I
like the dinner and compliments side of Valentine’s Day, it’s the thoughtful
extras that stress me out. I have experienced few things more frightening than
being led blindfold by a fruitcake Valentine into a dimly lit room full of
balloons. I would genuinely prefer to come home to a bed with ‘I drown
squirrels’ spelled out on it in Refreshers than one strewn with rose petals.
Producing anything more complicated than a heart-shaped fried egg on
Valentine’s Day should be a sackable offence. Fortunately my husband agrees.
He’s still hard to buy for. What to get for an amateur arsonist who is
terrified of dog poo and whose favourite film is Mrs Doubtfire? I did find combustible
false breasts with wire bristles for Christmas.
I
hope I don’t get roses again.
How to receive roses graciously:
Lesson One.
Receiving
roses graciously is so hard the University of Ham is now offering it as a
degree course so what follows is a very simplistic overview. Say
“ohTHANKYOUtheyresoBEAUTIFUL!” with meaning, inhale deeply and pretend they
smell of something. You must not then leave them in the sink – unwrap them
immediately and attempt to hack the bottom section of the stems off at an angle
with your kitchen scissors. Although this will be akin to cutting an Action
Man’s leg off with a Twix you must persist as whipping out bread knives and
shears etc will make you look unfeminine and scare your Valentine. As will
screaming ‘sh*t me’ when the thorns get stuck in your thumbs.
Do
not hammer the stems with a meat mallet in front of your Valentine for the same
reason, also because it kills the flowers. N.B. if your roses do not come with
rosefood you CANNOT, it turns out, make your own by tipping caster sugar into
the water instead, though this is a fun way to grow Quorn. Try to put your
roses in something classy, like a vase or spaghetti jar. Using a decapitated
Matey bottle may seem ungrateful.
If
you are still excited about your evening after all that then you may be
experiencing lurrrve and will probably get distracted and forget to put any
water in and your roses will wizen. Oh well. Thank God I don’t live in America
where Valentining is such a serious business people who score twos on ‘How Romantic
Are You?’ quizzes are left in swamps to be eaten by alligators.
My
husband and I may never do Valentine’s on a pink horse, pockets jammed with
doves but deep down we’re very romantic. Maybe very deep down and maybe
romantic in the way a homophobe may, deep down, one day, turn out to be gay…but
we’re up for the 14th. We like each other. We have a copy of this catalogue.
And we can tango.
*
Anniversary (1), Christmas (2), Enjoyable family/friend Birthdays (3,4,5,6),
Bringing baby home from hospital (7), Baby sleeps through night (8), Give baby
lemon (9), Baby says ‘Mama’ (10) and Dada (11) for first time, tadpoling day
(12), duvet day (13), bier festival (14) sporting events (15)
| About the author |
Sally has been writing and performing comedy since 1992. Credits include Smack the Pony, I'm Alan Partridge, Bridget Jones' Diary, Green Wing and Jam and Jerusalem. Her favourite productions to date, however, are her two children, Olly and Luke. She can't dance, draw or iron but she loves animals, the work of the late, great Bill Hicks, and buying presents. |
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