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Saturday, October 22, 2011

The Closed Window - alas!


It is with deep sorrow that I announce the arrival of autumn.  It came into our lives with a characteristic coolness yesterday and its presence has been confirmed by a lack of direct sunlight and lower temperatures today.  To those who continue to wear short sleeved shirts, we salute your refusal to accept the evidence of the thermometer and hope the warmth of your hearts compensate for its lack in the general climate.

There are still touches of blue in an otherwise cloud-covered sky and I cling to my memories of dull days brightening into pleasantness in this country.

The Post Pulveriser’s dogs are barking their morning joy to the world.  Presumably this is because their owner has taken the crippled dog for a walk in its wheeled chariot with the back paws bound in red insulating tape to avoid friction with the ground as their trail uselessly behind the pathetic animal.  As The Woman obviously relates more to her four legged captives than to her human neighbours the sense of loss that her other mutts feel when she takes one of them out to defecate on the surrounding pavements shows in their bewailing her absence with the usual moronic chorus of barks.

I am encouraged to hope that as the Town Hall has been pretty active in taking steps to do something about the parking post destruction they will be equally active in trying to silence her obstreperous pets.  She, and her menagerie are cordially loathed by all her neighbours and I only hope that the others have made complaints as well as us.  Certainly her other neighbour expressed his hatred in an extraordinary exhibition of a combination of Spanish, mime and dog impressions in one conversation with me as we discussed the latest knocking down of the post.

The sun has emerged.  It may be brief, but it has happened!  God bless Catalonia.  I am tempted to fly to the Third Floor and make the most of the seconds that we have been gifted.  Too late the sun went before I could make it.  The weather has now settled down into one of its default modes: “brightly dull” – which is better than dully dull which is too often the default setting for the old country!

There is just so long that you can live in chaos.  It is made easier by the fact that the true chaos is hidden behind the doors of the bookcases, but I kid myself along that it is creative chaos and therefore OK.  The Third Floor however is a different kettle of fish or confusion of objects.

Now there are compelling reasons why the place is so untidy.  Two un-collapsible sun bed cushions and four chairs with their accompanying cushions so create clutter to put it mildly.  This clutter is not helped however by the bits and pieces which have no real home of their own.

The most irritating items which wind their way everywhere are the electrical leads which I am too frightened to throw away.  They are again reaching the sort of critical mass where I have expect them to fuse themselves together into some creature from a gadget-lover’s nightmare.



There are so many leads and so much extra stuff that there is no logical place to start clearing up and I have little desire to make a start “anywhere” as being better than doing nothing.  Nothing sounds good to me.

Lunch was in our usual place where we were surrounded by the massed ranks of the retired.  We are beginning to believe that our motto for a happy and prosperous future should be “Follow the grey” – though thinking about it in my case it should be “Follow the shine” which has a rather nice messianic ring to it. 

It is certainly true that in Castelldefels that the retired have sussed out all the places which give the best value.  If the place you are going to patronize does not have the requisite proportion of “grey-and-shine” it is probably not worth going in.  Or, at the very least, be prepared to pay over the top for what you are going to get!

After lunch we called in to the branch of El Corte Ingles which is on my way to school and, remarkably, came out without spending a thing!

As Toni was tired – his leg does not seem to be improving at the rate that he would like and walking is a real strain – I was sent off to get the nibbles for United Nations Day from the supermarket.

The branch of Carrefour in El Prat (an unfortunate name but it fits the store) is one to test the patience of a good sight more saintly than an easy-going slacker like the laid back St Francis for example.

The background music in the store is not some Muzak Corporation of America version of The Four Seasons (a piece of music made justly famous by its inclusion as the music of choice of so many organizations where “call waiting” is the default setting for customer enquiries) but rather the cries and screams of small children.  Cries and screams which parents seem to assume have the same calming effect on those listening as the gentle lapping of the sea. 

They are misinformed. 

