Thursday, 31 May 2012

DOOR, YESTERDAY


You know, I really could go on about this in much the same way as I always do. Hell in a handcart, and so on and so on, and I know it's only "stuff" and I know nobody got hurt and yada, yada, yada...

But, the thing is, the mind-bogglingly stupid thing is, that I really can not be bothered.

Normally I'd write reams and reams about this. The hind leg of that donkey would be well and truly bored off but...

Oh you know...

This is the remains of the office door that I found upon arriving at work yesterday morning.

It had been well and truly creamed.

The rest is just far too much for me to have to deal with right now.

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

MAGNIFICENT LEEKS


I’ve not got much time today, but I did want to take a moment to compliment our next door neighbour upon the rather magnificent leeks that she has growing in her back garden, and to point out that the in no way are making us feel in any way inadequate when it comes to the lack of attention being paid to our own garden this year…



One of these statements is true, the other is our own problem…

Tuesday, 29 May 2012

KEYS OF STUPIDITY


I’ll admit it was a hot, sticky, distracted kind of a day, and that I probably wasn’t at my best after having felt just a tad ratty over the weekend, and then not having slept well overnight in the prelude to another working week, but my lack of concentration in the evening really was pretty unforgivable and I started to make mistakes big style, especially after the adrenaline rush of dealing with a whole host of idiot drivers as I made my way homewards.

But that’s a story for another time, if I can be bothered sharing something else so banal with you, especially as, no matter how much I complain about that sort of stuff, nothing ever really changes and anyway, nobody actually got hurt so it’s probably not worth dwelling on.

I stopped off on the way home to pick up my prescription, tapping my foot and studying the floor intently as yet another of my “time-saving” visits seemed to take far longer than it was promised it would when the “we’ll sort it all out for you” promise was first offered as a service all those months ago. Once again, cometh the moment, there was a huge queue and nobody much in evidence behind the till precisely at the moment when I “quickly popped in” because I had “a moment” in which to do so…

Nevertheless, eventually I was handed my bag of life-giving tablets and I then headed homewards on a lovely sunny day, sunglasses perched upon my nose and my incongruous jacket still stubbornly being worn.

So anyway, I got home and I opened up the front door and went inside, allowing it to slam lock on the Yale, but not deadlocking it, as I knew that I was due to go out later. I put down my bag, took off my jacket and sorted out the mail and placed it down on the cooker, along with my phone as I was expecting a message with regard to an email I’d sent just before leaving work.

I then realised that I still had my sunglasses on, so I went over to where my jacket was hanging, which was when I first noticed that my normal glasses in their case had fallen out of my pocket somewhere.

“Damn!” I thought, “more time wasted…”

So I went over to my jacket, grabbed the car keys and another bunch of keys from the pocket, rather “cleverly” decided against putting my jacket on again, and went out through the front door which, as you know, hadn’t been deadlocked and so didn’t need unlocking to get out of.

I strolled down to the car, stepping onto the roadway to let a jogger run by unimpeded (I’m rather nice like that, you see… and which is proof that karma is a load of old toss...) all the time hoping that the glasses case would be inside the car and so not necessitate a trip back to the pharmacy to see if I’d dropped it outside, or, even worse, driving back to work to collect them from my desk which was where I’d last seen them.

I opened the back door and there was no sign of them where they would normally fall if I left my jacket side pocket unzipped.

I swore, and closed the back door, and then was rather pleased to find that they had actually fallen out onto the front seat, presumably as I’d been climbing out of the car earlier, so I opened the passenger door, reached in and picked them up, happy that a frantic “search and rescue” mission had been averted.

This was when I noticed that the bunch of keys which I’d taken out of my jacket pocket were the office keys and not the house keys.

No house keys.

No phone.

No wallet.

Not even a book to read sitting on the bench outside the house.

Then I realised that without a phone I couldn’t even be contacted to be told which train I had to meet, or indeed ring to find out whether another set of keys were actually likely to be in transit anytime soon.

It really is the simplest of things that can most bugger up your entire day, isn’t it…?



