Sunday, March 18, 2012

2012 - 12b

Emotion Detector

I think the way I'm going I shall be blubbing at just about anything by the time I'm 60. I know that men, as they get older, suddenly become more... no, less able to control their emotions, especially ones that have you reaching for hankies. Maybe it's because I was a Caring Understanding Noughties Type (I say 'was' as this is no longer the noughties) or maybe it's because I now work with people and people have a way of inveigling their way into your emotions.

Anyhow, my most recent visit to the land of 'what the fuck is wrong with me' happened last night. I had, much to the wife's bemusement, settled down to watch the Spurs v Bolton FA Cup quarter final and despite going a goal down after 4 minutes, my team equalised and looked in the ascendancy, when something horrible happened.

Fabrice Muamba used to be an Arsenal player, but that is immaterial, because on the 41 minute mark he collapsed and 'died' on the White Hart Lane pitch. Only the actions of quick-witted footballers (normally something of an oxymoron of a statement) and medical staff, who worked valiantly and at times seemingly in vain to save the 23-year-old's life. The game, which was finely poised was cancelled, the fans were united in their support for the stricken player, the other players and the decision - never before could a game have been abandoned where there was not a single dissenting voice to be heard.

ESPN's coverage was respectful; as soon as the shot of Muamba obviously having a fit, face down on the WHL turf was shown, the producers decided that it was more prudent to focus on anything else. The crowd, the reaction of the players, the looks of complete and utter shock on everyone's faces - you didn't need to see a man fighting for his life to know there was a man fighting for his life.

And I sat there feeling emotion welling up in my stomach; yes, I will admit to feeling a bit like rubber-necking, but equally I could hear the emotion in my voice when telling the wife who Muamba was and stating the bleeding obvious when saying things such as, 'this is bad' and 'I hate to say this but I think he's dead'.

So, with the game rightly abandoned, we decided to watch something else and that something was the second part of Martin Scorsese's George Harrison documentary. Which, of course, doesn't have a happy ending and at the end I was sat there thinking about George - the tenderest and most self-effacing of the Beatles; and John so cruelly stolen from us by a madman with a gun; and there was Ringo, with tears in his eyes and a thick voice, making a funny, but poignant, joke about his own blubbing. I wiped more than one tear from my eyes and the wife, always finely attuned to death, wandered into the kitchen and I knew she had been crying as well. Someone else's tragedies and deaths have a way of making you remember your own grief all too acutely.

And today is Mother's Day; not a day I've ever been a huge fan of; because as anyone who knows me will tell you I think all of these 'days' are just the creation of card companies who understand that humans have a love of something and they should show that love by buying a card for that special occasion. It's like Valentine's day - if I love my wife, I'll tell her (and I do regularly); I don't need a card to show it.

But, today is Mother's Day and I haven't got a mum any more; George and John are still dead and Fabrice Muamba is in critical condition, fighting for his life...

Friday, March 16, 2012

2012 - 12

New Found Respect

You know, before I started working in a school, I was like you. I thought that teachers had it bloody cushy; 12 weeks a year holiday, short days and all manner of fringe benefits. Yet over the last few weeks, as I've watched them visibly wilt as the term grinds to a close and Easter beckons; I realised that people don't know half of it. these people need long regular breaks or they'd go fucking apeshit. I am gobsmacked that we don't here about more school massacres, performed by teachers rather than emo youngsters.

One of my favourite teachers at work said to me the other day, 'people who complain about us having 12 weeks holiday a year should come and teach at a school for one day. Just one day. People like that are fucking morons.' And, once, I would have been one of those morons.

Even good days are soul and strength sapping beyond belief and as a result time seems to get gobbled up faster than a speedy fast thing. I realise this evening that I haven't seen my mate Dez since the 30th December and have only communicated with him - via text - twice in 3 months. I could have met up with my old colleagues Wilky and Tony tonight (Friday) for a pint, but shopping, evening chores and almost complete battle fatigue made that hope as forlorn as Spurs winning the premier league.

I never did bother to log when I first heard one of my colleagues say, 'it's x weeks to Easter' probably because I didn't stop thinking about it once I said it would happen and therefore was a thinking it myself, especially when week's dragged on.

Missed Opportunities

I've not been on my best game this week. I've neglected to make any notes at all and while I've seen things that have amused or enraged me this week, it appears that most of them have disappeared from my memory like a fart in a heavily ventilated room.

Last weekend, I had a really freaky dream and intended to get what I could remember down; it seemed like a good idea at the time and with a bit of artistic license... you know, it might have been worthy of a few lines. But as the week went on, it slipped out of my mind stealthily and now the only memory of it I have is that I had a (not so) memorable dream last week.

Obviously, there are some things I'd like to talk about, but...

Anyhow, I missed a great opportunity at one point this week (so it must be done this weekend) of preventing a problem we had all last summer. I didn't have my office window cleaned by the window cleaner for 5 months because of a wasps nest in the eaves of my front porch. I said for months that I'd sort it out; all it needs is a good fill before they start waking up again; but the winter has slipped by and I had completely forgotten about it until I saw a wasp flitting about my office window a few minutes ago. I'd pray for a really hard frost to kill the little buggers off, now they're waking up, but that would finish the apricot tree and we don't want that, do we?

The Fault

I found myself nodding and agreeing with my mate Chev, this week. It's not something I'd admit to him, mainly because I think he thinks I'm on this planet to be contrary to most of his musings; but what he said about technology's contribution to the state of society at the moment was spot on. He said this: You know what I blame? Modern communications. Internet, mobiles, text messages, website comments and the like. People have become venal and opinionated and thoughtless and judgemental. The way they act online, behind that veil of anonymity, has moved via a cultural osmosis into everyday life. The mindset that causes people to be cruel and superior online - and we've all seen the dreadful comments people make on news stories and within Facebook - have somehow become acceptable in the real world.
I'm not sure people have noticed that they're doing it, to be honest. But the gradual dehumanisation that started online has crept its way onto the streets.

I was echoing this to the wife and anyone else who would listen. For all the shit I received from my ex-employer back in the 1990s, he did occasionally offer gems of utter wisdom. Knowing that I was the kneejerk champion of the world, he once told me to go and write a letter - not an email - and then when I'd got it all down, print it out and read it. The first thing any self-respecting person would do is then edit out all the mistakes and potentially libellous comments; take a deep breath, realise the anger had dissipated and screw the letter up and bin it, safe in the knowledge that you've got it off your chest and no one is going to suffer as a result. He saw this in the early days of the Internet when 'flame wars' were common place, but not socially acceptable.

Essentially, the Internet has always allowed arseholes, but when it was a smaller club, it policed itself. Once membership grew to include idiots, wankers, morons and arseholes, it no longer policed itself and now, at the click of a button, we can bully, insult, reveal or destroy a person's life and know that we can sleep at night because we haven't had to look them in the face.

