Sunday, April 27, 2008
Saturday, April 26, 2008
It's the weekend....
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Spam fritters and meme soup
I love the caring, sharing world of the interweb. Every morning I have a plate of spam for breakfast.
This morning Eleanor Pook enquired if I would like 3 months supply of viagra. No doubt she was in cahoots with Barnabus Ribble who kindly asked if I would like a bigger dick (apparently I can make the ladies moan if I am adjusted accordingly).

In the old days spam came in the form of revolting fritters, packed full of dodgy bits of meat(?). Today it means that you get all sorts of offers from kindly people who are selling a multitude of 'must have' things - so exciting.
Many of these wonderful salespeople have not only been concerned with the size of my wedding tackle but they are also worried that I might not have a genuine fake watch. The worrying thing is that I appear to be sending myself some spam from my website - how did I do that, it's a miracle?
Now, some memish soup.....

Lee Lowe, bless her mortal soul, had tagged me. I should be spitting on her blog but I will do it, just this once because it's bookish (did I say that last time?). So...
1. Pick up the nearest book.
2. Open to page 123.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the next three sentences.
5. Tag five people, and acknowledge who tagged you.
The Element Encyclopedia of 5000 Spells is my nearest book to hand (research, okay?). The 5th sentence falls under the title Papyrus Hieroglyph Spell...
Crocodiles, like snakes, are simultaneously fearsome, dangerous creatures and potent symbols of psychic protection. Pregnant Isis, after all, hid in the crocodile infested swamps of the Nile Delta. In ancient days the papyrus plant was a hieroglyphic emblem for Lower Egypt. It also served as a protective emblem from crocodiles, lending new meaning to Moses' cradle on the Nile, made from papyrus.
So now you know. A piece of swampy weed will keep you from losing a valuable limb, or two, and may allow you to grow up to be able to part more than just your hair.
Tag victims. Oh poot, I hate this bit.
Roberta - because I am just checking that she is awake.
JohnG - to test if he reads more that just dirty jokes.
Soubriquet - bound to be interesting
G&G - ditto, and he gives me some good reading tips.
Leslie - because she likes crocs and dragons
and the rest of you can spill your reading secrets in the box.
This morning Eleanor Pook enquired if I would like 3 months supply of viagra. No doubt she was in cahoots with Barnabus Ribble who kindly asked if I would like a bigger dick (apparently I can make the ladies moan if I am adjusted accordingly).

In the old days spam came in the form of revolting fritters, packed full of dodgy bits of meat(?). Today it means that you get all sorts of offers from kindly people who are selling a multitude of 'must have' things - so exciting.
Many of these wonderful salespeople have not only been concerned with the size of my wedding tackle but they are also worried that I might not have a genuine fake watch. The worrying thing is that I appear to be sending myself some spam from my website - how did I do that, it's a miracle?
Now, some memish soup.....

