How Many Cats Or Coats Left In You?
Wednesday, March 25th, 2009My old friend and first boss John Sinfield of PSL wrote to me:
Recently you asked me a hypothetical question about how many more cats you might have left in you.
I have a similar absorbing dilemma. How many Burberry raincoats does one buy in a lifetime?
My second is on its last legs – fraying at the edges and generally looking very sad. I calculate that this and its predecessor lasted about 22½ years each. That, it seems to me, is the life span of an average Burberry used predominantly in the UK with average precipitation but allowing for an occasional overseas winter trip to an inclement environment.
Now to the problem. Is it worth buying a third Burberry given the price is now close to a staggering £900?
Perhaps it would be better to nurse the existing model along for a few more seasons. But then if it totally collapsed a new Burberry would cost even more and I it would be touch and go as to which of us gave out first.
Should one abandon the Burberry entirely and go for a cheaper model?
Will the impact of global warming mean a Burberry lasts for a shorter time span?
Is there a market in second-hand Burberry’s?
I don’t remember going through this thought process when I got Burberry 2.
All of this is strangely worrying in a “can’t sleep at 4.00 am” kind of way.
Measuring one’s lifespan out in cats or coats is, I suppose, a valid way to face mortality. It was my friend David Ellis of Bloomberg (no spring chicken himself, but probably 15 years younger than me) who rather mischievously asked me, when we got Bembo and Bodoni as kittens about 3 years ago, how many cats I thought I might have left in me.
I reckon I’ll see another one or two cats out. Coats is a different matter. And puppies — never again. When Milo finally descends to pal up with Cerberus and throw up in the Styx, as he undoubtedly will in about 15 years’ time, his replacement will be a sedate old dog, rather than a cute, fluffy, marauding, despoiling, vandalising, iconoclastic malefactor.