IF YOU BUY ONLY ONE
BOOK THIS YEAR, LET IT BE THIS ONE (the
funniest book ever written in the history of mankind... really).
Excerpt If you buy only one book this year you're clearly
not trying hard enough - go to Waterstones immediately and spend vast
fortunes ... well, what are you waiting for, GO!
A crisis on the domestic front.
With The Budgies. I knew something was wrong when I uncovered
and opened the cage this morning; they didn’t immediately fly out
screaming, ‘Where’s the grub? Feed me feed me feed me!’ Instead, they
started fighting. I mean, really fighting and not that gobby
wobbly-head stuff they usually indulge in.
It seems that Poo (who’s buddied
up with Pea) now wants Pete to be his mate. Pete (who’s buddied up with
Puff) wants to be Poo’s mate. Pea, on the other hand, is beside himself
with indignation, rage and utter devastation.
The three of them flew round the
room all day like bats out of hell, screaming and fighting on the window
ledge, on all the picture frames and across the iron shelving, knocking
everything over. I tried putting Pete in the hallway so they’d all calm
down, but then they got agitated and started screaming for each other,
so I put them all together again and they started fighting again.
Pea does not want Poo to
buddy up with Pete. If he’s not trying to separate them and kill Pete,
he sits watching them and crying. Really, crying. He’s
so upset.
And so am I. I know they’re
only birds - I’ve not tipped into the Batty Budgie Broad bracket yet -
but there’s no doubting how distraught Pea is at this new
development.
Puff, on the other hand, really
couldn’t give a toss. He keeps getting knocked to the floor and just
laboriously climbs back up the rope into the cage.
I’m thinking about therapy (for
the birds, not me), some dominatrix
Victoria Stillwell character to come in and firmly order my budgies
to behave. Hubby would love that!
Tuesday 2
My next door neighbour is having
her kitchen done. She’s been having it done for a Very Long Time.
Weeks, in fact. A little man turns up late morning, saws a few things,
bangs a few things, then disappears early afternoon. I’ve had a bit of
trouble (as Frank Spencer would say) with his electric saw which,
standing almost underneath my study window, sounds as if it has no teeth
and is tearing the wood apart by sheer velocity and will power alone.
I have, once or twice, been
tempted to throw my pint glass of water over his screeching electrics
when he wasn’t looking, because I couldn’t hear myself think let alone
work (not that I have any work … should I worry? Nah, not yet). I
haven’t. Yet. But soon, if he doesn’t pack it in.
This morning when he arrived my
neighbour was out at work. All was silent. Then he put the radio on.
In the middle of a tought game
of Freecell, I heard this noise. I wasn’t sure what it was at first.
Cats fighting? Some animal being mutilated?
It was the workman. Singing in
the garden. Right below my window. I’ve never heard anything like
it. It was worse than any X-Factor audition. I sat in my comfortable
Ikea chair absolutely laughing my socks off.
He thought he was alone.
Waaaaaaaaaaail waaaaaaaaaaaaail waaaaaaaaaaaaail!
And then I made the mistake of
coughing in mid-hysterics, and he suddenly realised he wasn’t as alone
as he thought he was. There was an instant of heavy silence, and then
he turned the radio off. And turned the screeching saw on.
I closed the window and went
back to Freecell.
[Because I have no work (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
... oh bugger it), I felt obliged to tackle the Ironing
Mountain. I turned on the tv and it just happened to be on a channel
showing
Jeremy Kyle. I don’t normally watch this stuff and hate daytime tv,
but you can’t stand at an ironing board in silence, you need something
to take your mind off the agony. So I watched Jeremy Kyle, with my
mouth pretty much open the entire time. I won’t go into the details of
how awful this man is (the arrogance is just breathtaking),
but you can read what other people think
here (no, I didn’t look it up, I just came across it whilst
searching for … erm … work, yeah, work).
Half way through the ironing, my
neighbour came round. As he walked into the living room I frantically
told him, “Oh I wasn’t watching this, it just came on, terrible
programme, hate daytime tv, never watch it, never.” I turned it off,
thinking Damn, Trisha was on next. I now chant, on the hour,
every hour, “I will not watch daytime tv, I will not watch daytime tv …
“]
Wednesday 3
Oooh, a slump on the work front
- as in, there isn’t any. None at all. All week! Nothing on Monday,
one on Tuesday, nothing again today.
I wore out all my adrenaline and
panic reserves when I first gave up the real world, so there’s not a lot
left now. Monday I thought, ‘Great, I’ll slob, probably be inundated
tomorrow’. Tuesday I thought, ‘Bit bored of slobbing, I’ll do the
ironing instead.’
Today, the Panic Monster lifted
its little furry head and muttered, ‘Shall we panic?’
‘We could do,’ I shrugged, ‘But
what would be the point?’
‘Good point,’ it said, and went
back to watching
Vile Kyle on the telly.
So, on my third day of Not
Working, I find I’m sitting in my study, not so much perched on the edge
of my seat waiting for work to come in, more too idle to move. I’m
playing Freecell (my addiction of choice). I’m eating Cadbury’s
Mishapes that we bought from the chocolate shop on Sunday, languidly and
decadently popping them into my mouth as The Fat Monster laughs wildly
and rubs its horrid hands together (I don’t even like chocolate that
much, they’re just there, left over from Hubby’s Choc Fest at the
computer last night).
‘Nobody will ever know that I’m
sitting here playing Freecell and eating chocolates when I should be
working,’ I tell myself, repeatedly, whilst popping another chocolate
into my mouth.
It will, of course, be more than
a little noticeable when the men come banging on the door telling me I
no longer own the house.
But I’ll worry about that
tomorrow. Tomorrow is another day.
Thursday 4
The budgies still fight, the
work still refuses to materialise. Apart from one MEGA dictation which
runs for hours. Great, I thought, until I listened to it – think people
in a different room to the microphone, all holding pillows over their
mouths and talking in a strong foreign accent. Sigh.
Not a good day, on the whole.
I’d slump into abject misery-mode, only I can’t be bothered as lethargy
and worklessness are quite closely linked I’ve discovered. Decided to
panic about the Lack of Work thing tomorrow. Procrastination is a
wunnerful thang.
Did, however, get a template
dictation. 17 minutes. 15 seconds before the end (that’s 15 seconds)
my computer froze. I had two paragraphs to insert, and everything came
to a shuddering standstill. My thought patterns consisted purely of
expletives at that point – split expletives, joined expletives,
expletives that weren’t expletives but sounded like expletives.
Template now corrupted. Fark.
Whilst beating my laptop with my
headphones, the phone rang. My neighbour, saying he was being
video-recorded for a charity interview and would I come round. Sigh.
So I went round and just made like a spare part, giving what I hoped was
moral support, determined not to get involved in front of the camera in
any way (I already had my answer all prepared: “No.” Just that, nothing
else.).
Whilst I was in my neighbour’s,
my dad came over and went into my unlocked house; he said it was like
entering the Marie Celeste. As he was walking around shouting out my
name, Hubby came home, so now there were two of them wondering where I
was.
