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  • monkeys? the adam & eve of it!

    Following my reference to the Garden of Eden last night, Almighty God must have got in touch with two of H(/h)is more eccentric representetives.

    For lo, I am in the process of composing my next post, when there is a knock on my front door.  A man in a tweed jacket, and a woman hovering behind.  They are, he says, doing a survey of my street.

    "Do I think the future of the world," the tweeded man asks, "would be different if we descended from Adam and Eve or from monkeys?"

    Now, it crosses my mind to argue evolution.  After all, Darwin claimed that monkeys and ourselves have a common ancestor, not that one evolved from the other.  You might as well claim, say, that I am descended from the Duke of Edinburgh.

    But the guy in the tweed jacket doesn't look much of an intellectual.  Besides, I am decidedly undercaffeinated.

    "We come from monkeys," I tell him, slamming the door.  If anyone can think of a better a response I'll run after them and shout it.

  • airless

    I'm awake again - at my laptop at barely 5 am.

    My nose is blocked,  my eyes are running, I have a small sinus headache.

    The fact is, the ventilation in this "maisonette" is awful, although it has taken me a long time to work out that this was causing my sleep problem.  By about 4.30 am, despite a fan, my bedroom appears to run out of air.

    This probably sounds ridiculous.  But this flat, the only one on the ground floor, is part (20 flats) of a hillside building designed originally for offices - and, I would guess - air conditioning.  The windows don't open wide and are in the wrong places.

    For weeks i have been trying to find a ventilation engineer - although I expect "he" will tell me I need to spend 1000s of $£€.  I'll probably have to buy a portable air con unit, but on the other hand....

    This has taken ages to write.  I am going to attempt sleep again.

  • A Theological Trip

    No offence intended
    I mean I don't mean to blaspheme
    (and the nearest I've got to hash tonight is reading about travelling on the Marrakesh express)

    But Almighty God
    Is a lazy sod
    For not devising a way
    That we could all stay
    In the Garden of Eden.
    Why forbid a fruit
    If it's so nice 'n' juicy?

    Of course it's quite possible
    That AG isn't lazy at all.
    He could have created a parallel world
    Where we all hang out in the G of E
    In fact, quite possibly,
    That's the world we land up in
    When we're done with this one

  • I've gone wireless!

    I've gone wireless, so I'm no longer stuck in this gloomy study in the crypto-basement.  Also I'm new on Skype.  All I need now are people to talk to on it.

    Safriz, fancy a video conference call?

  • Words on the printed page

    Meanwhile again, I am moving round central Brighton, spending an hour in a cafe here, two hours there, reading my novel through now it's printed out on paper.

    Until Monday, in effect it only existed as a whole in binary form.  As well as in my head, natch.

    I almost forgot that this reading-through-on-paper stage was necessary.

    So far so good.  To my surprise I am enjoying the reading process. (the main problem is avoiding too much coffee)  My editorial pen hovers, but there is little to change.  Call me conceited if you must, but the final version of Low Life Games threatens to be pretty damn good.

  • Domestic

    I've been here almost six months - and there's still so much to be done to make this place look 'finished', reasonably tidy, my home.  After a week or two of frustration, and being occupied with othe things (eh finishing my novel revising) I lose impetus and retreat into catatonic self-blaming (I exaggerate)...

    1 I thought I had found a suitable cleaner - a friendly waitress from Ziggi's, doing it on her day off - but she withdrew at the last moment (no, oh cynics, even before she saw the scale of the problem) There is so much initial cleaning to be done - with sensitivity.  After that, I  just might be able to manage on my own.

    2 My builder - so efficient and helpful before - keeps failing to deliver his promise of coming back for a final day's work.  Most of the remaining work is 'handyman' stuff, so I may have to find a suitabe person 'blind' from local e-pages.

    3 There are still many, non junk, things I need to get rid of, but not throw away.  I don't want dozens of visitors casing my home when they come ot look at what I've got.  Office stationery, a heavy, decent hi-fi compnent stand, a big desk.  Not much is worth selling on e-bay (again, this is the sort of thing I am bad at doing on my own).  Will I have to give up and take everything to the tip?

    4 The flat's (lack of) ventilation.  I'll come back to this some other time.

  • I am a nerd

    "I am a nerd" + insomniac

    has 742 google entries.

    Probably 743 by now.