Of course, this breakdown has its advantages. Take for instance the short text exchange I had with my brother-in-law earlier:
Is it still okay to come up tomorrow?
Fuck off you ugly ginger cock. Wot time?
Half past cunt.
That early?

That would take over 2 weeks using Royal mail.

The Stuff
  • This week I have mainly been listening to William Orbit. Having had a desire to revisit Strange Cargo: Hinterland, I wondered if Bill had released anything since the woefully average My Oracles Lives Uptown and it seems that as well as a new Pieces in a Modern Style (which is considerably better than the first), there's this Ray of Light Instrumental Version floating about, which is essentially a Bill album. Now, I've long admitted that I think this late 90s Madonna album is by far and away her best record, ever. but this is due to the fact that Orbit produced it and essentially made it his album with Madge on guest vocals. The version I have acquired urinates from a Space Needle type height all over the original. It seems to have more power without the vocals; is trippy, beaty, rocky and full of Orbit trademarks that disappeared from his music when his ego caught up with his success. Stunning album; I can see it being on repeat for a while.
  • I have also been listening to loads more classical music.
  • I am still waiting to read Chavs.
  • The ducks have started laying eggs again!
  • That's about it. It can only get more exciting!

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Nostalgia Factory (i)

Tales from my youth... Observations of the past...

Part One: Harvey

People with kids shouldn't have favourites and people with pets probably shouldn't either. Even my current bunch - the four dogs of the apocalypse - have things about them that have firmly chained them to my heart and while none of them will probably ever achieve the heights of my first two dogs, none of my dogs will ever quite match Harvey...

Harvey's story started an indeterminate amount of time before we got him; we had no idea how long he was bumping around Ted's garden. The old Resource's Manager at Lings School had been someone I spent a lot of time with when I was there and he'd, through the synchronicity of the world, become friends with an old acquaintance of mine who was engaged to the wife's sister. Ted died after a short illness and my wife's future brother-in-law was one of the people responsible for clearing out his house - a strangely anachronistic old place situated near Weston Favell Mill. In the garden, full of fruit trees was this average sized grey rabbit.


He might have been a pet, but the brother-in-law couldn't see it; Ted wasn't a pet kind of guy. The likeliest scenario was the rabbit had either escaped from the nearby Billing Aquadrome, found the mini orchard and thought it was his birthday, or had somehow escaped from a garden, crossed the busy A45 dual carriageway and into Ted's garden. No one knew how old he was either, but what the people clearing out Ted's house did discover was this rabbit had little or no fear - of anything.

Now just recently a friend of mine on Facebook was posting in memoriam of a beloved cat and true to form, everyone who has ever had a special pet believes their pet to be the most crazy/ intelligent/ clever/ cheeky/ whatever you could wish to meet and I believe that all animals serve their purpose when they become special to their 'owners'. For me and the wife, Harvey was this animal. He was quite remarkable and I don't believe I have ever owned an animal with more intelligence and I doubt I will.

My parents were having a rough time in Maidstone. My mother had just been diagnosed with emphysema and they were thinking of getting out of the club trade and returning home to Northampton, so the wife and I began a search for a new home, one that would eventually take 2 years to achieve. One of the first houses we visited was a ramshackle shit hole of a house on Cyril Street, near the town centre. It was a perfect house for our needs, despite not having the biggest back garden, but it had structural problems - the rear wall was bowed and it would need some extensive re-modernisation. The price was good, but my brother, recently an estate agent, came to viewing and essentially put us off. However, in the garden, in a raised hutch, was this beautiful rabbit, who looked like he'd been living on his own droppings for a few weeks. He had no fresh water and no food. We were appalled; the young estate agent was a bit bemused and we told him to tell the owner's we didn't want the house, but we'd rescue the rabbit and we would come back in two days to collect it - the house, by the way, was empty, the owners' had moved to their new house.

When we returned, the rabbit was gone. I'd like the think the owners realised their cruel and wicked mistake and made amends; but the wife, who had set her heart on owning this orangey brown buck, was desperately upset. Three days later Ted died.

The wife's sister called us up; we had acquired a second hand hutch for the rabbit that never was, and offered us this grey bunny that lived in Ted's garden. Later that same day, arriving in a box with some holes was this solid dark grey rabbit, not big, not small, with a white mark on his ear and a small white slash on his nose; everything else was a graphite colour.

He took up residence in his new hutch and quickly took over the garden; it was the beginning of the summer, I was not working and for long spells I'd sit in the lounge, with the back door open watching this new addition to the household bumping about, checking out the four corners of the room, but never venturing up the stairs, or down the hall way to the kitchen and front door; he acted like these places didn't even register to him.

The first few weeks we had him, he'd come inside, sniff about and then settle down right by the open back door - good for being in the house, good for easy escape into the garden. Our neighbours Brian and Elaine decided that having a rabbit was a great idea for their toddler Gemma, so they bought Oy (it's all Gemma would call her) and Oy bit and scratched and growled and was anything but a fluffy bunny. The wife and I were both young - I was only 23 at the time - and we not only agreed to take Oy off their hands, we also stuck her in with Harvey and surprise, surprise, 30 days later, the newly renamed Clover dumped a litter of 8 baby bunnies on us; of which most of them would go onto have their own adventures (we kept track of all of them).

This gave us a problem. We had only one hutch, no money to buy a new one and a serious overcrowding issue. There was only one thing for it, Harvey would have to live in the house. We discussed it for days; trying to work out the best way of achieving it, while all the time potentially risking the lives of all his babies, because male rabbits often kill their young, especially if their in close proximity. This was never an issue with Harv, he seemed to dote on his offspring as much as Clover, but still, we couldn't have 10 rabbits in a hutch designed for one.

The wife had this harebrained scheme to house train the rabbit so it could come into the house full time. I was pretty much convinced she was talking out of her arse - you couldn't possibly house train a rabbit, surely? Oh yes you can. Except it wasn't like house training a dog or getting a cat to use a litter tray; these tend to take time. Harvey already had stopped dropping pellets in the living room within days of coming in and he had never, ever taken a piss in the house; so the wife figured he'd take to a litter tray for wet toilets. He did, for about three days. She put him in it, he bumped about a bit, lifted his tail, took a leak and bumped out. He did this every day for three days and then on the fourth he went and stood, not sat, stood by the back door. For a laugh, I said, 'Do you want to go outside, Harv?' and opened the door; he bumped out the back, jumped up onto the raised flower beds and went behind one of the miniature conifers and took a wee. I was gobsmacked, but couldn't believe it was anything more than a fluke. From that point on, he would wait by the door only if he wanted to go outside. He would return to the same spot every time and do his business - which as any one who knows about wild rabbits will tell you is perfectly normal; you see 'dump mounds' all over fields where rabbits live. But to us this was remarkable; he had no intention of soiling his home.