Hubs eventually located me and
rustled noisily in the background whilst they were recording.
Later that night I got an email
from one of my outsourcing companies. Could I do a dictation before 9am
the following morning? I said yes, then opened a whisky bottle to drown
my lethargy and misery.
I’ll do it tomorrow.
Friday 5
Up at 5.45am this morning.
5.45. AM. The sun wasn’t even up, and my brain cells (the
few that remain) had to be coaxed to life with a Very Strong Coffee.
Got the work done (rather fast,
actually; I seem to type better when I’m not fully conscious, head back
on the Ikea chair, lightly dreaming while the fingers clatter over the
keyboard).
I'm anticipating lots of 'power
naps' during the course of the day. Along with a gentle build up
of panic about the lack of work. Rather worryingly, started
scouring the local paper for local jobs, 'just in case'.
I’ve been saying to Hubs (poor
Hubs) all week, “I’ve got no work, I’ve earned practically nothing this
week, but I’m not going to panic. Oh no, not I. I’ll panic on Friday.”
Today, Friday. Panic levels are
disappointingly low, I think I’m still stocking up after the deluge
it suffered when I gave up the city (I could have lit the whole of the
West Midlands with the force of my panic then). I did prod the Panic
Monster, but it just huffed and told me to bugger right off, it was
tired. And anyway, I got some work in, some big work, work I could
actually hear. So I’m able to afford the staple necessities of life (Warburtons
bread, Heinz beans, whisky, cigarettes) and all is well with the world.
Well, apart from the isolation.
Six months I’ve been working at home now, and I’ve loved almost every
minute of it … working in the garden, earning as I sit, just merrily
typing away. But very occasionally I do miss people. Not a lot, not
oh my God I’m so alone and lonely oh woe is me, more Hmmm, quite
miss cracking jokes and making people laugh. I do see people –
neighbours, friends, family – but I’m not ‘interacting’ on a regular
basis. I think its starting to affect me mentally (and lets face
it, the edge of that particular drop was never far away).
Take yesterday morning, for
instance. Budgie breakfast. “Hello. Whistle. Hello.
Whistle. Hello. Whistle.” Nothing. Not a Hi
Fastfingers or How you doing today oh great mistress who feeds
and cares for us. I was waiting for the kettle to boil for my first
coffee (its important to note that it was my first coffee, that I’d only
been conscious for mere minutes and the brain hadn’t fully booted up
yet). This is what happened.
Me: “Well you lot are a barrel
of laughs aren’t you. Haven’t got much to say for yourselves at all,
have you. What about you, Puff? Haven’t you got anything to say, eh?
Eh?”
And then looking straight at
Puff, the disabled budgie, the one who can’t fly, my mouth, completely
of its own accord and without any interaction from the brain matter
whatsoever, starting singing. Yes, singing in my best
Orville voice.
Me: “I wish I could fly,
right up to the sky, but I can’t. Pete, your bit! You what?
Puff, I can’t!”
As if this ‘talking for the
budgies’ bit wasn’t bad enough, I laughed. At myself. At my own joke.
And then I caught myself laughing and thought Oh God, I’ve lost it.
Swallowed coffee, threw on
clothes, left the house. Went to dad’s, wailed, “I’m losing it!”
and he said it was probably a family thing, which didn’t help.
Walked in glorious sunshine to
our local shopping centre, bought things I didn’t need and couldn’t
really afford and then, to add to the budgie talking crisis and dad’s
dire warnings about genetic instability, I sat on the benches where
the lonely people sit. And I just watched the world go by, and sat,
and watched, and thought, Who says insanity is a bad thing?
Anyway, I got my act together
and, refreshed and energised, I went back home, firmly walking passed
the budgies saying, “I’m not talking to you, no, I’m not.”
They didn’t reply.
Saturday 6
I have recognised (because I’ve
had enough time to think about it) that I have a problem (apart from the
genetic instability thing). My problem is movement. Or rather, lack of
movement. I sit, I type, I run up and down the stairs 20 times a day
(well okay, not run up the stairs, but I can go at a fair stride,
I’m not hauling myself up the banister like a bag of potatoes, not yet
anyway). I’m not so much a couch potatoe as an Ikea blob. If it wasn’t
for good family genes (apart from the genetic instability thing) I’d be
roughly the size of a barrage balloon by now.
My mother has given me a fitness
video (which I haven’t watched). My mother phones me every Wednesday
morning to see if I want to go swimming (I do, really I do, but I’m just
so busy). My sis – who throws herself at a cycle/pulls on
walking boots/dashes to the gym at every available opportunity – is
appalled at my chronic lack of exercise.
I’ll admit it, inside me -
fighting for space alongside the Fat Monster, the Panic Monster and the
Motivation Monster – there’s an Idle Git Monster. All my parents fault,
of course. Despite the fact that I had a blissful childhood full of joy
and wonder and parents who were calm and loving, they insisted that we,
as mere children, innocent children, ‘go for walks’.
I can feel, even now, the sense
of horror I felt when dad cheerfully said, “Let’s all go out for
a walk.” He called it The Seven Park Walk, I called it Purgatory, and
it consisted of seven parks all running together across half of
Birmingham. Oh the misery. Miles and berluddy miles of mud tracks
and grass and more grass and more mud and sometimes a stream to stare at
in abject boredom. My siblings (sis, bruvver in pushchair the
lucky buggerr) seemed to enjoy it; they’d look at flowers and trees and
things and be all oooh and aaaah as dad told them how to identify an Oak
leaf. I just didn’t get it. Pointless walking. I had growing pains to
consider, penpals to write to, horses to draw,
Follyfoot to
watch on tv, what was all this stumbling through green stuff all about
exactly.
To add to the general horror of
being dragged out, when you got to where you were going (the seventh
park, somewhere in Bournville), what happened? We’d all turn round
and walk back again.
I just never got it. I’d say to
mom, “Where’s dad?” and she’d say, “Oh he’s just gone out for a walk,”
like it was a natural, enjoyable thing to do. Hmm, feeling a bit
bored, I’ll go out for a walk. It’s just wrong on so many levels, but
mainly, Why?
It’s not as if we lived in the
countryside or anywhere interesting, we lived in Birmingham (pronounced
Burmingum), lots of houses, roads, cars, people, shops. Okay, Burmingum
just happens to have more parks and greenery than any other European
city, but that doesn’t really appeal to a 10 year old forced to
walk endless miles along a green belt admiring some stupid yellow
flowers (and oh look, a tree!).
So, anyway, it put me off
walking for life, this childhood abuse of my legs, my time, my energy.
I’m more of an in-house, head-down, booky type of person. Breathing is
a form of exercise as far as I’m concerned. Hence the fact that I have
now – as a homeworker, sitting comfortably all day in an Ikea chair with
a laptop and no incentive to go out there – am becoming …
Sloth Woman!
It’s got to stop, I know it
has. Thin bones and good genes cannot hold back the tide of chronic
laziness. I’m starting to get breathless just pressing the Delete
button.
