Tuesday, December 26, 2006

No! It’s Traditional Dad.



No Christmas can ever go totally smoothly, though this year’s issues were small in comparison to some things that have gone wrong in years gone by. There was only one problem, which involved a dropped dish and me. However this was severe enough to have left some human remains on the drive outside, enough in fact to warrant calling in Harvey Keitel’s Mr Clean. Well, maybe not quite that bad - but it was painful enough to mean that I was awake as much as the children on Christmas Eve.

There was the usual carpet-concealing pile of presents this year; a haul, which, I regularly complain, is about equal to ten-years-worth of presents from the dark ages when I was a lad. However, one of the presents this time was a dolls’ house made from Handy Andy’s favourite three-letter abbreviation. I will confess it was a kit but I did have to fit it together and paint it and cover it with bits of slate-patterned paper (thank goodness for spray mount). Unfortunately it was too large to conceal the construction from my daughter, which meant that surprises had to come in other forms this year.

This being only the second year that there has been a seasonal Doctor Who, it may be too soon to call this a tradition but it seems like just that. The family sat down at 19:00 precisely, waving absent-mindedly at departing non-whovians for an hour of cracking Tardis-Taxi chasing and Spider-Woman over-acting followed by 90 minutes of Who Music over on that interactive channel thingy at number three-o-something.

This morning, the house is strange mess of casually discarded board games, books, foil wrapping from chocolate coins and an upside down plastic jet aircraft. Being ever-efficient, my wife was able to supply all required batteries from the secret store that she has been caching since August, though some have already run out.

Best joke of the day came from the BBC continuity announcer who said that Christmas day would not be right without the Trotters … before the start of Babe.

Merry one and Happy other.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Red Caps

Outside any collection of houses, we find a small group of farm buildings, hidden and sheltering under the steep slopes of towering northern hills. It is colder up here than it is in town; the frost from the night still remains, nurtured by the heavy shadow of this valley. Where the wall of the farm garden ends, there is a gate leading to a dark path which follows the contours of one of the hills up into the featureless winter green. We take this path, puffing up and up to find some view across the lake, some sun to tell us that the day has started. High up we eventually see water, smooth as ice, stretching round the curve of the valley into the misty distance. And now we are warmed by the sun as it raises with us over the hill. The sound here is almost nothing, a sort of absence of sound to make us aware of the tiny noises still left reaching us from the villages and big town below us.

My guidance is internal, a poetic collection of equations, balancing me, moving me forward, telling me which way is up and which way is home. They tell me when to eat and when to sleep, when to fall in love and when to act on it. This sounds like voices in my head, a madness of broken computer code, mixed up in the mush of my brain like the dreams of robots. The hawk up there has the same code but loads in different data, the actions and assembler for raptor and prey. I might think I have free will but within the framework of me as a human being, I cannot break out and behave unerringly like a hawk. The black shapes swoop down on us and I feel some link there, "hawkiness" streaming across the gap between us like chemicals across a synapse. Sometime, when asleep of awake for what a robot might term "self-cleaning", The maths comes out of the shadows of the glutinous mass and forms dancing visions of algebra and calculus in my head. All of this can be determined somehow; we just cannot put it together to form any meaningful device. And in the sounds and music, we find the same. Hear those earworms, the irritating tunes that get stuck on loop, the eight-track of the mind turning forever. Count backwards from 100 and it will stop.

We are at the top of the hill now. There is the house we are staying in, alone like most of them around here, but close enough to neighbours to feel safe and comfortable. There is the station in the town a dozen miles away, marked by steam rising from the yards and platforms and by the thin black of the cuttings that reveal the path of the invisible tracks. In a few days we will be back there, off to work and school with our flashy possessions in this austere time. I love this place. There is no outside here. And that is funny for I know that there must be an outside - I know I have to leave here but I have no memory of where I have to go. I know who I am and almost know ehere we are now but there is nothing inside my head outside what I can see from this summit. Now I realise that this is literally true. I can see say twenty miles down the railway line and that is where my memory goes back to. But down by the farm buildings I could only know the few hundred yards of road that I could see. But this is different, what I can see, I know one hundred percent, the location of every tree and road, of every house and every room within those houses. I can tell you the names of every person out there from my friends beside me to the stationmaster blowing his whistle in that distant town to the tramp looking in the bins outside the pub, to the unborn baby. And there - that tells me more. No only do I know the present of what I can see but all of history from conception to death and beyond in both directions. This is a sort of compression of memory into that of experience, time extended to fill in the gaps so that time gone and time to come leap in to meet the time now.

Now I worry about sleeping, what happens when I close my eyes and see nothing and know nothing? Do I turn into an inanimate thing? What will wake me up? But somehow the privilege of this change in memory is compensation for any lack of possible futures.

I wake up in this sunny room. I know it has snowed for my sleep has told me more of the future and this is some indication that I know more outside of what I can see. My sleep was empty of experience but has somehow told me things I need to know.

Again, we are on the hill and I can see what must be the entire county. I know how to fly and could at any time raise myself to orbit and know half a world and every location and person within it. I can see every grave, every lost person in this brown-green sward in front of me. Winter has come hard but covers nothing with its snows and ice.

Boatman to Trunyan


Boatman to Trunyan
Originally uploaded by Steinbeck.

He took me to see dead people.

Quick, Quick Quiz,

Listening to Dry by PJ Harvey. Not very Christmassy is it? Fairport Convention anyone? Struth!

Nice to see the King William's College Quiz online early this year. I got eight (I think) and my daughter got one of them.

I am inspired to produce a very short quiz of my own. Answers on an email postcard - prize is the never-ending respect of your peers and a small credit in the Bank of Kudos (Just East of Turkmenistan - spot the apt reference there).

Identify these vocal sound-effects :-

1. Pch-Tick-a-boompa
2. Pch-T'-cooff (my aunt knows the person who did this one.)

I tried to find a third one but all I could think of is ack-ack-ack but the above two are made by humans for non-human devices and ack-ack-ack is of course Popeye.

I have just re-read the Dead Famous book about Einstein for want of something un-emotional and although it explains the details of Special relativity very well, it is obvious that Einstein had to make some brave assumptions to reach his mathematical conclusions regarding time and space etc. It is all very well understanding it after having had it explained but to make all the leaps of faith between the various assumptions shows why Einstein was brilliant. But even then the implications were not definite. It took proof through experimentation though I suppose even to me the theory just seems right through being simple. Software development is a bit like that isn't it? I'm The Bishop of Southwark. This has been Thought For The Day.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Beware of the Pelagic Tern

My wife tells me that I only like Christmas because it is time off work and looking back at how my feelings towards the festive season have changed over the years she may be right. I do however, like the light and sound of the physical season around Christmas, the same sort of ambience that would have accompanied this time of year since before it was linked with Christianity. I also like the religious ambience of carols and some of the simpler secular aspects. What I really do not like is this year’s trend for spiritless adverts which seem to have dispensed with the last vestige of Christmas spirit once and for all. The big chains' spectacular commercials for television seem to be nothing more than CGI-heavy, Hollywood blockbusters; there seems to be a real lack of colour as if the deep reds and blistering whites of Christmases remembered are embarrassing to the oh-so-trendy, pastel-obsessed executives responsible. Compare Jamie Oliver in his current Dickens-fest with the (admittedly twee) Yellow-Pages advert from way back – you know the one – tall girl, short boy, mistletoe. Just not the same now is it?

I used to love Christmas when I lived out in the wilds of Worcestershire – the view from our window was like the live-action, introducing shot before the start of the Snowman, with a sort of long-distance silence – not traffic – just the sound of all possible noises bouncing around the valley until they made up a sort of sonic version of the echo left over from the big bang. I’d get a book as a present and could sit in the window as the day darkened in a sort of exquisite balance between the comfort and gentle sounds of the house and the excitement and silence that surrounded it. My dad will complain that I never made any indication that I did like living there but being away makes me miss it so much more. My parents do not live in the country any more so Christmas visits do not have that rural delight though the place is just a-few-minutes drive away.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

They’re Smart! They’re Organised and They’ve Got My Keys

I want one!

And for the sad people like me, some closure. I commented on the double StarWars link in The Smoking Room and whether anyone could find a third. The security guard in that was played by Leslie Schofield who was an Imperial commander in Starwars Episode 4 while Siobhan Redmond was in Bulman with Don Henderson who was in StarWars as General Taggi. I have now found my third link. Paula Wilcox was in Man About The House with Jeremy Bulloch who was of course Boba Fett. So link made and my status as sad git confirmed.

