April 1999.
Not To Do List.
Back in Ireland after 4 years in America. Time lingers heavy in the air, like the scent of jasmine at twilight.
Economic booms will come and go, but the essential qualities of Irish life do not change, because this young nation is populated by an ancient race, and at the core of the Irish heart is a need and respect for time.
Time with friends; time to be alone; time to walk the dog; time to play with the kids; time to wobble on your bicycle as you balance it on your neighbour’s gate and chat; time to live your life away from work, to say hello and have a few shcoops; time to appreciate those living alongside, to realise who you are and what you want to do about it.
The very thing that America could not offer became the coveted object of all this scribbler’s craving.
Squeezed into the narrow walkway by the roadworks on Shop Street, my hurried worried Americanised legs are just itching to get a move on.
The bodies in front of me are ambling. There is simply no other word for it. Ambling they are, past the workers on the other side of the wire who, for their part, appear to be shovelling sand and sliding cobblestones at a luxuriously relaxed pace.
‘Things to do things to do’ I mutter like a maniacal White Rabbit, picking up pace as I clear the roadworks, until I’m wrenched to a standstill.
A pair of hands grab my shoulders from behind. The Guru suggests a coffee, which turns into a pint.
By the time I finally get to the shopping centre I feel late. I have neither a schedule nor an appointment; merely the legacy of anxiety from the offices of California.
Sixty feet above the shopping centre, raised on top of a pole, a sign proudly declares
NOW'S THE TIME FOR DIY!
Directly below, a giant quasi-digital clock reads
10:56
I check my watch.
It’s 12:15.
‘Now’s the time to fix your clock!’ I say out loud to myself, taking the time to enjoy the irony of it all.
July 1999.
The Riddle of Galway?
Ahh, the relief of finally lying down ... as that cruelly early Galway Summer dawn appears from behind the curtain ... ooohhhhh ... god, bed feels good.
Now, time to check the spin-ometer. Just close the eyes for a few seconds, see if the insides of my head are of a mood to start challenging the laws of centrifuge, physics, Copernicus and Pat Kenny.
Nope. Brain and senses feel calm and stationary.
Good.
Next see if the ooo ... aaahhh ... eee ... contents of my stomach are going behave themselves, or act out Newton’s laws of acton and reaction.
Nope. Lovely.
Smashed but safe and intact.
I strain to lift my head, to see if the Scores on the Time Doors say 4:30 or 5:00am, the Snapper soothes my partied brow.
“Ssshhhssshhh ... you’ve been feeding the Beast, babe, that’s all. You know how Galway City loves to be fed excess...”
So true, so very true, and the day being the Guru’s birthday, I drained it of every drop of celebration there was to be had.
A riddle for Galway occurs to me, worthy of the Sphinx herself: in which city can you step out in the morning on two legs, walk all day alongside many legs, and return to lie down, legless?
July 1999.
What next? Gardengate?
At any given time there will be at least one pathetic political tribunal going on in this country. I’ve never lived anywhere like it.
The Tories set new parameters for sleaze in the early ‘90s with ministerial auto-erotic deaths and toe suckers abounding, and we know too well all about presidential cigars and the Oval Orifices of America, but you have to hand it to the Irish for their far-from magical ability to make a court case out of truly boring nonsense.
Beef, speeding tickets and supermarkets do not grab the public imagination in the same way as oral sex with interns and princesses crushed in cars.
There will always be some belligerent TD adamantly denying that he ever met, knew or spoke to the person who absolutely did not, at any time, ever give him a brown paper bag with £80,000 in it, and further, he didn’t even know what denomination the non-existent notes were of, because he didn't ever look in the imaginary paper bag.
What’s next? Dana found guilty of trimming her hedge a little too far over her neighbour’s fence? ‘GardenGate’ could run for three years, easy.
Anything will suffice, it seems, if it diverts the powers-that-be from the onerous task of helping ordinary people in their day-to-day lives.
September 1999.
No place like it?
Vacating Taylor’s Bar at midnight I enter the chipper the proud possessor of £1.23, knowing full well that a small curried chips costs £1.30.
Engaging yer one with a smile and a joke about the big black dog that sits outside all day, I ask her for £1.23’s worth of small curried.
She smiles a little coquettishly and proceeds to cram the plastic tray with as many chips and as much sauce as the blighter will hold. Generous, warm, the Irish are ever-attracted to humans and humour.
Home.
She then carefully takes four paper napkins and slowly, ever-so carefully inserts them into the bag so that they are completely immersed in the sauce. The napkins instantly disintegrate into a papery curryfull mush.
Home.
October 1999.
Neutral? I Don’t Think So.
As an ideal, neutrality has always sounded safe, sage and civilised, but it’s not ideals that walk the streets.
Does ‘neutrality’ simply imply an avoidance of war, or does it aspire to purity of intent?
Ireland’s stance in World War Two lay rooted in the past, in resentment, the Empire and Partition. The nascent nation did not want to embrace Nazism, but had to turn its back on England, simply because it finally could.
‘My enemy’s enemy is my friend’, whilst a little naive, is a wholly understandable reaction, but is it neutral?
I don’t think so.
Four years after the war, the Irish Minister for External Affairs, Mr. MacBride, was explaining his government’s position on membership of NATO to the Dáil.
“As long as Partition lasts, any military alliance or commitment involving joint military action with the State responsible for Partition must be quite out of the question as far as Ireland is concerned.”
Neutral?
I don’t think so.
Michael Collins, writing in the Manchester Guardian on December 7th, 1921, saw Irish membership of a League of Nations as:
“… necessary if the old world of internecine conflict is to emerge into the new world of co-operative harmony … Ireland’s inclusion as a free member of this league would have a powerful influence in consolidating the whole body, for Ireland is herself a Mother Country with world-wide influences.”
Neutral?
I don’t think so.
As a member of the European Union, Ireland has already aligned itself with two of the world’s nuclear superpowers and several members of NATO.
The notion that the EU is simply an economic arrangement between wholly independent nations went out of the window with the EU’s recent involvement in wars in former Yugoslavia.
As much as Ireland benefits from EU membership, it can no longer ignore the conflicts that influence the collective group.
During the Kosovo war, some members of the Irish football team made it clear that they were so appalled by Serbian activities, they did not want to play the Euro 2000 match against Yugoslavia at Lansdowne Road. The administration refused to permit entry visas to the visiting team.
This tiny act, so far from neutrality, was made by the same government that now tells us that membership of PFP will not affect Ireland’s neutrality.
What neutrality?
The Irish will hopefully never become international aggressors, but it is preposterous for them to pretend that they are, or ever have been, neutral.
©Charlie Adley
11.04.2026.