The exercise regime starts
here. She says, sitting here with her laptop typing “The exercise
regime starts here” whilst eating toast for breakfast, sipping at her
coffee and glancing idly out of the window. Tsk.
I am going to Tear Myself Away
from the Ikea chair, my laptop and my room with a view, and I’m going to
do something Every Day, oh yes. I’m going to make myself do
exercise. The MP3 player is on charge for the walks (sigh), the
exercise video is in the playing machine thingy, the swimming costume is
on standby. I might even dig the bike out of the shed, who knows.
From this day on, I swear, I’ll
never be slobby again. (But I’ll just let this toast land first, can’t
exercise on a full stomach, bad for you).
UPDATE: I need a personal
trainer, someone big and tough who'll bark orders at me and make me do
50 press ups before, during and after meals, who'll force me into lycra
cycling shorts and swimming costumes, who'll ignore my wailing and
sobbing and pleas of insanity and make me do exercise.
Please send CVs to ...
Curry at a friend’s house last
night, which was fun, the bits of it I can remember anyway.
I measure my drinks at home
(because after one or two I tend to hold the bottle upsidedown for
longer with each additional drink). I have an eye-bulgingly expensive
measure that delivers a double shot of spirit into a shiny glass of
chinking ice. No such measure tonight though, I think it was a full
glass of whisky with just the merest hint of lemonade, but I drank it
anyway (well, I didn’t want to appear rude).
At one point during the drunken
revelry the friend’s son came into the room, took one look at Hubs (who
was having a bit of a ‘power nap’) and gasped, “Is he alright?” in a
Really Horrified way.
“Oh yes,” I said, slurring into
my glass and burping, “Mr Narcolepsy is fine.”
He does that, does Hubs. Well,
anyone who gets up at 5am in the morning is liable to drift off from
time to time. I’m used to him lying there in an untidy heap, mouth
open, head lying half way down his back, looking like he may have
‘passed over to the other side’, but I suppose it must come as a bit of
a shock to other people. We forced him awake and the
drinking/yakking/revelry continued.
The size of my hangover today is
phenomenal.
Monday 8
I was downstairs, eating a
sarnie and waiting for the lunchtime news to start on TV. I flicked
idly through the channels. Well waddaya know, Jeremy Kyle was on
again. Tsk.
Yes,
I watched it. I couldn’t stop. I’m so ashamed.
Halfway through my sarnie, a
knock at the door (Daytime TV Police?) It was the local newspaper
photographer looking for my neighbour (the one who runs the charity).
He wasn’t in, so she came in for a coffee.
“Oh no!” I cried dramatically,
waving my hands in the air as I raced across the living room to the TV
set, “Jeremy Kyle, tsk. Horrible show, never watch it. Awful
man.”
“Isn’t he,” she said, and
suddenly we were both talking about ‘Vile Kyle’ (like one addict
confessing all to another, you feel so much better once its all ‘out in
the open’).
But that’s it, no more, it
has to stop. Having no work is no excuse for watching midday chat
shows.
I will NOT watch daytime TV,
I will NOT watch daytime TV …
On the other hand, most of my
visitors seem to turn up when there’s bird seed on the floor, washing up
in the sink and Jeremy Kyle on TV. So maybe, whenever I’m feeling the
need for a bit of company, I’ll put it on, toss seed all over the
carpet, and just wait.
Tuesday 9
Hubs
and I looked at each other the other night (not that we don’t normally
look at each other, Hubs happens to be rather nice to look at, but we
looked at each other in a weary oh-my-God kind of way). Talking like
Michael Cain, he said, “Those Berluddy Budgies Are Driving Me Mad.”
I had to agree. Pea is still
attacking Pete and trying to reclaim Poo for himself, and the noise is
obscene. They’re out of control.
“Right,” said I, resisting the
urge to rush upstairs and get changed into something Victoria
“Dominatrix” Stillwell might wear, “I’m putting my foot down. I’m
breaking them up.”
We got the small cage out of the
shed, put Pea and Poo into it (they looked a bit stunned), and moved
them into the hallway. We left Puff and Pete in the big cage and moved
them out the back (they looked a bit stunned too). There were two whole
rooms between them. They screeched for a little while and then,
blissfully, we experienced a silence like we haven’t had for months
(people ring us up and say, ‘What’s that terrible noise in the
background?’)
Silence is golden, GOLDEN.
They’ve clearly been given too
much freedom to fly around and fight and screech, but the Big People
have had enough. I’m being firm – just call me Fastfingers Stillwell.
An hour’s exercise in the morning, an hour at night, in their cage the
rest of the time.
Astonishingly, it seems to be
working, that constant background noise of budgie bickering has stopped,
just the normal odd tweet every now and again.
Our sanity and our eardrums have
been saved. And thank God for that!
Hubs is still quite interested
in me wearing Ms Stillwell-type cloths and red lipstick though, which is
slightly worrying. I might surprise him one of these days!
Wednesday 10
October is obviously a quiet
month for transcribers. Had a bit more this week than last, but not
really enough. This morning was the first time I got up and had
Nothing To Do. My ‘motivation’ is a bit of an idle git and does a
runner at the slightest provocation, and the thought of having no work
to do sent it running off into them thar hills whooping with delight.
So I thought, as I often do,
bugger thisfor a game of soldiers. I emailed a company I
occasionally do work for but haven’t committed myself to because I
normally have enough from the other two. “Need any help?” I asked
casually. “Yes,” came the reply, “But we need it back by 11am.” “No
probs,” I told them confidently.
They sent me something at
9.30am. A 50 minutes dictation. Bearing in mind it normally takes
three times the length of a dictation to type, 50 spoken minutes equated
to around 150 typing minutes (two and a half hours), so I wasn’t under
any pressure at all!
Got
started. Phone rang. “What?” I hissed, and the caller
immediately put the phone down. Minutes later it rang again, I ignored
it. Then it rang Yet-A-Berluddy-Gain and I snatched it up - someone
wanting an email address like urgent because they had a
deadline (and why the hell didn’t I answer last time they called).
Hunted down address whilst hissing into the receiver.
Glanced at emails. The other
two companies had sent me work as well, so I’d gone from being bereft,
just me in the study with tumbleweeds drifting idly across the laminate
flooring, to being Absolutely Berluddy Bombed with the stuff.
Sod’s law isn’t it!
But hark, what’s this, me
moaning? No, no, no, not me.
I now, apparently, work for
three outsourcing companies, and considering I’ve been pretty busy
working for two the last six months, I suspect the future is going to be
very busy indeed!
Thursday 11
I wasn’t wrong. The
transcribing world has obviously got its act together and deluged me
with work. So had to get up at the ungodly hour of 5.30 am this
morning. Will repeat that for full effect, 5.30AM. Why?
Because I was going out at lunchtime.
1.15, finished the deluge. Just
as my neighbour was walking down my driveway mouthing, ‘You ready?’
Nooooooooo!
