whenever there’s a significant advancement of opportunity in my life it spins me out a little. And there’s always some cost.
It’s not imposter syndrome, just a bigger playing field. I went twenty years storytelling without a mic on my lapel, and for a while I loathed the amplification. But then – as recently as the recent Irish tour with Tommy and a brilliant sound engineer – I grew to grow into the possibilities vocally offered. Don’t have to shout all the time. It took a while, but it’s about adjusted into the new situation. Please pray for me that I can actually absorb and enjoy all of these good things.
And one thing I do know, is that the bloody rooks are always woken, softly spoken or not. It’s their gig. And especially around Christmas.
Yesterday I was in the east, up in Norwich. There’s been some illness in my own family that required attendance, and now I’m back, but not in that warm cosy zone we generally wish for. I feel anxious – this may have changed by the time you read this – and the juxtaposition of stress and jolly can create such an out-of-body sensation.
On the train journey back and forth I saw hundreds and hundreds of faces, many worn or clearly struggling. It was like a Rembrandt street sketch. The fact the trains were full beyond capacity certainly wasn’t helping, and people had packed as if they were taking at least three months off. I was surprised to see the return of the enormous rucksack, rather than something with wheels on. I do love wheels on a long journey.
But carrying some burden myself, I was oddly moved to be part of this large, struggling mass of bodies trying to get home. The visible distress mirrored my own state and it was an odd kind of relief.
To state the obvious, there’s something rather climactic about Christmas. It brings everything to the surface. Joy, loneliness, gluttony, sacrifice. I can sometimes feel all of that within an hour. I’ve never been able to produce ‘on demand’ romantic feelings on Valentine’s Day, equally I’m never quite sure what Christmas will produce. I find myself awake in that tough stretch between three and five-thirty am, attempting to pray, drifting, stressing, coming back. Turning the pillows, fretting. Alone. The glee of Old Scratch circling the bedroom...
The Balance of Frivolity