Monday, 28 May 2012

SMALL MOMENTS (1)

Sometimes, the very nicest moment of the day is that one where, having navigated my way through the morning traffic, found a parking spot and negotiated my way through the tricky security systems of our little office building, I’ve nipped into the kitchenette, clicked on the kettle and am waiting to taste that very first cup of coffee of the day.

Modern life, even one as simply structured as mine is by comparison to the madness others describe to me, is all about those little routines, the basic superstructure of a day which holds things together.

As the kettle boils away to itself, I will head off down the corridor, unlock the office, switch on the lights and open the shutters. Then I will adjust the blinds so that they are “just so” and I am able to experience the daylight but not feel that I am under observation. After that I will unpack my lunch from out of my bag, plug in the old portable teffalone to charge it up, and check it for any overnight emails before attempting to launch the rinky-dinky computer in order to get it up and running for my latest day in the wacky world of being something closely resembling a “designer”.

Once all of the passwords are tappity-tapped (usually twice – somehow it always objects to my first attempt), I will launch the more vital of the software packages and only then will I pick up my huge mug – long (and not very interesting) story - and take it, as well as the most currently active of the jars of coffee, along to the kitchen to rinse it out.

By then the kettle will be almost boiled and so, once I’ve tracked down a spoon, the coffee will go into the cup and I will explore the fridge in the hope that someone hasn’t swiped our milk overnight and, with any luck, add a dollop of it to the coffee in my mug and wait for that oh-so-satisfying click of the kettle, and that sweet pour with the most revitalizing of aromas.

After that, it is just a swift  stroll back to my desk, being careful not to leave the jar in any of the public areas from where it might get filched, and I can sit down to take that first sip of the morning which finally means that the day has truly begun.

Sometimes you really do have to just take a moment to wake up and smell the coffee.

Sunday, 27 May 2012

ONLY SON

A crowd it gathers and gently mocks
The man standing on his little box
The staff in the shops they roll their eyes,
To them it comes as no surprise
They find it all a bit of a bore
But then they’ve heard it all before.
Every week about this time
He’s there reciting the same lines:
“God” he says “Loved Everyone
So much, he gave his only son!”

He stands amongst the jeering crowd
Shouting it loud and saying it proud
His message bellows out quite clear
To anyone who wants to hear
For a crowd it gathers every week
(Perhaps it’s not saving they seek)
They seem to want to shout him down
As his voice carries across the town:
“God” he says “Loved Everyone
So much, he gave his only son!”

Now I haven’t got an axe to grind
About this message to mankind,
But this idea seems flawed to me
When you consider it logically.
If someone claimed to love you dear
And to prove it did then appear
To give to you the corpse of their son
I think that you’d quite rightly run!
Yet God, we’re told, loved everyone
So much, he gave his only son.

Now some will argue it means faith
And proof of everlasting life
But then that means God wins both ways
And killed him merely to amaze,
For if there was no risk he’d die
There’s no loss to God, no tears to cry
He’s really given up sod all
So it’s no sacrifice at all
That this God loved everyone
So much, he gave his only son.

Martin A W Holmes May 15, 2012

Saturday, 26 May 2012

FIDDLE-DI-DEE


It’s that time of year again. The Eurovision song contest has rolled around once more and whilst it has always seemed to be a harmless bit of fun to those of us in the “Youn-I-Ded Keengdum”, at least since I were a nipper, this year it has managed to get itself everso slightly mired in more than one controversy, not least because of the international reputation of the host country for this year’s proceedings, Azerbaijan.

The BBC’s “Panorama” programme even went to far as to upset Britain’s hopeful contestant this year, the one and only Engelbert Humperdinck (which is, bizarrely, not as rare a name as you might think…) by accosting him in their most “noble” (cough!) and “journalistic” (ugh!) way about “how he felt” about performing there, whilst simultaneously failing to realise, it would seem, that it would be the BBC itself that would be broadcasting the event the following weekend. Perhaps “Panorama” is now just another arm of the BBC Publicity machine...? After all, only this week I idly clicked on an interesting item on the descendants of Nazis and how they deal with the stigma attached to their name, and found out later that the article was linked to a television programme. I really should know better. Everything on the BBC seems to be linked to a television programme these days...