Went to an outdoor shop that was
giving my neighbour’s charity loads of camping equipment. Another of
the Gambia drivers came with us, primarily because I’d said to him the
day before, “If you don’t start showing your face, I’m going to hunt you
down and cause you pain.” Apparently he took me seriously because I’m
apparently quite intimidating sometimes – who knew!
Got there, took pics, loaded up,
sped back just in time for a ‘representative’ from a local
football club to have his photo taken by the Mail because they’d donated
loads of kits to my neighbour’s charity. The ‘representative’ was a
footballer who honestly looked about 12, and he couldn’t been more bored
if he’d tried, apathy just oozed out of him. I’ve seen dead fish
with more enthusiasm.
Zonked* after that.
* ‘Zonked’ – pronounced
Zzzzz-on-ktt: A state of semi-consciousness, often accompanied by
dribbling, incoherent muttering and a general sprawling of limp body
parts across furniture.
Friday 12
There's nothing for Friday.
I was clearly abducted by aliens today, who stole 24 hours of my life
(the buggers, I wish they'd stop doing that, its really
annoying).
Have a look at
this instead - its an unofficial
diary, so don't tell anyone about it.
Oh, and grab yerself an
original oil painting done by a very talented Yorkshireman
(aka Hubs the Handsome One) right here.
Saturday
13
After
this (snigger), Hubs and I drove to our local
shops for (argh!) the weekly shop, we passed two little boys playing
outside a house. They were about 8 years old and they were wearing
children's police uniforms.
“Policemen are looking younger
all the time,” Hubs sighed.
I nearly threw up from laughing.
[This
is a weird site. I can understand children wanting to dress up
as firemen and astronauts, but a chain gang prisoner?]
Sunday 14
The Dangers of Apple Pie
I was in the living room
vacuuming when Hubs shouted something through from the kitchen. I
didn’t hear what he said, and carried on vaccing. Moments later, I saw
a ladder wobbling passed the kitchen window. There was a moment of
tum-te-tum-te-tum, and then I actually screamed out loud and let the
vacuum drop to the carpet.
Raced into garden, just in time
to see Hubs climbing up the apple tree.
"What?"
“You’ll kill yourself,” I cried
(because I’m a wife now and, like parental paranoia, I’m obliged to say
these kind of things).
Where’s Hubby?
He started throwing the apples
down to me one at a time – I was leaping sideways for them like a
professional goal keeper. Then Hubs decided it would be quicker to
shake the tree whilst he was still in it. He survived, but I was
clobbered by cooking apples the size of melons. Felt like I’d been
mugged with a baseball bat.
So we now have loads of
apples for an unbruised Hubs to make lots of apple pies for his
multiply-bruised wife (I’m a battered wife!).
Which almost makes up for the
dreadfully poor crop from our ravaged garden this year.
Yep, that's it. All of it. Impressive,
eh?
Monday 15
I’ve done it. Yay! I’m
chronically allergic to form filling, as I suspect most people are.
I’ve had one lying accusing round the study for weeks. Even
worse, it was a tax form. I felt comatosed just looking at it.
Today I decided I had to
fill it in before I’m imprisoned for non-payment (any tax people reading
this, I’m claiming insanity for the delay and I have lots of
people willing to testify to this).
Put pen to paper. “Oh my God,”
I wailed, “This is sooooooo boring. Which name shall I put? [All
my documents are still in my old name because I haven’t got
around to filling out those forms yet either]. National
insurance number, how the hell do I know?”
Spent
30 minutes searching in cupboard and drawers, of which there are many,
looking for my NI number. Oh the boredom. Then I needed my P60,
whatever the hell that is, so spent another 45 minutes looking for that
in the same cupboards and drawers whilst muttering, “For fark’s sake!”
over and over again.
Copy of passport. Oh for crying
out loud! Looked in the place where the passports should be, only it
wasn’t (of course it wasn’t), just my old passport with a photo of me
from 20 years ago (sat and sobbed at it for a while, wailing, “Where
does the time go?”).
Finally, a copy of my marriage
certificate to prove there was a reason for changing my name and it
wasn’t just a whim. Couldn’t find that either, and the “For fark’s
sake!” got quite loud after that.
The study is now awash
with scattered papers and documents. My hair is in disarray from all
the pulling, my garments are rented and torn, and my eyes are all bulgy
and bloodshot.
Apparently the housing market
had stalled, which is why I’ve not been getting much work from my
building surveyor company. Luckily, the two other companies I
work for have different sources and, after the arid, tumbleweed period
of the last few weeks (I’d even started looking at job vacancies in the
local paper sharp intake of breath), I’m now inundated
with the stuff. Which is good.
There’s obviously a knack in
juggling workloads from three different sources which I clearly
haven’t mastered yet, but I will, or at least I’ll go down trying (like
the captain of a ship, I’ll valiantly cling on to my red-hot laptop
until either its PC chip explodes or my sanity does).
Because of the housing slump,
I’ve had quite a few emails from other home-based typists who are short
of work, asking if I need any help. Well yes, as it happens, but not on
the typing front, more on the (as
House would say) neurological front, but that’s a whole other
story. There’s clearly a lot of us home-workers out there. More and
more people are choosing to work at home for a variety of reasons.
One of the reasons, I read in an
article recently (which I can't find now), is that home-workers are
home-workers because they 'couldn’t hack it in the real world'. What
tosh. I left the rat race because, having climbed the ‘secretarial’
ladder up to executive PA level, I found myself surrounded by
ferociously ambitious, scheming and aggressive colleagues (most of them
unmarried and without children). I wasn’t intimidated by them, I was
bored.
I couldn’t take all the back
stabbing seriously, it was almost amusing in a dark kind of way. It
wasn’t that I couldn’t ‘hack it’, I just couldn’t be bothered, it all
seemed incredibly tedious and an enormous waste of energy, and also a
bit childish. It’s difficult to become paranoid about other people’s
salaries or job titles when you have a rather handsome husband at home
promising to cook you something fabulous for dinner, or offspring coming
for the weekend, or friends to gossip with about interesting
stuff (like men, and men, and ... men). Bit difficult to think up ways
to make other people look bad so that you’ll look good when you’re
perfectly content with what you’ve got.
Office politics is just too dull
for words. There’s no fun in it. I couldn’t see the
point (apart from making every working day like an episode of some awful
soap opera, spare me).
The choice was simple; become
like them, or do something else.
And there was also the whole
daily commute nightmare, which pretty much swung it.
I’m still being offered jobs in
the city for eye-watering salaries, but I’ve been there, done that, and
it bored me to tears. I work at home not because I couldn’t
‘hack it’ in the real world, but because it wasn't the real
world, it was a tediously insular and self replicating environment
created by people who didn't actually have a life outside the office.
I work at home because contentment is infinitely more important
than salary, making someone laugh is much more satisfying than making
someone cry, and because I like my life and have no desire to change it
or myself.
Bit deep, that. But true.
Wednesday 17
Up at 6am this morning to get
through my workload because I was off galavanting again at 10. This
time to the
NEC
(which is always further away than I remember, I mean, is it even part
of Birmingham?). With my neighbour. To pick up a satellite
communications box a company are lending us for the
Gambia Drive.
