Another restless night. I
don't mind the hot days; it's the hot nights I don't like. It's
rather frustrating to have spent much of yesterday looking forward to
watching a film with friends only to sleep through the film, and then
to go home and lay awake restless for much of the night
And so to work again. I
didn't have the Sunday service on the radio this morning. Instead
there was a discussion about a party which had been held to celebrate
the four hundredth anniversary of the Pendle
Witches Trial. I felt sorry for the organisers of the event who
had clearly done their best to put on a family fun day, and to raise
money for a good cause. On the one hand they were under attack for
making light of the deaths of ten innocent people, and on the other
hand they were accused of child abuse for making kiddies think that
dressing as a witch is harmless fun.
I must admit that I got a
bit cross with the do-gooder who accused the organisers of child
abuse. When I was younger I would have stood side by side with that
do-gooder waving my bible in the air. As I grew older (but not wiser)
I had a complete change of heart, and I would have (verbally)
attacked the do-gooder and asked if he had magical pixies in his
garden as well as his imaginary friends and the voices in his head.
And now... I really don't know what I believe. But I do believe that
do-gooders who force their religious views on to children do far more
harm that anyone who invites them to dress up in a silly costume for
fun.
As a child I was in the
Boys Brigade. I *loved* it; lapped up all of what I was told, and had
no idea that I was being slowly and quietly brainwashed by religion
until some years after I'd taken the confirmation they'd led me to.
The radio article ended
just as I drove into Chilham. I went to work via a slight detour this
morning. With (seemingly) the rest of the world at liberty to
go geocaching today I didn't want to be left out, so I did a quick
"cache and grab".
I can't believe how
popular the entire geocaching thing has become just recently. A very
good friend of mine has been telling me about it for months and I
wasn't interested. After all, going looking for little plastic boxes
sounds rather lame. But when you find your first little plastic box
hidden on the pavement that you walk along every day, you start to
wonder how many others there might be. And you start looking. There's
about one hundred and six (as of this afternoon) of the things
within three miles of my house. I think it's fair to say that over
the last couple of weeks I've converted over a dozen people to the
cause.
I didn't sulk as much as
I might have done today. Others had gone to the beach today because I
was working and I'm not keen on the beach anyway, and because the
weather had been forecast to be even hotter than yesterday and I
don't really like the heat. Hoever it didn't turn out to be as hot as
predicted.
Weather forecasting is a
joke really. The forecasters look at what happened the day before and
just predict a bit more of the same; throwing in a wet or a dry spell
for a bit of variety. And when they get it wrong, no one does
anything because they are expected to get it wrong anyway.
I did my bit at work and
then made my way home again. And I had the shock of my life.
Whilst driving along a
rather dark part of the A28 I suddenly spotted a cyclist who came
seemingly out of nowhere. It was after dark and this twit was dressed
in black and had no lights and no reflectors. With a lot of oncoming
traffic I could not swerve, but had to do an emergency stop.
Fortunately there was no one behind me or things would have been
messy. Why do people cycle so dangerously? Couldn't he have at least
worn something light so he could have been seen, rather than wearing
something dark to act as camouflage?
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