Gail writes:
As lockdown was announced towards the end of March, I resisted all calls to make the most of this great opportunity that being at home offered. I didn’t want to master a new language; I ignored calls to join in online fitness sessions; I made no plans to transform our interiors or read all those books that have sat waiting patiently.
Instead, it was simply a matter of survival.
I aimed solely on getting through and staying well.
Around this time Deacon Blue released their 9th studio album: City of Love. The title track seemed to follow me whenever I turned the radio on – it was always playing. I felt an instant affinity (isn’t it a joy when a song has that immediate impact?) and my spirits were lifted.
“All that remains” sang Ricky Ross, “is a City of Love”.
These words swam around my head endlessly it seemed.
As lockdown unfolded I didn’t join the ranks of those doing extraordinary things: key workers putting in long, dedicated shifts or gestures of great altruism: fundraising or volunteering. Secretly part of me wished I was contributing more. Instead I was working at home. Sitting at my desk. Writing emails and making phone calls. It wasn’t exceptional but in the circumstances it felt all I was able to do.
As the lyrics to ‘City of Love’ continue:
“If you’ve got the will, you’ve got to keep on going”
so I did, feeling the whole weight of these peculiar and surreal circumstances. And yet there was relief as time went by, a new divine warmth, a sense of God near, his hovering in close proximity that enabled me to “put what I’m carrying down”.
These spiritual overtones in City of Love have spurred me on, a song that Ricky Ross has described as “a hope for the future”. During a season of strangely abnormal normality, existing in our own bubble, I’ve discovered my grand offering to the common good is in fact a small one. Little gestures that build a ‘City of Love’ in my own and the lives of others. Because that is all that remains: love for those dearest to me. Love for my neighbour. Contributions that lovingly demonstrate kindness and hopefulness. That seek to let someone else know they are seen and remembered in a time we’ve been forced to become distant. And God inhabits it all in his own mysterious way.
This song (along with other album tracks such as ‘Wonderful’) have been rich and comforting as we’ve progressed through the days, weeks and now months of lockdown. Hopefully my tickets to hear Deacon Blue live again in October will remain valid, for Ricky to sing “all that remains is a City of Love” just so I can join in with gusto and a very thankful heart.
Find out more about Deacon Blue at https://deaconblue.com/