Got there, walked miles
from the car park, stood outside the halls where they were having a
show, and rang the bloke. No answer. Again. No answer. Again, left a
message for him to call me, and just hung around (me thinking, ‘What if
he’s changed his mind?’ in a really panic stricken way while my
neighbour looked at me wondering if he’d changed his mind in a really
panic stricken way).
Eventually he rang back. There
was a moment of huge relief, immediately followed by excruciating
embarrassment of the hole-open-up-and-swallow-me kind. I don’t have my
own mobile phone any more – don’t need one – so Hubs had loaned me his.
Unknown to me, Hubs has a ringtone on his phone that, to the very loud
sound of a siren, screams, “WARNING! IT’S THE WIFE! IT’S THE
WIFE!” over and over again at about 137 decibels.
And, because the phone was
unfamiliar, I couldn’t figure out where the ‘answer’ button was to
make it stop. So I just stood there, in a hall full of people all
staring wide-eyed at me, randomly pressing buttons and hissing, “Shut!
Up!”
I hit the right button,
eventually. The man asked where we were so we could meet up and
‘hand over the package’. I said, “Did you hear that horrible ring tone
that everyone was laughing at?” He did. “That was me.”
He found us immediately.
I don’t think I’ll be borrowing
Hub’s phone again any time soon.
[This
is totally pinched from
Helen’s site, very funny.
Ooooh, a shopping trip, an
interesting shopping trip.
My neighbour had persuaded a
local store to give us a discount on a load of stuff for
Africa. Today,
we went to the store to choose what we wanted (pens, pads, etc.). I was
quite looking forward to it, imagining it to be a kind of supermarket
trolley dash. I wore my trainers and was ready to throw out an arm
along shelves whilst skidding down aisles.
It was actually quite boring (as
most shopping is). Deprived of a trolley, we strolled around making a
list of what we wanted. “Just make a note of the item code,” the
store manager (with a handshake like a marshmallow) told us.
Seemed simple enough. Except
the codes were this
big. Me and my neighbour stood in front of
things, squinting and tilting our heads from side to side saying, “Does
that look like a 7 or a 4 to you?” When blindness threatened to
overcome us, I just wrote down the item description with handy pointers
like ‘The one with the red cover.’
We went to The Pound Shop
afterwards, just so I could run my arm along the medical shelves (very
satisfying, although it took ages to pick up everything off the floor
afterwards so might strategically position a basket underneath next
time).
Friday 19
I did a terrible
dictation today. It was clear, but every other word in it was a medical
phrase: cutaneous, Xenograft, multiple hematologic
malignancies, miloid metaphasia. I had to scroll up
and down huge Powerpoint presentations looking for word spellings, it
was like transcribing a foreign language and it took flipping ages.
Hacked off by the time I
finished, I emailed it back to the outsourcing company saying, “Well
this was not fun! Can I charge extra?’
They replied, a little startled:
“How much extra?”
I replied: “I don't know, what
do you normally pay to someone who is now chanting 'cutaneous miloid
metaphasia' and dribbling a great deal after wading through medical
presentations about tumours, cancers and Xenograft models?!”
They replied: “To be honest,
you’re the only one who has ever asked for extra.” Which had me
laughing my socks off, that I’d dared to ask for more (please,
miss, can I have some more?) But they offered me an extra 4p per
minute.
I replied: “I'm merely seeking
compensation for the loss of sanity incurred. 4p is fine, I can treat
what remains of my sanity to a bit of bubble-bath and maybe a telephone
consultation with a therapist.”
It pays to be pushy. I earned
an extra £1.96!
Saturday 20
Hubs and I have both been busy
the last few weeks, work-wise and charity-wise. We needed a night to
just veg and yak without interruption (not that we mind interruption,
but sometimes you just want to shut out the world and recuperate).
So I tested out my visitor
theory. I vacced up the bird seed, dusted, made sure the sink was empty
of dirty plates, did a general tidy of the weeks accumulated debris, and
put on smart clothing.
It worked. Didn’t see a soul.
On Monday I’ll be researching
the same theory that, when the house looks like its been ransacked, I
get an almost constant stream of visitors. And on Monday that’ll be
fine.
But tonight, we veg.
Sunday 21
I have a difficult decision to
make. My birthday is fast approaching (its been approaching with
increasing speed for the last few years, which is really annoying). The
decision I have to make is: what age shall I be this year?
No of course I never admit to my
real age, I’m a laydee, it’s in my genes to compulsively lie
about the number of years I’ve been on the planet. But I’ve been 37
since I was, well, 37. I think its time I upped the stakes a bit in
order to remain in the realms of reality. True, I don’t get many people
raising eyebrows, widening their eyes and gasping, “You’ve got to be
berluddy joking! 37?” But then I don’t tell many people how old my
children are (because I can’t, myself, believe how old they are, or how
impossibly young I was when I started having them).
We were watching some diabolical
programme last night (because it was veg night, and because we couldn’t
be bothered to search for the remote controls to change channel, or
indeed move ourselves to get up and do it manually, not
that we even know how to do it manually).
Pete Burn’s PA (which
is utter bollocks) A potential candidate was introduced as being 23.
Hubs and I, even in our lethargic slob-fest, fell about laughing. “23!”
Hubs cried, tears running down his face, “She’s 40 if she’s a day!”
She did look 40. Definitely not
23. Hadn’t been anywhere near 23 for a long time. And that’s
what got me thinking. I don’t want people rolling about on the floor
with tears running down their face when I say, as I’ve said for years,
that I’m 37.
So, time to change.
Should I venture into 40s
territory or adamantly refuse to leave the 30s period?
Hmmm, decisions, decisions.
[And no, I’m not telling you how
old I really am!]
Monday 22
As some of you know, my sense of
dress (along with my sense of smell) is almost non-existent. Well, not
almost, it doesn’t exist at all. I’m bereft, completely devoid.
I either missed out on that particular lesson at school, or the
molecules that make up the olfactory area are closely linked with the
fashion molecules, neither of which I have.
Yes, I’ve been smart at work.
Smartish, anyway (I’m sure the fuzzy pin-stripe suit look will be
very ‘in’ at some point). Wearing suits is like wearing a uniform, you
don’t have to think about it (or maybe that was my problem), you just
put it on, hope for the best, and leave the house. If anybody points
and laughs, you just go back and change; repeat until you look like a
member of the human race.
I don’t wear suits now that I
work at home. I wear ‘comfortable’ clothes (no, not jogging outfits,
God forbid). I just put my hand in the wardrobe and wear whatever comes
out. My wardrobe could be described as eclectic. Or insane. Nothing
matches.
Consequently, when I went
downstairs for a coffee a while ago, I caught myself in the hallway
mirror, and I actually stopped dead in my tracks and grimaced. A woman
with zero dress sense actually stared at herself in the mirror and said
(out loud, in horror), “What the hell are you wearing?”