Friday, November 24, 2006

The Return of the Whovians

Today I found out where the phrase "Wilderness Taxidermy of Glendale" came from. No longer are these pages the only place on the web where you will find those words. They come from .... ahh - but that would be too easy. Go and find it for yourself. I remembered it as soon as I read it but that's no fun. Socially we are falling apart. I am so glad I do not wear black. Anyone for a game of Centrifugal Bumble-Puppy? Thought not!

It has been so dark today - like the quiet week, the start of every day, of every short story, a bleak cover to the beauties of autumn and what you will be remembered for. You could have gone with so much good behind you but that was really Mo and her super wig rather than anything you did. End one war and start another! That's the way to go. Admit it was a disaster? Never until the war is over.

Out of the this darkness comes the rush of winter gods, little gods but part of larger ones, each with their own little home behind the leaves, in the deep of the undergrowth, parts of poem maybe, like these lines are parts of a bigger story. Maybe you could take each paragraph as a separate thing, mix them all up, throw them up in the air and let them fall into their own new story. Or news Story.

I hear the low screech, the melodic buzz of some electronic device talking to another, linking thoughts more tightly than any humans could do. They link deep in to each other's minds; have a handle on the neurons and the very pulses flowing between them. Maybe one day we will tap into the memories of others in this way, picking up the tenuous hum of another person's mind. Falling in love is like that I think, a sudden understanding of the frequencies and handshaking parameters of someone else. It is just the accident of frequency and decency and how you want things to be.

I have lost the cursor; a new curse for technology. There are so many small annoyances caused by the lack of things we think we need just to survive these days. I’m not yet rendered blubbering by not having my phone with me, in fact sometimes I leave it behind because it means that much to me. Maybe one day I will understand irony. I am not even sure whether the Whale-Rider’s dilemma is actually ironic which in its broadest, simplest application means dichotomy between the effort and the outcome. I suppose that is the beauty of irony; that it is impossible to define without being able to understand it. My work is like that – sometime the mad rush to complete it leaves out the detail and it still works - never fails – ever. That is how beautiful irony is.

Time might go backwards. I have to put this paragraph in because it refers to the title which is my entry for an imagined competition in the way an acquaintance of mine has taken pictures from a non-existent movie, though that must be a common theme amongst photographers as much as making imaginary soundtracks is a favourite oblique strategy for some people. The brain has never done a soundtrack has he but his music is used to back all sorts of films anyway. Who are the Whovians? They live in a town that reflects back on itself, twists and turns though a dusty, Mediterranean landscape that seems to have been built on the exposed edges of a Möbius strip, never ending and having only one surface. I should take a giant pair of scissors and cut it along the centre band. Drinking from a Klein bottle is another difficult leisure activity.

I took a different route home yesterday, through the darkness of this countryside, listening to drumming - long drumming from some concert hall miles away, sounds that took the darkness and made it darker. I got lost for a few minutes, feeling like I was on the edge of the known world, that fiction of the table edge with the water falling away and the landscape fading away in my vision. Just before I imagined my fall to limbo patrum, I found a turning place and got back onto my proper road. I was not scared – though my end seemed inevitable for a few seconds – a fear of ceasing to be though not the blind panic of waking in the night with every possible future screaming through you. Safe in the company of dimness and winter trees, the demons slink back to their caves. You can never kill them – only lock them up.

I have exhausted the ideas I had for today until this idea of the end of ides came to me, a sort of extension of my old brain-jammer of trying to imagine everything in the universe and then instantly to try to imagine nothing at all, no space, no matter, no time and by extension no love. No cliché perhaps. The old architect of the War against Cliché was on the radio yesterday talking about his father and all the time I expected him to talk in this measured way designed to give him time to avoid the very mixtures of phrase and platitude that he rails against. He was eloquent and the odd stock phrase got away from him but it did not seem to worry him. I was waiting to hear him say he was a police (sic) but obviously he didn’t; he didn’t even mention the book it was from and I cannot remember. It was the best half hour of radio I have heard for a long time. They break us down to these little clichés and then build us up again into fully formed characters. Someone is writing me at this moment, deciding not only on how I am thinking but what I am writing at the same time, two levels of character in one. I bet no real writer ever really bothers in that way. I am back to my strange idea of not defining something completely and yet having it work all the time.
A Dream Diary

This is not about you! It's about me!

I had an interesting variation on my standard exam dream last night. I used to have these dreams a lot but they have been absent for at least five years. Last night’s dream didn’t really involve worries about exams at all until I thought back over what it might mean.

In it I was drawn to what promised to be a wonderful and lucrative new way of working which involved some sort of communal living experiment though how we would make money from it was obscured at the very start, only being revealed through obscure and strangely worded brochures and at the end of a long and boring video tape. We all had to move in to some glass-fronted building vaguely situated in London. At one point we were taken to a large room with many long, high tables lining the walls, with lots of magazines, books and comic books, which might have been chained up. Various people were sitting round reading these books and I speculated out loud that we were being set to read these books in order to look for patterns which might indicate some hidden information much like Robert Redford’s character in Three Days of the Condor. I think this was denied in a half-hearted way by some of the people there.

I eventually found out that we were paid only when we aped the actions of celebrities, acting out various tabloid-reported incidents though I never found out the rate of payment as this was only given at the end of the introductory video. I also discovered that low-level income could be gained by delivering Pizzas. This is all beginning to sound like some obscure and sad computer game. In my mind I was trying to work out whether I should give up college in order to join this weird collective. What’s all that about then?

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Shouldn't it Have a Comma?

I’m not sure what it is but this blog seems to have lost some of the old style. It may be that I am just getting old and unable to concentrate but that seems at odds with my assertion that I am now able to keep going with ‘difficult’ books. Current reading is a true example. My wife gave me a copy of Brave New World some years ago and I never made it into the book itself, having given up after the Introduction, and biography and somewhere in the middle of Huxley’s own foreword. I started reading it again after its mention in The Martians and Us – part of BBC 4’s Sci-fi Britannia season and this time it seems so much easier. In a way it is a slightly more believable dystopia than that of nineteen-eighty-four because of the standard intelligence and behaviour of the main (albeit alpha male characters) as opposed to the downtrodden party members of Orwell’s book. There is the usual lag of technology where the book despite being set 600 odd years into the future still records everything on 80 cubic metres of card index. I suspect that most of the mechanical advances of the future would not amaze the sci-fi writers of the past. What will get them is the shrinking of information storage. I can’t be bothered to do the calculation but I suspect that 80 cubic metres of card index would easily fit into an empty corner of this very machine. The fact that the whole world is connected down this little cable to my left would knock anyone from the thirties to the floor. And yet none of this seems to have created the social revolution you might imagine. We all continue with our prejudices and desires for a normal quiet life. Who does the future belong to? – those who can understand the technology or even predict it - or to those who are comfortable with using it. Of course this is just a rewording of Arthur C. Clarke’s assertion that any sufficiently advanced society (civilization) is indistinguishable from magic.

There was one paragraph at the beginning of BNW which made me stop and re-read it as it chimes beautifully with this Government’s desire to identify potential trouble-makers almost from birth. The vision of conditioning of embryos before birth (decanting in Huxley’s terms) is only a slight modification of the idea of teams of bureaucrats like those in the film Brazil, wandering round with clipboards and staring down at crawling infants. It is almost identical to the terrible post-decanting conditioning of infants using aversion to deter them from a love of the countryside.

Oh dear, the little paranoid, conspiracy demons seems to have got me again. I realise that the BNW is not likely to be upon us immediately if ever but the present seems to be a creeping erosion of the society that has taken years to be built. There has been a hard struggle over the years to get us to the current state of free-speech and reasonably equal society and now it seems on the brink of a reverse, not maybe back to the dark ages but a perverse place where things that for the champions of our free society grate and annoy are seen by the over-complex brains of the people in charge as positive developments. Maybe the architects of this derosion seriously do believe they are doing good. They just don’t realise that cutting edge changes to society often only appeal to the mad, bad and dangerous-to-know elements, a group which too many of our politicians seem to belong to. Reform of the health service is a priority for both main parties but sometimes such a radical reform blinds the architects to the reality of what the service is designed to achieve. On top of this, the measurement of the service provided is not possible using the figure-based criteria that are defined. Numbers are blunt instruments when it comes to something as complex as health care. You need perceptions and good feelings, the confidence that you will be looked after with respect when you go for any health care. Start by making staff use family names rather than given names for every body. Calling everybody by their first name may be alright for those of us still in our first childhoods but it seems like lack of respect for a lot of us. I suppose I must be on the border of this distinction but even there I feel like the success of reforms is defined purely by numbers and of course you can do anything with numbers.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Four-Minute Warning

Out of town and out of luck,
away from warnings of the end of time
the disadvantaged countryside
falls to its sleep without the word
of missiles flying to us,
gifts from grateful enemies.

