So, the first day back at work after a busy and vee-enjoyable bank-holiday weekend, and don't I know it. I slept like a corpse last night. Usually, it takes me at least three hours to drop off, but last night I genuinely don't remember a thing between kicking off the memory-foam slippers en route to the mattress and the alarm clock screaming its tits off at 7.20 this morning. The bedside lamp was still on when I woke up, implying that
I must have fainted rather than fallen asleep in the traditional
manner.
Despite all the shut-eye, I was super knackered right from the bully-off. I managed to get through the rituals of breakfast and dressing myself on instinct and caffeine alone, but quickly ran out of juice. I even had to have a lie down before leaving the house. I'm no general practitioner, but that cannot be right, can it? I really should have 'phoned work and told them to sod off, but that's not the kind of attitude that gets you on the Apollo Program, is it?
I am no stranger to chronic fatigue. I blame my bio-rhythms, which are all-to-cock when compared with polite society. When they're preparing for bed, I'm settling down in front of an episode of Kenneth Clark's "Civilisation" with a half a bottle of rioja and a bag of monkey nuts for company. I've always been like this.
When I was boy, we had a cat called Tibby. I remember heading-off for school one morning. There was snow on the ground, and as I mooched forlornly off I spotted the Tibster curled-up in front of the gas fire in the front room, utterly oblivious. "You jammy get," I remember thinking. I could have wept.
In fact cats have a rare old time of matters generally, don't they? The favourable shift-patterns notwithstanding, they are the masters of their own ships in every conceivable way. I sometimes look at dogs, and feel sorry for them. They're like children: they go out when they're told to; they're always accompanied by an adult, and they can't feed themselves. I often look at my friends' chocolate Labrador and sense her thinking "I could absolutely murder a sausage." She's got more chance of flapping her ears and taking off, the poor cow.
Your cat, on the other hand, is like an undergraduate: he comes and goes as he pleases, sleeps 14 hours a day and eats when and what he wants. If a cat wakes up hungry and it's several hours before the Whiskas gets an airing, he simply leaps out window and bags himself a pigeon or a tit.
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