Another day closer to the awful vote. I wish I could see a positive side to all this. I can't relate to the Yes campaign at all, and that disturbs me profoundly, because according to the polls, half the country is behind the Yes campaign. It's really disturbing to feel such a gulf between how I perceive things and how the other half of the country perceives things.
I look at images of my countrymen (for want of a better word) waving flags and cheering and painting their faces blue, and I feel like I'm on another planet. I can understand people wanting to get rid of the Tories, but I cannot for the life of me understand this intensity and nationalistic zeal.
I see people being interviewed on the TV and it scares me because I honestly cannot relate to their fervour or to what they say, and I feel I need to because on Friday morning they could be leading a victory parade and making plans for a whole new country. MY country - or what was.
I read an article today about 'anarchy for Yes'. I'm quite well-disposed to anarchy as long as it stays well away from me and my life, i.e. in the ether of the theoretical realm. We are talking about Real People being affected on every level here - Real People with lives, children, mortgages, jobs, credit cards, aged parents, illnesses - the paraphernalia of 21st century life. What relevance does - or rather, should - anarchy have for them? How self-indulgent and cruel to talk of 'anarchy' and a total change of regime in that context.
The whole campaign has been utterly ghastly and I cannot wait for it to be over. I pray that it's a resounding no, but I'm preparing myself mentally and spiritually for a yes.
I look at images of my countrymen (for want of a better word) waving flags and cheering and painting their faces blue, and I feel like I'm on another planet. I can understand people wanting to get rid of the Tories, but I cannot for the life of me understand this intensity and nationalistic zeal.
I see people being interviewed on the TV and it scares me because I honestly cannot relate to their fervour or to what they say, and I feel I need to because on Friday morning they could be leading a victory parade and making plans for a whole new country. MY country - or what was.
I read an article today about 'anarchy for Yes'. I'm quite well-disposed to anarchy as long as it stays well away from me and my life, i.e. in the ether of the theoretical realm. We are talking about Real People being affected on every level here - Real People with lives, children, mortgages, jobs, credit cards, aged parents, illnesses - the paraphernalia of 21st century life. What relevance does - or rather, should - anarchy have for them? How self-indulgent and cruel to talk of 'anarchy' and a total change of regime in that context.
The whole campaign has been utterly ghastly and I cannot wait for it to be over. I pray that it's a resounding no, but I'm preparing myself mentally and spiritually for a yes.