    However,

    I-am-a-nerd + insomniac

    produces a mere 367

    (at 0345 GMT 27-08-08)

  • Fatuous Facts of the Night

    1.  There are more choirs in England than fish-and-chip shops.

    2.  There are 30,000 more Google entries for "nothing is possible" than for "everything is possible".

  • Ha! I have found "My Hermetic Sister"

    This is the post, My Hermetic Sister that somehow got marked depreciated and so not published, a few hours ago.  So - I did write it.  I wasn't halluicinating after all.

    ... What I mean by "hermetic" is that she's sealed off from all persausion.  I can never reach her inner world in which her life depends on fulfilling her duty to our mother - duty beyond reason, but not continual complaining.

    She drives hundreds of miles every week, commuting between the locations needed for her journalism, her house and horse  - and our mother's house.  Maria, my mother's nurse and helper, has to have off one, two days a week - and my mum needs a break from her to.  Two days and two nights.  Part of the job involves getting my mum up in the morning, and as a man I am not thought suitable (thank goodness).

    "Why can't we have someone else ocasionally, from an agency?" I ask.

    "She wouldn't pay for it.  You know what she's like with money."

    "I'll try to persuade her"

    My sister sighs the martyr sigh.  "It's all right.  I'll manage"

    She'll also manage to drive one day to Gloucester and then all the way back to Surrey again the next so she can drive our mum the three miles to the dentist, or the hairdresser, or the jewellers.  Maria doesn't drive and my mother thinks taxis are too expensive.

    She does everything for our mum except stay still.  "She never sits down," my mother complains.  "Unless we play Scrabble."

    "I can't stand her bedroom" my sister confides. 

    "You're going to crack up" I tell her.  "You can't go on like this much longer.  And then where what we do, if you crack up?"

    "I won't crack," sis says, conceited in her martyrdom.  "I won't crack up until she dies."

  • I wrote this long post about my sister

    ... but it seems to have disappeared.  I blogged it about 2 hours ago, although there seems to be no record of it even in my browser's history (which includes a couple of BCUK pages I didn't visit).

    Well, nothing to be done.  I know it happens to a lot of people all the time.  It just happened to a long post I was pleased I had written, and which - anyhow for now - I couldn't possibly write again...

    Hey - maybe I didn't write it.  Maybe I'm hallucinating.  Today's the 12th Never, right?

  • golly, gee

    BCUK tells me I had over 100 visitors yesterday.

    I thought that sort of thing had stopped happening.

  • False starts, Champagne Finish

    My copy of Word had no UK English dictionary (but 2 copies of the US English) my (forgotten, long abandonned) Text Editor (with a brillianty fast spell checker) provided the wrong formating, so back to Word then my printer jammed, later Word quit in the middle of printing and the supposedly final print file completely evapourated so I had to reconstiute it, the printer jambed again, then sarted printing everything twice...and... but...then... eventually, despite all this I got a printed copy of my novel and I went out to a more expensive meal than I should afford and to hell with not drinking I had a glass of champage.

  • Death, death to Microsoft - slowly so it h-u-r-t-s

    An easy job today, I thought - spellchecking my novel.

    "Colour"? it queries.  "Color" is the correct spelling.

    "Color" my arse.  Except the "correct" spelling is "ass"

    My Word spellcheck, unused for a few months has defaulted to CRETINSPELL, aka U.S. English.

    No panic - find preferences, find dictionaries, no languages, change to U.K. English.  OK, resume Spell check...  "Colour"? it queries.  "Color" is the correct spelling.  And it still says US English at the top.

    No panic.  Repeat procedure  "U.K.English"  OK.  Now reboot Word, restart spell check.... and we are still imprisoned in the land of Bush.  Next it will be suggesting I write pants instead of trousers.  Mow the lawn in my yard.

    My Microsoft Word is smugly stuck in its default mode.

    I hate them, I hate them.  They can spell how they like, and write their dates backwards, but how dare they impose it on me!

    Please, somebody who knows about these things, help me get back English spelling.

  • My Inner Sabateur is Sulking

    I feel physically awful.  No reason - except that my Inner Sabateur has failed to stop me finishing my novel (see yesterday's posts) and it is not used to creative or personal things going well in my life.  And so it's beating me up a bit.

    Still, things are going well...  Who knows, I may soon even manage a succesful, sexy, loving relationship.

    Whack!  Here comes a migraine, merely thinking about it.

  • Released under the Freedom of Information Act

    Permission to speak sir.