Shopping on a Saturday evening is a very stressful experience and distressed and distressing children do not lessen the strain.  Indeed their harpy (sic) little voices add a veneer of murderous intent to the way you manipulate the trolley.

It is astonishing how little people realize that a crowded store means that progress is more constricted.  They look at items on shelves with their trollies at right angles to said shelf and look surprised when I hiss a request to pass their impregnable fortifications!

The traffic in the main spine-like thoroughfare was a nightmare, sometimes so comically constricted that one suspects one is part of the supermarket re-make of “The Truman Show”!

In one bottleneck because of rampant inconsideration, there was only room for one trolley to pass.  Being the perfect British gentleman I politely kept to one side as three women swept through not one of them having the basic consideration even to note my existence, let alone express passing thanks.

People walked into my path as if the metallic trolley was made of marshmallow.  From time to time I was sorely tempted to demonstrate that metal is slightly harder.

I suppose that I shouldn’t have been shocked at the idiocy of the people in the queue in front of me.  Two North Africans were trying to buy goods using something other than money and credit which necessitated conferences and discussion; a man kept skipping off to find other goods leaving pushchair, child and shopping as a marker for his place; no one appeared to realize that payment was necessary at the end of the beeping procedure and there was the usual frantic search for purse or wallet; packing was painful to watch – and the children screamed on.

When it came to my turn I packed at the same rate that she checked and my card was ready and waiting when the total was spoken: it is not bloody rocket science.

It was night by the time I got out and needed something to raise my spirits – apart from spirits which I usually do not drink.  And drink is something which I can now do as my course of antibiotics is now officially over and alcohol may be consumed.

Tomorrow is a “fun” run and this necessitates the closing of all sorts of roads in our area while the lame, the halt and the mad “enjoy” themselves through the medium of pain.  Each to his own.
 
Barça have drawn against Sevilla with the end of the game descending into violent farce with Kanoute (an excellent player for Sevilla) behaving disgracefully and being sent off, soon to be followed by another player.  And Messi missed a last minute penalty.  The bloody ball went everywhere around the Sevilla goal but in it.  And I can’t believe that I am actually concerned about a mere game of football!  As a passing comment I said that Barça must have had 80% possession.  The statistics at the end of the game pointed out that I was wrong, it was actually 79%.  What is happening to me!

I obviously need more rest.

Obviously.


        

Friday, October 21, 2011

Towards the weekend!



A true disinclination to get up did not unfortunately stop me and I set out in darkness for the school.

Arrival should not have been so bad because I was off on a trip and even my first lesson was going to be taken by others.  But, there is always a but, the work that I had prepared yesterday was only half useful as the disk that was supposed to accompany all the photocopying I had done was nowhere to be found.  So, I copied another test and all seemed to be going well until the second set of photocopying I had done also lacked its disk.  Much flurrying about and off I went again to photocopy another set of tests.  This time I was informed of the missing disk with a couple of minute to go before the lesson started.

By the time I set off to join my colleague on the bus I had (although I didn’t know it at the time) lost my keys.

The mock-rehearsal student United Nations was held in a school in San Cugat.  The school itself was very impressive with a real library and an indoor swimming pool!  We held the lobbying in the school library and the General Assembly in the school theatre.  I continued to be impressed with the facilities.

Our kids were somewhat intimidated at first and had to be encouraged, or rather cajoled into taking a more active part.  It was a good day and gave the clearest indication yet as to what may be facing our kids when they go to the “real thing” in Lisbon next month.

Do not, for a moment, think that just because I went to a school a few miles away from us I am prepared to accompany the kids on a trip to a foreign country.  That is something I have not, do not and will not do.  The Lisbon excursion will have to do without me.  As indeed it is doing as the other person who is going has already been booked in on flight and hotel.  But I do not trust my school and have a sneaking suspicion that they have other plans.  But I will be firm.