My favourite long, brown-check,
cotton skirt. Red and white striped shirt underneath an aqua
coloured v-neck jumper. And just to complete the whole ensemble (and
because it was cold in the study this morning), knee-length, purple
socks with black spots.
Can’t imagine it?
See the full horror for yourself.
Yes, this really is my hallway. Yes, that's
really me. Yes, those are really my everyday clothes.
I'm can't decide if 'the look' is fabulously quirky, or just desperately
sad, but suspect the latter.
Dig those socks!!!
I’m expecting a tidal wave of
visitors at any minute.
I’m putting it off. I’m
procrastinating like crazy. I’m turning a blind eye and pretending its
not happening because I know what the consequences are if I acknowledge
it in any way.
Picture
this. I get up in the morning and go straight into the study to turn on
the laptop. Then I go downstairs, whistle a bit (because I can’t sing
and because I like to let the neighbours know I’m up that this
ungodly hour), fill the kettle, whip blanket off budgie cage (that
wakes them up fast I can tell you), feed them, water them, encourage
them to whistle/talk/sit on my finger (no response), make coffee, haul
carcass back upstairs into study just in time to find it loading up the
desktop.
I click on Explorer, then go and
get dressed, make bed, look in mirror and think, ‘How old do I look?’,
stare in mirror more closely, step back and view from every angle
possible, then go back into study, just in time to see Explorer loading
up.
Click
on My Folders and drink coffee, stare out of window, light a cigarette
(I know, I know), stare out window some more, view bookcase to
see what book I might want to read next, drag laptop onto lap just as My
Folder opens.
Honestly, I could carve transcripts into granite using a blunt chisel
faster than this laptop works. I primp and coddle it, keep it company
all day, fed it RAM, defrag, delete, run scandisc, download updates, get
rid of unwanted programmes, set memory to argh!-size, clean it, love it,
swear at it, and still its like a slug on Valium. I can feel myself
aging (not that I’d ever admit to my actual age) as I wait for a Word
document to open.
I’m
going to have to bite the bullet and get it over and done with. I don’t
want to tempt fate and type what I must do on this laptop in case it
takes the huff and spits out its PC chip just to spite me, but it
involves (typing slow and quiet now) PC World and a credit card (shhhhh).
But
not yet.
I’ll
do it tomorrow.
Definitely tomorrow.
Wednesday 24
The
shop where we wrote down all our requirements last Thursday have rung
twice to say they have everything in stock and it’s ready for
collection. So me, my neighbour and the son of the Vice
President of Gambia (who flew over yesterday and hasn’t stopped
shivering since) went to collect it.
Except
it wasn’t ready at all. There was some stuff in a carrier bag and some
stuff in a box, most of which wasn’t the stuff we’d written on the list
(I mean, who needs 124 metal pencil sharpeners?). The girl
behind the counter said she’d go and look for the rest of the stuff
‘upstairs’. I think she actually went home, had a good cry, nipped into
the hairdressers and did a bit of shopping before she returned.
We,
meanwhile, are standing in the middle of a packed shop just
waiting.
And
waiting.
And
waiting.
The
girl did eventually return, clearly on the verge of a nervous breakdown
(so I held back on the, “Good God, woman, we’ve been here nearly an
hour! Give us our stuff so we can continue with our lives!”).
The
stuff wasn’t ready at all. The girl said she’d go round the store and
collect everything for us. I held back on the, “Why couldn’t we do that
in the first place!”
We
left. Empty handed. To return another day (sigh).
Clearly on a sadistic roll, neighbour took us to a warehouse that was
nowhere near Birmingham to buy more African supplies. The place was
huge. My facility for shopping was running on empty at this
point (like my laptop battery, it only has a lifespan of less than an
hour). They sold beds at this warehouse and I threw myself down onto
it, groaning heavily, which at least cheered up the other shoppers (“Oh
look, a bored woman making a fool of herself and not caring.”). They
also, because it’s nearly Halloween, sold five foot tool rubber
mummies. Yes, mummies of the Egyptian kind, all squishy and
wubbewy. Bored beyond description, I hauled one into my arms and asked
it if it wanted to dance. The other shoppers skirted round me
nervously.
Shopping, love it, as much as I love sticking red hot needles in my
eyes.
Thursday 25
The
nightmare season has arrived. I know this because I’ve been waking up
every morning for the past week (a) anxious because of the insane
thoughts going round in my head, and (b) absolutely knackered.
I toss and turn all night,
waking up at almost hourly intervals and drifting in and out of
consciousness, hence the proliferation of the weirdest dreams. A
psychiatrist would have a field day interpreting the stuff going on in
my head and would no doubt have me committed: sis (who’s a midwife)
coming to visit with a black baby in a mug (yes, a mug), standing
naked in the middle of the city centre (have that one a lot), climbing
up the skeletal remains of a high building (looking for the loo),
meticulous dreams about all the things I’ve got to do for the charity
drive, meticulous dreams about all the things I’ve got to do in order to
earn some dosh (yes, I dream about typing), and ex-hubby saying he’s
moving in and present-hubby has to move out (scariest of the lot!).
I tell
ya, I’m a nervous wreck by the time I crank open the eyelids (revealing
horrified and bloodshot eyes).
Worked
12 straight hours today trying to clear up my worload. That's 12
straight hours, from 7am until 7pm, with no break.
I'm
hoping I sleep well tonight!
Friday 26
Took
our Gambian friend to the Birmingham Mail offices in the city centre for
a quick interview. Hubs managed to find a parking space right outside
the building, and then nearly had a coronary when he bought a parking
ticket. All we heard for the rest of the day was, “£3 for an hour?
£3 for an hour!”
Then,
because we were 'looking after him' for the day while our neighbour was at
work, we took our Gambian friend for a bit of English history …
Warwick Castle.
Got
there and drove miles through car parks, which consequently meant we had
to walk miles to the Castle entrance. I’d forgotten it was the school
holidays, so there were millions of screaming, yelling, stropping
children all over the place, and the queues were massive – cue for
tickets, cue for coffee (and then the wait for the coffee was like
waiting for the end of the world to arrive), queue to get in, queue for
food (as it was lunchtime). Everything was in slow motion. A
demonstration of the English longbow started late (but was good), then
we took our Gambian friend up the tower bit, listening first to a dire
warning about the 530 triangular shaped steps we’d have to climb and not
to attempt it unless we were at the peak of human fitness. A doddle.
Yeah,
right.
I
first climbed the tower thingy 23 years ago when Middle Son was a baby.
I’m still not sure quite why I was carrying the baby instead of
ex-hubby, but we won't go into that. Up steps I couldn’t see because I
was carrying a baby and, worse, coming down steps still unable to see
because I was carrying a baby. I think that was one of the first times
I ever experienced real fear (that, and the time Middle Son nearly threw
himself off a turret at
Dudley
Castle … we’re clearly not very good with castles).