    Yes, Carruthers.  Granted.

    * *** ** * *** ** * * * * ****

    * ***?

    Yessir.

    Good God, man!  Why in heaven's name didn't you tell me before?

  • The End - in sight

    Longstanding and longsuffering readers of this blog will have heard it all several times before.

    But I have at last finished the re-re-re-revising of my manuscript for Low Life Games.  I haven't spellchecked it yet, or had it proof-read.  But there will be no further editorial revisions.

    When the cover (and wording on it) is finalised, it's off to be printed.  Of course there's publicity to organise including a website (I'm looking for help here) and many other things I can't remember at the moment - but, after almost seven years, on and very much off, the writing side is over.

    And very soon I'll begin to think about my next project, and the one after.

  • Gushing Quotes, please

    Every book needs a gushing quote on the front cover.  Plus a few on the back cover as well.

    My novel Low Life Games is - at long, long last - approaching its self publication. I have a friend who has designed a brilliant cover.  All it lacks is some juicy quotes.

    These are always a problem, especially if the author is not well known.  Critics don't like to read of Word Files, PDFs or manuscripts.  On the other hand, the printing only a few copies of the book without a quote from a ecstatic review, to show to potential critics who may hate or ignore it, could well be a waste of time and a pain to the soul.

    Anyway, there's a new service.  A new website called Blurbings.com.  For $19.95 (their bargain basement package) they guarantee you 10 enthusiastic revews written by their readers (I think they are gauranteed to ecstatic).  Their readers get something out of the deal and will read in PDF.

    What a racket.  Still, my Friends, maybe some of you can help me.  Passers by, too.  Send me  a quote I can use on my front cover.  Something arresting, even if negative.

    Oh, you want to read the book first?  Well, an earlier version of Low Life Games is still there on my other BCUK blog, Where the Rainbow Begins, in installment form.  But frankly, you don't have to bother to read it to write something like "I can honestly say this book changed my life forever."  Or...  Insults are fine, but they need to be witty.

  • Band of Golden Fantasy

    My mother's wedding ring got stuck on a joint of her finger, and it began to hurt her.

    She got married 70 years ago.  Divorced in 1950.  Her husband, my father, died in February 1996 (having married and divorced again)  I can't ever remember ever saying an affectionate word about him.  But it's the principle.  She is a convert catholic.  She is married to him for ever in the eyes of God.  Even after her ex-husband's death?

    Last Saturday, my sister took her to the jewellers - forgetting that on Saturday you can't park outside.  So my mum had to walk much further than she's used to.  Yesterday she still felt exhausted from the effort.

    The jeweller managed to remove the ring.  Now he is enlarging it so she can put it on again.

    I will see her today and be nice to her, and yes some of the time enjoy her company, be glad she's alive.  But this business about her wedding ring makes me angry.  Sad, very sad, that she wants to go on wearing a symbol that has been a lie for almost 60 years.  Sad and delusional.  Enough is enough.

    Whenever she refers to im in my hearing, she doesn't use his first name, or even "my husband".  He's always "your father", as if somehow it was me that brought them together.  A son repsonsible for the sins of his parents.

  • Memo to Self

    1. Your father is dead.  There is no longer a danger of castrating him.
    2. Genetics have nothing to do with it.
    3. Forget essence.  Remember confusion.
  • IBS? Ha, very ha.

    It's back with a vegeance, the belly of my discontent, part of the healing crisis, ha, ha, better than a migraine, bloated rumbling restless, irritable, what did I eat bad nothing, don't drink don't smoke, so it must be the medicines perhaps taken in the wrong order, dispetic, so one way or another it's me that's to blame. Or perhaps it's the blaming.

    One thing it's not is IBS because that doesn't actually exist, I'm told by medical professionals.

  • random lyrics of the night

    If you knew Susie
    As I knew Susie
    Oh, Oh, Oh what a gal!

    There's none so classy
    As that dear lassie
    Oh, Oh, Oh what a gal!

    and

    If I could live twice
    I'd make life Paradise
    For someone really nice
    Like you.

    well, I did say random; perhaps i didn't mention old and fairly obscure

  • what is my name - really?

    I'm losing touch with reality.

    This much is true.  The staff of Ziggy's cafe have been instructed by the chef of adjoining Ziggy's restuarant to write the name Ziggy in balsemic vinegar on every bowl of soup they sell.  Ziggy is the name I have here to the "celebrity chef" who has lent his name to the whole enterprise. 