Late suppers finished
see us off to bed in silence
with the distance crowding down,
the weather undisturbed and failing
in its muffling and baffle,
while the screams of rockets

from the nearby politics
of civil war go overhead
without a touch to us.
The PC dozes, spilling drink
and books to fire-lighted floor,
his disconnected phone still flashing.

A clank of late-night feedings
streaks between these villages,
one metal impact, blanketing
the roar of traffic covering
the distant, powered ululation
warning of the war above.

The crank of our siren rusts,
has rusted here for years,
twined in the undergrowth
that pulses over it with seasons,
tides of spring, then autumn
hiding it from panic.

And only those who hear it die;
for all of us the world goes on
in peace and light and our desires,
cut from the universe of morals,
the fields and woods supporting us
without metropolis and poisons.

Monday, November 20, 2006

It Certainly Didn’t Have Any Depths

I finished Wuthering Heights at about 1:30 on Saturday morning. I wasn’t desperate to finish it, more like desperate to get it out of the way. The whole thing can be summed up by a single line (sometimes single word) analysis of each of the characters.

Catherine I – Neurotic.

Heathcliff – A Cipher in the sense that 0 is a cipher. Psychotic. He bribes the sexton to open the elder Catherine’s coffin for goodness sake.

Edgar – Effete blank.

Isabella – Blonde and with Ringlets – nuff said.

Hindley – Lush and Jealous

Hareton – The token intellectually challenged one (though I like him best because he overcomes the disadvantages that the author gives him)

Linton – Sick boy – effete – neurotic.

Catherine II – Nicer than her mother and makes a gentleman of Hareton.

Joseph – Token local who speaks nonsense.

Nelly Dean – Dea Ex Machina – the sensible one but then again she does everything that the author tells her to. She would have been sacked from a real job for all her concealments and tale-telling.

Lockwood – Ben Fogle I think.

All the others – I think all the men are Branwell Bronte and all the women either one of the other Bronte sisters or one of the servants.

I actually quite enjoyed the last bit where the younger Catherine makes friends with and educates Hareton. Heathcliff obviously upset the balance of the existence in Wuthering Heights and also obviously was needed to make this an interesting story which I suppose is the reason for writing it but I can’t help feeling that the ending represented a simple return to normality. As I might have suggested up there, I am glad that that’s over and the Earnshaws can get back to the normal scheme of things. Jane Eyre was much better.

Oh and Kenneth the doctor sounded a decent sort of chap.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

I’ve suddenly just become able to feel semicolons

I was prepared for some naff and badly dated drama in The Day of the Triffids on BBC 4 last night. Instead it was threatening and frightening without anything actually happening – something that TV producers will not sanction these days. I read one review that said it had too much artificial explanation to develop the story which in the first episode was obviously directed at the tape player that Bill Masen was using to dictate the story of the Triffids for his colleague’s book. This will always be a problem with adapting John Wyndham’s books as he explains the background to the action in great detail; to stick to the story as this drama did, some sort of deep research type material is required just to keep the reader or viewer up with the plot.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Three Days of the Wuthering Triffids

Oh where have I been? Not sure really but not quite out of this world yet. Big news for today is a reshowing of the early 80’s go at The Day of the Triffids from the BBC. Charlie Brooker seems to like it despite the Naff 80s look and bemoans the lack of genuine shocks on TV. I though my daughter might like it but she asked if it had a happy ending and when I replied that while not happy, the end was optimistic, she wanted to know what that meant out of ten. I had to say 4 which was met with the statement that she doesn’t watch anything under 5 on the happy-ending scale. I seem to remember it being genuinely scary, not because of the Clack-Clacking Giant Marigolds, but because of the accurate following of the book’s tale of the breakdown of civilization.

After my final capitulation as regards classic literature led to me reading and quite enjoying Jane Eyre, I have started on my fourth attempt at Wuthering Heights, sparked into it by it’s choice as one of the books in A Good Read on Radio 4. One of the guests, Professor Lisa Jardine said it was a standing joke that she had never finished this though for the show she managed it. She went on to complain at the main Narrator – Ellen Dean – who depending on the requirement of the plot either tells tales or withholds information. My thought that wasn’t this just a personification of what the novelist does anyway - but what do I know? I am not enjoying it as much as Jane Eyre, there is no real depth to the characters. What there is instead is a real whirlwind of passionate action all contained within this delicious little world of the moors and heights. The story does not seem to be much beyond the ramblings of what Emily Bronte would know about from her little world as filtered and arranged through the tales and actions of Nelly Dean. I suddenly thought about Mark Helprin and his book Refiner’s Fire which jumps around the world in a way which seems vaguely autobiographical but comes out seeming like a fantastic novel based on everything the author knows. Of course both Emily Bronte and Mark Helprin have literary ability which makes such fantasy possible. As I am over half-way through, I do expect to finish this though I am not sure it will leave me as satisfied as I have been expecting.

I have to go now and wore up all the phones in New York so no one can tell where I am calling from.

Friday, November 03, 2006

Sickert To Them.

Blackbird, an online literature journal has a previously unpublished poem by Sylvia Plath called Ennui, a sonnet from her college years. I’m not sure I can read it correctly without actually reading it out loud but it is interesting. I wouldn’t want to suggest that the use of the word ‘jejune’ is self-referential; that would be consigning the poem to juvenilia wouldn’t it? I can have a go now I suppose.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Take a bit of Good Advice

There are plenty of new photos over at Flickr. There may be more. I just don't know. Don't pressurise me.

I am on a different site today. The chair I am sitting on is so much lower than the special back-pampering, twisty thing I have have at my normal place of work and all I can see over the partition are lines of ceiling lights fading to the vanishing point. The far wall is hidden so that the lights might be stretching to infinity like the infinite plain - all of which reminds me of a poem I read the other day called "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner" You will have to try and work the link between the infinite plain and this - my blog archives hold the the only clue as far as I can see.

Long poems are in my head - well ones with unstructured and undefined purposese anyway.

Monday, October 30, 2006

Frettage

I have had this mug for around thirty years. I’m not sure when I first got it and it is now kept at my parents house for use when we visit. This is a good thing when you take into account the number of mugs that have disintegrated in our house for various reasons. So as you might have guessed we have been back with the kids’ grandparents for half-term week. There is therefore a glut of pictures which will be on Flickr when the next calendar month starts. Who said cheapskate for having the basic account?

Daughter does not want to go back to school despite having guitar lessons to look forward to. My wife actually owns an acoustic guitar and was told by an expert player some time ago that it needed stringing with nylon rather than steel. So a good proportion of yesterday was taken up with restringing. This was a nightmare and sounded like some form of torture that even the VP would not condone. However, to add to the frustrations of my ineptitude, there was the use of this job to assist in the learning of next week’s homophonic spellings.

“I KNEW it was a mistake to let daddy restring that guitar.”

“Never mind - if it breaks we can always get a NEW one.”

“If it does break, at least we shall have a PIECE each.”

“And we shall also get some PEACE.”

Comedians the lot of them! This is a pity because last week was quite relaxing. Various elements of the week were :-

A 16 pound Carp.
A fish that blows bubbles and tells the time.
Other fish that were literally belly-up.
Lots and lots of swans, geese and ducks.
Mushrooms – all inedible.
Soft landings for a small boy.
Herbs.
An Abbey.
A wet Witch and a cutting.
Hundreds of classic car magazines.
A tank (twice).
A british camp.
260 photographs.
Mud – lots of mud.
Only one wet day in the whole week.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

I’ll get You Pesky Kids!

It must be a law that any science book for kids will have a picture of a Bessemer Converter. I’ve just found this site of pictures from Look and Learn Magazine. We used to get this at school and I had forgotten how detailed the drawings were. Most of the kids only read it for The Trigan Empire I suppose and I have to admit that I didn’t read everything in it, though looking at it now I wish I had. The big news is that you will be able to subscribe to a Best Of series with the same look and feel as the original. My dad used to reminisce over the cover of a thirties equivalent of Look and Learn and we managed to find a copy at Hay-on-Wye in a room piled high with many magazines from all eras.