Still, you gotta just lerve those pesky journos and their blinkered focus on their story.

The Media Show on Radio 4 in the middle of the week didn’t seem to fare all that much better, to be honest, as, in its interview about the same “controversial” topic, they kept harping on about whether it was right to let Azerbaijan host the event without ever addressing the knotty problem that last year’s winner always hosts the next one, which is why the Irish government in the 1990s were seriously considering putting a contract out on Johnny Logan after they kept on accidentally winning the thing.

Okay, some of that isn’t actually true, but I bet someone thought about it...

Mind you, I am now wondering whether there are “contingency plans” just in case some natural disaster or revolution overtakes the winning country over the course of the intervening year. Is there, perhaps, a “back up plan” of asking a particular country to step in, or does the whole of Europe just look down at its shoes and pretend that nothing is happening...?

Well, it’s not as if they’ve never done that kind of thing before, is it...?

Anyway, despite their buttonholing of “The Hump”, it seems that the whole event is still going ahead, indeed, as I sit here writing this today, both of the semi-finals have taken place and I’m happy to report that the group of increasingly tiny elderly Russian ladies (do they stack inside each other when they’re not performing?) made it through despite the fact that they all seemed to be singing different songs. Although, looking again at those that did qualify, it does look as if we’re in for another evening consisting mostly of Eastern European folk singing...

Which is nice.

So I’m busily compiling this year’s score sheet for the big night on Saturday, and we will sit through twenty-six performances (because they’ve added on yet another one) of some of the most bizarre musical numbers that I am likely to hear this year, and our massively personal marking system, based on things like bonkers dancing, weird hair and bizarre clothing, will produce a clear winner who turns out to be nothing like the eventual actual winner.

In fact it could be argued that by having introduced the “semi-finals stage” (which in our house we don’t generally watch – we just happened to see the Russian ladies when we were channel surfing after “The Chelsea Flower Show”…), a lot of the “fun” and madness of the old style Eurovision Song Contest is being weeded out and so we don’t get to see it, which is a bit of a shame.

Mind you, we should also be grateful for that, otherwise we’d be sitting through forty-two acts on Saturday night, and I really don’t think that I have the tolerence.

I used to think that there wasn’t really any kind of music that I didn’t like, although some of the more “off the wall” performances in the Eurovision Song Contest do tend to test that theory almost to breaking point. I do have to admit that Reggae has never done all that much for me, to be honest, and I’m not over enamoured of the bagpipes, but I can still see that they have their place in small doses.

A lone piper at a funeral or on the battlements of Edinburgh castle can be quite moving, and I can see them working as an effective soundtrack as the haggis is delivered at a Burns’ Night supper, but apart from those specific moments, a thirty second burst is plenty for me.

I also struggle with what I call Irish “Fiddle-di-dee” music. You know the sort of thing; That Bodrun and Fiddle nonsense of the sort they always play when they go off to have a look at what the tragic Third Class passengers are up to in “Titanic” movies.

I still love a good harp, though, and the power of some of the Irish rock scene, with its blending of the traditional with the modern can be quite astonishing, just so long as there isn’t some clog-wearing idiot hopping about and they don’t overdo the solo interlude on the wretched fiddle.

It’s not as if I don’t like the violin, but in its place, being mournful and moving, amongst the wider orchestra, and not jigging about and pretending that its “fun”.

We really should leave that sort of nonsense to the Eurovision Song Contest.






Friday, 25 May 2012

HAPPIEST DAYS

Same van, different day - No girl.
So maybe I was wrong after all...
I noticed a youngish looking girl as I drove to work the other day. I didn’t, I hope, “notice” her in a “creepy” kind of a way, she was merely where she was when I drove by on my way to work, and I happened to see her standing there as I was slowing the car down to allow another car to come through in the opposite direction in one of those “20 m.p.h.” zones that seem to confuse the people in the cars behind me so much.