The initial plan was to keep Harvey in the house until we could afford to buy two more hutches, but after a successful two week trial we decided that as he was pretty much perfect in the house, he could stay. It was a Sunday afternoon, we had our friends Steve, Gareth and Vince round and we were being entertained by Harvey's new game; grabbing a piece of newspaper and draping it over his head, then running around the living room literally blind. It was a truly bizarre sight; but one he never stopped doing and one we never grew tired of. We'd just got a new hutch and the babies were almost weaned, so the wife was preparing that hutch for them to move into. I walked back into the house and Harvey was lying sprawled under the chair I sat at at the dining table; over the weeks of his trial he had gradually gotten closer and closer to me when I was sitting there, until he finally used to sit directly under my seat.

What happened next was truly remarkable and if it hadn't been the fact we had independent witnesses you'd probably think I'd smoked too much drugs. I told Harvey he could live in the house permanently. He cocked his ears, sat up and ran directly down the hallway; somewhere he had never been before; he checked it out, rubbed his chin along the skirting boards and left two small pellets on the coconut mat. He then turned round, came back down the hall, stopped at the foot of the stairs, looked at them and took off up the stairs, one step at a time. He had never been the slightest bit interested in the stairs; he'd seen me and the wife go up them late at night, but by that point he was puffed up under my chair, with his ears back.

We all sat there pretty startled; our guests had grown very familiar with this odd fellow living in the Hall house; but had never seen him quite as... determined. I followed him up the stairs, the wife in quick pursuit, and there he was, sniffing and chinning the skirting. He checked out our bedroom; looked in there, turned on his heels and came out; he checked the spare bedroom, which would have a succession of lodgers in it and then he checked out the box room, which stored a lot of my folks stuff and had a single bed in it. Harvey walked, not hopped, into this room, sniffed around, walked under the bed and settled down. We stood there looking at him, slightly stunned; but after a short discussion and a check to make sure there were no overt wires around, we left him there.

An hour later, as our friends were getting ready to go, he reappeared; bumping down the stairs like he'd been doing it all his life and over to our guests to say goodbye. We had all worked out he liked having his head stroked and he sought out this fuss from any one prepared to give it to him. By the time our friends had gone, Harv was back upstairs in his room.

Now, one of the bizarre things about having an intelligent pet is your start to talk to it like you would a precocious child and shortly before 10pm, the wife thought that perhaps Harvey should go outside for his nightly wee; something she does most every night with our dogs even today. She shouted up the stairs asking him if he needed to go out and bump bump bump there he was, down the stairs and across the room in no time, straight out the door and under his conifer. We looked at each other completely gone out.

For the two years we lived in that house, Harvey took himself off to bed at 10pm every night. It was his bed time and he did it without fail, whether we were in or not. At 10pm, he'd take himself upstairs to his room and settle down under the bed. he'd have a bowl of water and some food and we left his tray in there in case of any accidents, but he never used it. Every morning at 6.30, when the wife got up, he'd follow her downstairs and wait, silently, by the door to be let out and he'd stay outside until I got up; checking out the garden, his missus and kids.

This was just the tip of the iceberg for this rabbit; his adventures were the stuff of cgi films and I'm not over egging the pudding; they really were...

For all of his intelligence - think Brian the dog in Family Guy - he was still pretty much a rabbit and he liked doing stuff that rabbits did, like digging holes, shagging and beating up cats... We'd had him about two months and he was sitting in the middle of the fenced back garden, just minding his own business on a rather dull summer's day, when a local cat sprang up the fence, walked along the top and spied him sitting on the grass. There was no malice in the cat; he just jumped down and wandered over to Harv who had his back to the feline. The cat got about two feet from the rabbit when I was about to spring for the door and shoo it away, but I saw one of Harv's ears stand up. He knew he was not alone. What followed was like something out of a Bruce Lee film; he rocked forward onto his front legs and his two powerful back legs flew out, connecting with the cat full in the face and literally knocking it into a backward somersault; I have never seen a cat look so surprised and we never saw that cat or another in the garden again. It was like word got round; there's a mean mother of a rabbit living there, stay away.

Yet, he liked dogs. On his own terms. The first time I saw Harvey's terms I almost died of shock.

As I said, the garden was fenced, but I was pretty reckless and used to play cricket in the garden using a potato bound in tissue paper and masking tape, which allowed us to play cricket without much risk of breaking any windows; but if bowled hard enough, this spongy package could punch a hole in the flimsy wood panelling; holes large enough for commando bunny to initiate escapes. The house that's garden ran adjacent to ours belonged to a girl I used to go to school with and she had a dog called Judy, a Labrador/Collie crossbreed with the dopiest face in the world.

One day, I'd got back from probably signing on and I couldn't find Harvey anywhere; after a frantic search I spotted the hole in the fence and rushed up to the top of the garden. Oh God, what if Judy got him? Judy might be stupid, but Judy is a dog and dogs kill rabbits! What I witnessed for the next few minutes was one of the most extraordinary things I have ever seen. Judy knew of Harv's existence long before the hole in the fence; she sniff and whine and get really frustrated because she got really close to him but could never catch him. Put the two of them together in a garden and you had to pinch yourself. They were chasing each other up and down the garden. First Harvey would chase Judy and then she'd turn round and chase him back down the garden. There were no hackles; no bared teeth, no grunting or growling from the rabbit either; they were just... playing.

As soon as he saw me, he made a bee-line back to the hole in the fence and jumped through; Judy stood looking forlorn at the hole in the fence and I felt my pulse rate drop; despite it being one of the sweetest things I'd seen. Judy positively loved Harvey; I'm not sure he felt the same way because he often used to bite her; but he was probably just putting her in her place; which was always going to be behind him. I tried to play chase with Harvey in the garden and was amazed when he started to play back. I'd chase him, in a comical big way; turn round and he'd chase me back. If it was possible, we had a rabbit that thought it was a dog and long before he ever met one.

We'd often get home and find him missing. Now, he was given the name Harvey by us, but he answered to it within a few weeks of being called it; so standing out the back calling him was not as unusual as it sounds, even if others thought we were mad. One day, he'd disappeared completely and I'm standing on the patio calling his name when the woman at #22 called over. "Is Harvey a grey rabbit?"
"Yes. Yes, he is?"
"He's here. Well, he isn't here, he's upstairs on my bed." Huh? Harv rarely got on our bed, but it seems he'd tunnelled out of #26, skipped #24 and found #22's door open so went exploring. When he found the woman, doing her make-up, he decided to go and introduce himself. She was, fortunately, only impressed, not scared; she had her own rabbit, in a hutch in the garden; Harv had introduced himself and gone to find the owner - owner's usually had food.

On another occasion, he got as far as the show home about 150 yards from the house. I think he got lost and confused because when he heard me, he came belting up the road and jumped onto my lap. Something he did often when he was freaked out by something (which, I'm happy, but sad to say, didn't happen very often), but he did like a cuddle, especially with either me or the wife; he didn't like the mother-in-law and she almost killed him. It was in his later years and she decided he'd let her pick him up; he had other plans and wriggled his way out of her arms; unfortunately she was by the back door and the drop was about 3 feet and the extra 4 feet he was off the floor; he landed awkwardly and almost broke his leg; maybe even his neck; he never went near her again.

