We need relatable joy, wherever we find it

2 min read

editor’s letter

There is a quiet absurd nobility to the Sanday Easter egg story. To recap, there are 500 people living on Sanday. It’s up there in the Orkney islands, minding its own business, full of beaches and bronze age remnants and Norse names, as close to Norway as it is to Glasgow. Or thereabouts.

A few weeks ago, Dan Dafydd, owner of Sinclair General Stores on Sanday, ordered Easter eggs for his shop. He thought 80 would be enough. By now, you’ll know Dan made a mistake. He ordered 80 boxes. He ended up with 720 eggs. I don’t know much about Sanday except that Peter Maxwell Davies was from there. So, for a time, I had an image of Dan, eyes fixed on the North Sea, hair billowing around him as he listened to Farewell to Stromness on repeat and contemplated his chocolate future. Go on, Dan.

Dan has spoken of his “embarrassment”. He has also talked about finding “non-conventional” means to get rid of the eggs. Not sure what that meant at first – was he fashioning them into a large neolithic chocolate henge?

Turns out, Dan set about raffling some of them with a ‘guess the number’ competition (unless something curious is going on, surely the number is 720) with each guess costing £1. It’s open to non-islanders, so given the publicity, there is a chance of a fair sum being raised. The money is going to the RNLI, which makes all sorts of sense for an island community.

Dan has no reason to feel embarrassment. At some point we have all misordered – the wrong volume, the wrong size, the wrong trousers. We have all been the casualty of lack of online focus.

And Dan’s is a wholesome tale, like the secondary, very gentle, storyline on a formulaic Sunday evening TV show. I can see why it was widely reported. People need Sanday Easter egg stories.

A report by Dr Vivek Murthy, the US surgeon general, recently said “young people are really struggling”. For one of the first times, young people are less happy than the older generation in the US. This shift is expected to be repeated in western Europe, though a detailed study isn’t yet available.

We all want our children to live at the gates of a brighter future, where their opportunities are brighter than our own. That’s not to say ours were bad, but it’s a natural instinct to wish them better. The US report doesn’t explain it – though Dr Murthy has been