She was leaning against a van, texting away upon her teffalone, and wearing her civilian street clothes with that “first job” air of freedom and hopefulness that comes from having escaped the stifling cloisters of education, thrown off the uniform forever, and being free to engage with the big wide world and all of the so-called “freedom” that it offers once you get beyond the confines of formal education, bless her.

At least that’s what it looked like to me, and it seemed to be about the right time of year for that to be the case. She could, of course, merely have been stopping for a bit of a breather having walked up the hill, or her phone might have just rung. There are millions of reasons why someone might just stand next to a van at that time of the morning and I just happened to fabricate this whole woven fabric of back story for her.

Maybe I am my mother’s son after all…

But that moment did get me thinking… and no, not in a “creepy” way… about school days and how eager some of my fellow students were to escape into the “Big Wide World” (or, as we were later to discover, “The Big Wide World of Work”) at the first opportunity that they were offered. They all seemed so eager to be gone whereas I had kind of got used to being there and would rather not have had to come up with something else to do, if I’m being totally honest with you.

I’ve always been very comfortable with the status quo.

I remember listening aghast, and yet simultaneously amazed at the boldness of them, to tales of escapees burning ties, thrown away bags (I so nearly wrote “satchels” there before realising that it was merely a literary conceit… even I am not THAT old…), badges torn off blazers and those blazers then thrown away (or burned) in some gesture of freedom from what some of us considered to be oppression, not really realising that we were throwing off the shackles of something that turned out to be a rather “safe” environment when you compare it to the brutal environment of the “Real World”.

I’m sure that a lot of young people feel much the same way about the perceived shackles of their own educational establishments and how they can’t wait to be free of them, but, as I get older, I find myself looking back with more and more fondness upon those allegedly supposedly “happiest” days of my life, as the cliche goes...

Oh, I know that an awful lot of it was pretty grim, and large chunks of those years, especially any times when I was expected to appear upon a sports field, can still conjure up some pretty miserable memories. All of the petty squabbles and bullying that goes on in any society where humans interact can be found in microcosm in any institution, and schools are no exception to this. All of those day-to-day fears of retribution from both teachers and fellow pupils, all of those vital pieces of homework not actually done, or those tests which I was bound to fail... each one could be thought of as being yet another hammer blow in the eventual shaping of me and how I turned out to be.

But somehow I do also sometimes feel ever so slightly nostalgic for the lack of responsibility, the sense of order and the known quantities. Knowing that each day had its own routines and order, other people would take responsibility for organising my meagre existence and the administration of my life, such as it was, and that things would pretty much stay like that until the day when I had to leave, and, just so long as I could not draw enough attention to myself to appear upon the radar of the thugs and bullies, I would probably come out of it all fairly intact.

Perhaps it’s just that I thrive upon the mundane. I happen to like rigidity and order in my progression through my daily life. I’m rather happier (although I’m sure you couldn’t really tell) if I know that next week, next month or even next year is going to be much the same as this one.

Oh! I may rail against the monotony and tedium from time-to-time, but the truth is that I rather like the comfort and security of it, and those five years of secondary school, and the subsequent signing up for two more after it, now seem to be a time when everything was not only safe and predictable, but so many possible futures seemed possible.
I was always rather shifty-eyed, even amidst a crowd of
people whose names I have mostly forgotten.

This, of course, had the added benefit that I was actually doing something that kept me busy at that precise time, so I didn’t have to actually do very much about planning for any of those possible futures and so they could remain intact in my imagination, unsullied, pristine and perfect, and consequently couldn’t start to disintegrate and fall apart because of my own failings and shortcomings until some abstract future date came and I finally had to address them and, naturally, fail to achieve them.

The fact that I’m now pushing up against the door of having spent half a century on this sad little planet and I still don’t really know what I want to do with my life may have something to do with it.

Now I can happily look back upon a time when there was an almost total lack of “responsibilities” like bills and stuff. A time when when the only real problems were avoiding the bullies. This was  something I eventually became quite adept at, usually by managing to be so insignificant that I could never be a threat, developing an air that implied that I really didn’t care about them enough to be bothered by them, and managing, against all of the odds, to develop something approaching a sense of humour which kind of acted like a barrier to their nonsense. All that and maybe the sadder truth that there was always someone else much further down the food chain who attracted more of their attention. The only other main concern was usually being sure that you would be getting more than 70% in your vocab test to avoid the snide comments and the inevitable detention, which all seems kind of pointless now, but, at the time all seemed so terribly important.