This
time, up we go. And up. And up. And up. How tall was this tower
thingy exactly? It reminded me of a story from an
Astounding Stories comic I’d read as a child, of a Baddie man in
a trilby hat running up steps and then, deciding he’d never get to the
top, stared to run down again, only there was no end, up or down. Yep,
felt like that. But I could hardly show myself up in front of our
Gambian friend by screaming, “I can’t do it! I’m going to die! I think
I’m having a heart attack!”
They
say the tower is haunted. Probably by the ghosts of tourists who
have perished on the staircase.
With
my legs burning, my heart pounding and my lungs on fire, I reached the
top, throwing out both my arms to haul myself out into daylight gasping
“Oh my God!” I was puce, I was sweating, I was so getting myself
a personal trainer the minute we got home.
Yep,
view, view, view, and down again, Hubs putting on the light on his
mobile phone to stop me whingeing about not being able to see a bloody
thing and we were all going to die.
Queue
for the state rooms, being startled by waxwork models who weren’t
actually models but real people (“And this is how they dyed wool.”
“Jesus Christ woman! You scared the living daylights out of me!”),
pushing our way through screaming, yelling, stropping children.
Our
Gambian friend loved it. It was a good day.
Apart
from the walk back to the car afterwards. “I’ll wait here,” I kept
saying, throwing myself down on a log or a bench, “You come and find me
in the car. If you can’t find me, just leave, save yourselves.”
Hubs
hauled me ever onwards, with our Gambian friend laughing because he
thought I was joking (I wasn’t, I was ready to throw a strop right there
on the ground my feet hurt that much).
I
slept on the back seat all the way home.
Personal trainers who can tolerate vast amounts of whingeing and crying,
get in touch.
Have not
had a chance to post the last few days. It’s all been
rather frantic! Work has picked up, and then there was the
Gambian arrangements
which completely went into overdrive (no pun
intended). Rushing here, there and everywhere, trying to find
time to go to the loo or actually eat something in between the phone
ringing, the emails arriving, and five men coming to the house at
various times. It’s been manic, it’s been tense, it’s been jolly good
fun.
But mostly it’s just been exhausting.
I am, to put in bluntly, berluddy knackered. But
as I sit here, hastily stuffing food in my mouth and ignoring all the
emails and the phonecalls (argh, the phonecalls!), I finally
have time to ‘go over’ the events of the last few frantic, hectic
days.
Saturday 27
Today, the men-types started packing the cars. It
was all very random until I got hold of some bright yellow labels and a
marker pen so they’d at least know where to find food or plasters if
they needthem.
Okay, everything out.
Out of the house and out of the garage.
LOADS of stuff!
All the medical and educational supplies heading off to Gambia.
So much stuff we have a 'security guard' watching over everything.
Yep, all that, in two cars (except the plant pot). Uh huh.
Bob and Sulayman looking optimistic.
Like completing a huge jigsaw ... can we get it all in?
Of course we can. We think we can.
Sulayman displays the boxes that have yet to go in.
Five men, 10 days, one roll .... hmmmmmm.
Dark (and raining) by the time we finish.
A close up of the exhaustion. But we did it.
Sunday 28
Panic starting to build.
The drivers arrive at my house
so often I've taken to leaving the front door open.
Monday 29
Panic reached excruciating heights.
And in the midst of screaming
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaargh! all day long, I rang my
household insurance company because they’d sent me a reminder and I
needed to make changes. A 3 year old spoke to me.
Could I change my name on the policy, I asked. She
wasn’t sure and put me on hold. She came back and said, “Can I ask why
you’ve changed your name?” Oooh the temptation to tell her I was on the
run from Interpol was great, but I forced myself to admit it was due to
marriage.
“Can I take my son’s student cover off?” I asked.
She wasn’t sure and put me on hold. She came back
and asked why I wanted to take him off my policy. Honestly, it was on
the tip of my tongue to tell her my son was on the run from Interpol and
was currently in hiding in Berlin, but I forced myself to admit it was
because he was no longer a student and has his own cover.
“Will that make my payments cheaper?” I asked,
hopefully.
“No,” she said, and she sounded pretty certain
about that.
“We don’t have a record of your date of birth,” she
suddenly said.
My date of birth is a pretty touchy subject
at the moment, what with Yet Another Birthday winging its way towards me
like a heat seeking missile.
“Good,” I said.
“We need it,” she said.
“I’ve been with you 7 years and you need to know my
date of birth now?” I asked.
She wasn’t sure, suddenly seemed terribly
flustered, and put me on hold. When she came back she said, “We have
your date of birth as 1 January 1950.”
1950! I quickly blurted out the real date because
I wasn’t born in 1950, I didn’t want anyone to think I was born in 1950,
I was nowhere near that old.
“That will increase your monthly payments,” the 3
year old said.
“What? Why? You’re penalising me for being
younger than you thought?”
“No,” she said, “Because of your age.”
There was a long, long moment of silence.
“So you’re penalising me for being old?” I hissed/seethed/spat.
“You think I need more cover because I’m verging on decrepitude?”
More silence. The 3 year old didn’t know what I
meant. “You’ll think I’ll break more things?” I explained, “Burn more
things?” I thought it best not to mention about being anosmic and my
habit of sending fireballs across the kitchen from the gas cooker.
The 3 year old wasn’t sure why, and put me on hold
again. When she eventually came back she said the payments would
remain the same, despite removing Middle Son’s cover and despite
my senility.
I didn’t have the strength to argue.
Later that afternoon I finally got hold of
the laptop the drivers will be using for their journey. It has Vista on
it. Vista is nothing like XP, and the touchpad isn’t a touch pad at all;
in fact, its all pretty crap. Panic starts rising like the
mercury in a thermometer. I just have to load up some photo software,
compression software, satellite communication software, dictation
software and Skype, then test it all works and
print out simple instructions for everything.
By 9pm, panic has risen way past the red and
I lie on the floor like a starfish, crying, "Make it
stop! Make it stop!"
Twas the day before Set Off and all through the
house, panic was rising, thank God for Famous Grouse.
Got up this morning already in a state of Abject
Panic. Sent Middle ‘IT Guru’ Son a desperate
text message: “COME DOWN AND HELP ME!”
He did, speeding down the
motorway from Leeds to help his verge-of-a-nervous-breakdown marmee
with the laptop and the satellite box.
So that was one catastrophe narrowly averted.
Then, when I went round to my neighbour’s house
before we ventured ‘oop town’ for the Mayor presentation, I found five
men standing in the living room, all with mobile phones clamped to their
ears, all with farking-hell expressions on their faces.
Apparently they need visas to get through
Mauritania. Quite why they didn’t know this before I’m not sure, and I
didn’t like to ask as watching grown men cry is a terrible thang to
behold.
There was much calling of British and Mauritania
embassies, much faxing and emailing of passports (the photos of which
are hysterical, and if I had the guts I’m post them on here, but
I can’t … no, really, I can’t … can I?).
Okay, last minute panic over (we hope).
And then … another one.
The cars aren’t registered in Gambia. They can’t
drive them in Gambia unless they’re registered in Gambia. There was
much calling of people in Gambia, and much faxing and emailing of log
books to Gambian authorities. My computer was glowing hot.
