17 February 2023 (Friday) - Thinking Of Mum

Finding myself falling asleep in front of the telly at ten o'clock last night I had an early night... and was wide awake at twenty past two. Perhaps I should go back to the hospital's sleep clinic? Mind you the last time I went they told me to keep going with the CPAP machine and not to drink coffee before going to bed. Perhaps enough people do drink coffee before bed so that telling them not to gives the sleep clinic a reasonable success rate? To be honest apart from the CPAP machine, when I saw the sleep specialist last time he didn't tell me anything that my grandmother didn't fifty years ago.
 
I dozed on and off for a bit, but eventually gave up, got up and did my usual morning ritual. I really should chuck a bucket of bleach over where Morgan tiddles; I have no sense of smell, but it might be getting a tad whiffy?
As I scoffed toast I watched more "Downton Abbey". Lady Mary's peccadilloes are history; Lady Sybil is causing consternation and the chauffer has gone so far as to plight his troth. At Lady Sybil. The beast(!) Mind you, I think she’s up for a portion…
 
I picked up my sandwich box and made my way to my car. As I left the house I dodged the wheelie-bin being carelessly flung in my direction by the bin-man. He half grunted / half mumbled an apology. I made the observation that God forbid they should put the bins so as not to deliberately block up the entire pavement, and the chap had the good grace to look suitably embarrassed. Back in the day the bin men would pick the dustbins from your garden, empty them into the lorry and put them back where they found them. These days they won't touch them unless they are out on the pavement (as they aren't insured to step into your garden!), and having emptied most (but not all) of what's in the bin into the lorry, they just randomly fling them somewhere out of their way. I've whinged about this before; I've complained to the council before but have been told that "we must all appease the contractor".
 
Being up and about ridiculously early I thought I might take the opportunity to run a little geo-errand. A couple of years ago I put out a series of geocaches in the back of beyond. In their first few months they proved rather popular, but within the first year pretty much everyone who was anyone in the geo-world had been out and done them. Over the last few months it has become very clear that they've run their course. Bearing in mind that the area is alive with pheasants and so a pain to walk with dogs (Treacle ran off the last time I was there - and that *never* happens!) maintenance is an issue for me, so I had good reasons to archive the series, and none to keep it going.
A fellow hunter of Tupperware walked the series yesterday and gathered up all the film pots from under the rocks, and so with a little time on my hands I drove out to where he'd stashed them all for me.
I drove off northwards, but after fifty yards an alarm went off on the car's dashboard. The boot was supposedly open. I stopped the car, opened and closed the boot, and the alarm shut up. What was that all about?
 
As I drove there was a lot of talk on the radio about the missing woman Nicola Bulley. The local police have come in for a lot of stick for releasing details about her struggles with alcohol and the menopause. Her family have asked for an end to speculation in the media about her. Whilst I sympathise for the family, I can't help but wonder just what it is about this case that has caught the public's interest. After all, on average each year over five thousand people in the UK have been reported as having been missing for over a year.
Where do these people all go? And why is there no public outcry about them?
There was also an interview with the head honcho of Britain's radiologists on radio. He (again) made the observation that the current NHS strikes aren't just to feather the nest of those in the NHS; they are to try to make the NHS a more attractive place to work. Yesterday there was an interview with the manager of a GP practice who pointed out that you can't force anyone to be a health care professional. He was saying that they have had no applicants for advertised jobs at all, and wondered what you do when there is a clear and present need for a job that no one is willing to do. He actually said on live radio that perhaps the only way to recruit a GP was to kidnap one from elsewhere. It might well come to that. All the time you earn (on average) nine hundred quid a year more from being a dustman than you do from being a nurse, who's going to want to go into healthcare?
 
I collected my geocaches from where they had been stashed; I drove on to work. Work was much the same as ever. As I worked I had an email from the bosses. Have a look at this.
I try not to talk too much about work, but I will make the observation that I work in the fifth best NHS Trust out of one hundred and twenty. I'll also make the observation that where I used to work was once rated the best but is now in position seventy-five.
And then my phone beeped to tell me it was going to update my watch's software. I wish it wouldn't do that sort of thing, but by the time I'd found out it was already on the case. It has been my experience that any kind of IT upgrade actually renders that which is being upgraded less able to do the job it is intended to do. After an age my watch told me it had been updated. Apart from the battery power level being a lot lower than it was I can't really see much difference. So far...
 
“er indoors TM boiled up fish and chips which we scoffed whilst watching the first episode of the new season of “Star Trek: Picard”. It reminded me very much of a predecessor series “Star Trek: Enterprise” in that once the show’s cancellation was announced it suddenly started getting rather good.
 
Oh  - and today is the second anniversary of my mum’s passing… It rather preyed on my mind today…

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