Now, rabbits like to chew things and Harvey was no exception. Fortunately there were no loose wires he could latch on to, at least not until his first Christmas. Suffice it to say, he saw the green wires of the lights and thought he'd check them out. I'm surprised he didn't kill himself, but he did look a little like he'd been playing with a Van der Graf generator for a few days.

Possibly the most sensible question I was ever asked by a vet was, "How on Earth do you discover that a rabbit likes Maltesers?" In that, 'you've been feeding them to him, haven't you?' kind of way. Moira, our best vet, like many other doubters, looked in slight disbelief when I explained to her that Harvey ate what he wanted; he was like a force of nature if you had food and he wanted some. You would be metaphorically beaten up until he either managed to get at whatever it was or you succumbed and showed him what you had and allowed him to make up his own mind.

It started with a Curly Wurly...

I was a head. I liked my munchies and I was having a particular fixation with this Cadbury's combo of chocolate and caramel. Harvey, who rarely ventured off the floor, saw me eating it one day and decided it was his. Tug of war ensued. You have never seen anything quite as funny as a grown man wrestling a rabbit over a chocolate bar, but once Harv had sunk his teeth into that sweet goodness, it was his and no one else's. He eventually lost the battle, but probably went on to win the war. His only achievement that day was to get a mouthful, but it was enough to hypnotise him. His most unbelievable tales of eating are to come, but first I have to tell you about... tea.

Harvey loved his tea. This was discovered by an all too boring fact. My mum used to put her tea on the floor, next to her feet; Harvey being inquisitive, checked it out, tried it and from that point on, whenever my mum had a cup of tea, she would pour some into the saucer and that would be Harv's tea. He loved my mum and who wouldn't, she treated him like a small grey son, giving in to all his demands and if he wanted something he'd let you know. He'd grunt, stamp his feet and generally run round and round in circles making his feelings clear - temper tantrums. He also had a thing about tea bags and would fish them out of the bin - yes, really - and then run around the house or garden with it hanging from his mouth - tea was this animal's nicotine.

However, back to chocolate and beef burgers...

Probably the craziest stunt I've ever seen Harvey perform was one evening while the wife and I were lying on the sofa watching TV. I had pulled a packet of Maltesers out of the fridge and we were helping ourselves to them and he seemed uninterested. Yet, as it was, he was fully aware of everything going on around him and was planning his next move. He nonchalantly wandered around the edge of the room, in a uninterested kind of way until he disappeared behind the telly and the end of the sofa. Suddenly, there he was, on the arm of the sofa and he charged up the length of the sofa, using us as his road. He leapt from the sofa onto the coffee table, landed on a newspaper and slid across the table, as he passed the Maltesers, he reached out, grabbed the packet in his mouth and as the newspaper shot off the edge of the table, he landed running. It was like something out of Die Hard and he never looked wrong footed. He landed on all four feet and was running for the safety of the dining room table, with his bounty (he also liked them) taken. We sat there wondering if this animal would ever stop amazing us.

Several days later, while I was out and the wife was in the kitchen doing some washing, she heard rustling in the lounge and walked in to find Harvey in the bin, head first, with his legs up in the air, trying to lick the insides of a chocolate wrapper. we had a monster in out midst.

I rarely had takeaways, but one night I opted for a Mid-West American Styled Hamburger from the now ancient shop on the Wellingborough Road. I got back, sat down and began to eat my food. Harvey saw me eating and hurtled for me, up the sofa and up my front, where he sank his teeth into my massive burger. Now, rabbits tend to have very inexpressive faces, you can't really tell what they're thinking, but this evening, the look on Harvey's face was remarkable. It was like the thought 'uh-oh, what have I eaten?' came into his head and he ran off shaking and a bit cheesed off. From that point onwards, he'd go outside if we were cooking meat; it was like a protest.

The more people that met Harvey the more wanted him. We were offered £500 once for him by a friend who thought he could turn the rabbit into a TV star, but we weren't getting rid of my boy, not for ten times that amount. I started to think people just came to see the rabbit.

He got a little slower when we moved to Wellingborough and the upheaval freaked him out a bit; he became very much a doorstep bunny again, rarely venturing past his new dump mound. He still had his moments; attacking dogs that came into the house and fathering a couple more litters - from which came Bugsy, who in turn was the father of Chester, who I will tell you about one day, because she was everything her granddad was and quite a bit more, but considerably less intelligent.

While I had the shop, Harvey got ill and we almost lost him. He'd developed fluid on the lungs and it was touch and go with him for a few days. It was the only time he ever wee'd in the house; the day we brought him back from the vet who saved his life. He had to get rid of all that fluid somewhere and on the kitchen floor was fine by me.

His favourite things in the world at the new house were the fire place, which he'd roast by on cold nights and the fridge, because he knew all his favourite things lived there and that was where Paula found him the morning he died. He wanted one more Malteser before he went off to bunny heaven. Jesus... It still chokes me up now. When we lost Giff and Meg 5 years ago it left such a yawning hole in our lives, we never thought we'd get over it, but Harvey's death - the death of our first real child/pet was devastating. I don't think I've cried so much in my entire life. I'd lost my best mate; because that was what he was; my constant companion for so many years; always by my feet, always willing to sit on my lap and give me a cuddle while basting my jeans (something his granddaughter did as well). The words, "Phil, Harvey's dead." reverberate in my memory all the time; they were the three worst words I'd heard up to that point in my life and we buried him at the bottom of the Ashfield Road house and thankfully, because I sold the house to one of our best friends, I still get to go and stand in the garden, quietly and have a few words with my boy.

A lot of the people reading this might remember him; it was a long time ago now, but he was such an important little man in our lives that we'll never ever forget him and like I said, I've never met another animal with the intelligence and understanding that rabbit had and I doubt I ever will.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

2012 - 11

Electric Avenue

Solar flares have apparently caused some electrical problems across the globe; however in Fullingdale Road they didn't need sunspot activity to bugger up the power supply. Even Fishwife isn't sure why the power went off on Monday, but it was obviously something major because by 6pm on said day, there was at least half a dozen vans, diggers and little mini-JCBs beavering around the street and they were still at it at 11.30 - generator burbling, men with more copper wire than a gang of travellers and not an English voice to be heard.

Our power only went out for about 1½ hours, but the Sexually-Explicit family, boring old man and the Token Ethnic family all went without power for getting on for 18 hours - which would have paralysed the average family: no TV, no Internet, no heat unless they had gas and provided it didn't need some form of electricity to fire up the boiler. It must have been hell for them, well all except the Sexually-Explicit family; they're probably used to it coming from deepest darkest Eastern Europe, plus they probably would have been at it like a couple of rutting steers.

Okay, I'm going to be really crude and sexist now, but hey it's Saturday morning, the sun is trying to come out and I feel... mischievous.