Finally, we all clambered into the cars and set off
towards the city centre. The leading car turned the wrong way at the
end of the road! Then we kept losing them and had to wait for them to
catch up! This is a four mile journey, 1,000 times
shorter than the one they're about to embark on!.
Trying to get onto
Victoria Square was like trying to kick jelly up a ladder, but my
neighbour finally got passed the security guard using only the sheer
volume of his voice. Narrowly avoided several pedestrians who didn’t
seem to notice two logo’s cars moving straight towards them.
Here we are outside the Council House
Makes yer proud to be a Brummie dunnit.
Looking good!
A crowd quickly gathers, drawn by the logo'd cars and the fabulous drummers.
The fabulous drummers, who were fabulous.
Solomon and Sharon Jaiteh - who were fabulous!
L-R: The drivers
L-R: Sulayman, Bob, Gary, John, Steve, Solomon and Sharon.
L-R: Lord Mayor Randal Brew, Coun Vivienne Barton, Birmingham Mail photographer (!), Bob, Sulayman and Gary.
Not quite sure why Bob's hanging on in that 'natural' manner.
Having a chat.
The Drivers: John, Sulayman, Gary and Steve - very 'Tarrantino'.
My gorgeous sister with gorgeous boyfriend and lovely mommy (nepotism, couldn't resist)
The Lord Mayor hands over a plaque for Bob to present to the Mayor of Banjul.
Good crowd. Nice necklace (very bling)
Sulayman chats with the Mayor.
L-R: Gary, John, The Mayor, Bob and Sulayman, having a bit of a chat.
And the council provided sarnies. L-R: John, Coun Vivienne Barton, John's very pretty daughter, Gary (looking a bit stunned), Bob, Suzanne (Coop Travel), my hunky hubby, driver Steve and my handsome son and IT expert.
Webmaster and Suzanne from Coop Travel - looking good!
My mom and sister enthusiastically handed out leaflets - I think my mom
actually ‘pulled’ at one point with a man who said he worked for the
United Nations (and she believed him). An elderly couple came over and
said they didn’t have much but they’d like to give something, and
pressed a pound coin into my hand, which was lovely. Another woman
handed over a note and promptly burst into tears. We had drummers, we
had a tall man wearing really big bling, we had photographers and crowds
and even coffee and sandwiches courtesy of Birmingham City Council!
Me with my bestest mate (and marmee) after
we’d done some girly elbow-waving and
shrieking.
Absolutely no idea who that bloke is staring at us.
A really, really good day. That ended with
me and Middle Son driving to our local park late at
night to test out the satellite system – MS lying on the ground,
in the dark, in the middle of a road (the park gates were locked) with
me watching he didn’t get run over.
Everything works (we think). Everything is ready.
The end is nigh.
Wednesday 31
HALLOWEEN
The cars set off at 6.15 this morning, managing to
wake the entire neighbourhood. I
watched from the bedroom window as they disappeared into the blackness.
I’m so going to miss that Jeep!
Relief washed over me. It felt as though several
hefty people clambered off my back. They’d gone. It was over. Life
could, finally, return to normal.
Yeah, right. They rang at 10 o’clock. They rang
at midday. And they’ve been pretty much ringing up every couple of
hours since. Its all here.
It’s also Halloween, though I haven’t had much
chance to acknowledge this through the fog of chaos. Two tiny kids came
to the door tonight looking dead cute, but I had to tell them I
had no sweets (unless they wanted a tin of beans instead?) They ran
off, and I could just make out their parents standing at the top of the
drive (hopefully not with baseball bats for the Mean
People).
<<<<< Spookily gone all funny
at the bottom ooooooeeeeeeeeeoooooooooo.
Anyone been having trouble
emailing me? If you’ve emailed me and I haven’t replied, I’m not
being rude. Try my
business address (oooh that sounds posh dunnit) …
bhamsecretary@gmail.com.
DONATIONS?
We’re
going back to Africa in November (yay!). If you want to donate
anything for our neighbour’s Gambian charity, let me know, its a simple
process. Throw some packs of paracetomol in the post, or aspirin,
or plasters, or any First Aid medication, anything at all, one
pack or ten, it all helps. If you work in an office, do you have
any obsolete paper or pens or computer equipment you don’t need?
If you work in a hospital do you have any equipment or medication you
could donate? They literally have nothing over there and
are desperate for anything.
Get in touch. Many thanks to those who already have, its
really appreciated.
PLUS
two insane brave mates are driving from
Birmingham to Banjul in Gambia (Africa) on 31 October to raise funds for the
charity. A blow by blow account will be here on Brummie Blogs as
they drive 4,000 miles through Spain, Morocco, Mauritania and The Sahara
Desert (the utter nutters). Wanna sponsor them? It's dead
easy, nag your friends/family/work colleagues to cough up some dosh,
then when they complete their impressive journey and arrive in Banjul
all tanned and sweaty and probably a bit smelly too, you just pay the
money in the charity account from your own bank, couldn't be simpler.
Details here. Sponsor form
here. Diary
here.
HERE'S
AN IDEA: Someone asked me to put an RSS feed on my site so they knew
when I updated the blog. Well do you think I can figure out what
an RSS feed is, where to get it and what to do with it when I've got it?
That'll be a no. Many brain cells have died on the journey to
where I am now - you can't reach my age (37 ... yes, still!)
without there being casualties strewn along the long road of life.
I quite miss my braincells, but they say ignorance is bliss and, as you
know, I'm very blissful.
So
technology-challenged moi has come up with an idea that I might actually be able to cope with -
EMAILS! Send me an
email with the
heading TELL ME WHEN YOU'VE UPDATED and every time I update the blog
I'll email y'all with a lil link.
CLICK THIS >>>>>>>>>>>>>
WANTED
Women to check out a new web page I’m creating
(strictly for femmes only). Email me and
I’ll send you a link. Men - this page contains everything you ever wanted to know
about women
but were too afraid to ask ... and you have no access! Yet.
Comments so far: "Love the site!"
"Congratulations!!!!! again you have achieved another hilariously
funny website." "Fantastic ... brilliant!"
"Fantastic. Brilliant. Still laughing as I send this message."
"That site for chicks you've knocked up rocks! The only
complaints I have are the wrinkles from cringing at some of the
familiarities and a bout of knicker-wetting incontinence giggling....
"
people have been here (spooky!)
DISCLAIMER: This is a personal weblog. The opinions expressed here
represent my own and not those of my employer(s), work colleagues or
family. My experiences are written purely from my point of view
and are intended to be a humorous depiction of my somewhat chaotic life.
No malice is intended in any way, it's not in my nature. The names of
real people and companies have not been used (for
which I'm sure they're eternally grateful).
This page and all of its
contents are copyrighted (c) Brummie Blogs 2006. All
rights reserved - that's all of 'em so don't even
think about nicking anything unless you
ask first, y'hear?
Hello, my
name is
Fastfingers and I work
at home, typing all day.