We got back in good time and it was only then that my frantic search for me keys revealed their lack.  My friend the secretary, fellow survivor of The School That Sacked Me and lover of penguins was typically phlegmatic about my loss, worked out where they might be, phoned and – there they were!  A calm end to a fairly frantic day.

The evening was enlivened by the reappearance of the car crane which pulled in opposite our house and the driver and another resplendent in fluorescent jacket marched resolutely towards our house.  The intervention of Toni as translator revealed that they had come to repatriate the two parking posts which I had salvaged after the wrecking activities of person or persons unknown (ha!).

I produced the broken one (the third one to be destroyed) and the second one which I found hidden away in the bin in the street.  They thanked me profusely and tucked their spoils away underneath the crane and drove off.  I only hope that my neighbour saw me talking to the people who purloined her car a couple of days ago and starts to put her addition in order!

I think that an early night is in order.

I am coming to the end of my course of antibiotics and I should be ready to start drinking alcohol by United Nations Day!

What timing!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Cool days


Preparations continue to be made to combat the horror of Friday when five members of staff are going to be absent.  This is almost unworkable and has created total chaos.  The only way that such a loss of staff can be coped with is by collapsing classes right left and centre.  Or school is very much like Heathrow Airport in that we are so close to full capacity as far as teaching loads are concerned that minor changes or illness cause panic.  If anyone is away tomorrow the whole system will implode.  As it indeed fully deserves to, because this situation is entirely self inflicted with the incredible meanness of staffing creating a situation where every snuffle is a potential disaster.

As I constantly point out, our workload is the equivalent of working an extra day a week; therefore for every five teachers' workloads we are doing a colleague out of a full time job.  The maths is simple and the reality oppressive!

As there is a flu bug going around at the moment the day is looking more and more precarious.  I’ve had my jab and anyway I am one of the people who is not going to be there, so I can think, along with King Louis the umpteenth “après moi le deluge!” – if only!

I have been wrestling with the irritations of Power Point with the added itch of trying to get the thing to work on two different systems.  The programs are the same but any split between a Mac and a PC is heading for tears.  For some reason there is a difference in the way that you download a painting in the different versions of the program and I have had to resort to using the PC in Spanish to get the annotated Futurist painting done as an example for the class that I am teaching.

In theory I should now be able to tap the whiteboard and arrows should appear followed, with another tap, by a perceptive analysis that should amaze and delight the kids.  Fat chance!  But it will show them what I want.

The weather is now clearly cooler and we even had a spiteful downpour last night.  Today is bright but cloud is obscuring direct sunlight.  When we now get direct sunlight it is summery, even if it is not summer, but I do feel that the day when I have to wear long sleeved shirts is drawing ever nearer.  I find the ironing of short sleeve shirts almost possible; their long sleeved cousins are clearly impossible to get right.  I can see me wearing short sleeves well into January!

While in school I had a message via my phone which I did not at first believe.  It appeared that our splendid police force had turned up and arrested the illegally parked car of our noisy neighbour and hoisted it onto the pack of the crane lorry.

She obviously noticed at some point that someone was trying to steal her car and came down to the police and mendaciously but vociferously protested her innocence.  As she constantly parks on the pavement, knocks down parking pillars and has noisy, irritating dogs my only regret is that Toni did not have a camera to capture every detail so that I could relish them at my leisure!

He car eventually was whisked off with her in hot pursuit.  She returned with her car and I trust a substantial sum of money missing from her purse.  I calculate she will have to have her car impounded four or five times for the state to recoup the money they have spent on replacing the parking posts!

Having had such a pleasing response to our visit to the town hall we confidently expect a ninja team of dog poisoners to visit the inconsiderate cow and do the decent thing to her caterwauling curs!

Today, this evening is a significant day as I have given in to the moaning of another person and finally closed the living room windows because of the “coldness” which I do not necessarily feel in quite the same way.  I am prepared to admit that the weather has become somewhat cooler – my car thermometer tells me that – but it is still fine weather for the time of year.

