As a real life Santa – Noddy was a legend.

As we’re still in the Christmas period, I think this is an appropriate time to tell a story about a real Santa Claus who lived in Cork once upon a time. He lived in a time before the Internet, when getting requests to the North Pole was a bit trickier than it is now. Younger people can’t believe there was ever such a time but that was the way of it back in the dark ages.

In the early nineties, I was transferred from Blarney to Mayfield Garda Station in Cork city and I was new to the area when I first came across was a character by the name of Mattie Nodwell. That name might not ring a bell with some people, but many of you would certainly have had dealings with him, particularly around Christmas time.

He was known affectionately as Noddy and he had a toy shop in Cornmarket Street. He had every toy you could think of in that shop and some you hadn’t even heard of. At Christmas time, Noddy’s was one of the main places to go for presents for the kids. He was always tuned into the current trends and you could be sure that if the kids were talking about it, Noddy had it.

There were a couple of incidents that happened during my time in Mayfield that brought me into contact with him.

The first meeting came about as the result of a burglary that had occurred at a house on Christmas morning. The house was broken into in the early hours and the thieves took everything. Not only did they take the presents, but they took crackers and the lights off the tree as well. It was a traumatic experience for the family and they were devastated.  

Apart from the fact that their home had been invaded, they had to face the prospect of explaining to the children that Santa had somehow missed their house even though he had managed to find everyone else. I was there that morning and it was impossible not to feel sorry for them.

I thought of Noddy and I got in touch with him. At a time when everybody else was enjoying the festivities at home with their families, he headed to his toy cave and gathered enough toys to ensure that Santa was able to make a special visit to that house, albeit a few days later.

Santa was escorted by a garda patrol car with flashing blue lights and siren to make a special delivery. I can still see the face of one of the kids looking out the window as we pulled up outside. His eyes wide open with excitement and it turned out to be a special Christmas for that family despite the earlier disappointment.

There was another occasion too when a family was left distraught at Christmas time. I can’t go into details without revealing the identity of the family concerned but I can say with certainty that Christmas would have been a complete disaster without the Mayfield Santa. Three kids would have been left devastated only for Noddy.

On another occasion, I had a personal request for him. I was looking for a toy called ‘Super Van City’ for one of my kids and I couldn’t get it anywhere. It was on the top of his wish list and I was getting desperate. This thing was in huge demand and every store had sold out of it. I contacted Mattie and he told me that the item was like gold dust, but he would do his best for me.

I had given up all hope of getting it and I was trying to figure out how to break it to my young lad that Santa couldn’t fill the order. My landline rang late on Christmas Eve and it was Mattie and he had sourced one of the toys for me and it was ready for collection. Once again, he had saved the day.

About a year after I retired, sometime in 2016, I was down in Youghal and I met a young garda. He recognised me from my community policing days in Mayfield and he had attended one of the schools that I used to visit.

We chatted for a bit and it turned out that he was Mattie Nodwells son, Brian. I asked him how his dad was keeping, and he told me that Mattie had died.

I got a bit of a shock and I couldn’t figure out how I had missed it. I left Mayfield in 2000 but I was still in contact with many people up there, but that piece of news just escaped me. His son told me that he became ill and died within a very short space of time, so it all happened very fast.

Mattie Nodwell was a guy who did things for his community without advertising the fact. He didn’t put it in neon lights in the city centre. He didn’t want any recognition or praise, he was just happy to help those in trouble. He stepped up to the mark when he didn’t have to and when there was nothing in it for himself. He was just a guy with a big heart.

It seems a bit strange writing about this now, so many years later but he regularly comes into my head over the Christmas period. He died around this time of the year as well and I just thought that it might be nice to remember his sense of community spirit.

We had no big relationship, we weren’t the best friends or anything, but he did stuff for others that generally went unnoticed. When people were in trouble, he was there and it’s only right that he should still be remembered. 

Don’t be led astray on Christmas Eve.

I’ve always thought there is something special about Christmas Eve in Cork City. It’s a day when everyone is in good form, especially in the late afternoon. The shopping is finished and the offices around the city are closing for the holiday period and the atmosphere is good. The sound of Dean Martin and Bing Crosby singing the usual favourites makes it difficult to be grumpy.