In the end, of course, most of us survived to become, if not exactly stand-up citizens, at least reasonable human beings, live our lives and, those of us who are still able to, can look back upon those years and remember whatever it is, both good or bad, that we carry with us about our own experiences. Mine, I’m happy to say, it seems, just aren’t as bad as some others, and I can now look back upon those years with a certain amount of fondness and wish that life could be quite so simple these days.


Thursday, 24 May 2012

SUSSING THE DETECTIVES

Some reading about TV detectives.
Welcome to my world...
I watch and read a heck of a lot of detective fiction, in fact, I’m starting to imagine that it is just ever-so-slightly possible that I watch and read slightly too much of it. This is because, just recently, I’ve been able to work out far too early just “whodunnit” and I’ve come to recognise this is not due to any sudden increase in my own powers of deduction (Great Uncle Sherlock notwithstanding) but because I’m starting to recognise the structure that certain series and specific novelists use and it’s starting to kind of ruin the stories for me a little.

I hardly imagine that the Police Force are likely to come a-calling and asking me to assist with any of their cases about which they are utterly baffled any time soon.

Take, for example “The Mentalist”. This enjoyable US crime drama, rather in the “Columbo” mould, has been running for four years now and we’ve been watching it, more-or-less, from the start. It’s a well-made, character-based show about solving brutal murders committed in California and is basically a stylish bit of procedural nonsense that bears no real relationship to how such things would be solved in the real world, but it fills an hour or so on a Friday evening.

Recently, however, I have begun to notice something. There’s been a pattern developing that I’ve only noticed over the course of the last half dozen or so episodes but which may very well have been there from the very start. After all, despite the influence of Great Uncle Sherlock, I have always tended to be rather slow on the uptake.

You see, in recent weeks, there’s always been a small but significant scene where “the Mentalist” (a title, by the way, which still conjures up an image of Alan Partridge to me…) with a peripheral character which seems rather irrelevant but it always seems to turn out that the other character in that otherwise pointless scene turns out to have been the killer, despite the many false leads and other suspects that they might bring in across the course of an episode.

Now, I’ll grant you, with only 42 minutes to tell your entire story, fudging the issue by adding half a dozen other scenes of “little chats” with other suspects might significantly reduce the story-telling opportunities, but it has tended to rather spoil the denouement of late.

It’s like when I eagerly devoured the latest Mark Billingham “Tom Thorne” paperback recently. I’ve faithfully read all of his books annually since the first one came out about a decade ago, and I’ve always enjoyed them. This time, however, I began to realise that I’ve become rather too familiar with the style. It became very obvious within about twenty pages or so that, if the way the character was being written was anything to go by, there was only one person who could be the ultimately responsible party and, sadly, it turned out to be the case. I say “sadly” because I really wanted to be wrong and to get the kind of surprise the earlier books used to give me, but, this time, I wasn’t. I’m sure that next time, just to be perverse, I will get it completely wrong, but this time I wasn’t.

It’s not Mark Billingham’s fault, of course. He still writes a far better thriller than I ever could. It’s just that I’ve got far too familiar with his writing technique, and the structural form his books take, possibly because he is the only modern thriller writer who I do actually take the time and trouble to read. Maybe what I need to do is read some others and then I’ll return to him and be bamboozled all over again.

There is a theory that when you get to a certain age, you start to think that you’ve either seen it all before, or that you have got so very familiar with the subject that nothing much can surprise you any more. Well that may or may not be true. One of the things that I’ve found recently with cinema is that the same old cycles are coming around again but that my own level of tolerance for nastiness or extreme willful violence has reduced to a level where I’d rather not bother with them, but would prefer to watch the “better” films I remember from the first time around instead. Of course, I’m sure my parent’s generation thought much the same thing when “Alien” and “Jagged Edge” came along and they remembered “The Thing from Another World” and “Psycho”.

