6 reasons why, contrary to popular belief, autumn actually sucks

By Charlea - Saturday, October 17, 2015



It's happened. I've untangled the wooly mess of forgotten, bobbly jumpers congregating at the bottom of my wardrobe, I've enlisted another blanket for bedtime, and I've stuffed a bin bag up the chimney to exclude drafts. This week, I also made my own batch of chicken soup, wore gloves four mornings in a row, and binge ate porridge. Yep, it's official - autumn is here.

And I bet if you've spent any time on Pinterest, or are just a relentlessly upbeat person, this is the season you've been waiting for - the season of crackling fires, pub lunches, oversized knitted jumpers, pumpkins, the smell of cinnamon and colorful, crunchy leaves decorating the streets.

If you're one of these people: stop reading now, click back on to Deliciously Ella and enjoy the rest of your pumpkin spiced latte...because things about to get real ugly.

It's October. It's a Saturday. I've rejected plans to go out with friends and I'm in bed with a stuffed bear wearing three layers and two duvets, poised and ready to list the many reasons why AUTUMN IS CRAP. Brace yo self.


1. LEAVES

Ooo aren't they lovely when they change colour and we get to see that truly autumnal scattering of gold/red that makes such a lush satisfying crunch when you step on it in your Chelsea boots... pfft. Let's be real here; autumn leaves rarely crunch, they're normally brown, and nine times out of ten have merged into some sort of saturated mulch that leaves a minging slimy trail all over your new suede boots.

2. COSY JUMPERS

We all want to be that girl on Pinterest with the perfect messy braids and chunky roll neck jumper who looks just so cosy, but let's be honest: most of us can only scrape together the funds to hit Primark to stock up on knitwear, which will emerge from our washing machine one week later threadbare, bobbly and unable to retain any sort of body heat whatsoever. Don't even get me started on autumn fashion as a general, because I'm currently desperately attempting to save my £2 disposable income each week to purchase an £80 pair of suede boots and it's making me feel quite sad about life and the sort of people who can afford to refresh their wardrobe with new things every season.

3. BOYFRIENDS

It's effing freezing, and hence only logical to start looking for a partner to occupy one half of the bed and share their body heat (and your rent) so you have any remote chance of surviving the long winter ahead, right? With autumn comes the Relatonship Transfer Window, causing an inevitable influx of coupling off and wifeing in – which is all fine and dandy until you're the last man standing in the friendship group. Your friends are starting to pie you off every weekend so they can cuddle on the sofa with lasagne and blankets and stuff, and you're the last one hanging around outside some packed bar in Clapham every Friday night trying to lock in your winter squeeze for boyfriend season, but still remaining horribly alone and cold in your giant bed night on night on night (this isn't actually me, promise).


4. CARBS

One of the things I love most about autumn (and life actually), is food. All the good stuff comes out: warm stews, chunky soups, pies, gravy, root vegetables, sprouts. Which is all fun and games, but let's appreciate the common denominator here: complex carbohydrates. One half of us wants nothing more than to curl up in bed with a giant bowl of spag bol and cheese; the other half is scrolling through their Instagram feed reading "motivational" quotes such as the above, looking at photos of cacao nibs and abs, and proceeding to cry into a bowl of spinach and tuna in a bid to finally get that beach bod ready for June 2016. YAY.

5. SOCIAL SOLITUDE 

The drop in temperature means a social life spike is inevitable, and everyone starts spending their Saturday nights doing X Factor and tortellini instead of tequila slammers and BBQs. A blessing for the bank balance, but a curse for your morale/happiness/general wellbeing. But it's cool, because Itv 2 is probably showing Bridget Jones once a week, so you've always got that.

6. THE TEMPERATURE

TWO DUVETS. Yet again please mind the gap between my rent and my salary, because I can't really afford heating and I'm having to come up with new strategies daily to keep warm and I've started debating buying an electric blanket and I'm even thinking about wearing a beanie around the house. In conclusion: my flat is freezing, and I'm probably not alone in this one. Has anybody else stood on the platform waiting for a train/bus this week wearing gloves? Yep. yep. yep.



I could go on but I think it's pretty official: I hate autumn. (and I think I may be suffering from mild seasonal affective disorder) 

And on that note, I'm officially going into hibernation. See you all next April and please bring beer gardens, Pimms and tanlines.

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1 Comments

  1. This one is of my type.I really like Autumn and winter.In that season as you mentioned,Leaves fall and that loneliness.It makes huge effect.Thanks for sharing

    ReplyDelete

I really do appreciate any comments, and will always read and try to reply to each one. If you have a question, however, you may receive a quicker response by tweeting @misscharlea