It’s a great time for children too as the excitement builds with only one more sleep until the great man arrives. That excitement wanes a bit every year as the kids get older and when they eventually grow up, some of the magic goes out of the occasion. But then, the grandchildren come along and the whole thing starts off all over again.

There was a time, when I was working in An Garda Siochana, that I was responsible for Operation Freeflow. This came into effect around the start of December and would normally run until after the sales in January. The traffic was always manic during those few weeks as more and more cars tried to fit into car parks that were already struggling to cope.

Those who couldn’t fit into a car park wanted to queue up on the street until a space became available which in turn caused problems for other motorists who were trying to get around the city.

The aim of Operation Freeflow was to keep the traffic moving but that wasn’t always possible given the sheer volume we had to cope with. Tempers were often frayed because everybody had things to do and they had no time to be dealing with parking problems. It wasn’t an easy time for anyone, and it was worse when the weather was bad.

But we battled on and looked forward to Christmas Eve when the madness would end, for a few days at least. It was the same every year. In the morning there would be the last miniute shoppers, racing around, frantically looking for the remaining missing present. Then in the mid-afternoon, the panic would be over, the streets and the car parks would empty, and calm would be restored once more.

Christmas Eve at home is a special time too. Building up the excitement for the kids on the one hand while trying to calm them down to get them to bed on the other. Then as soon as they’re tucked up, the presents can be retrieved from their hiding places and put under the tree.

There was one occasion though when Christmas Eve didn’t go quite so smoothly. I went out to deliver some presents to family members and I got waylaid. I was encouraged to go for a quick pint with some friends. Not that I needed too much persuading. Everything was ready at home so there was no great panic, it was just a matter of putting out the presents and we were all set.

I must have stayed a bit longer than I had anticipated because when I got home, I was having a little difficulty speaking properly. It was before mobile phones came on the scene, so I hadn’t been able to tell my wife where I was, but she guessed correctly anyway, that some bold people led me astray. She didn’t seem to mind but she had a strange look in her eye that told me something was up.

I went in to the sitting room to inspect the lay-out and my heart sank when I saw a very large box sitting in the middle of the room. My wife asked me if I had forgotten about it and, of course I had. It was a ride on tractor and trailer for my son and it had a bucket attachment on the front like you’d see on a JCB. That’s no problem, I thought. I’ll just take it out of the box and stand it near the tree along with the other stuff.

When I opened the box, I realised immediately, that things were about to get complicated. There were lots of bits and pieces in there that needed to be put together and tools were also going to be required. There was a serious looking set of instructions and I had difficulty making sense of them in my fragile condition. I had a sinking feeling in my stomach that this was not going to end well, and it dawned on me why my wife had that strange look in her eye. She was enjoying herself.

A few hours later and well beyond midnight, I was sweating profusely. This contraption was getting the better of me and the instructions were being splattered with blood as I cut my knuckles on pieces of metal that were refusing to go where I wanted to put them. I had to do some hammering and there was also a bit of violence involved before I eventually got it sorted.

The following February, I was rooting for something under the stairs when I pulled out a parcel. The first thing I noticed was the Christmas wrapping paper. When I looked at the label attached to it, I discovered it was a jumper that was meant to be given to my father two months earlier, on Christmas Eve.

I have no idea how it ended up under the stairs, but I suspect that my merriment on Christmas Eve may have had something to do with it. Then the guilt set in as I realised that my poor father must have been wondering what he had done to be struck off my Christmas list. He was very amused when Santa eventually turned up.

From now on, the 24th December will be an alcohol-free occasion for me. It’s just not worth the blood loss, stress and guilt.

How would you like to get an injection into your eyeball?

I have never been a follower of fashion and my wiferegularly complains about my dress sense. Many fads have come and gone downthrough the years and I managed to avoid all of them.

When I was a young lad,hair styles went through many phases too. The Beatles introduced a mop type,then there was long hair, crew cuts, skin heads, spiked punk rocker hair andshaved heads.