You see there’s a thing about detective fiction that’s basically unreal and that is that the crime actually gets solved. That’s not to say that crimes don’t get solved in the real world, but it’s seldom done so neatly, so precisely or with any sense of satisfaction.

There’s nothing real at all about the cosy world of murder that is found in Agatha Christie’s books, although they are immensely satisfying. A story like “And then there were none” is really an exercise in structure. “Is it”, the author seems to be saying, “possible to write a story in which all of the characters die and one of them had to be the culprit?” and, by and large it is. The novel itself is a very satisfying story, and doesn’t leave the reader feeling in any way “cheated” by it and yet, if you sit down and think about it afterwards, is so preposterous that it is, quite literally, untrue.

But then, that really is true of all detective fiction, and rightly so. I suspect that few readers would feel satisfied if they read an entire novel and, at the end, the police still didn’t have a clue who killed the victim. I suspect that, unless you’ve set up your novels as a series where the killer is slowly identified across a number of books and told everyone that that is your intention from the very start, you’d be losing your readers hand over fist.

It’s a bit like the original Danish version of “The Killing” in that respect. In the end it was always pretty obvious who had done it really, when you think about it. Just like when, in “Twin Peaks” the killer turned out to be exactly who it would be in the majority of real-life incidents of that tragic sort, somehow it felt slightly bland and disappointing when you found out that it was them after all. All of the to-ing and fro-ing in the first series of “the Killing” (I haven’t watched series two yet, “spoiler” writers) was really just a lot of, admittedly very effective and atmospheric, smoke and mirrors, sadly leading to a not-all-that original conclusion, even though there was some impeccable drama along the way.

But if the nation sat down to “Lewis” or “Midsomer Murders” and invested two hours of their precious free time into it, they’d be quite irritated if the main character turned to camera at the end and said “Buggered if I know who did it…”. Crime dramas, no matter how nonsensical or convoluted the killers plan turns out to be, have to fulfil certain requirements. There must be victims at the allotted commercial breaks; there must be plausible alternative suspects, preferably ones who need to be brought in for questioning; and above all, the whole thing must be neatly wrapped up within the running time of the length of the programme or series.

Otherwise we’ll all be screaming blue bloody murder…


Wednesday, 23 May 2012

THE SAVOY'S SHORT STORY

Isn’t it strange that, when you’re “tuned in” to a certain aspect of your life, things that make you think about that particular thing tend to pop up in all sorts of unexpected places...? For years, people (and by “people” I mean that abstract notion of “people” which usually doesn’t bear close examination, but leads to a whole heap of people “reckoning” that they know what’s what…) have been remarking upon those slight coincidences that occur, like when you think of someone’s name after twenty years and then they suddenly ring you up out of the blue, or you when you walk along a busy high street far from where you live and you meet someone that you know from home.

I could dig out a whole lot of mathematical analysis that proves that these incidents are little more than statistical probabilities and that when you look into the number of times when this doesn’t happen then you’ll realise that they simply have to happen occasionally, but that would take all of the “fun” and “mysticism” out of it, and I spend enough time sucking the fun out of other people’s lives, do I not…?

Anyway, cynical old me would just like to point out that such coincidences rarely if ever happen to me, quite possibly because I hardly know anybody any more, but also because I seldom get out much in that “running in to people” kind of a way.

Oh, I’ll occasionally run into old pals in the supermarket on a Saturday morning, but for a great many people, that’s when you’re supposed to go shopping, so that’s no big deal, and I did go through a phase about a year ago when I kept on running into the same old schoolfriend for a few weeks in so many various localities that I began to suspect that they thought that they were being stalked.

Or I began to think that I was…

The look on his face when he arrived at the dentists for an appointment only to find me sitting there (again?) in the waiting room waiting for my own appointment was priceless, but happily, that was the last time that the seismic plates of coincidence shifted us into each other’s orbits and those strange unexpected meetings seem to have stopped again.

Either that or he’s diving behind handy bushes whenever he spots that I’m around, which is a possibility, I suppose.