Mrs Sexually-Explicit, a woman who I have unintentionally had the benefit of seeing naked at least twice through my office window, has a fantastic body, especially considering she has had a couple of kids, but has a face that could scare polar bears. Don't get me wrong, she's a lovely girl, but you'd seriously have to consider double-bagging her in case one fell off during the beast with the two backs. You could always put a bag over your own head, that way you'd be making doubly sure there wasn't an accident.

You can see where she's going to end up. Having seen her mother masturbating in her bedroom window, also twice, in recent years, you understand why she's there with her rubber toys and not a man (or a woman). She's like a cross between the Incredible hulk and Jade Goody as she'd look now and has a gob on her that when unleashed could decay lard.

They also have four cars. Who seriously needs four cars?

Anyhow, the work was completed by Thursday and apart from mud on the road you would think nothing had happened.

Atmospheric Pressure (or WWAW - SF)

"There's a full moon."
"It's windy."
"It's raining."
"It's snowing."
"It's too hot."
"There's a Y in the day."
"It's too cold."
"Libra is rising over Pisces."

I had a Volkswagen Polo when I was younger. It was a great little car and took the wife, Meg and Giff and my good self on lots of excellent family holidays. It was just a basic little thing with an engine that would go forever. However, it didn't like the rain, the snow, the cold, the heat and only really was at its most optimum when the temperature was 15 degrees, the sky was overcast and it was dry. On days like this it was the dog's bollocks of little cars. The wife used to joke that she'd get it up to 180mph on good days.

It seems my young clientèle are all related to my old Polo. Apparently there is a entire list of weather conditions and related that cause the students at my place to change from normal young people into monsters. There is truth in a lot of what my experienced colleagues say; if it's wet, they stay inside and that causes all manner of problems; if it's windy the incident level increases five fold and apparently when the temperature gets above about 22 degrees all hell breaks loose.

After the last week, I'm biting my lip and hoping for dull days, average temperatures and dry conditions between now the third week in July, maybe with some wonderful interludes at Easter and half term; that way I might be able to stop myself from either going mad or having some kind of stress related nervous breakdown. I never want another week like last week, which at times was more reminiscent of the Ray Winston film Scum than anything else...

Just Shoot Me Now

I have pretty crappy memories of festivals. I can't ever really go to one without something spoiling it. Destroyed wardrobe at my first Glastonbury; bad weather at my second, serious illness at my third. Being robbed at the Cambridge folk Festival while I slept and countless others where I have either been rained on or just plain didn't enjoy myself. After a 20 year hiatus, Roger and I went to the 2000 Trees Festival in Gloucestershire a couple of years back and were greeted with January weather in July. With the exception of Amplifier and Charlie Barnes it was a pretty dire day and I kind of vowed that I would never go to another, ever again.

Glancing at the back page of The Guide this morning, I saw an advert for the Latitude Festival in Suffolk and for the first time in donkeys years I saw a host of acts on the bill that I would gladly pay something to go and see. It looks like it could be one of the highlights of the summer season, especially with Glasto taking a breather for the Olympics. Bon Iver, Elbow, Richard Hawley, White Lies (who Roger was impressed with), The Horrors, Explosions in the Sky, Lloyd Cole, M83, Zola Jesus, Yeasayer and even Simple Minds, doing their best of their first 6 albums set. It has people like Ian banks, John Pilger, Rich Hall, Adam Buxton and the man my students all think I'm the spit of - Greg Davies. It also has dull and boring Paul Weller, Laura Marling, Wild Beasts, Daryl Hall (of Oates fame), Battles and tonnes more, many of which I haven't heard and might be tempted by.

But let's face it. It's going to piss down all weekend. There might be the first recorded snow in July since the mini ice age and Suffolk will probably have a some kind of ecological disaster - but only if I go. The other good thing about it is it takes place during the last week of term, which means I wouldn't be able to get the time off. Thank Christ for that...

Spring back?

Look, I'm really not obsessed by the weather, okay? But it was both great and slightly worrying to see the apricot tree coming into full bloom this morning. Yesterday it looked like a big stick in the ground, today it is a mass of pink flowers. It looks fabulous, but this is a tree that probably shouldn't thrive in the UK and one that is sadly prone to even mild frosts. In the three years since it has been fruiting we had 22 apricots the first year, two the second year and half a dozen last year. Both of the last two years we've had hard late frosts which have really buggered the tree up and I can't help thinking that the same thing is going to happen again this year. The exceptionally mild winter has brought it on earlier than ever before which probably means that we'll be lucky if we find any little bright orange fruits come the beginning of August.

But on the plus side, we have crocuses bursting into life, poppies thriving, bulbs coming up and shoots on all the remaining trees and the first duck egg - it certainly looks like spring out there, especially with the promise of a fine weekend; one that might be warm enough for me to sit on the patio, with the paper, a cup of coffee and all my chores completed. Monday is going to be dull and mild, that makes the weekend seem even more important.

Same Stink, Different Colour

Yeah, I'm a socialist. Yeah I hate the Conservative party and all they stand for. And yeah, I admit that the Labour party made some pretty shitty mistakes while they were in power; but usually you expect the Tories to come in and kind of clear up the mess while making the most of all the success stories the last government had. However, the coalition seem to be a bit poo, on just about everything.

This week saw a new nadir with the decision to try and rescue some hostages in Nigeria, without bothering to tell one of the interested parties they were going to do it. The inevitable happened and lives were lost and the Italians, who had a man killed in this seemingly ill-advised hostage recovery attempt are positively fuming; it could cause a serious international incident and has left Cameron and co with large quantities of egg on their faces.

With the economy in the toilet; the NHS teetering on the brink, more and more people staring poverty and despair in the face, we also appear to be escalating a row with Argentina over the bloody Falklands again. Nothing like starting a war to distract the populace's attention away from the mess at home, eh? The problem is this isn't 1982; people have changed and many are fed up to the back teeth with Iraq, Afghanistan and all the other tensions which have brought our troops into danger and for what?

Also, factor in this little interesting factoid - the UK still gives foreign aid to Brazil, a country that just knocked us out of 6th place in the largest economy in the world stakes. As one of my friends put it last week, if the government continues to look like a bunch of headless retarded chickens, then the prospect of an insomniac panda as PM suddenly starts to look slightly better.

Face it people, politicians are all a bunch of worthless cunts. I no longer believe they are acting in the national interest, whatever colour they sport. I said a long time ago we need a radical overhaul of our politics and nothing has happened since then to make me change my mind.