I ignored it all but while I would have loved long hair like my friends had at the time, it simply wasn’t possible. My hair didn’t get long, it got wide, like an afro. There were bottle brushes around one time and they were used for cleaning babies’ bottles. They had a wire handle with a fuzzy piece at the top. That was me.

The footballer, Marouane Fellaini, plays for Manchester United, and he’s noted for his big mop of hair. I had that afro look long before he did and while he probably spends a lot of money looking after his trademark cut, mine was natural. I didn’t like it but there wasn’t a lot I could do about it either.

All that changed when I walked through the gates of theGarda Training College in Templemore in 1979. On our first day as new recruits,we were all instructed to go to the barber who occupied a small room by themain gate.

One by one we sat in his chair and in our innocence, we eachinstructed the barber on how we would like our hair styled.

He listened very attentively and then grabbed his shears andpromptly scalped each one of us in turn in the same way. We were in a state ofshock as we looked in the mirror and then looked at each other.

It was December,so we were frozen with the cold. The only consolation was that we were all inthe same boat. For the next thirty years, our hair styles would be determinedby our uniform and not by any fashion trend.

I got used to it very quickly and I kept it that way until nature intervened and robbed me of what hair I had left. Grooming was no longer an issue for me then, which suited me just fine.

It’s the same with clothes. I’m not adventurous or fashion conscious and I just wear what’s comfortable. Shorts and a T-shirt are my preferred option and I couldn’t care less about labels. When it gets colder, I wear jeans and a comfortable jumper and when I have to get dressed up for a special occasion, I iron my jeans.

I don’t know why anyone would want to buy jeans that are deliberately ripped and torn so their knees are sticking out through them, but it seems to be all the rage. Another frightening trend emerging is one that requires the trouser legs to be raised at half mast, accompanied by shoes with no socks. I will not be sporting that look.

Another craze that passed me by, thankfully, is body painting. Modern day footballers are covering themselves with ink. They want to cover every inch of available skin to mark themselves out as being different. But with so many at it now, they are all beginning to look the same.

It’s the same thing with body piercings. First it was earrings, then people started putting things in their eyebrows, nose and bellybuttons. Now they’ve gone back to the ears, cutting holes in them and sticking discs in their ear lobes. But there are others who have taken it a step further.

Eva Tiamat Medusa is from Texas and she is in her mid-fifties. She has taken body modification to a new level and she looks like nothing I have ever seen before. Her head has been painted with scales and various horns have been implanted under the skin. Her ears have been removed along with some of her teeth and her tongue has been split to resemble the tongue of a snake.

Apparently, she has spent more than $60,000 getting her forked tongue, removing her nostrils and acquiring her tattooed scales and eight ‘horns’. Her eyes have been coloured green and the result is that she no longer looks like a normal human being and that suits her fine because she wants to look like a reptile.

Lucky Diamond Rich currently holds the Guinness Book of records title for being ‘The world’s most tattooed person’, with an incredible one hundred per cent of his body covered with ink. That includes the inside of his eyelids, mouth, and intimate areas.

He admits being an obsessive-compulsive, who decided he wanted to become the world’s most tattooed man which he achieved in two years. Now that his entire body is covered with ink, Rich is having a white design tattooed over the top of all that black and is subsequently adding coloured tattoos on top of the white.

If that’s not bad enough, spare a thought for Lucy Luckayanko from New York who had a piece of platinum jewellery inserted into her eyeball because she wanted to stand out from the crowd. She had a heart-shaped sequin placed on the white of her right eyeball.

This procedure involves injecting anaesthetic into the eye to numb the area and then making a small incision in the eyeball to make room for the piece of jewellery. Then using forceps, the piece can be placed in position.

This kind of body modification is controversial, and it probably won’t surprise you to learn that the American Academy of Ophthalmology is warning consumers that this procedure could cause problems with vision.

Suddenly, the idea of torn jeans worn at half-mast with shoes and no socks, doesn’t seem so off the wall.

Leave your bum alone and don’t be such an eejit!

When I was about five years old, I had surgery for a pyloric stenosis. In layman’s language, a pyloric stenosis is a narrowing of the opening from the stomach to the small intestine. Symptoms include projectile vomiting.

