I could probably have
done with an earlier night last night; having spent far too long
dozing on the sofa before finally going to bed at 1am.
Over brekkie I read
something which... what can I say. Read
the article here. Some young lad has been seen on telly sobbing
his heart out becuse his favourite football team lost. The managers
of that club are trying to find that lad to offer him VIP tickets as
an apology for the upset caused.
Shouldn't the police and
social services be trying to trace the lad to put him with parents
and carers who could help the boy to realise what does and doesn't
matter in life?
And before anyone posts
in hate mail, I know in advance that nearly everyone who does feel
strongly about this young lad's tears will feel that it is only wrong
because he is sobbing about the wrong football team.
What is it about football
that instills such passion? If you watch ten minutes of the sport,
(be it the world cup final, or half a dozen children kicking a
ball round the park) you really have seen all that the game has
to offer. Don't get me wrong - I don't dislike football as such; I
just don't understand what's (apparently) so good about it.
And despite over forty years of asking that question no one has ever
given anything approaching a reasoned explanation about why such a
simple sport arouses such high feelings and emotions.
After
brekkie I set off to the MOT shop to collect er
indoors TM"
and to drive her to work whilst her car failed its MOT. And with her
safely ensconced at the workhouse I came home to find that the
dishwasher that I helped carry to the front garden last night had
been stolen from our front garden. I was quite pleased about that -
one less thing to have to lug round to the skip.
I
put the lead on to "Furry
Face TM"
and took him for a little walk. We went through the park where we ran
into (literally)
Orangehead and her chunky little friend. Over the lasst few weeks
Orangehead has been losing the orange hue and had been becoming
somewhat grey, but she must have had a re-spray for Christmas. She's
back to her usual colour. We walked on past Singleton Lake and out to
Great Chart. Over the Christmas break "Gordon
Tracy"
told me that one of my Wherigos had gone walkabout. There is nothing
more disconcerting than an errant Wherigo so I went to check on it
only to find it was where I'd left it three months ago.
Oh
well, "Furry
Face TM"
needed a walk anyway.
I had a text message. The
er indoors TM"- mobile had inded
failed its MOT. But only on one tyre. If I could collect her from
work and drive her back to the MOT centre she could then sort out the
necessaries. So I collected her and did what I was told. I know my
place.
I was home just in time
for the delivery of the new dishwasher. Following last week's
debacle, this time we were taking far more of a D.I.Y. approach; all
we wanted from the shop was for them to deliver a new dishwasher. And
that was what it did.
I could have spent the
afternoon plumbing it in, but er indoors TM"
said she was going to do that. So I took her at her word, and left
tthe thing in its packaging in the kitchen. I then Hoovered (with
a Dyson) round it, cleaned the mud off of my wellies (in the
bath), and then started watching "Death comes to
Pemberley"; a sequel to "Pride and Prejudice"
which I had recorded onto the SkyPlus box. The first episode was
watchable.
I worked on the party
guestlist for a bit, then listened to the latest Total
Ashford podcast. It was quite interesting; with job hunting tips,
news about all sorts of local stuff, and even an article about the
astro club. Then the doorbell went. Some arrogant little scrote was
trying to sell double glazing and wouldn't take "shove off"
for an answer. Apparently only his double glazing has any thermal
insulating properties at all, and when I eventually shut the door on
him he shouted through the letterbox that he would leave me to carry
on wasting heat through my windows. I wish I had taken his leaflets;
I would at least know which company I could publically run down.
Then the phone wouldn't
stop ringing. Half a dozen calls which could have been about
absolutely anything; the Indian accent was so thick I could not
understand a word. Alan from lifestyle choices with a survey which
(apparently) I was obliged to complete for him; I hung up. And
finally Debbie called from Wills-4-U. I asked her how many calls it
was reasonable for me to expect in one afternoon. She was quite
pleasant, and said that company policy was to phone anyone who hadn't
specifically asked them not to phone.
I wonder how that would
stand up in court. I expect it's probably the truth. But it prompted
me to review my will. I reviewed it. You can read it if you want -
there's a link to it at the top of this page.
er indoors TM"
came home and installed the dishwasher. I say "installed";
she did so in a supervisory manner. you can guess who did the donkey
work. I
took some photos of the assistant. The thing is having sea trials
before we trust it entirely. I'm expecting leaks. Better to expect
the worst and have your expectations exceeded than to hope for the
best and be disappointed...
Sorry to be a pedant, but will you stop trying to Hoover with a Dyson.
ReplyDeleteIt's just not possible.
We stopped Hoovering years ago.
In fact I do't think we ever Hoovered, well not with a real one.
We have Dysoned for as long as I can remember.
Its a good job your not American or you would probably be trying to Xerox with an Oki.
Cheers