We also used to get The Daily Express when it was good and The Birmingham Post when it wasn’t. They were displayed on one of those sloping desks with high stools that you don’t see in libraries any more, hidden round the corner of the main library and out of view of main door. Not that the teachers ever came in to check up, possibly deciding that the mischievous kids would be intimidated by so much writing in one place. This allowed us regulars to get up to anything we wanted to, including holding a séance in the ready room. What I didn’t appreciate at the time was the view from the window. The whole building has been knocked down now and all the kids moved to my high school where they have filled the wonderful quad it had with more buildings which is a real pity.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

PJ Harvey under spotlight


PJ Harvey under spotlight
Originally uploaded by sounddrown.

Electric Cool Picture Test

Though I would try this posting from here and what with that being a very cool picture ...

Anger Has No Place in an Objective Media - Discuss



Write on only one side of the paper and do not use any facts.

The title and juvenile sub-title are an attempt to recognise the irony of discussing the following in what can only ever be a place for my prejudices.

Please read this article first.

Finished? Good! Hold on while I read it as well.

The thrust of this is that the new science curriculum for GCSE seems to have had the science removed in favour of airy-fairy discussion off science-related topics in the media. The class in the Radio 4 article this morning were discussing recent stories that have again raised the view that the moon landings were faked. A third of the pupils in the class believed that. I am afraid that it is only now that I have realised that most state school pupils have not actually been studying separate courses for Chemistry, Physics and Biology at GCSE for some time; this separation being confined largely to grammar and independent schools. The new curriculum which has just started this year removes the study even further from core scientific discipline and appears to turn the whole thing into a giant discussion along the lines of “what do you believe about science?” based on current obsessions in the media. This suggests that the teaching of science will not be much above the filler articles you find in the centre pages of The Daily Mail, such as predicting the future based on hidden codes within The Bible, or stuff about people with past-lives. My first O-Level Physics class began with the pure facts of density – in fact when I went back to the school years later, I dropped in on my physics teacher (my favourite teacher of all time) and she was happily doing that very lesson – quite took my breath away at how little time had actually passed. We were often asked for opinions on the possible outcome of experiments or how you might use maths to analyse the results but subjective discussions were found only in humanities. It seems that social science has taken over everything these days. We are of course crying out for more social scientists aren’t we? All this lack of objectivity seems to have filtered through to business life with so much breath-taking stupidity in the application of processes to work-life.

I suppose all this nostalgia for school science has been sparked by the fact that the kitchen at this place has the same smell as the ready room between the Chemistry and Physics labs. I’m not sure that this smell is a very good idea in a kitchen because at school it was the result of leakage from specimen jars mixed up with the dust from the stone cutting machine. This was the very room where the physics teacher (not the same one as above) tried to disprove my claim that dowsing actually worked. The TV program that started me on this claimed (I think it was a serious one) that dowsing worked and I believed it. I don’t think his disproof worked but I’m pretty certain that my dowsing was all at best wishful thinking and at worst pure fakery.

And dad – I bent those forks myself.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Zephyr in the Zirconium

I have only just noticed that Richard Dawkins has a new book out – The God Delusion – a fundamentalist-baiting tome about Dawkins’ second-favourite theme, that of how religion is myth. I get weary just thinking that there are some people who will not accept even obvious truths such as the universe being a good deal older than 10,000 years – 45% of Americans think it is younger for some reason, but then people are people and people are generally stupid in the face of truth. I was reading about change blindness recently, which is where people will miss even huge changes in some situation or view. Experiments where the receptionist for those wishing to take part in some laboratory study was substituted while the subjects filled in the application form show how easy it is to fool almost everyone. We would all like to think that we would not be taken in but I am sure we would be. That is why the truth (and it is truth for anyone who might like to pick me up on that) of the universe must be defended against those who believe the literal accounts of some ancient text and on top of that believe that only their particular text is correct. What makes them so sure that their version of creation is the correct one, that only prayer connected to their particular religious outlook has any chance of working? It has struck me in this unstructured rant that will in no way stand up to even the most fuzzy intellectual grilling, is so obviously superior to the fundamentalist beliefs that are held by so many people. Little wonder that Dawkins sometimes feels like giving up on these arguments because debate legitimises the arguments in the proponents’ minds. I sometime feel like shouting “BECAUSE IT IS” at moments like these because that is the only basis for the wackier beliefs out there.

Deep breaths! Cognitive Therapy! Fainting at the desk!

Right! Back again. I found out something that Douglas Hofstadter did first. No prize for anyone who gets it. It was in 1995 if that’s any help.

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Toxteth O’Grady – USA - Again

Usual warning about brains and guck and stuff like that!

Oh Yes – like this one.



(From the website of Eric R. Marcotte, PhD)

Brain Matters has an anecdotal feel, which divides things up into various catchall chapters. The current chapter is a rare one about the mind rather than the brain and has mentioned an article in Science1,which examines how the brain reacts to having to work hard, say having to read particularly complex sentences. This made me think of something from Godel. Escher, Bach where the author talks about the possibility of making a record that would break the record player on which it was played. I seem to remember that it might have to be tailored to the particular record player to be used. I should look it up to be sure of what it was actually trying to say but the relevant part is that I am wondering if it is possible to write a sentence that would make a brain seize up. I don’t mean in any psychological way – that would be hypnosis, but just a set of words the process of reading it and processing it into meaningful thoughts would be so complex as to jam up the brain. What with it being Michael Palin night, this has reminded me of the deadly Python joke which would kill anyone who read or heard it.

The more physical chapters of the book have brought back all the images that used to fascinate me in my mother’s medical books. I would stare at the illustrations of how to open the skull, marvelling at how it was possible to actually get into someone’s head and still have them wake up afterwards. I am now amazed all over again at the brilliant devices that are now used to get through the cranium: drills which stop turning the instant they break through the bone so avoiding damaging any of the fragile membranes that lie beneath, the Gamma Knife which can act on a deeply buried tumour without any opening having to be made and many more procedures and tools. This makes me wonder what sort of company actually makes these devices. They can’t have a huge stock; everything must be made to order. With my cynical view of the world of business, I sometimes wonder how the low demand end of the market actually survives. Maybe the things are just darned expensive.

1. Marcel Adam Just et al., “Brain Activation Modulated by Sentence Comprehension,” Science 274 (1996): 114-16.

(I've always wanted to use a footnote. My life is complete.)

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Leaving Home

More Blossom

It is very dark here, like a winter Sunday afternoon indoors with tea and toast waiting for the next BBC teatime period piece – with the lights on.

She lists possessions in her head – not going to be one of those honey girls who fills her cell - yes a cell like nuns have – with fluff and toys. There is some thought required to paring down my music she thinks. Here into her head, clawing its way against the acid worms of all the pop she thought she liked, comes raw blues, the sheer beauty of it, all that stuff she heard played by her dad and now she is making a list of which records to steal from him. But records mean a turntable and boxes, all too fragile for such rare and important things. Yes – I’ll take them off his hands but so he won’t miss them - and I’ll dye my hair green for something to do. She is between two delicious states, of misery and excitement, such conceited fun and back to missing him but who does she miss most - will she miss most? I wish he’d write to me she thinks to herself once she is there, with the record player carefully installed and all the records dust free in their sleeves and boxes. I’ll write to him, I need fancy paper and pen and then I’ll be like some Austen girl, those weedy types who read it all and forgot what it would be like for them to live like that. How Slushy I have become. But anything like that is a letter from home, even if he doesn’t live at home anymore. He is up in some room like this, wishing he could write probably.

Here comes the obscure blues in this room, maybe some Muddy Waters as well, because he is not that obscure, ska and regga, soca – all that stuff and now she thinks of puff and fluff she wants to write, half-wishing she had a quill and the dismissing it with shakes and embarrassment. I am so soppy, wishing for him in this tiny room, breaking regulations in my head to get him in, and stay the night. Do they have regulations? Not sure if all the wardens bother any more, all did this back in the sixties and went through all the prohibitions for us. Nothing left for us to rebel against someone said. No! I was in the middle of a letter, genteel rubbish about the weather maybe though not quite that pad perhaps. I’ll tell him of the lectures, all those things we take apart he hates, a mush of dissection or cold, clammy samples and next week onto the dead bodies and I will have them taken apart on the slab like nothing more that next days’ dinner. I’ll burst with all this, need to write down everything, the days the nights, the wide stares across the city from this window, sleeping with the curtains open so that the lights can get in. And no one realises how big the city is or how big the world is. Sometimes they think that one little bit of writing like this will convince everyone how to be nice and good and stop everything from going wrong but it is always wrong, like one big sentence – a thought to love everybody. I love everybody.

