Oct 28 2008

broken tags

category: blog development
scribble tags:

To honour Scarlet’s request, 6 psuedo-random personal things:

  1. Peanut butter and cheese sandwiches without any bread,  spread the peanut butter directly on a wedge of cheese.
  2. At 44.9 (.9 recurring) yrs old I still wear school daps.
  3. I do not have enough hand-wind-up-clocks that tick loudly with unsynchronised chimes.   BOINGNGNGNGNGNG…
  4. Beyond name and gender allocation I bear no resemblance to JM Barrie’s Peter Pan character Wendy. 
  5. There is garden mud underneath my left index fingernail.
  6. I will be breaking the tag rules (see below) by not leaving a tag comment on the blogs of those people cited below.

Tags for these 6 people that are worth reading to see if they ring your bell,  chime your clock,  peanut butter your cheese, or dap your feet :

  1. Hilarious. Jenn’s ‘The Piehole’: http://liscious.net/piehole/index.php
  2. Serious. Twisty Faster’s ‘I blame the patriarchy’. http://blog.iblamethepatriarchy.com/
  3. Windows. Raymond Chen’s ‘The Old New Thing’: http://blogs.msdn.com/oldnewthing/default.aspx
  4. Ambulances. Tom Reynolds ‘Random Acts of Reality’: http://randomreality.blogware.com/blog
  5. Matronly. Mrs. Pouncer’s ‘Mrs Poucer’s counsel’ http://mrspouncer.blogspot.com/
  6. Paramedic. Stuart Gray’s Paramedics diary. http://theparamedicsdiary.blogspot.com/

Tag rules: Link to the person who tagged you. Post the rules on your blog. Write 6 random things about yourself. Tag 6 people at the end of your post and link to them. Let each person you have tagged know by leaving a comment on their blog. Let the tagger know when your entry is posted…


Oct 18 2008

lists of fairtrade outlets in Reading

scribble tags: , ,

I do enjoy a good list,  closely followed by that wonderful feeling of achievement that follows ticking things off lists, or striking them out as ‘done’.  I’ve found a list provided by the BBC,  a fabulolus service,  that lists shops and eateries in Reading that sell fairtrade goods.  How fabulous is that?!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/berkshire/features/2004/03/fairtrade_shops.shtml

I will tick-tell-myself off if I use any other Reading shops and cafes. Naughty girl. 

Hip Hip Hoorahs all round


Sep 15 2008

fabulous wedding features

category: courting
scribble tags: ,

<soppiness warning>

Just a few of the too numerous to enumerate highlights:

  • Gift registry:  www.epilepsy.org.uk & www.simoncommunity.org.uk 
  • The bride wasn’t ‘given away’ like chattles,  bride and groom walked down the isle together.
  • Isle-walk accompanying music:  You only live twice
  • Readings including multiple references to Pooh in A.A.Milne’s ‘us two’  (read by AfH)
  • Outstanding vows because they acknowledged each others strenghts and weaknesses and showed love, respect, knowledge of what it takes to make a relationship work and be fun too.  I particularly liked this one:

I promise to allow myself to be silly around you and to enjoy you being silly around me as well.

  • 7 Henchman subtly and actively coordinating the smooth running of the event: Oddjob, Mr. Wint, Mr. Kidd, Nick Nack, May Day, Xenia Onatopp, Jaws
  • Red wedding dress
  • No ‘maids’
  • A photobased childrens TV themed Quiz organized by table at the wedding breakfast.
  • Bride’s speech toplining the other speeches. 
  • Creatively quirky photographer:  http://www.vikmartin.co.uk/
  • Local bands at the reception were friends of the Bride and Groom,  some included the Bride or Groom and all played at least one cover version of Bond theme tune,  compared by AFH.
  • My yellow-red shot silk hat,  however, the relative lack of hats on other guests was actually a tad disturbing.

BagpussTables were decorated in childrens TV themes, with models and soft toys, and each guest as a character,  I was Soo.  As you can see, even Bagpuss joined the fun.

<soppiness temporarily suspended>


Sep 14 2008

again please!

category: visiting places
scribble tags: , ,

Hotel breakfast room with volcano view

Excellence

included multiple boob-topped churchesdeserted dawns shared with the departed,   livingly sociable sunsets announced by rather flat church bells,   mules trains,  smiling old people,   sculpted young peopleversataile windmillsstylish alleys often containing sleek kitties,  oodles of sunshine, beer and clear blues. 

On top of all these standard Greek holiday experiences I learned about the real sailing motoring experience from a chain-smoking German skipper in the company of a pack of youngsters.  I learned real sailing involved:

  1. being prepared not to sail.
  2. feeling sick.
  3. not doing a poo in the loo of a boat moored in a Greek harbour.
  4. wearing white to hide the cumulative sea-salt crystals.
  5. knowing knots.
  6. charging small ‘devices; in Tavernas.