    As far as I can tell, the standard way of becoming a "celebrity chef "is being photographed being hugged drunk by various celebrities - say 1 A list, 2 B, the rest Zds.  And having your name written in balsemic vinegar on soup you didn't cook.

    Anyway, Ziggy's recipe or not, the soups are good.  And today, the assistant manager, a mate of mine and about to go off shift, told me he was going to write - as a joke - my name, not Ziggy's on the soup I ordered.

    Now this is the losing-touch-with-reality bit.  I imagined him writing a balsemic "Alec".

    So when the soup arrived with my real, birth, name on it, I almost felt disappointed.

  • "on the bus": a fib, overheard on the train

    "I'm on the bus now," she said, leaning back in her seat on the train 40 minutes before we reached  Brighton.  "I should be there in an hour and a half."

    It's not often I overhear strangers lieing.  In her twenties, she looked dressed up for a part in a play - a smart, schoolgirl-like suit, but not sexy.  Also too much foundation on her face, over-rouged cheeks.  Under film or stage lights, she might look fine.  Her only bag was an outsized rucksack.

    At the start, just after she lied, the phone conversation had sounded formal, but soon she was chatting in a relaxed, happy way.  Then her voice tightened.  Suddenly she "had to go".   But why?

    Any seasoned traveller on the line would have known we were about to reach a tunnel, where the mobile signal fades.  Of course that happens on buses, too - but maybe she had a guilty conscience.  How do I know?  I'm not writing fiction, so I don't know her motives.

  • Alec's Big Tag Cloud

    All of us on BCUK have had our own "Tage Clouds".  Now, checking it out for the fiirst time, I discover the cloud (to be reached by a link at the bottom of the front page of everyone's blog) lists all tags from the blog, and not just the most used ones.

    From the outset, I have been a great user of tags on Too Much to Declare.  They are a good way of finding posts from the past which otherwise could lie permanently cyberburied (or, zn, would cyber-buried be better?

    Unfortunately, some time back, BCUK restricted the number of tags listed on our individual sites - now to 200.  I had a far longer list than that, which meant it has been to find the posts with lesser used tags.

    But now, I discover, they are all in my cloud.  So if you are a Westonista (thanks, TKK)and feel like risking a migraine, why not click on the tag cloud icon and spend a few hours in the hyperspace of TMTD.

  • Sometimes

    Sometimes, the hardest thing to do is nothing.

  • Winston? Whatever

    My memory, as ever Random Access, presents me with a possible post to write about Winston Churchill.

    To hell with that.  It would be a sort of "Winston & Alec" post - the time, me aged 11, and all my schoolboy mates were all herded into a room by the headmaster, to listen on the radio, to the old rascal giving a speech to MPs to celebrate his 80th birthday.  He was still Prime Minister.

    here is an image that Uncle Google deems relevant

    That's it, really.  David Cameron will be 80 in about 2126...  no, I can't even be arsed to come up with a punchline.

    Sometimes my RAM is useless.

  • Making a Man of Me?

    My father sent me to an expensive all- boy boarding school - a sort of second rate Eton.  "It's got a reputation for teaching manners," he explained.  "And the prefects don't have bum boys."  He explained.  True enough.  When I got there I discovered most of the sex consisted of mutual masturbation, with no kissing, either.

    My dad was keen on rugby.  He gave me a new rugby ball.  I hated rugby.  I let all the other boys played with it and watched.

    The years passed.  One teacher (of geography, I think) used to sit at the top of my table at lunch.  "Weston, you are not interested in rugger or cricket - and not the army either," he remarked, genuinely puzzled.  "So what are you interested in?"

    Eventually - in fact on the second to last day of my last term - I was expelled.  It was never made clear exactly why, but ever since I have worn my expulsion as a badge of honour.  My father, though, tried to take away the credit.

    "I only sent you to that school," he told me, on the first day of the rest of my life, "because I hoped you would rebel against it."

    first blogged here in February 2007

  • Fear/Electricity

    Fear is like electricity.  It can be generated from dozens of sources, but it feels the same wherever it originally came from. 

    I fear death, you fear life.  I don't, at first, what you fear but I sense you are afraid - and it's catching.

    In fact, I do not what I fear the most - sometimes it feels to be failure rejection, abandonment, obliteration.  But now I have come to suspect that my greatest fear is success.  Why?  I am afraid that I don't know why.  I am afraid.