TO be honest, I was going to spend Thursday in bed; the possibility that a public service would without invitation be visited upon my person filled me with dread, and I had nightmare visions of schoolchildren repeatedly helping me back and forth across the village pedestrian crossing as I tried to make my to the Mahogany Ridge.
I almost made it to lunchtime, but I was dragged off to Muizenberg to watch a surfer friend flail about in waves the colour of rat fur. Did this count, I wondered? Could this be my 67 minutes?
It was raining, so I found a coffee shop where a waitress promptly told me about the day's special. "It's a Madibaccino. If you order one, we'll give R10 to Nelson Mandela's kids." I knew that she meant the children's fund. So I ordered one. I think the fund got the better deal, but at least the coffee was warmish.
That's when it struck me: a few weeks ago we were in deep gloom, wondering if the former president would reach his 95th birthday. But on Thursday, what with reports that Mandela's health had rallied, the national mood was upbeat and we threw ourselves into goodwill overdrive. Orphanages were spruced up, trees were planted, streets were swept clean, schools were painted, food parcels and blankets were handed over to the poor.
Everywhere there seemed to be evidence of what Archbishop Desmond Tutu was on about when he told The Guardian that "we have the capacity to be a fantastic nation".
But just not with me, and it became glaringly obvious that I would have to do something more than slurp away at a cup of foul joe if I was to come to the party. But what exactly?