United Nations Day will be celebrated on Monday next with the obscenity of my being in school.  The hated meeting at the end of a full day's work is scheduled to go on from 5 pm to 7.30 pm!  Two and a half hours of pure unadulterated torture which will start off in Spanish and almost immediately change to Catalan.

I am going to make it clear to all and sundry that it is a significant day for me in the fond hope that some shreds of common humanity will encourage me to escape early. 

This is a futile expectation because there is a sort of fatalistic, ghoulish pleasure that some of my colleagues find in these flagellestic and masochistic events and they do not like anyone to flee the delights.  And it is good preparation for the Saturday morning performance coming up in November!

However, to sweeten the occasion I have bought mini packets of Smarties to give to my colleagues in the meeting.  At the very least it will cause them to munch away rather than talk and hopefully it will increase the guilt they feel for keeping me from my “party”.  It will also make the whole situation look slightly absurd – which will amuse me.

The Family will be waiting for me at home and I am going to make it clear that any extension of the meeting will be directly insulting to my guests! 

Anything is worth a try!


Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Philosophy for Schools


Last night I was thinking about existentialism.

That sounds like a bad rewriting of the opening sentence of “Rebecca” – and I would not do that to a novel which I think stands head and shoulders above anything else that Daphne du Maurier wrote, up to and including the short stories.

Jean Paul Sartre : rainI suspect that consideration of such a nihilistic philosophy might have had something to do with the awful day that I had, but I suspect in some typically twisted way it had something to do with the content of my teaching.  Knowing me it may well have been some casual throwaway remark that I made in the first form which triggered this response retrospectively and, after all, if you can’t explain existentialism to an eleven year old you don’t understand it yourself.  Anyway it fits in with selected readings from Jean Paul Sartre and sketches from The Theatre of the Absurd that I am doing with them at the moment. 


I have now got through the bulk of the teaching day with only the disaffected Y9 class at the tail end of the day to go.  O Joy!  They are going to be given back their papers and 70% of the class are going to discover that they have failed!  That should keep things going for a while!

Fantasy and unreality are gaining ground as we totter our way towards the return of the papers.  All hell is going to be loose when people who still have shreds of self-belief find that they are condemned into the outer darkness by having their results recorded and sent to their parents.

My continuing abstinence from lunch is occasioning comment, but I do feel much better for not going up to the canteen and staying in the blissful silence of an empty staffroom for twenty or so minutes.  It is my equivalent of leaving the premises during the lunch hour and is necessary for the continuance of a quiet soul.

On Friday I am off on a school trip to another school in Barcelona for our “mock” student UN conference as a dry run for the “real” thing in Lisbon next month.  I am to be the official photographer and my efforts will surely grace the pages of our very professional and colourfully glossy school magazine.  What with this domestic event and the international one later the English and Humanities Departments should make a more than respectable spread in the next issue!

Four teachers are likely to be otherwise engaged than in their classes on Friday: two real teachers and two members of management.  This creates chaos in a school staffed as meanly as ours and frantic efforts are being made to compensate for teachers not being there.  If there is any illness on Friday the situation will degenerate into absolute pandemonium!  My sensible advice is always to close the school on such occasions, but management have a stubborn reluctance to do the obvious thing!

Laura’s Name Day went well and she gave an enthusiastic reception to our composite gift of various forms of stationery as an aid to her new English Course.  I also helped her with her English homework after the rest of the family had left.  English verb tenses reduce grown foreigners to whimpering children and whimpering children to incoherent amoebas.    

Toni was watching Barça play and voicing his amazement at some of Messi’s spectacular attempts on goal.  My own glory moment was tasting Laura’s tuna empanada which was by far the best that I have ever tasted and has rendered all the supermarket versions less than pale imitations.  Laura’s highly accomplished effort with moist, juicy filling and light, delicious pastry was a true delight; I think that it could have restored my appetite in a bite during the savourless days of the swollen leg!

