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Country Living

The word that should never be mentioned in November

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Earlier and earlier seems to be the theme for the start of the Christmas season. In Galway city, the lights were switched on and the seasonal market opened in mid-November. JOE O’SHAUGHNESSY took this enchanting shot of Eyre Square just as the first quarter of the Beaver Moon began to emerge.

Country Living with Francis Farragher

If the truth be known, I don’t really mind Christmas that much at all, once it arrives, but it’s the pre-December build-up that often sets off a little tingle of trepidation in my inner-consciousness. Christmas does have its real consolations especially when loved ones are returning from abroad and I suppose that the notion of doing little to nothing for a couple of days – apart that is from eating, drinking and being merry – does give a break to the grind of the normal work regime.

Alas, that doesn’t apply to everyone, with staff required to keep our emergency services and hospitals ticking over, but for the vast majority of the proletariat, there’s at least the little consolation of taking some downtime on the 25th and 26th days of December and on New Year’s Day.

Long gone are my days of making New Year resolutions, but I’ve tended to replace that habit with a list of dos and don’ts that click into place from the early hours of December’s first day.

With the passing of years, the first and golden rule of the festive season is that any post-party hangovers are limited to just one in number.

The zero tolerance approach has been tried in the past with a very poor success rate so at least if a concession is made to have one day of self-inflicted suffering over the Christmas, it can become that tad more bearable, but festive hangovers are truly awful animals.

It probably is an age thing, but it is one of the great feelings of the festive period to wake up in the morning without that little wrecker with a lump hammer belting away persistently at both your temples, and not stopping until the evening sunset arrives.

Then there’s tiredness, both mental and physical, that makes even the most trivial of tasks like emptying the ashes or throwing a few cups into the dishwasher, seem like at attempt at climbing Kilimanjaro. The only modest consolation to be taken from such personal disasters is that they are self-inflicted and that they will eventually go away.

My second great Christmas resolution is not to over-eat on more than four occasions, with the notable exceptions being a couple of party dinners, the inevitable feast of the 25th, and one ‘pigging out’ with a greasy take-away followed by the best part of a box of Quality Street.

For more,  read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and  county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Country Living with Francis Farragher

If the truth be known, I don’t really mind Christmas that much at all, once it arrives, but it’s the pre-December build-up that often sets off a little tingle of trepidation in my inner-consciousness. Christmas does have its real consolations especially when loved ones are returning from abroad and I suppose that the notion of doing little to nothing for a couple of days – apart that is from eating, drinking and being merry – does give a break to the grind of the normal work regime.

Alas, that doesn’t apply to everyone, with staff required to keep our emergency services and hospitals ticking over, but for the vast majority of the proletariat, there’s at least the little consolation of taking some downtime on the 25th and 26th days of December and on New Year’s Day.

Long gone are my days of making New Year resolutions, but I’ve tended to replace that habit with a list of dos and don’ts that click into place from the early hours of December’s first day.

With the passing of years, the first and golden rule of the festive season is that any post-party hangovers are limited to just one in number.

The zero tolerance approach has been tried in the past with a very poor success rate so at least if a concession is made to have one day of self-inflicted suffering over the Christmas, it can become that tad more bearable, but festive hangovers are truly awful animals.

It probably is an age thing, but it is one of the great feelings of the festive period to wake up in the morning without that little wrecker with a lump hammer belting away persistently at both your temples, and not stopping until the evening sunset arrives.

Then there’s tiredness, both mental and physical, that makes even the most trivial of tasks like emptying the ashes or throwing a few cups into the dishwasher, seem like at attempt at climbing Kilimanjaro. The only modest consolation to be taken from such personal disasters is that they are self-inflicted and that they will eventually go away.

My second great Christmas resolution is not to over-eat on more than four occasions, with the notable exceptions being a couple of party dinners, the inevitable feast of the 25th, and one ‘pigging out’ with a greasy take-away followed by the best part of a box of Quality Street.

For more,  read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and  county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Country Living

Getting a small bit spooked as the machines get smarter

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Country Living with Francis Farragher

WE all get attached . . . nay, even dependent . . . on our technology devices, most notably the mobile phone, but here and there the technology does spook me a bit.