I remember being out playing on the street with the other kids and I’d run in home to get sick and then run back out to play again. It was normal as far as I was concerned, and it didn’t knock a feather out of me. Eventually, I had to go to the Mercy Hospital in 1963 to have it sorted and I remember being sore after the operation.

I can also remember looking out the window at my mother as she waved up to me before heading off to the railway station for the train home. But mostly, I recall being left with a long and elevated scar on my stomach that has remained with me to this day as a reminder of that visit to hospital.

It didn’t take me long to realise that hospitals were associated with surgery and surgery was associated with pain, so they were to be avoided as much as possible.

As a teenager, I was back in the Mercy again, this time for a pilonidal sinus. In medical terms it’s described as a small hole in the skin that fills with fluid or pus, causing a cyst or abscess. It occurs in the cleft at the top of the buttocks. A pilonidal cyst usually contains hair, dirt, and debris. It can cause severe pain and can often become infected.

That’s a very good description of it and I can confirm that it does indeed cause severe pain. I am informed that the treatment for this has changed over the years but back then, they drilled a hole into the infected area. Then they packed the hole with a long thin strip of gauze which was left in place until it soaked up a lot of the gunk inside. Then they took it out it and repacked it with fresh gauze.

That sounds like a simple procedure, but the reality was that it was taken out with a tweezers. Inch by painful inch, it was slowly pulled out and the pain was excruciating. I remember the most comfortable position for me, while it was being removed, was to lean out the bathroom window, holding onto the window sill with both hands, and a cloth between my teeth. It was not pleasant.

My most recent visit to hospital was to the Mater Private in Dublin for robotic surgery to remove my prostate. This gland and myself had a falling out and it turned against me, so it had to go. This surgery also left me in some discomfort and I’m still recovering from it which brings me to the point of my story.

There is a growing market for cosmetic surgery and I find it difficult to understand why anybody would submit themselves to a surgical procedure when there is no medical need for it. The idea of going through that pain and suffering to get a different nose, a larger bum or bigger boobs is beyond me. There’s a difference between cosmetic surgery and plastic surgery and I fully understand the need for plastic surgery.

Plastic surgery is often required for reconstruction of facial and body defects due to birth disorders, trauma, burns, and disease and is intended to correct areas of the body that have been damaged and is reconstructive in nature. That’s completely understandable.

Cosmetic surgery, on the other hand, is focused on enhancing appearance and includes the likes of breast enhancement, rhinoplasty, chin enhancement, facelift, eyelid lift, tummy tuck, liposuction and filler treatments. This is mainly for people who are not happy with some of their bit and pieces including their bottoms.

In case you haven’t heard of it, let me introduce you to the Brazilian Butt Lift. If you grew up in the same era as I did you will be familiar with the question, “Does my bum look big in this?” Well it seems that now, thanks to a lady by the name of Kim Kardashian, that has changed, and big bottoms are all the rage. It’s now a case of, “Does my bum look big enough in this?”

The procedure to increase your butt size isn’t cheap and costs about £8,000 in the UK and it doesn’t sound pleasant either.

The fat is extracted from a patient’s thighs and injected into their buttocks to give it a fuller appearance. Sounds weird but it is very popular because nearly 320,000 buttock augmentation or buttock lift procedures were performed globally in 2015, according to the International Society of Aesthetic and Cosmetic Surgery, but it’s not all plain sailing.

There can be complications from BBL including severe infections, scarring, wound ruptures and abscesses and there is a risk that the fat can travel to the heart or brain. So, if you’re considering having this done, be careful who you go to.

According to The Guardian, Prosecutors in Rio de Janeiro have charged a celebrity plastic surgeon, known as “Dr Bumbum”, with homicide for carrying out an aesthetic procedure that resulted in the death of one of his patients. They said he injected more than the recommended quantity of a synthetic resin into her buttocks.

The British Association of Aesthetic and Plastic Surgeons advises that travelling abroad for this surgery should be avoided as you can’t be certain about the surgeons or hospital you are being treated in. You should only undergo surgery in a fully registered hospital with full intensive care support.

My advice is better. Just keep the bum you were born with and don’t even think about surgery until the time comes that you really need it.

Is this nonsense ever going to end?