Anyway, the reason I’m prattling on with all this preamble was that I was strolling around the old neighbourhood I grew up in the other evening and I happened to walk past the old picture house where I used to go and see films when I were “but a nipper”.

It’s looking a bit dilapidated now as it struggles along trying to survive in this brave new “multiplex” era which, like with digital TV, purports to offer you far more choice (and therefore be “better”) whilst actually giving you a far worse service and, ultimately, less choice than you thought that you were getting.

Not that it was its current state that struck me, of course. That all came later. I’m nothing if not blind to the plight of things during the actual moment, I need time to process and think about such things before I climb upon my own “high horse”.

No, it was the words posted up on the “current attractions” board outside that struck me. Earlier on in that week I had been giving some thought to what the shortest possible story actually was. I think that I even wrote about it in these unhallowed pages, but there, in massive plastic letters which were barely managing to hang on against the combined forces of entropy, neglect and gravity, was a short story in itself, and I grabbed the phototeffalone from out of my pocket and immortalised it for you:

“We bought a zoo.” (pause) “Muppets...”

Class!





Tuesday, 22 May 2012

BURNING STICK



I don’t know really what to make of the grand tour that the Olympic Flame seems to be currently making, progressing (or processing) all around the country, meandering its way eventually towards London by the most roundabout way possible. The idea behind this is probably a pretty sound one, in that for anyone who wants to see the thing, it will pass within fifteen miles of every postal code in the country at some point during its journey.

Personally, I’m really not all that fussed about the Olympics, if truth be told. It just seems like a lot of running and jumping and standing still to me that seems to have added up to a huge bill for very little reason, but then I’ve always found most competitive sport to be fairly pointless, so I’m probably not the best judge.

In my humble opinion, once Greece had gone to all the trouble of building all of their stadia back in 2004, it would have made a lot of sense if the international community had accepted that the Olympics had finally “come home” and just replenished and refurbished those venues and held the competition there every four years instead of going through all of the rigmarole of bidding and building and overspending and security worries that always seems to come alongside any of the games.

Holding them in Greece might guarantee some decent weather, too, which is more than London can, although it might be lucky.

You never know…

I remember watching the rowing back in 2004 whilst I was working on a writing project during the early weekend mornings and thinking what a lovely backdrop the event had. Somehow any and all of the venues this year just seem to me as if they can’t help but be a little bit drab and ordinary, because that’s pretty much how things are over here. Mind you, I always thought that the Thames motorboat chase sequence in “The World is Not Enough” looked drab and ordinary, but international audiences seemed to like it, so what do I know? Perhaps it’s just that the place in which you happen to be living in always seems a little bit ordinary, whereas everywhere else seems more exotic.

Except Sydney. People living in Sydney always seem to look terribly smug to be the people living somewhere so spectacular and beautiful looking. That young chef who made that “Bill’s Food” programme (Bill, I think his name was...) always looked particularly pleased with himself…

Purely as a matter of passing interest, and mostly because I wanted to take umbrage at the fact that Lesser Blogfordshire is so far beyond the back of beyond that the torch would fail in its mission of passing within our fifteen mile radius, I had a quick look at the route and was rather disappointed to find that it was indeed passing within only eight miles of Holmes Towers. Curses! These planners are better at these things than I like to give them credit for...

Not that I’ll be going.

We did, when discussing it at work, wonder whether it was worth planning an “office day out” as an excuse for going and having a gawp, but we decided against it. This was just as well because it turned out that our particular opportunity to see the mighty flame is due to take place on a Sunday morning, and it will have left the area by 10.10 AM that day. Whether it manages to reach its destination at 7.30 in the evening after its thirteen and a half hour journey that day remains to be seen. After all, the route shows it passing through at least three areas in which I might expect somebody to have a go at nicking the thing and flogging it off for its metal content, or (if any of those hypothetical thieves are daft enough - as they might very well turn out to be) flog it off for the price of a small house on Ebay...

So cynical…

Still, I do wonder how many people they will actually persuade to get up to get into town for 6 o’clock on a Sunday morning just to see a burning stick go fleetingly by on its way to go everywhere but its proper destination for 70 days...