Lee Lowe, bless her mortal soul, had tagged me. I should be spitting on her blog but I will do it, just this once because it's bookish (did I say that last time?). So...
1. Pick up the nearest book.
2. Open to page 123.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the next three sentences.
5. Tag five people, and acknowledge who tagged you.
The Element Encyclopedia of 5000 Spells is my nearest book to hand (research, okay?). The 5th sentence falls under the title Papyrus Hieroglyph Spell...
Crocodiles, like snakes, are simultaneously fearsome, dangerous creatures and potent symbols of psychic protection. Pregnant Isis, after all, hid in the crocodile infested swamps of the Nile Delta. In ancient days the papyrus plant was a hieroglyphic emblem for Lower Egypt. It also served as a protective emblem from crocodiles, lending new meaning to Moses' cradle on the Nile, made from papyrus.
So now you know. A piece of swampy weed will keep you from losing a valuable limb, or two, and may allow you to grow up to be able to part more than just your hair.
Tag victims. Oh poot, I hate this bit.
Roberta - because I am just checking that she is awake.
JohnG - to test if he reads more that just dirty jokes.
Soubriquet - bound to be interesting
G&G - ditto, and he gives me some good reading tips.
Leslie - because she likes crocs and dragons
and the rest of you can spill your reading secrets in the box.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Conditioner
"Ladies and gentlemen, the train now standing at platform 1 is just having a little snooze and will be leaving just as soon as it is ready. We apologise for the inconvenience."
I would like to be more inconvenient but my head conditioner thinks that waking up at 6.30 every morning is the thing to do. I have tried giving myself a good talking to, turning the foul alarm off and staying awake until the wee small hours - but my mind is a temple to the Holy Timetable and suggests that Saturday morning should be savoured from the start.
Grrrr.
Before children (B.C) my body overruled my work ethic, leaving me to catch up on the missing sleep and make the repairs necessary for a line-free face. What happened?
The Holy Timetable is responsible, of course. That inner git who can't remember that it is Saturday and that the worky constraints of the week have been lifted. It thinks I want to get up and do a spot of home work.
Big Fecker has no trouble sleeping through a number of meals (hoovering, house demolition, end of the world etc) and rising just in time to enjoy the sunset. When exactly did I lose this talent? When did I kick this wonderful habit and replace it with a need to experience the dawn of a Saturday morning?
I am therefore placing a hex, an embargo, a giant sized fatwa on Saturday mornings - any suggestions, apart from the use of illegal drugs (well...) will be gratefully received.
I would like to be more inconvenient but my head conditioner thinks that waking up at 6.30 every morning is the thing to do. I have tried giving myself a good talking to, turning the foul alarm off and staying awake until the wee small hours - but my mind is a temple to the Holy Timetable and suggests that Saturday morning should be savoured from the start.
Grrrr.
Before children (B.C) my body overruled my work ethic, leaving me to catch up on the missing sleep and make the repairs necessary for a line-free face. What happened?
The Holy Timetable is responsible, of course. That inner git who can't remember that it is Saturday and that the worky constraints of the week have been lifted. It thinks I want to get up and do a spot of home work.
Big Fecker has no trouble sleeping through a number of meals (hoovering, house demolition, end of the world etc) and rising just in time to enjoy the sunset. When exactly did I lose this talent? When did I kick this wonderful habit and replace it with a need to experience the dawn of a Saturday morning?
I am therefore placing a hex, an embargo, a giant sized fatwa on Saturday mornings - any suggestions, apart from the use of illegal drugs (well...) will be gratefully received.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Granny Annie
It was only in later life that I realised that Annie was a little potty. As a young child her slightly unconventional ways went over my head and straight to my heart. I loved my grandmother.
She was born in a place called Inner Hope and her family were a 'bunch of theivin' rascals', merchant seamen who made a career of dying early in unchartered waters. Inner Hope lacked any hopeful males so she moved away and married Stanley (whose family were never spoken about) and had four children. My mum was the youngest until Annie embarrassed the whole town by getting pregnant at 49. Maybe the madness set in then.
Apart from the weird hats she used to wear, Annie looked like anyone else's granny (twinset and pearls, two underskirts and a pair of long drawers). It was only when she opened her mouth that you got some inkling of the 40-a-day, card sharp that she was.
I loved staying with her, sleeping in an iron bedstead that hugged me all night and sitting with her on the spin drier to stop it walking around the kitchen by itself. I once helped her liberate some pigs from the field at the end of the garden but I never helped her bury the yappy dog from next door that had strangely died by flinging itself under a plant pot.
Her winter years were an excuse to wear her dressing gown in public and to help herself to mars bars from the shop down the road (my dad paid her chocolate bill every week). There are many stories about my grandmother that make me smile but 'Annie goes missing' is my favourite.
We arrived at her flat to find it empty. We could hear a radio blaring somewhere but she was nowhere to be found. After checking all the local shops in case she was on a thieving expedition we noticed that her bedroom window was open. At 85 she had climbed out onto the flat roof with her deck chair and was happily listening to music.
"The old biddies next door were making a noise so I came out here for some peace".
(It should be noted that the 'old biddies next door' were only in their sixties!)
Granny Annie definitely wore purple - I hope I shall do the same.

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She was born in a place called Inner Hope and her family were a 'bunch of theivin' rascals', merchant seamen who made a career of dying early in unchartered waters. Inner Hope lacked any hopeful males so she moved away and married Stanley (whose family were never spoken about) and had four children. My mum was the youngest until Annie embarrassed the whole town by getting pregnant at 49. Maybe the madness set in then.
Apart from the weird hats she used to wear, Annie looked like anyone else's granny (twinset and pearls, two underskirts and a pair of long drawers). It was only when she opened her mouth that you got some inkling of the 40-a-day, card sharp that she was.
I loved staying with her, sleeping in an iron bedstead that hugged me all night and sitting with her on the spin drier to stop it walking around the kitchen by itself. I once helped her liberate some pigs from the field at the end of the garden but I never helped her bury the yappy dog from next door that had strangely died by flinging itself under a plant pot.
Her winter years were an excuse to wear her dressing gown in public and to help herself to mars bars from the shop down the road (my dad paid her chocolate bill every week). There are many stories about my grandmother that make me smile but 'Annie goes missing' is my favourite.
We arrived at her flat to find it empty. We could hear a radio blaring somewhere but she was nowhere to be found. After checking all the local shops in case she was on a thieving expedition we noticed that her bedroom window was open. At 85 she had climbed out onto the flat roof with her deck chair and was happily listening to music.
"The old biddies next door were making a noise so I came out here for some peace".
(It should be noted that the 'old biddies next door' were only in their sixties!)
Granny Annie definitely wore purple - I hope I shall do the same.