There are certain people who have nothing better to do with their time, than study the constitution to find things in there that annoy them. There must be another agenda at work here though because many of the issues brought up could hardly be described as life threatening. So, I suspect it’s just an attention seeking exercise.

For instance, hands up all of you who know what Article 41.2 of the constitution says. How many of you care what it says and hands up all of you who will have a better quality of life when we get rid of it? Well, it’s a matter of great concern for some.

Article 41.2 of the constitution says the Irish state “recognises that by her life within the home, woman gives to the State a support without which the common good cannot be achieved. The State shall, therefore, endeavour to ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home.”

I can’t see thousands of women getting out of bed every morning and cursing Article 41.2 for holding them back and ruining their lives. I suspect they have better things to be doing but others have taken it upon themselves to create a national issue out of this heinous and offensive Article.

My wife is very satisfied with her life so far and why wouldn’t she be? Apart from having the perfect husband, she has always done what she pretty much wanted to do and never allowed anything to hold her back. She worked when she wanted to and stopped when it didn’t suit her. She returned to work when she wanted, went on foreign holidays, played sport, had kids, and I have never heard her giving out about Article 41.2.

She has a few expletives in her locker that she reserves for those special occasions when she stubs her toe, or her tennis is cancelled because of the rain. But in the forty years we’ve been together, I’ve never once heard her grumble about Article 41.2.

But some people like nothing better than a good moan. For instance, the term, ‘Mansize tissues’ has been keeping a few people awake at night. So much so that Kleenex are rebranding their ‘Mansize tissues’ after receiving complaints that the term is sexist, and they are changing it to “Kleenex Extra Large.”

We have been successfully wiping our noses with these things for over sixty years, but now because of a few characters with nothing better to do than highlight this nonsense, the name must be changed. But it’s not only tissues that are causing problems, Walt Disney has upset people too.

The actress, Keira Knightly, won’t let her three-year old daughter watch Cinderella because she doesn’t want her growing up thinking that if she waits around long enough, she will be rescued by a rich guy. Instead she wants her child to understand that she is an independent person who can rescue herself and doesn’t have to rely on a man. She’s three years old Keira!

Other Disney films have also been criticised for being unrealistic by suggesting that good always wins out over evil and for suggesting that there is always a perfect ending where everyone lives happily ever after. Critics complain that these films give a false impression to young people of what life is really like. Honestly, I’m not making this up.

Dr Sarah Coyne, from Brigham Young University, said: “Disney princesses represent some of the first examples of exposure to the thin ideal. As women, we get it our whole lives and it really does start at the Disney princess level, at age three and four and people should really consider the long-term impact of the princess culture.”

When I was a child, I watched Disney films, but I wasn’t intelligent enough to take these negative messages from the films, so I guess I was lucky to have survived unscathed. I watched Popeye, but I never desired to smoke a clay pipe and I never wanted to eat spinach. I watched the Roadrunner too and I haven’t spent my adult life trying to drop boulders on coyotes.

The Big Bad Wolf ate the granny but we’re not suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder because of it. They’re just fairy tales.

Anyone bothered by these children’s stories and Article 41.2 of the Constitution should learn to take life a bit less seriously and stop getting their knickers in a twist. Or jocks in the case of men. Or underwear for those offended by knickers or jocks and that’s not to suggest that getting underwear twisted is safe because it could affect blood circulation, so it is not recommended.

But just when you thought the world couldn’t get any more ridiculous, along comes Deanne Carson. She’s an Australian lady, with pink hair, who describes herself as a sexuality expert. I’m not exactly sure what she does with her expertise apart from handing out valuable advice to parents.

In her latest nugget, she is suggesting that in order to establish a “culture of consent” in a household, you should ask your baby for permission before you change its nappy. She says the language doesn’t have to be complicated: “I’m going to change your nappy now, is that OK?” will do fine.

I’ve changed many nappies down through the years and on more occasions than I can count, it was a struggle because the baby didn’t consent and actively resisted my efforts. So, if I’m changing the nappy against the wishes of the baby, am I not teaching the infant that it’s ok to submit to an adult who uses force to subdue them?

Life is complicated enough as it is without making it harder for ourselves.