Stuff
  • I am currently listening to: Hurry Up, We're Dreaming by M83 (again); William Orbit's Strange Cargo: Hinterland and lots and lots of classical music.
  • I am about to start reading Chavs, which the wife has almost finished.
  • I didn't watch Dirk Gently mainly because the wife isn't bothered. So I might catch up with it one night next week after she has gone to bed.
  • I bought the wife her third ever bunch of flowers for her birthday and still have to get her that winter coat.
  • I got a handheld blender!
  • I need a new egg slicer.
  • Tesco microwavable porridge oats is far better than I expected.
  • Fuckwit has been told he has to find a job because his DLA is being stopped - the government have finally cottoned on to the freeloading bastard.
  • I have just listened to a conversation between two dodgy looking geezers arguing about why one of them won't score some drugs for the other without paying a surcharge. Very loudly and unashamedly.
  • Roger has a portaloo in his drive.
Beat that!

Monday, March 05, 2012

The TV Dump (iv)

This contains spoilers...

Dead End

Jeffrey DeMunn must have thought he would be working for a while. If he had any sense when he got the job as Dale Horvath, he would have picked up The Walking Dead trade paperbacks and seen that he lasts a long time before he finally succumbs to the curse of the walkers. Imagine his surprise when he read the script of the 11th episode of the TV series and saw that he bites the big one a damned sight sooner than he (or the comics fan) probably expected.

There is a, possibly apocryphal, story going round that only Andrew Lincoln, Sarah Wayne Callies and Chandler Riggs - aka the Grimes family - are the only cast members pretty much guaranteed to survive the first three series, but the rest of the cast won't find out until the script for the next episode they're filming arrives. If it's true, it's a helluva production incentive for the rest of the cast to try and keep themselves alive - act well, stay alive.

I'd been horrid to my wife, who enjoys the TV show a damned sight more than me, and told her that in the comic Andrea, Glenn and Maggie are both still going strong and that Dale and Carol managed all the way to the TV equivalent of series 27, especially the way the current show is moving the story along. Of course, all bets were off almost from the start with subtle changes becoming massive changes and the introduction of a different bunch of supporting characters, presumably introduced because there needed to be more wanton killing of the group to keep the shock factor high.

If I sound a little jaded it's because I am. The comic book isn't the best in the world, but as an exercise in hopelessness, desperation and hell on Earth, it's probably the world's first car crash comic; you just have to read it to see who dies this month. That gives it an edge. a hook, to keep reeling them in. Time elapses in the comic a month at a time, so the stories seem to go on forever, but in comic style they take place over a short space of time; a year's worth of comics can be two days on average. The passage of time is easy, a couple of weeks can have passed at the conclusion of one arc and the start of another - the reader has the imagination to accept that the intervening days were too dull to chronicle or quite simply nothing happened and when you have a comic that moves the way The Walking Dead does, more than one month of sitting around the campfire discussing their predicament and gore fans get restless; besides, in the medium of comics, this is a wordy book by any standards already. WD has enough of nothing much is happening already, because like the TV show it is about the characters, the survivors, and not the scrapes they get themselves into - that's almost secondary, because, let's face it, there are only so many ways to dispatch a zombie before you start repeating yourself, it's just shown from a different angle or perspective. The comic could quite easily be an illustrated script.

The Walking Dead TV series, as I've said before in other entries, started phenomenally well, but frankly petered out pretty quickly by the time they got to the penultimate episode of the 6 part run. The new series started pretty poorly and now 11 episodes into the second season, the band are still playing on Herschel's farm - the place they found in the first episode of this series; like I said, they probably figured they could film it for about 80% less if they use a farm, especially if they limit the zombie count to an average of three an episode - saves on the make-up as well.

Like I said, the comic is no masterpiece, but the TV series is woeful by comparison. It is inhabited by thoroughly horrible characters and I'm not talking about selfish and nasty because of their need to survive, I'm talking probably selfish and nasty in the old world. Very few of them come out of the series in a good light and as Dale found out, being a good guy means you'll have your insides ripped out by a zombie; who, incidentally, was only there because one of Rick's family continued the growing theme that his wife and son have, of acting like complete and utter fuckwits. Between the two of them I'm surprised all of the survivors haven't died because of their remarkably selfish, yet sanctimonious ways. Rick Grimes should have shot them both or let the boy die and the wife run off with Shane, the cartoon villain. He really would have been better off without them.

I can't see the final two episodes suddenly seeing the cast up sticks and leave for pastures new, which means in the next two episodes we'll hopefully see the start of their being forced out. I apologise, but in the comic the slaughter of the barn inhabitants caused so much noise it attracted hundreds of walkers from all around who descended on the farm and forced them to move on, at the expense of some of Hershel's family and other minor characters. This didn't happen in the TV show, but I think it will happen as the season finale. But don't worry if you like this sedentary pacing; in the comic they find another mug to take them all in for a while before finding a prison to hide inside; but, like I said, with the current pace of the show, they'll find the prison in season 10, if it doesn't kill its viewers with boredom and hate first.

Shameful

On the flip side; the best TV show I'm watching at the moment is Shameless (US). It is... shameless. It makes even the brilliant early seasons of the UK version seem pale and uninspired, despite using many of the themes from those halcyon days of what is now basically a Channel 4 joke.

William H. Macy, Emmy Rossum and especially Jeremy Allen White are quite brilliant as Frank, Fiona and Lip Gallagher and they are surrounded by a simply superlative cast portraying the rest of the family and all the colourful supporting cast. I don't want to go on too much about it because I don't know if it's getting an airing in the UK yet, but if it doesn't, then it's worth trying to (cough) download them. You will be blown away!

MP F**k

I admit to downloading the odd programme, usually things I either can't get over here or to save waiting an eternity only to end up disappointed. The thing is, the sites are changing; most of the places I use seem to be putting up torrents for mp4 files rather than avi files and my DVD player looks at mp4s and goes 'meh' at them and ignores their existence. This has meant that the relatively easy job of downloading something like Shameless US has become a bit of a chore and that smacks in the face of the Internet supposedly getting easier. I think the easier it gets the more complicated people think it should be...

Sunday, March 04, 2012

2012 - 10b

Shop Talk

After driving about for two hours yesterday afternoon, in an attempt to buy the wife a decent waterproof coat, at the right price, for her birthday, which is today, and failing miserably, I decided to nip out this morning, get her a bunch of flowers and some chocs to make up for her not having a present from me this morning.

Morrison's was full of wankers and I got in the wrong queue. Eventually I got out and realised that I also had to buy a cucumber, but figured I'd get one from the Co-op later. Fast forward 4 hours and we're on our way back from a woody dog walk and I venture into my local store, pick up a cucumber, felt robbed that it was 95p and went and queued behind a woman with more Muller fruit corners than you could shake the proverbial at and a packet of cut green beans. She proceeded to drop everything, not once, but twice and while this was happening two women, a mother and daughter presumably were in the queue behind me. The older woman tapped me on the shoulder and said, "Do you think I could go in front of you, I only have a loaf to buy?" I looked at her, already growing slightly frustrated at the Fruit Corner woman's incompetence.
"I only have this," I said waving the cucumber at her.
"We're in a hurry." She said. I stood there, dripping after walking in the rain and sleet for an hour and looked at her with a touch of incredulity on my face.
"I'm in a hurry too." I said, not really wishing to be an arse, but slightly gobsmacked that she could ask someone with as many items as herself if she could push in.
"Be a miserable bastard then," she said.
"I beg your pardon?" I said, but before I could say anything else the Asian checkout girl called me over.
"£1.05 please."
"It said 95p on the rack," I said.
"It says £1.05 here." I just stood and looked at her. She realised that I was digging my heels in and said, "George, could you check the price of cucumbers for me." George disappeared and the woman and her daughter were looking highly agitated.
George reappeared, "95p," he said.
"It says £1.05 here," the checkout girl with some kind of stubborn heel digging of her own. I suddenly thought, hang on, she sends someone to check, still doesn't budge and I only had £1 on me.
"Tell you what," I says, "Here's £1, we'll split the difference." I handed her the quid and walked out of the shop with her saying, "I can't do that." She could, she did, she had to, I wasn't coming back.

