Showing posts with label Victor Meldrew. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victor Meldrew. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Turning into Victor Meldrew

I don’t recall exactly when I turned into Victor Meldrew, but there is no doubt that we are now completely indistinguishable.

Keith Hann
Victor Meldrew

Having fallen about laughing at the line “Don’t tell him, Pike!” at a recent awards dinner, and found that no one else on the table recognised it (or had even heard of Dad’s Army), I should perhaps explain that Meldrew was an irascible, elderly sitcom character.

I thought of him as, before I sat down to write this column, I emailed Inchcape to tell them that they were mistaken in their belief that my Land Rover was due for a service, only to have my message instantly bounced back because the email address they had provided did not exist.

I then rang Npower to ask why on earth they had written to me suggesting that I could save money by switching from my Economy 7 tariff on the grounds that I am not using enough electricity at night. Which seemed odd, given that I use ten times more power then than during the day, owing to my reliance on storage heaters.

Their representative cheerily admitted that it was a “generic” letter they had sent to all their Economy 7 customers. So no chance of some confused or vulnerable people being worried or persuaded to pay more than they need to, then.


So much for this week’s sterling efforts at customer service by the private sector. I hesitate to move on to the public sector, because I have found from bitter experience that it is never a good idea to question other people’s religions or quasi-religions, and the NHS definitely falls into the latter category.

Nevertheless, I cannot think of any other organisation that would expect me to wait patiently for two hours, as I did on Friday in the company of my two-year-old son to see his consultant, only to be told: “He’s not here today.”

To be fair, I exaggerate. I only spent 90 minutes in the waiting room. The first half hour was spent alone in the car waiting for a parking space to become available, following the hospital’s decision to fence off at least three quarters of its car park and designate it “staff only”.

Leaving a totally inadequate provision for “visitors” or, as in our case, “patients”. I don’t know what happened after that as I got the red mist and walked out, remarking that their communications were a joke.

My wife, who was also there, said she found the subsequent consultation useful and our son did not bite anyone, so I suppose it may be counted a qualified success.


I have never known anything of the sort occur in private medicine. There you always seem to be able to see the consultant you expected, at pretty much the time you agreed. The surroundings are usually nicer, too.

The downside in my experience is that they are always eager to recommend a barrage of tests in the hope of identifying some expensive treatment to charge to your insurer.

When I went privately to a cardiologist a few years ago I was told that I urgently needed an invasive procedure on my heart.

I sought a second opinion and was referred to the NHS because the even more sophisticated test my new consultant recommended was not available anywhere else, even for ready money. It concluded that I would be just fine and there must be something in it, as I have not had the originally predicted massive heart attack at the time of writing.

Today I shall have the delight of speaking to my private health insurers to ask how they can justify their latest 14% increase in my premium to more than £4,000 per annum, given that I have not made a claim for several years.

“Old age and rising costs” will no doubt come the answer. The same reason that NHS spending continues to spiral in a way that makes it, I suspect, completely unsustainable.


But I shall steer clear of that and conclude with a topic on which we can all agree: the non-contrition and non-resignation of Maria Miller. Here Victor and I are in absolutely perfect harmony. Altogether now: “I don’t believe it!”



www.blokeinthenorth.com

Originally published in The Journal, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

What if I had become Victor Meldrew?

The “what if” game is the historian’s equivalent of “truth or dare”. What if the Salic law preventing female succession to German thrones had not applied in 1837, and Victoria had become Queen of Hanover as well as Great Britain? Would the First World War have been avoided?

More frivolously, and fictionally, what if Victor Meldrew had never married? Just how grumpy would he have been by the time he reached 70? My lovely young wife, as she likes to style herself, constantly reminds me that she has rescued me from a solitary old age in which I would no doubt have made Victor look like an advertisement for drug-induced jollity.

What if I had not opened that fateful email on March 31, 2008, in which she responded on behalf of an improbably offline friend to my website’s spoof advertisement for a wife, girlfriend or carer? Or what if I had simply deleted it, as I almost certainly would have done if she had not mentioned that she worked for a company whose chief executive happened to be a friend of mine, making it easy to check that she was a real human being and not some evil internet fraudster?

All these thoughts ran through my head on Saturday as we celebrated our son Charlie’s first birthday with his family and friends in Northumberland: his second major party and his fourth in all, setting a record likely to be challenged only by our own dear Queen. Admittedly I had taken the precaution of confining the children to a largely art-, antique- and book-free conservatory, but even so several people remarked on my preternatural calmness, as I sat there sipping Cava and nursing the head wound caused by three-year-old Nathaniel’s over-enthusiastic throw of a surprisingly sharp-edged dog toy.

I have certainly become a great deal more relaxed in the last couple of years. Perhaps because, like a man caught in an avalanche, I have stopped trying to grab something solid and simply resigned myself to my fate.

Yet, ironically, the unplanned developments in my private life have also closed off the option of the relaxing retirement I had planned for myself when I turned 50, after the predictable failure of an over-ambitious attempt to retire to the country and write books at the ripe old age of 32. Having spent several years systematically shaking off my loyal and long-suffering clients, I have been forced to spend the last 18 months trying to re-ingratiate myself with them and to broaden my range of contacts and capabilities.

No easy task in the present economic climate, with the added handicaps of my age, looks and gloomy persona. Who would appoint Victor Meldrew as a PR adviser when he could have a bubbly blonde with more up-to-date professional knowledge and infinitely greater charm, not to mention a wardrobe full of designer short skirts and Jimmy Choos?

Even so, my efforts have not been entirely unsuccessful. Except that I realised last week that I have made the classic self-employed mistake of squandering my income and failing to set anything aside for the tax bill that will arrive in January. So, like someone on an ever-accelerating treadmill, I must now try to earn yet more to pay the tax, thus preparing the ground for an even bigger bill in 2012.

What if I had had a proper career instead of drifting along in pursuit of the easiest option, always carefully dodging out of any job just before a large bonus or other serious windfall was about to land in my lap? It’s a question I ponder regularly, as I contemplate working until 80 or death, but I only have to look at the curly-headed one-year-old playing happily with his cousins to know that I would not really wish it any other way.

Originally published in The Journal, Newcastle upon Tyne.