One more day of antibiotics and my course is done and alcohol can start flowing, though I rather think that I will have to hold off until my blood test on the 28th – with a totally understandable lase for the evening of the 24th of October and United Nations Day!

My United Nations Day will comprise a five period day, together with a lunch duty and finished off by a mind-numbingly boring two hour meeting.  This will, Officially, be the worst birthday in my life so far.  I intend to “play” my Natal Day for all it’s worth in the fond hope that I might be let off early as I intend to let it be known that The Family will be waiting for me to return so that the celebrations can take place!

Fond hope indeed!



Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Old Mr Grump!



Today is one of those oddly desolate days when you simply do not want to be in school.  Most days you tolerate it, but today takes a special effort to get through.  The weather continues fine, but the thermometer is clearly on a downward trajectory and I think that over the next few weeks will have slid, gracefully and not unreasonably into autumn.

Today we have yet another examination.  This one, for 3ESO however is enlivened by the fact that I have absolutely no idea what is in it.  Usually we have been able to tell the pupils what aspects of the work they have done is going to be examined but this time, for a variety of reasons I have not seen the paper or had an authoritative outline of what it might contain.  We know that the work is going to be drawn from the first two units in the textbooks that the hapless students follow but what precise aspects and what vocabulary we know not.

Last year such a lack of information for the needy little group of inadequates that made up the 3ESO would have produced howls of outrage and demands that the whole situation be taken to the International Court of Human Rights.  This year’s 3ESO is a little more quiescent but I foresee trouble ahead!  And there is the marking!

The papers are now marked and only five kids actually passed the exam, with 10 failing and one taking a small part of it as she has only recently returned from a visit to a school in Canada.  This is a disaster which I ascribe entirely to my teaching.  Please sack me!  Unfortunately this will not happen.  In our school such an examinational disaster will not be allowed to stand.  Something will be done to make the reality a little less awful.  Perhaps mine is the only class to do so badly.  Who really cares?  Certainly not I.  Those who live by the Examination (like our school) will surely perish by the same!

Today has been a more than bloody day with some of the kids behaving like animals.  I teach six periods today with the last two together with Year 9.  Every week I say the same: bloody awful wages and still at 2009 levels.  Why do I bother!

On a lighter note (ha!) Radio 4 (to which all praise) has just informed me that with rates of inflation at the viciously high rate that they are, all savings will be halved in twelve years!  Bad news (again) for savers in which group, for once in my life I find myself.  Good news for pensioners whose increase next year in April will be in line with the inflation rate of this month.  Swings and roundabouts!  Though the swings of inflation are substantially more than the roundabouts of money coming in!

Tomorrow off to Terrassa for Laura’s Name Day and we haven’t got the slightest idea what to get her – I just hope that the shops on the way up to Terrassa do us proud!

Toni is semi permanently linked to the TEMS dynamo and that is fine if it is doing him some good.  I do fear that he might become a voltage junkie!

Monday, October 17, 2011

A long day


When you get up normally at half past six there is something quite wonderful about waking up at five in the morning.  One can return to one’s bed knowing that there is an hour and a half of musing, self-indulgent, semi-dreaming left before the horrible reality of joining the mad road race to Barcelona.

In theory I could get up much later: in practice that would mean that I would be late each day and not be able to find a parking space.  One has to balance all, bring all to mind and eventually set off in the dark!

We are getting ever nearer to the disgrace of a meeting on a Saturday morning.  During the course of last year the appalling scheduled meetings for Saturdays were changed to (wait for it) Friday evenings!  I keep thinking of the UK and the response from teachers if any management team even vaguely considered let alone attempted such pedagogically unfriendly scheduling!  The nearer we get to the Black Saturday Meeting with no announcement telling staff that it was only a joke and of course we will not be meeting on such a silly day, the darker my mood gets.