Well, it was always a bit of a hard sell in my book, but then I guess I’m not really in their target demographic, and I’m fairly sure that the whole thing will be terrifically successful and engender some level of “Civic Pride”. After all, who wants to be seen to be the only city that didn’t come out and support this great venture, or mad folly (delete as applicable), especially in the only part of the whole flipping thing - apart from the sailing of course - that actually seems to want to include anywhere in the country outside the capital…?



Monday, 21 May 2012

NADA

I’m sorry but I really have nothing for you today. The cupboard (as they say) is bare. The empty desert stretches ahead of us to the distant horizon without even the remotest hint of an oasis. There really is nothing to see here. Move along, move along…

Zip, nyet, nothing, nicht, nada…

It was all so different when I woke up this morning and a billion blues lyrics flooded my mind…

“Woke up this morning…”

No, not really…

You see? We’re already struggling. This is how desperate things have got…

Actually when I got up this morning at an hour that even the ungodly might think a little too ungodly, I thought that I had a “witty” little skit on a popular pop tune that I’d like to get down on paper and share with the world, but it faded away in the harsh reality of another morning and I realised that it wasn’t half as funny as it had seemed to be when I was lying in my bed, mulling the thought over as I lay there, half-awake and wondering quite what the day was likely to bring.

You see, every so often, I do actually wake up and wonder whether today is actually the day when I might actually manage to be funny, and not just in a peculiar way, but in an absolute chucklesome, belly-laugh kind of a way. It’s just one of those vague hopes and dreams which I still manage to harbour in the face of adversity, apathy and so much evidence to the contrary that the judge was already having his black cloth dry-cleaned before the defence had even coughed slightly before giving its opening statement. Hell, it was probably already a fait accompli before the Chuckle Police even showed up at the scene of whatever crime against humour I was allegedly committing was even a notion.

But I, as ever, have managed to digress, which isn’t that bad an achievement for someone claiming to have nothing to say...

I sometimes head up to this keyboard utterly convinced that I have it. That today is indeed the day that I will finally get to tickle someone’s funny bone and raise more than a contemptuous smile. Then the so-called “joke” will whither on the vine and become leaden and dour as the sentences unfold, and suddenly we’re treading that tired and familiar old path towards dreary familiarity with that same old lack of sparkle that one or two of you have come to know and, well, not “love” exactly, but you know what I mean.

The problem is that Im not all that good at being “funny”, the truth be told, as anyone who’s ever suffered one of my “amusing” comments on FizzBok or my “hilarious” TwitWorldings would be able to tell you. Sometimes I think that they are, of course, otherwise I wouldnt go to all the trouble of typing them out, honing them to imperfection and clicking “send” but then afterwards, when I really think about my hastiness to do so, I will fret and worry about them and realise that there was precious little to find amusing about them in the first place.

All this from the idiot who, just a few short weeks ago, really thought that he could write a sitcom...

The funny thing is... those things that I say... the ones that I seem to think might be funny... well, they do  always seem funny to me, otherwise I really wouldn’t have bothered now, would I? Well, at least at first they do, until I’ve had that chance to think them over again. This is why I always head home from any of my rare nights out really, really full of self-loathing and embarrassment absolutely wishing that, just for once, I could learn to shut up and stop trying to engage anyone in any kind of banter at all.

I used to think this was why I did so much better in BlogWorld. Here, at least, I can give myself time to really think about what I’m writing and go over it with a fine-tooth comb before I’m actually stupid enough to actually publish it and put it out there, but, sadly, even that is proving to be less of a sure thing than I would like it to be.

Still, I suppose, in the end, this very morning, I haven’t done too badly in managing to write what I might have called “A short essay about nothing” if I could have been bothered to write that out in full like I, er, just... did...

Crikey! It’s tough this extemporising, isn’t it...? I think that I’d better just shut up now and hope that the “elves of inspiration” will sprinkle their “ideas dust” on my sleeping form tonight, so that I can write something much more, probably about something much less as, with any luck, another bleary morning dawns.