Sep 09 2008

no trousers

category: using things
scribble tags: ,

<list-overdose event warning>

Below is a list of the stuff that GAP recommended that I pack where the ticks (US = check mark) indicate how many of an item I carried.  Items not actively used during the holiday are struck-through:

  • Passport (with photocopies)  ü
  • Travel insurance (with photocopies) ü
  • Airline tickets (with photocopies) ü
  • Euros and travellers cheques ü
  • Credit or debit card (see personal spending money) ü
  • G.A.P Adventures vouchers, pre-departure information and dossier ü
  • Any entry visas or vaccination certificates required ü
  • Camera and film ü
  • Reading/writing material üüüü
  • Cover or plastic bags for backpacks ü
  • Flashlight ü
  • Windproof/waterproof jacket/rain poncho ü
  • Small towel and swim wear üüü
  • Warm sweater ü
  • 4 shirts/t-shirts üü
  • Sunhat üüüü
  • 2 pair of shorts üü
  • 1 pair of long trousersü
  • 1 pair hiking pants/track pants ü
  • Hiking boots/sturdy walking shoes (for shore excursions) ü
  • Sport shoes with light colored soles/sport sandals (while on board) ü
  • Biking gloves (if you wish to participate in sailing - optional) ü
  • Sunblock ü
  • Sunglasses üüüü
  • Toiletries (biodegradable) ü
  • Flashlight ü
  • Watch or alarm clock ü
  • Water bottle ü
  • First-aid kit (should contain lip salve, Aspirin, Band Aids, anti-histamine, any extra prescription drugs you may be taking). ü

Striking holiday characteristics hidden in the above list include my:

  • Not falling-over (band-aids not used) .
  • Not loosing my passport.
  • Not wearing more than one pair of shoes during the fortnight.
  • Only getting 4 mosquito bites.  I think the high winds helped.
  • Wearing only 3 different pairs of glasses during the fortnight.
  • Managing with only 4 hats,  I suspect I needed more.
  • Being able to see by the light of the moon.
  • not wearing trousers or knickers.

<list-overdose temporarily suspended>


Jul 22 2008

news: wendy is a fake woman (crash*)

category: female condition

Sunday Times and  online Times article ‘Sex and the Sixities’  by India Knight includes the following rousing calls to womanhood:

the essence of modern womanhood, the one hard-to-define component that makes us all want to cheer the loudest…“  is  “…possibility that we may, at 62, perhaps look like Helen Mirren in a bikini

a 62-year-old woman looking hot – properly hot, not “hot for her age” or hot as in “fanciable, even though you know you shouldn’t” is a thing that simply can’t be celebrated enough.”

‘Mirren in her red bikini says more, more succinctly, about what women want and can achieve than any amount of turgid feminist preaching ever could’

Gosh, I don’t think I know people who think spending time and skill to dress for the occasion is shallow,  but India thinks that view might be held by some Times readers because she considerately quashes it “if you think that’s shallow, I would humbly posit that you understand nothing at all about real women’s hopes and ambitions.”  Trying to following India’s humble reasoning,  leads to the suspicion that if I don’t want to look like Helen Mirren in a Bikini then I may not be a real woman,  Ooops!  I think I may have fallen over.

Apparently the social construction of ‘woman’ once meant “no longer being “a girl”, which translated into bad clothes, bad hair, bad make-up and, if you were especially unfortunate, a bad figure.”  and “Worse, having reproduced meant that in the eyes of society you no longer existed as a sexual being“. It seems that India believes promoting yourself as a ’sexual being’ , sexbot, should be an aspirational goal for real women and it is equated to looking young. If you don’t look sexy you look old.  Whhhooooops!  I definitely fell over this time.

India’s view also implies that, normal, aspiring real women have no financial or legal obstacles to not looking youthful and sexy because ‘deregulated’‘ ‘minor surgical procedures’ are ‘nothing that is outside most people’s league’ .  It is all part of the groundwork for achieving ‘a triumphant assertion of easy, carefree femininity’.  While fake women should embrace the freedom and “life-changing power of hair dye“.  As a self-identified, terminally-fake, woman I  ”might know better if they [I] made an attempt at living in the real world“.  Maybe downtown Reading is actually a figment of my nasty, demented, Ivory-tower, imagination?  Deary me,  I  must get out more and take my zimmer-frame.

If ‘looking good’ is primarily equated to looking youthful and sexy I have no intention of developing an interest. or skill, in it.  When looking good is constructed to promote wrinkles and twisty silver hairs ideally with a dash,  or spring, of surrealist creativity,  then I’ll be swinging my funky-stuff with the melting clocks but not with the people who aspire to portray themselves as sexbots.

For now,  if I place myself in India’s analytical framework I find that I am:

  • Preaching (turgid?) feminism.
  • intelligent, a blue stocking.
  • a frump because I don’t pride myself in being fashionable.
  • Living in an ivory tower (in Reading). 
  • not recognising the equivalence of the value of having a face-lift with the right to paid maternity leave.

At least India has clearly given me the escape route to achieve real-woman status that luckily I can choose not to aspire to,  I must

  • maintain my already abundant confidence.
  • promote my sexual potential. 
  • develop and interest in whatever the current fashion defines as looking good.  
  • have minor surgical procedures so that I can look good in a bikini. 
  • Die my hair.

Unlike Alan’s outstanding advice I wont be aligning the value-set outlined in India’s article.

* the sound of me and my zimmer-frame colliding with the ground when dropping out of our Ivory tower.


Jan 02 2006

List Enthusiasts

category: friends & idols
scribble tags:
An American critic wrote that she would rather be forced to read the New York telephone directory three times than watch the film A Zed and Two Noughts, a third of which was a homage to Vermeer. Conceivably, if you are a list-enthusiast like me, the New York telephone directory might be fascinating, demographically, geographically, historically, typographically, cartographically; but I am sure no compliment was intended.”