I have been to one such meeting and I was amazed at the easy camaraderie that my colleagues evinced during such an intolerable imposition on their sacred free time.  Some of them even laughed and joked!  I found such unprofessional behaviour repugnant.  I dressed in my most casual clothes and kept a stony expression on my face that degenerated into fury when colleagues engaged in idle, gossipy, chit-chat taking up valuable breathing time during my sacrosanct weekend.

I stomped away at the end of the meeting vowing that I would never, ever go to another. 

So much for vows!  I might huff and puff but when push comes to shove I kowtow just like everyone else.  I make up for defeat by clearly visible bad grace: I don’t really do low profile.

Sometimes the resolute acceptance by teachers of near-intolerable impositions makes me proud to be a member of the profession; at most other times I grind my teeth in impotent fury at the fawning acquiescence that my colleagues display.  Anything other than foaming rage at futile meetings on a Saturday morning gets the latter reaction from me.

The Scumbags have gone – though I am very wary of their future intentions.  The next few weekends should show whether they are going to follow the pattern of the last few years or strike out on a new path and make our continued residence in our house impossible. 

At the moment, as well as the usual horrors attendant on moving house, Toni’s bad leg makes it even more problematic. 

As I have stated before, the last move was the last time that I take such an active part in the affair.  I think that I am just about prepared to pack boxes, but I am not, repeat not prepared to move them – especially up and down stairs.  Unpacking is horrendous as well and that is as far as I am prepared to go. 

If nothing else it will give us a real opportunity to downsize on all those possessions which stick to us like iron filings to a magnet.  We shall (to continue the simile) have to hit the magnet hard to make its lose some of its attractiveness and disperse the filings elsewhere.

I must admit that the idea of downsizing in any real sense is more of a theoretical than a real path that I will follow, though it would be interesting to see me try especially with my own in-house Savonarola urging me to put everything (especially books) into the Bonfire of the Vanities!

I am, partially, convinced by such a Draconian approach to mere “things” (books obviously excluded) and in particular a particularly stubborn cupboard which seems to accrete kitchen “things” to the point of bursting and then refuse to disengorge them. 
That cupboard is an impenetrable three-dimensional jigsaw that probably has a temporal anomaly in the centre.  No one knows, because no one has been able to penetrate that far.  I know that somewhere in the morass lurks a multifaceted mixer Shelob-like keeping around herself a whole load of cases, implements, things of plastic whose use is known only to god, and the like.  I have often contemplated attacking this useless piece of unusable and highly filled dead space, but have drawn back fearfully at the immensity of the task.

Every house has one such filled space: we have many for they are legion!

As far as I can see our removal can only be positivized (ugh!) by this single element of putative clearing so I pray that The Scumbags become quiescent and only start irritating us at the much more normal time of late May.

I will soon have to leave the safe confines of the staff room and wing the desolate abyss to the hall where (god help us) a concert of Scottish music by students from a Scottish Academy are performing for the upper end of the Primary and the lower end of Secondary.  I have a vivid and morbid fear of the bagpipes and I fear that I am about to be assailed. 

Ah well, having recently seen film of the D-Day Landings I know that there are worse things that a body could meet!

The second half of the concert that I had to attend was just the sort of middle-brow programme that one would have expected from the happy-clappy suit wearing teacher choirmaster.  The soloists I saw had upper register frighteningly exposed pieces to sing and, in spite of obvious nerves, they did very well.

 The same could not be said for the tenors and pseudo-basses; if they had been anywhere near the bonny banks about which they were singing the fish would have flung themselves into the Irish Sea forthwith or possibly the North Sea to escape, possibly travelling overland to escape the song-shout that the men of the choir created!

The most disreputable looking character was an over-grown gormless sixth former or under-grown nerdish teacher who was sporting the kilt.  There are some people for whom the kilt is not: he was one of them.  The knees, my dear, the knees!