A couple of weeks ago, as I sat into my car one evening as I prepared to head for the hills, I began to sing a verse or two of the Beatles classic ‘Yesterday’.

The Apple CarPlay system was on in my car and I had scarcely completed the first verse of the song when lo and behold what started to play on the speakers but of one Paul McCartney with the ‘real thing’.

Now, some of my technology nerd acquaintances will come up with a simple explanation as to why this happened but it surely wasn’t a coincidence.

There are times too when I think I’m paranoid, or maybe not, when after certain conversations have taken place about anything from cars to canisters, an ad flashes across my iPhone about the topic we’d just been discussing.

And now, the latest buzz words in the whole chain of technology advancement are Artificial Intelligence or AI, which I have to admit is just a little bit above my basic level of competency or understanding of high-tech jargon.

Being of country stock, the AI initials always meant only one thing back the years – artificial insemination – when the man with the straws of bull semen would arrive on the farm to impregnate cows in what had to be a very non-pleasurable experience for all concerned.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

 

 

 

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Country Living

Dark days when innocence disappeared out the window

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Country Living with Francis Farragher

Sometimes, the return drive from Dublin after a weekend sojourn in The Capital can feel a bit longer than it should. The passengers are generally tired and try to steal forty winks so often the radio is the best companion to court. With local stations out of range, I flicked through the channels on a Sunday evening and stumbled into one of those programmes that once you hear the beginning of . . . well it just sucks you in.

It was a documentary made a number of years back for Radio 1 on the Whistleblowers’ theme, featuring the story of one Father Gerard McGinnity who in the late 1970s and early 1980s was regarded as one of the ‘up-and-coming stars’ of the Catholic Church in Ireland being appointed as Senior Dean of Maynooth College in 1978 at the age of 32, decades younger than any of his predecessors.

The Armagh native seemed destined for high places in the Church hierarchy,  with ‘the sky the limit’ for someone so young to have advanced so quickly through the ranks. However, all was to change dramatically around 1984, when Fr. McGinnity was made aware of allegations of possibly of improper contacts between the then Vice-President of Maynooth College, a Fr. Micheál Ledwith, and young seminarians.

Fr. McGinnity, still alive and well in his mid-70s, spoke on the documentary about how he wrestled with his conscience and what he should do after these concerns were raised with him.

Eventually, he made the decision, that he needed to express his concerns to a number of bishops and the then Papal Nuncio, Gaetano Alibrandi, expecting that his concerns would be treated in confidence and properly investigated. Neither of those two things happened.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

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Country Living

Suffering from everything apart from hypochondria

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Country Living with Francis Farragher

It’s a condition that’s eased with the passing of time but here and there little symptoms of it return. A sore calf muscle; a cough that lasts more than a week or so; a stiffness in the back of the neck of shoulders; a soft little lump on the bottom of a foot . . . now that is a whole range of harmless enough symptoms but when you add in a measure of hypochondria to that cocktail . . . well then the medical self-diagnosis can be devastating.

The only little consolation for an ordinary Joe Soap, who might occasionally suffer from this condition, is that it’s one shared by many famous people across the globe. Over a decade or so, a pretty widely acclaimed book by Brian Dillon, entitled, Tormented Hope: Nine Hypochondriac Lives, documented the lives and times of nine famous people spanning the centuries who were afflicted with extreme doses of the condition.

From Charles Darwin to Charlotte Bronte to Andy Warhol, these are famous people who had an unhealthy preoccupation with their health or what they believed was impending doom coming down the track for them. Of course, the inevitable is coming for all of us either sooner or later, but the trick is not to be envisioning the final whistle being blown early into the second half of the match.

Mark Twain was probably ahead of his time when he cautioned about reading too many health books ‘in case you might die of a misprint’ and now for every little pain of headache we experience, the temptation is there to flick through Google where invariably you will find a fatal affliction connected to that occasional twinge in your big toe.

Hypochondria can be defined rather simply as an irrational fear about health and death and while to non-sufferers, it’s the butt of many jokes and moments of jocularity, the rather more serious side to it is that it can make life pretty miserable for the person that believes, for no particular reason, that the end is nigh. It can lead to depression or be caused by depression but the simplest cure for it may be just a simple heart-to-heart chat with your GP.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

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