Oh! Come to my party she thought and then distracted herself with a view of the trees behind her house –well just her father’s house now – how is he on his own? I haven’t thought to ask these last few days – he always seems the same as if nothing gets out of that brilliant brain. I think of the trees there, so old, been there for years and years, back beyond any history I was taught or even the classics my mother did so long ago. The rain was falling on them as Roman soldiers reached this far north the first time, making shelter in those woods and marvelling at how peaceful the countryside seems from in there, like hiding in the hedges during children’s games. I’d love to be back there – is this homesickness? She thought again of her father, alone and flicking through the channels. Maybe she would tell him to get out but thinking about it, maybe he was already. Thinking back to the few days before she left for this place, she began to realise that he might actually have been going out without her noticing it. Maybe he is worried about what I would think about that she thought, maybe he thinks he is just protecting me but I want him to be happy rather than to think of me. After all he is paying for all this and she looks down at the pile of new, pungent text books lying on the table and is sad and happy all at once.

Now she thinks of having a party again. Some of the others here are quite friendly, but we need to break the ice, play them some blues – maybe not. Something in this world bends, a small tragedy somewhere unrelated apart from being in the human world, a death unnoticed in the streets around this new building and it makes me shiver with the injustice and the pure randomness of what happens here. How can anyone let that happen? Paradise will not be like that she thinks, back again in those trees to make her think of home and then again sad for her poor father alone with all that vinyl. And there on the table is a letter from him, not her father, but him, and opened it is blue and cool and rough to the touch, not like the thin, lines stuff she makes her anatomy notes on, all that stuff she won’t ever have to remember. It is poetry, mad and unscanning in the dimness of the single light she had left on, beautiful evocations of her home and his home and how they walked across the moors that spring day, gentle and shy in the drizzle and now calling her home, celebrating her success, the days and days ahead that make her the cleverest person he knows. He writes about her pose against the bus stop when they first met that day, how her leg angled perfectly against it and how the wind was just right, just strong enough to lift her hair in the way that made him fall in love with her. How they walked the length of the bus, passing by the old ladies. I saw them wink to each other she thinks, I had forgotten that. And all is good grammar and bad grammar and no war anywhere.

Back in her wood, the soldiers have broken camp, and are marching under orders to the coast so many miles south, back to the boats and Rome. The rain still falls, unheard in the clearings. Over the moors above the house, the wind links then to this room, this small cell, like for a nun she thinks again, and she is happier than she has been for weeks. The world does not go backwards but everything that happens in it flows forwards and becomes us. I love everybody she thinks. I love everybody.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

It’s Not Rocket Science.



Warning! Contains short description of Brain Matter not where it should be. This means you!

I galloped, loped, whistled through The Life and Times of The Thunderbolt Kid. The last Bryson book I read was A Short History of Nearly Everything which was a meaty tome, breathtaking in its ability to explain the big concepts of everything about the universe from Big Bang to Evolution in standard Bryson comedic prose. In contrast The Thunderbolt Kid was a quick romp through the heady and safe days of Bryson’s childhood, funny and evocative and maybe a little bit too nostalgic; the stuff of comfy, Sunday night drama. However, the book was very successful in its attempt to make this reader laugh out loud.

Daughter won a competition at the library and we went to pick up the cinema ticket (Wot! No book token?) which was the prize. I left her scanning the online catalogue and complaining that all the books she wanted were out at other libraries (The one I want seems to be booked out to Ashworth High Security Hospital - which is slightly worrying) while I scanned for some light reading. What I came up with was Brain Matters: Dispatches from Inside the Skull by Katrina S. Firlik. Strangely it seems to have some of the style of Bill Bryson – quite light really, starting off by discussing whether brain tissue is like toothpaste or tofu – answer: it depends of whether it is just sitting there being sliced or being forced through holes drilled in the skull. The book has only been out once before but already I can detect the smell of a nice Chianti wafting from the pages.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Always September, Never Halloween.



We all took the train to Liverpool today for the Anglican cathedral’s Narnia day. Entry was via a wardrobe naturally though there was a gap either side for the claustrophobic and those just a bit above that sort of nonsense. Inside, and we found plenty of characters to have your picture taken with and a vast array of Sticky tape-and-glue activities to build homemade things to add the vast pile of pre-manufactured stuff we already have at home. Father and daughter were able to support each other’s shaky courage and ascended to the top of Cair Paravel for the highest view in the city where we found an entire Brownie troop sitting against the wall having the highest picnic. I took a few photos with the camera dangling out of the viewing windows but managed to get over the irrational desire to throw the thing off. This is the hospital where both children were born.



I took this of the bells as we clung to the steps on the way down.



Downstairs mayhem seemed to have broken out as the sombre, gowned attendants had to cope with every organised group of children in the county and some unorganised ones as well. It was just a good job that the birds of prey in the (I want to say vestry but that would have been silly) Knave were sensible enough to keep perch-fast.

Lunch was an all-you-can-eat in Chinatown and was followed with a visit to Virgin Records to celebrate a modest (very modest if you must ask) financial advantage that seems to have been directed my way. (It appears that my recent reading has in some away affected my prose style in a manner destined forever to echo the legal communications between Miss Eyre and the uncle previously unknown to her.) I bought Through the Windowpane by Guillemots and The Best of Ian Dury if you are interested.

And that's the month. See you next year.

Friday, September 29, 2006

The 14th Reincarnation of Shooting Fish



I finished Jane Eyre last night. The end actually caught me unawares as I was expecting a lot of loose-end tying between “Reader I married him” and the end and it was just a short chapter which ended with St John – the strange clergyman with a long-winded turn of phrase – detailing how he was fully expecting to die before he write another letter to Jane. I can’t say I will miss him. I’m not sure if I was expecting anything different in the main bit of the story as I know this from at least two TV versions but I was happy with all the philosophy and managed to keep up even if the depths of the longest paragraphs. I think my wife wants me to read Pride and Prejudice next but I have The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid to read first and the probably something else entirely. You may like to go back to the first few entries in this blog to find out what I was reading then for one day I may finish it and then this blog, me, the entire world will fold in on themselves and leave a void ready for the next big bang. Or possibly not!

Thursday, September 28, 2006

I Hate Badgers! They’re So In Your Face!



It has been male bonding day in the deWeyden household. Eldest was accompanied by her mother on a school trip of the “pointing out interesting things around the locality” type while youngest was treated to a train trip to Southport where he argued that every stop was our stop and demanded his own ticket despite being conveyed gratis. We walked (actually he was pushed) to the end of the pier where for one Earth Pound we were given ten old pennies that we could fritter away in various old-time games. When my first attempt at topple-the-pennies resulted in a seven-fold return I thought I had beaten the system until I realised that the only place I was going to be able to spend these was the ten feet around where I was standing. We did get six sweets with five goes from the grapplers but none of them were toddler friendly and had to be reserved for the eldest, though as you can see from the picture above, she seems to have been rather successful at foraging. I hope she sticks to the sweets though we could pretend we are besieged German civilians circa 1940 and make some acorn coffee. Youngest jettisoned his lunch of best Jamie-baiting hot-dog sausage to the benefit of the pigeons but managed to stuff all the bun in his mouth at once and still manage to smile.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

The Loneliness of the Dangling Modifier



The big news for today is that I have remembered two things … er … one thing from the list of really important stuff that I thought about yesterday. I thought because I had managed to remember them both several times that I was not going to forget them. And what do you know; just thinking about them has brought the other one back. This one first then!

I was watching that nice Stephen Fry on the Secret Life of the Manic Depressive last night – a very brave thing do to. It struck me that maybe Bipolar Disorder (as we now have to call Manic Depression) is just a reaction of things deep within our nature to the modern world. It struck me as Mr Fry was being tailed around various shops by a cognitive therapist who tried to talk him through (though not out of) buying various things which he would never use. He mentioned the joy of discovering a long sought-after rarity in a shop and how the thrill of the hunt was much more satisfying than simply ordering the thing on the internet. I thought then, that the mania that he was displaying at that point was simply the redirection of the energy required for real, blood-spouting hunts all those millennia ago into some form of modern release. My theory fails twice, once when I try and explain where the depression comes into this and then again when I hold it up against my other similar theory that Autism is some sort of throwback to an older, less emotional time; one of things that sufferers from Bipolar disorder fear about being put on various medications (Lithium in particular) is that their top and bottom will be removed until they live their lives in an emotionless “letter box” (as Richard Dreyfuss put it). Maybe there is a link and maybe I am just talking speculative rubbish as usual.