.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Warning: Do not attempt to get out of bed

It started out all right, but I am easily fooled these days.
A food hygiene course doesn't exactly tickle my excitable bits but it could have been worse.
"Do we know where we are going?" my colleague asked.
I assured her that although we hadn't been sent a map I had (albeit vague) directions. Penzance is a small town, how difficult would it be to conceal a chapel? Very, apparently. Someone had moved the chapel and replaced it with a a housing estate.
I was calm. We weren't late and had time to ask a few people. The people we asked seemed reluctant to tell us (language was obviously a problem in a foreign town) or sent us off everywhere but there. We accosted some bin men (Umm, rubbish technicians, I meant) but they didn't know and neither did the police (worrying). To cut a really long 'now we're half an hour late' story short we rang home and after five phone calls we found the chapel hall, sneaked in commando style, got caught, apologised, won over the tutor with a winning smile and resigned ourselves to having missed coffee.
While trying to focus on what was being said and not thinking up a hundred hex's on everyone I knew, I realised that the table was juddering. The guy sat next to me was shaking. I looked around and saw that everyone in the room was wearing five layers of clothes (except shakey boy next to me). Within ten minutes frost bite had set in. I rarely dress appropriately for any occasion and today was no exception. The Victorian hall was at least -30 and it would be foolish to say that I am exquisitely happy when I am cold. I sulked all morning and only brightened a little when lunch was announced. Ooooh, I imagined hot soup, hot bread, hot, hot, hot, but it came disguised as a soggy sandwich and a piece of cake that required a pneumatic drill. Hygienic it may have been but they gave us about ten minutes to eat it and then I had to run two miles to feed the car park meter (again).
The afternoon lurched between feeling my toes and not. I learned about serving hot food at the right temperature but could barely keep my own above arctic conditions. With my brain in danger of freezing completely and the thought of a hefty fine if the meter was not fed I announced to the tutor that we had to go.
"You have to do your exam in order to pass the course" the smug bastard said.
I have probably failed, miserably. Getting killed by staphylococcus aureus (fuck, I learned something) was preferable to dying coldly in a foreign town.
The day was a disaster, I really shouldn't have got out of bed and I should be looking forward to staying in mine tomorrow. Unfortunately today was only Part 1 and tomorrow I have to do it all again!
.
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Friday, April 04, 2008
Vegetating

The other day, while tucking into a mixed salad for lunch, one of the children I work with pointed at a red pepper and said 'Ugh, I hate them'. As he stuffed another chocolate biscuit in his mouth he went on to list a hate of most vegetables. 'Does your mum cook them at home?' I asked.
'No.' he said 'She doesn't like them.'
So how much do we influence our children's eating habits? I looked to my own family. With two meat-eaters and two veggies I suppose we are exposed to a variety of foods everyday. I have only consciously deprived them of parsnips and prunes (I blame that one on school dinners). Other than that, between us, we eat most of the world's garden.
I am not righteous about food, my vegetarian habits come from a stomach that cannot cope with meat rather than moral issues. I do, however, try and provide a healthy balance. I steer clear of meat that doesn't look like meat, preservatives, enhancers, colours, or stuff that makes yer bread last for a month (Saint Minx!).
The Feckers made their own names for veg - trees = broccoli, naked trees = cauliflower, fart bombs = sprouts, grass = cress. They didn't like mushrooms until they were in their teens but I never told them that they didn't like them, only that they hadn't grown into them yet. I also assured them that they liked everything (I had no time for fads) and that chocolate was a vegetable!
So my theory of a healthy eating regime for your children is... tell them lies. Now, shut up, sit up, and eat your pepperfrogs.
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More cute veg can be found HERE
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