The Wheels Come Off

All season, Roger and I have had this feeling that Man Citeh would, to quote my good friend Martin Ship, do an impression of a clown's car and the wheels would come off. Seems that it was going to be the fate of Spurs rather than Citeh all along.

Personally, I blame two people for this slump which could see us battle it out for 4th place rather than breeze into a top 3 position. Those people are John Terry and Fabio Capello. If I need to explain to you why then you have no interest in football, so I won't bother.

And Finally...

All credit to my mate One El for his drag stint on Saturday night for a party. He went as Marilyn Monroe and looked a bit like one of the Python crew in drag. Big shout for his guts; I wouldn't have, but I know a few blokes who would have hit on him at a party. Marilyn always shaved her pits though...

And...

Even more credit to my wife, 47 today and still looking like she's in her 30s. Quite a remarkable achievement considering she's married to me!

Saturday, March 03, 2012

2012 - 10

Up in Smoke

I started smoking again around my birthday... last year. I kept it quiet, but I never really discussed my smoking with anyone, so keeping it quiet was easy. My new smoking regime was simple, 4 or 5 fags a day, to stave off the boredom of my then impending unemployment - a really sensible time to consider doing something that eats a huge hole into one's finances, you'll probably agree.

I was buying a small pouch of tobacco and it was lasting me best part of a week. When I smoked in the house, it was by open windows with the wind behind me or by the fireplace where there's a good draw from the flue. During the summer it was easy, I'd just sit on the patio or on mild or warm nights, sit on the back step. I was feeling confident that I'd managed to deceive the wife.

However, I started to make mistakes. I'd leave a dog end on the hearth, or I'd hide it among the ashes in the grate; and I figured that storing the other dog ends in my office bin, saturated with Hugo Boss and out of the way of prying eyes would suffice. Some of the mistakes were even simpler than that - leaving strands of tobacco lying on my desk; noticing, but not doing anything about the growing detritus on my window sill and the fact that the longetr I continued to smoke the more I just wanted her to find out.

Then back in November, when I started my new job, I started having a smoke at break - me and my assistant would leave the school grounds smoke one of her cheap fags as quick as we could and return to school eating Polos and spraying (herself) with half a canister of perfume. After a couple of weeks of this my chest began to get tight. I haven't actually smoked tailor-made cigs this century, the main reason being that they fuck up my lungs (more than just smoking in general). So I knocked the break time fag on the head and it was then that I realised, truly realised, that if my wife had not realised I was smoking by now then she must be dead. My assistant would come back from her break and despite her precautions, she smelled like an old tramp. I did less to cover my smoking up, so therefore must have smelled like an old ashtray whenever I got into bed at night.

But I persevered. I said to my mate Tony, who was convinced she knew long before I was, that I think she was overlooking it for a couple of reasons - I'd lost 3 stone; was not the most miserable bastard on the face of the planet and I was, at least, trying to hide it from her and doing more, ironically, around the house and garden.

It's the wife's birthday on Sunday and last night we were treated to our customary visit from her mother (an ex-smoker), who apropos of nothing (although both me and the wife have coughs) if I was still not smoking and I looked over at my wife who was sitting there with what looked like a smug smile on her face. "No." I said, as ambiguously as I could and the remainder of the conversation just highlighted what a complete and utter twat I am...

The most telling thing was that she knew almost from the moment I started. The second most telling thing was that whenever I was out in the garden at night smoking, the smoke would waft into our bedroom or bathroom window and she, being a non-smoker, can smell random cigarette smoke from about a mile away. I sat there and heard how she was completely aware of every trick I'd tried and felt stupid.

Many years ago, because I have actually tried to stop smoking more times than I've eaten exotic food, my then GP told me that I was probably in the worst 5% of people who want to stop smoking but can't. It's a statistic that people who smoke 20+ cigs a day are twice as likely to stop permanently than people who smoke under 20 and they were four times as likely to stop than people who smoke less than 10. In my pot smoking days, I'd smoke about 6 a day and I treated it like a treat, a reward or a way of unwinding; like a small scotch or a big glass of red wine; but the sad fact is once you're hooked on nicotine and it has had the chance to rewire your brain - cos that's what it does - stopping it is tougher than shagging a rotting corpse. The intervening years have seen me stop smoking for 18 months, 7 months and a host of under 6 months attempts. I have actually tried to stop smoking 14 times since my mother died - of a smoking related illness and just like my wonderful mum, I'm rubbish at stopping, but a world beater at stopping stopping.

I'm pretty sure that the now public info hasn't changed her opinion and I know that it hurts her a lot to see me with bad coughs and resignation that I won't be spending my old age with her; like my mother, I'm growing resigned to having a horrible death caused by something I loathe but love in equal measure. My only options left are - seeing a hypnotist or having a heart attack; I'm pretty sure being handed a death sentence in person by a cardio-vascular specialist will kick my sense of self-preservation into overdrive.

I am, it should be emphasised, a complete and utter twat.

Fantasy TV

Occasionally I have waffled on about ideas I've had that have never come to fruition or sit gathering cyber dust in a directory on my PC and backed up on a series of discs. But last week, when I was writing my periodic TV Dump thing, I realised that I was growing disillusioned with the majority of TV shows I watch and as we enter the stagnant month of March (when most US shows go on sabbatical and most English ones are waiting for another time of year), I'm faced with trying to decide which of my many 'box sets' I will sit and finally watch.

Perhaps I'm just pining for some good weather so that I can get out more again, but most TV that I currently look forward to ends up leaving me slightly cheated or empty; at times it's like being in a perpetual shaggy dog story or to put a comicbook analogy to it, like I have been reading Chris Claremont's X-Men for 50 years, just hoping he'll resolve at least one of his sub-plots.

It might have something to do with the rare moments I get when I watch a TV show and think, "Jesus, I could do this 100% better." This was why my good friend Martin Shipp and I had a go at writing a TV show a few years ago. I mean, we're both brilliant. I am the ideas man and Martin writes like he should be getting paid shitloads of cash for just being in the room, inspiring others. However, Seaview never got past the draft script phase. We wrote a pilot; reworked it, actually got together and paced the thing and then got a few friends to read it.