The more than creditable concert ended, perhaps inevitably, with a portion of the choir (all the ones who couldn’t sing) sloping off and reappearing with knees akimbo and dead animals’ innards under arms and three drummers.  They were very loud.
The highlight was a young drummer called Andrew (he was the only person to be named by the head of the Scottish Academy) for whom the kilt definitely was (and he knew it) giving a tour de force of something called a “drum fanfare” all stick hitting and twirling and putting drumsticks under his arm and retrieving them in a most bravado and pointlessly adroit fashion and then soaking up the adoring adulation in a way that no other performer did.  And he had a positive smirk on his face.  Though he did steal the show, so that was alight!

When I came home I found that only a minority of the letters filling the post box were actually for me.  Some of the others were clearly addressed to other addresses, while two cards from Britain and the notification of the non-delivery (!) of a package were correctly addressed but Gulia (complete with exotic surname) simply doesn’t live here!  I am not sure what to do with these missives.  In the UK, I could put them back in the post box with “Not at this address” on them, but here?  Who knows?

I have done my public duty with some of the others and placed them firmly in what turned out to be another wrong address – but they are nearer to where they should be!  I think.

One of the more-or-less correctly addressed letters was from the national census office urging me to go on line and register the household and presumably change the address just to show that we had been taking notice.  I have tricked Toni into taking on the task of filling out the form and he is rapidly becoming less than enamoured with the process as streams of questions keep appearing.  There were, of course, various threats and mentions of laws that made the non-completion of the form a major crime, so there is an incentive for him to keep going to get the thing off our electronic hands.
My “learning” of Schumann’s “Scenes from Faust” is taking longer that I would have expected given the general jolly nature of the music.  Perhaps I need one of those pocket scores to help me along.  I wonder if there is a web site on which I can get such things for nothing, as I do not fancy paying the inflated prices that I know these things demand.  I am sure that there must be and app. for the iPad which would suit me down to the ground!

I mustn’t start thinking like that.  That way lays madness and penury.  Though I did find a complete score on line and it would, indeed lend itself to being seen on an iPad.

Apple iPad tablet sheet music app forScore
It would be wonderfully naff to admit that I was forced to buy an iPad because it was the only inexpensive way I knew to view scores that I needed to get to know for the operas that I was seeing that season!

I have almost convinced myself!

Culture is a terrible thing!



Sunday, October 16, 2011

Slack time



Scattered cloud was insufficient to keep me from the Third Floor and taking what sporadic sunshine there was.  To be fair it is still summer-like and it is very easy to forget that it is the middle of October! 

The living room windows remain open – the only reason they were momentarily closed last night was that The Scumbags next door were smoking by their open windows and the foul fumes made their miasmic way into our house.

The Head Scumbag has been “doing things” to the house.  This is a bad thing as that might mean that he is planning to live there for longer than we can tolerate.  The worst-case scenario is that he is tarting up the place for his repulsive daughter to live in by “herself.”  This would produce such an increase in unbridled noise that living here would be intolerable.  We await developments.

Today has been a truly lazy day with the only time I left the house being to go for lunch from the localish grilled chicken place.  One day we will remember to phone so that when I go to the place I will not have to wait in the long queue which is always there on a Sunday but rather do straight to the counter and pick up the order. 

Some things never really work out as you expect even when you know that a small adjustment in behaviour would bring about results.  That’s life!  Even if it shouldn’t be.

Now Clarrie and Paul 1 have, rather unfeelingly, bought an iPad 2 – in spite of the fact that I am just a poor human trying his best to resist the blandishments of the gadget of the moment.  And the adverts on Spanish television are very unfairly enticing. 

I used to carry around with me a printed list of “14 reasons not to buy an iPad” kindly given to me by the IT teacher in school.  But this list only related to the iPad not the iPad 2 – and many of the fundamental objections have been dealt with by the new machine. 

Life, and the spending of money are so difficult at times!