The second thing I have in my head in reasonable detail though I cannot remember what started me thinking about it. (pause for quick browse through the Radio four listings). Got it! It was a piece on Word of Mouth yesterday regarding the euphemistic language used to refer to death and dying. This piece started with the wonderful sketch from That Mitchell and Web Look from last week where a criminal mastermind and his two henchmen were discussing how to kill someone who was getting in their way – “deal with the situation”, “he has become a nuisance” etc. This annoyed one of the sidekicks who kept trying to get them to say “Kill” and “Murder someone to death”. Very funny but quite incidental to what follows really. Through some minor route through my head, this led me to think about Heaven and how this place must be either a police state where every type of behaviour is checked and matched and compared with the ideal. The question is then who decides what is the correct way to make heaven … er … heavenly? This of course reminds me of the story that our headmaster used to tell us of a well known Korean hero, newly arrived in heaven who asked for a tour of hell. He was surprised to find that hell was exactly the same as heaven. Just before he ascended to his rightful afterlife, he was taken to where the people in hell ate to find them moaning and struggling because the chopsticks they had been provided with were 5 feet long, making it impossible to move the delicious food to the mouth. Glad to return, the hero goes to have his first meal in heaven and discovers that everyone there is provided with the same 5 foot chopsticks. The difference being that here, everyone is feeding each other. Heaven is made by how people interact with each other, not how they fit into the material world. This story of course says much more about how people behave in this life rather than in any possible, subsequent one.

None of this really tells you what I was thinking in detail about this. I would say more later but you probably wouldn’t believe me.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

We’re Gonna Need a Bigger Boat

There is a madman on the telly. I think he can’t actually get to us but it seems like he’s in my head. He cannot hide from anything and stares at the ceiling where the light swings manically, its shadow on the wall like the dark things in his mind.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Like Glencoe


(http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/janeeyre/)

I think I owe my wife an apology over my disagreement about the last film adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. We were both disappointed in the BBC version of Jane Eyre last night. As I am in the middle of reading it, I suppose my quibbling must be seen in view of that. However, the break-neck rush over Jane’s early life was quite jarring. Her time with her Aunt and as a pupil and teacher at Lowood school was supposed to define her character and so the speed with which she was shoved off to the (overly gothic) school and whistled through all the trauma and death in that place gave no insight into how Jane became the strange mix of ingénue and savant that is clear in the book. As the young Jane talks to Helen Burns in the two minutes between their first smile and the elder girl’s death (from whatever Neutron Bomb of a disease leaves you looking untouched) they speculate that they think they are expected to become teachers. I wonder why they didn’t go the whole way and show a few spinning newspapers to indicate passing time. Georgie Henley is quite able to handle a half-hour of proper emotional development I am sure. This early stage left me feeling that they days of having to write out children’s parts from TV adaptations of popular drama because of the lack of good child actors had returned. I suppose they wanted to get to the juicy bits with Jane and Mr Rochester and indeed the pace did slow at this point.

I am trying to step back from having a go at the concatenation of various scenes because my complaints are probably just the result of just having read the book. I can probably get over how the house has been made too big and stony for my images and after my rant last week about how we probably expect things like this because no real insight into the décor and furniture is actually to be found in the books, I should be more measured. Having said all this, it is shot beautifully and the adult actors are excellent. Jane herself may be played as a bit too confident – I am not sure I can see this Jane Eyre abandoning her comfortable life to live rough on the moors; she would be much more likely to ask for an excellent reference and a year’s salary in advance. Oooooh. What would I do with thirty pounds?

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Big Yellow Spider or Ghosts and Empties



We attempted to go swimming this morning but the pool had had a power cut and so we went to sit in the car at the Coastguard station to wait and see if the power came back on. We arrived in the middle of a dark and dangerous thunderstorm – average distance to lightening of about 2 kilometres. Sitting in the car with dark grey clouds and pouring rain was quite atmospheric and reminded me of the half-term holidays we used to spend by the sea in Wales, because of course it always rained then. I am thinking of this little sanctuary of dunes and scrubby estuary sheep grazing, where the rest of the world seemed far away and we would not think about having to go back to school. It seems that, over the years, the length of time I worry about things has extended well into the future but then a week’s holiday seemed to create a gap long enough to blank out any issues completely. The pool never opened again so we’ve had to skip it. And now the children are bored with the DVD we scrounged from friends so it has been a pretty fragmented day. But as I keep telling my daughter when she whinges, that there are plenty of people around who would be happy to be doing the things she whinges about.

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Phew! Is it Still Saturday?

The day has been full and fulfilling. That must be a phrase from somewhere although I suppose the alliteration would make it likely to turn up sooner or later. We found a large, yellowy-orange spider today. It seemed to have small lumps all over it, as if it were made up to look old and wrinkly. A very strange creature indeed, though the camera (useless item that it is) failed to focus and the picture I took of it looks blurred. Anyway, as you can see it is late (unfeasibly late for parents to still be up) so this is all you get. As it is past eleven you get no pictures today.

Friday, September 22, 2006

I am a Camera



According to this article, today I am supposed to tell you how the web has changed by life. The thing is that despite the complete change in outlook that is represented by the internet, I have been using it so long that none of the milestones really stick in my mind. I suppose I can remember the first time I saw some text-based pages all those years ago and how I registered with Amazon for the first time. I can even remember a bit of personal surfing one Christmas Eve when the whole office was standing around doing nothing productive. Only a couple of us had internet access at that time and I suppose the one thing that sticks in my mind is how something which so obviously was going to change lives, was ignored by the great and the good in our department. Maybe it just wasn’t dynamic enough back then – just text-based pages and all mostly in California. There were no fancy logos or colours just one defined background colour with all the pictured to be downloaded separately. I think I downloaded pictures of bridges that day. Now you can read www addresses of the back of rusty old vans in scrap yards – it has been around that long.

It still amazes me that despite the internet being part of almost everything these days, there are so many people in charge of what we do in this industry who still have no real idea what is possible. I always used to quote the (most-likely apocryphal) story of the businessman who sent his ZX Spectrum back because it wouldn’t tell him when his birthday was. This is of course the opposite of my argument. Maybe we should all be like that businessman and expect everything of our technology. The day will come (probably already has) when a computer could be asked this question and will use the retina or finger print that you have used to login to trawl all the databases it can find using its own initiative and will indeed be able to politely tell you when you were born. I love the internet and sometimes I still do get amazed by what it can do. Unfortunately, the children are not amazed and increasingly adults aren’t amazed either. Being amazed by something is the first step to asking what else you can do and without that sense of wonder we stifle development. I suspect that if just one more person in every ten started asking big questions of technology we could be reaching the stars in the next couple of decades. But then again, if the Romans had started doing this, we would be in another galaxy by now. Instead we have to spend so much time thinking about the next meal or how to avoid being the victim of the latest intellectually challenged idea from people who should know better. I always remember the scientists’ reply regarding the original Star Wars Strategic Defense Initiative. With the technology available then, the whole project could not possibly work. Only one missile needs to get through for the whole thing to be a failure. I am back to my analogy from the programming world. Sometimes when you find yourself putting in all sorts of junky Boolean variables to be able to jump out of processing, you realise that the whole thing just cannot possibly handle the complexity you want without being stripped down and redesigned. Lots of things in society, lots of processes and procedures put in place by Government and business are either incompetent complexity which could be redesigned or deliberate obfuscation in order to confuse customers.

Things could be so much better but people just don’t know. We have the technology. We actually have the technology to make so much stuff that has not even been thought about. I am sorry, this was supposed to be a piece about how wonderful the net has made the world when actually it just makes me think how stupid we all are.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

I Am a Wuss



I float. My head fills up with stuff like this and I cannot see anything else. I did want to write something regarding The Home Secretary's travails of yesterday but it was just naff so I haven't bothered. I am hoping that you will accept photos as daily entries.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Isn't That the Noise a Pigeon Makes?



This was Midsummer day this year. I don't know the names of these two guys but they moved around the fete we were at, playing various folky things on gravestones and actually at the altar of the church. Wonderful!