Some friends are just blown away that people they know have attempted something so ambitious, while others donned critics hats - the kind of people we needed to read it - and tore it to shreds. I've talked about this before, but the point is I still think the premise for the series is better than 90% of the shit that gets churned out.

Seaview is about a man who inherits a run down hotel in a quiet seaside village from a father he barely knew. All is relatively normal or so it seems, but what he has actually inherited is a hotel that serves as a halfway house for time travellers because the village the hotel sits in also sits on a rift in time, which allows the inhabitants to run a black market operation by which they travel through time and steal things they can use - everything from food to antiques and money. We both saw it as a kind of Ballykissangel meets The Twilight Zone and like all bad script writers, we had all kinds of things promised for the second, third, fourth seasons... I even went as far as wanting the main character to be the son of another famous actor, so they could play the same role but in different times. Like all bad script writers, I firmly believed that if we could sell the idea to someone the rest would be easy - the problem was we had to have a good idea to sell, backed up with evidence we could do it and the draft for the pilot had lots of intrigue but barely anything else.

Another one of my failed novels - Second Contact - could be developed into an excellent TV series, IMHO. It is the story of how a race of aliens arrives on Earth with the offer of enlightenment, gifts and technology that would allow the planet to take its rightful place in the galaxy. However, these advanced beings aren't the first aliens to arrive on Earth. Back in the 1950s around the time of the Roswell Incident, a spaceship lands and a massive cover up is put in place. Only people at the highest level of the government are aware and the aliens are repatriated into a new town in the mid-west of the USA. They live there for half a century, part of the USA but also kind of annexed from it. The town is situated next to an air base and the people there also serve to watch and observe this new colony of aliens.

The newcomers in the present are actually intergalactic bounty hunters and are anything but friends of the planet; they just want to find the original aliens, wipe them out and if the planet dies as a result, then so be it. Earth has, after all, been harbouring galactic fugitives. It offers all kinds of possibilities from varying perspectives and has the added beauty of I never came up with an ending for it so it could go on and on and on...

Around the time that Dexter was beginning to prove itself to be one of the best programmes to come out of the USA for years and around the time Martin and I shelved Seaview, I had this idea that allowed me to draw more insight from my real life - always a good thing when you do this kind of thing. The idea was about an award-winning child behaviourist, who freelances for councils and services working with the worst kids imaginable - murderers, arsonists, psychopaths or just simply kids who have gone so far off the rails that only drastic action will bring them back. The guy, Mark Rigby, gets employed by all manner of people and has an extremely high success rate until he is asked to work with a young girl with some extremely disturbing personality traits...

The real intrigue (hopefully) comes from the fact that this expert isn't who he claims to be, or, at least, that is what a social worker attached to the case believes. When she was at university, she dated a Mark Rigby and shortly after their graduation they were going to travel the world for a year, but her Mark disappeared and she never saw him again. 20 years later another Mark Rigby walks into her life and he has the same life as her ex, up to the point where her's disappeared...

Martin and I talked about this, but he could see where we'd be accused of treading on Dexter territory, especially as I saw the modern Mark Rigby as being quite a dark and unpredictable character, prepared to do anything to preserve his position. I had this idea that the modern Mark would be a real enigma and that very little of his real life would ever be revealed and what was would be ambiguous, slightly surreal and seemingly unrelated to anything he did now.

I still think it's a good idea.

Tying this section into something else; I decided last week to add to the My Monthly Curse blog. Now that it has finished and I have an unexpected hole in my life, I've taken a suggestion made to me and tweaked it to suit me and t least two more entries are scheduled looking at the comics that have influenced me or I rate really highly. I talked about comics for 167,000 words and rarely touched on the reasons why I started reading comics in the first place.

One of the comic series on the first list is something called The Griffin, a kind of Rebel Without a Cause meets Superman with a bit of Starship Troopers thrown in. It was a prestige 6 part series by Dan Vado and Norm Felchle and told the story of Matt Williams, a young rebel who joins an alien army, is endowed with super powers and then, after 20 years, decides to go home, even though it is punishable by death. I read it again the other week and couldn't help wonder why it was never optioned for a film. It is quite a simple but expertly done little story that would, with current CGI, transpose to the big screen with ease and with very little changes to the existing story (not that that would ever happen). If film producers are really strip mining comics for future big screen blockbusters, they would do themselves no harm looking at this.

March of Unpredictability

My obsession with the weather never changes, but I suppose that this has more to do with my belief that I'm more human when the sun shines on this side of the world for more than 12 hours a day. I think my worst nightmare would be to become a vampire...

The end of February was stunning; there were a few days that could easily have been May and my sun glasses got an early year airing and even if last week was a bit misty and murky, you couldn't help notice that there was a warmth behind the cloud, especially when foggy days in February usually mean sub-zero temperatures. I stood on the school's artificial playing surface watching some of my charges play football on Thursday and the sun was shining and there was far more sweat on brows than you would expect at a time of the year when jumpers are worn rather than used for goalposts. It was glorious and I felt slightly disappointed that I had to go back into my stuffy room and miss the wonderful sun light.

Today, while sitting here, I've seen it start murky, then rain and now the sun is out, the temperature on the patio is 13 degrees and anyone with a memory would remember that 13 degrees is actually about 3 degrees less than it was on this corresponding day last year. The reason I say this is because the wife's birthday has, for most of the 29 years I've known her, been either cold and wet or very cold and snowy. She has often joked that even if we see no snow throughout the year, we'd see some on her birthday; but last year, we walked out with the dogs on March 4 wearing no jackets and basking in 16 degrees of heat. It was weird, but it made a pleasant change.

The weather forecast for tomorrow is awful; it's going to get very wet; it's going to start to get very cold and by the time the vast rain belt gets over us, the rain will start to turn to snow... Back to normal then?

Stuff
  • I am currently listening to Vs by Pearl Jam and Orang's Herd of Instinct (which is a bit like Talk Talk lite, but that might be because it's Talk Talk without Mark Hollis or Tim Friese-Green).
  • I am not reading anything but will start Chavs when the wife finishes it.
  • One of the two nectarine trees I have grown from stones, the one that never lost its leaves throughout the entire winter, has just started to sprout new ones. The other nectarine tree, which did what all normal trees do and shut down for the winter still looks like a twig stuck in a pot.
  • Still a bit miffed by Blogger's refusal to allow me to do much with my blogs. If I want to change a font or a size it allows me to do it in the editing stage, but once it's published it seems to ignore all these instructions...
  • I'm taking the dogs out on my own today - Lexy disappeared again last week for a couple of hours and is on leash punishment at the moment - and earlier than usual, because I still haven't bought the wife a present yet. When she finishes work I'm taking her to some fancy shop to buy her a new waterproof coat; at least that's the plan. Then it's on to Pooja for a nice meal and then home for copious amounts of filthy dirty sex. At least, that's the plan...