I hadn’t had the ‘flu in ages, avoided all those awful places fraught of gritty eyes and splitting heads, patrons ringed in lethargy of leaden wings, deafened by the roaring chills and still-life flushes, weakened in their clumsy trusses, trodden on through breached defences, sore diseased and barely breathing; now I can’t decline a cough or sneeze, I’m on my knees and in the throes of drowning.
Sure, I sip my lemon tea with spoon of amber honey, trying to decide which things to do, things I didn’t need to think about before this day, praying for the strength to ride these doldrums out, to see them to their squalid end.
Then lost again, the sequence fades and drifts in thinning strands of random thought, my nose is dripping like a faucet to be stopped, should I sit or stand or aught I turn a page or listen to my wife who says to rest. Keep warm, its best you take a blanket dressed across your knees, keep your fluid levels up and don’t despair.