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

One Person’s Wheel-less Skateboard is Another’s Tea Tray



Such is the profundity of eight-year olds these days.

I am enjoying Jane Eyre a lot more than I thought I would. I sometimes find the depth of Mr Rochester’s language a bit attention-sapping, sometime almost bordering on disconnected gibberish but I am sure Charlotte Bronte knew what he meant. Jane Eyre herself seems to be the ultimate voice of reason in all this, already acting the cool wife who saves her mad husband from himself. I keep making comparisons with modern books, where there is a quarter of the narrative. The human brain extrapolates so much of its experience from the relatively limited sensory input we have but Jane Eyre seems to fill in all the gaps for you, at least those that involve human emotion. As I said before so much of the described environment could be anything, my opinion having been coloured by all the standard early-Victorian background that goes with the TV and film adaptations. Like this one I suppose.

It might be considered strange to recommend a programme which details The Secret Life of the Manic Depressive but the blurb says it is entertaining and informative and it is presented by Stephen Fry as well.

Monday, September 18, 2006

I Can Do Serious! Can You?

Sucking up the human race.
Get James Burke on the case.

It sounds like this guy just beat Banksy to it.

How serious do you want today to be? I think that today should be spent thinking about whether there is any easily distinguishable pattern to Prime Numbers. I know that there isn’t but like perpetual motion and the ultimate answer, everyone thinks that somewhere there must be. If there is a pattern, does that blow all our encryption processes? Maybe there is a particular shape or spiral which determines primes. I just thought of the first few primes and without ever consciously learning them, their ‘primeness’ is just obvious. If only the pattern was that clear. This is like Rudy Rucker’s description of sometimes being able to imagine the fourth dimension. I’ve tried that many times and though it sometimes seems like I can see things that must be at right-angles to everything else, it always turns out to be just another view of our standard 3-dimensional world. I did manage to see it for a few seconds while watching a rotating hypercube on an episode of Horizon but seeing it one minute and then not being able to see it was so frustrating. Now the web has the ability to show you rotating hypercubes but I have never managed to ‘see’ the reality again. Of course there are people whose real jobs are to work out everything that you can possibly know about Prime Numbers, after all, Governments might fall should public key encryption get destroyed by a short cut to factorising numbers, but it nice to think that all you need to play with them is the grey, gooey stuff behind your eyes. I suppose a pencil and paper might be useful as well.

Sunday, September 17, 2006

That ole Book Stompin’!



I’ve always wanted to use an apostrophe followed by an exclamation mark.

I did another page or two of my scrapbook today (examples above) and my daughter made me drag out some of the old books to look at. It wasn’t the pictures that sparked the strongest memories but the smell. Some of the early things I put in were experiments done at work using the new–fangled scanners and printers that we had just got. We actually trialled a number of printers and what has remained in these printouts is a smell which reminds me so much of the time. One of the printers actually put a measurable thickness of waxy pigment on the paper, which could be scraped off with a fingernail, and I suspect that this is the smell I get from them. The later books just have oil pastel in them, which smells different. Interweb’s not yet able to take smells so maybe just some nice pictures later.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

All That Plastic Tat!

I’ve got so annoyed at the intellectually challenged beliefs in Tony Robinson’s investigation into the “end times” that I’ve had to give up watching for the sake of my blood pressure. There is no hope for me apparently. These idiots are the problem. Where are you when we need you Starglider?

Anyway, I must mention something much more worthy. I finally got hold of a copy of Blood, Sweat and Tea, the printed version of Tom Reynolds’ wonderful blog about his life as an EMT in the London Ambulance Service. The online version is up there on the sidebar – Random Acts of Reality. Read it. You will find out that the Ambulance Service is not an Emergency Service but is instead an Essential Service. They do not have access to useful information that the police actually get on their computers such as the locations of known violent residents etc. Be amazed and humbled by what this man does in the face of general idiocy.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Plz to Meet the Byzantine Emperor

Nice to see that world figures are up-to-speed with contemporary comment. I always like to quote 14th century figures at every opportunity. It keeps me in touch with what is happening in the real world. If you really want to examine those words that were quoted, you could always turn it round and see what Christians were doing at the time. The fact is that over history, it is not religion that has been responsible for all the nasty things that people have done to people; it is just used as an excuse. So take any religious group and compare it with any non-religious group and you find that the proportion of people in either prepared to do nasty things to others is probably about the same. Sometimes it does appear to me that the religious amongst us are MORE likely to be like this but that is probably because a tale of an atheist psychopath is always less news-worthy than something about a nut who uses religion as an excuse for something bad. I could mention the LRA, or worse still some of the religious establishment in the US who as far as I am concerned are using the power of a legitimate government as their weapon of choice.

It reminds me of a show I must have mentioned here, regarding experiment into the power of prayer. It involved groups of various faiths praying for named patients in hospital. Now I am not concerned with the outcome; there is something else on that later. The issue relevant here is that the only faith group who questioned whether the other groups’ prayers would have any affect were the Christians. Now this could have been editing but that would have been a bad mistake by the programme makers. Shall we say that all the groups doubted the ability of the others to be successful? That’s seems balanced. Which then of course raises the issue of who is right which is a whole other question and one for someone more into this than I am.

The Material World yesterday quoted a few responses to a previous live programme discussing whether the human mind extended beyond its corporeal boundaries. The final comment struck me quite forcibly. It referred to the idea that if some scientific postulation is true, then the increasing improvements in experimental procedures will tend to move towards proof. The fact is that all experiments into paranormal phenomena have produced results that increasingly tend to move away from the postulations being correct. I have a gut feeling on this whole area which is that if any of this was true, then we would have had absolute proof long ago. I don’t believe in drawn-out and carefully constructed parlour tricks like Uri Geller does; I want real proof – something that is as useful as modern technology. As Arthur C. Clarke says, any sufficiently advanced civilization is indistinguishable from magic. We live in such a civilization, so when I can talk to someone on the other side of the world using a small box that I can fit in my pocket, why bother trying to see what someone is thinking.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Thank God I am …………. *

* insert nationality here

A wet, early Saturday evening – late October – somewhere in Wales

This is a long room, either just illuminated for the night or maybe still lit by the grey diffusion through a continuous blanket of cloud. The room is not fully carpeted but has several rugs which, though once of bright colours have now faded to pastels in green and orange telling me that they have been here since this house was built. I see them being placed while the house still smells of new wood and varnish. The hall lets into this room through a centrally placed door which links us here with the front entrance from the grass and sand at the front. This door divides the room into two sections though there is nothing protruding into the room to divide it physically. It is like those triangles defined by other shapes which only exist in the mind.

To the South there is a door leading to the sandy path to the beach and near this door are an oval table and four chairs. The flat of the table top is level with the sanded and varnished window sill. This is where we eat and play cards with the radio on. There is no TV here though our father tells us that there is and it is locked away; maybe that is true or perhaps he is just tormenting us with missing episodes of shows we may be into. We sit close to the window, just a flat inch away from the rain on the window, and the sand and dune grass and the drop to the beach and then the sea pouring its own white noise into the mess of weather.

In the Northern part of the room, there are more comfortable chairs, cushioned and covered with throws again with those pastel colours. There is a bookcase at the North end, a low one with probably three shelves and a collection of books that might interest me. There is also a stamp which can be used to emboss the address of this place onto paper and we use it to mark anything short of a book. And the sound is continuous, the sea with its distant mash of breaking, unstopped since the first sea met the first wind, mixed with the high speed percussion of the rain on glass, itself modulated by the gusts of wind which goad the sea in making its sound. And we read, listen to the radio, play cards and fight, thinking behind it all that we are the luckiest people alive but never admitting that to our parents. There is no world outside this house and what we see, no person beyond those who switch the lights on and off in that distant town. I see the many little rooms, all the people moving about hitting those lights and making in one town a mess of codes and numbers, random lights across the sea.

I could play that sound in my head to help me sleep in the mess of worries that I have these days, wish to go back to listening to the sea building its power outside but now I would wonder if it was about to swell and break its boundary, flood the sand and break waves upon the windows of the house. But the house is still there despite the sea with all its power trying to take us. The house is still there despite the attempts of salt to break it down. The house is still there facing up to all our differences and threats to bring each other into hell. If your God is in charge of such desires then there is no God. Humans will fix these houses; mend the damage caused by wars made in the name of God; come prayer or no prayer.

Outside this room now, the world is wet, not as violent as that wet and stormy day but raining again, to level us all. I could sit in the window all day with a book, protected from the rain by glass and from the room by curtains. I would not be worried about anything hidden there.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

The Strange Life of ‘erbert GabbleBlotchit

My mind was again full of really interesting stuff last night. I even thought about going to get the notebook to write some of it down and here we are as usual with a big space somewhere behind the eyes. Typical! Some of it was about Jane Eyre and how the style of the text relates to modern narrative. Aha! That was it! I was thinking about how recently I have been able to trawl through things which I would have jettisoned very early on. I am not sure whether this is just maturity which makes one stick with something for longer or an increase in intellect which means that longer stuff sticks. Jane Eyre could of course be written with a lot less extraneous words but it wouldn’t have been right. This was of course the root of the discussion I had with my wife about the latest film version of Pride and Prejudice. I honestly enjoyed this film but as I think I mentioned, my wife bemoaned the lack of authentic dialogue which is the real draw for most Austen fans.

I have to say that from reading Jane Eyre I think that most of the adaptations over do the environment – suggesting some sort of gothic backdrop when what Charlotte Bronte wanted to suggest was something altogether more homely. Another thought that came to me was that there is no way we will ever know what was meant. As we get further and further away from the year of the book, we must inevitably lose our ability to determine the style with any accuracy. Shakespeare looks vaguely accurate to us if the costumes worn are anything from 1500 to 1630 – a drama about Romans could probably get away with anything worn between Romulus and Remus waving goodbye to the she-wolf and the day the Vandals, Goths and Visigoths woke up with a hankering for some energetic sacking. All a Greek drama needs is a pile of sheets (and a bucket of blood along with the ‘humour’). And of course hands up all those who believed that Raquel Welch was authentically dressed in One million years B.C. Mmmmmmm! That’s me in that film that is!

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Trinity, Trinity, Trinity, Trinity

I want islands. I want the wind off the sea, over the dunes and lakes up to the mountains that loom unmoving over all this land. I want empty moors and sunshine that gives way to driving rain, and all of us safe out of it under the eaves of summer houses. I want to go back forty years to when we didn't worry about things we didn't know could ever exist, to when my dad looked cool in his pressed trousers and formal shirt even when he went out bird-watching, to when he dragged us out into any type of weather with barely time to choose the right coat.

The other parents at school have been complaining about how much home-work the children are being given. When I was at primary school, the only work I did at home were occasional projects, one about human physiology and another about the Second World War – bodies and more bodies I suppose. Now I hear that a collection of the great and the good – the people who we look up to – have said that modern life poisons childhood. My daughter gets homework every week – this week she had to go and draw the glacial stone that rests in one of our parks. I already had photos of it but we dutifully tramped over there so that proper observations of shape and colour could be made. I expected hordes of small children to be clustered around the rock, pushing each other out of the way and asking each other about the finer points of composition. In fact we were the only people there apart from one mother who turned up, took a photo and disappeared. Doesn’t really seem quite right to me that. We could have saved ourselves the trip I suppose but that is cheating. I will admit that I did OCR the text of the notice but that wasn’t actually asked for.

I thought of something really important and interesting last night and it was vanished into the mess of dreams that I seem to be having. Several times over the last week I have remembered something and spent minutes trying to place where I thought about it and eventually found that it was in one of these dreams I have been having. After so many of them being anxiety dreams, the most recent ones seem to have been benign things, general narratives with no great negatives but nothing really wonderful either. Just writing about these has brought an image of Kenneth More in Doctor in the House - something like the riotous celebration of victory in the rugby match where the mascot was stolen by the rival team. Not sure why though it does seem to fit with some of the more negative “medical” dreams which I have been having.

For some obscure reason, I just ended up at this website http://www.s4c.co.uk/clwbgarddio/ which is for the S4C show. S4C have decided to cancel the show and it has just led me into a reverie much like the one which opened this entry. For a fleeting moment I wanted to give it all up and spend the day in some garden somewhere, out on the soil when it is dry or quietly pottering in … er … the pottering shed. My wife will be falling about as she reads this because gardens and I do not really go together; the huge lawns of my parents’ old house put me off because I used to have the job of raking up the cut grass after the beast of a lawn-mower had done its work. We also had a rotavator which I only got to use once I think because I demolished a shed with it.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Black Pudding Lobbers Unite!

This morning while lying awake waiting for the time at which I absolutely, positively had to get up, I found myself daunted by the drive in here and wishing for the evening to come. When I was finally, properly awake, I longed for the next holiday … then for next year, ultimately thinking about how retirement would feel. I don’t think of myself as much older than when I started work, in fact I can’t see any changes in the picture of my own physical appearance that resides somewhere in my mind. I know that this is not true but now, being probably half-way to retirement there is a sort of physical link with both versions of me - The spotty graduate and the (probably still spotty) late middle-ager who will finally hand in his laptop (or implant or whatever it will be then) and look forward to a full life of sitting in front of the telly still too tired to do anything important in the way of art, poetry or gardening. The upshot of all this is that I should stop wishing things away and start filling in with the meaningful stuff. We can’t all do things that we enjoy 100% of the time and still get paid for them.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

The Modern Prometheus

We watched the recent film version of Pride and Prejudice last night and I found it quite wonderful, beautifully shot and fast-paced without losing any of the spirit of the original story (not that I’ve read it and now I have to). My wife however, bemoaned the loss of original dialogue and the ignorance of the social conventions so obvious in longer adaptations. We have to differ though I will admit that it seems that Jane Austen purists have the same feelings as my wife. Maybe I will re-evaluate after I have read this. My current reading (Jane Eyre) is just about to be broadcast in a new version, which looks a little too gothic for my liking – Mary Shelley without the monster. “My – what a Knobstick”! Sorry! Wrong industrial novel there!

Saturday, September 09, 2006

John Mills, Sean Connery, Kelsey Grammer …

… and me … sort of.



Phrase of the day – Fake Tilt Shift

I thought I had got beyond the general air of anxiety that had been washing around me for the last few weeks and then, this morning I had a really upsetting dream. I deference to my wife’s superstition on this matter I have promised not to “tell a Friday night dream on Saturday” but this was weird in a David Cronenburg type of way though later on it did turn lucid when I realised that it was a good job that it was a dream or else I would be in deep trouble. I do know what the dream referred to and I suppose my being able to recognise it and realise the consequences of it have actually made me feel better about things and so on to a very enjoyable Saturday.

I want to write about big things, like the things I used to write about but a week of toil and driving seems to have turned my mind to something like the stuff you might find behind the fridge. Oh well, there is always the Dorling-Kindersley history of art book which I got from the library today. It cries out to be turned into a CD ROM like the Microsoft disk of pictures in the National Gallery. It will only be a dipping-into book as after finishing The Citadel, I have started Jane Eyre much to my wife’s delight, as this is her favourite book. The Citadel was strangely modern and old-fashioned at the same time. It seemed a dangerous collection of themes to write about for the late thirties, almost as if it was written by a doctor for doctors, or at least the levels of society permitted to experience racier stuff – like the Victorian upper classes had all their own kinks and pornography while frowning on the licentiousness of the lower orders. I have to say that the Citadel was obviously a pointer towards the creation of the Health Service and had many plus-ca-change moments, which I wanted to ram down the throat of the current incumbent of Richmond House – I want to say Alan Milburn but I really just don’t care any more. – Aha Patrica Hewitt.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Micro-Management

We wander round the custard factory, broken by its own destruction, matching those decayed walls with our own decayed minds. It feels like one of those blank Saturdays, at some time after lunch and before the football results, the time when it does not matter of it rains or doesn’t rain because we feel the same regardless. Not like those late Summer Thursday evenings when any rain changes the mood in seconds. Those are the days when we sit in the doorway, something of our bodies just out in the trickle that makes it to the ground under the porch by way of being diagonal. Or if it stays dry, the humidity and late sun turn the world into something different again, a mix of painting and subtle smells from the gardens here. We could be in Bali or some South Pacific Atoll, clothed in the smell of exotic plants, meeting the glow of sunset with blank minds, untroubled by thoughts of boiling sea or man-made disaster.

But here, we are in the same time, seeing the end of something, a building for a thousand people; just to keep them out of the rain took industry and ingenuity, made human’s exploits seem worth it. And all for this end! Of course for this construction to fade back into the ground will take years. We will never see the final swallowing of brick and concrete by knotty, ugly scrub. We will be taken that way long before the last discarded box has broken down to dust. It is the way of things.