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20 November 2024 (Wednesday) - Late Shift

As I scoffed brekkie there was something that amazed me on Facebook. The goat sanctuary has a new goat – “Callie”. The poor thing was found tethered on a roundabout leading on to the local motorway. Who would do such a thing? If you’ve got a goat you can’t cope with (for whatever reason) why not take her straight to the goat sanctuary? It strikes me that it is less arse-ache to take the goat there than it would be to sneak about at night when no-one is looking and messing about on roundabouts.
I also saw the Wherigo I wrote yesterday had gone live, and three people had downloaded the cartridge in the first half-hour. I’m hoping people do this one properly and don’t try to cheat; I’ve put in so many red herrings that it is quicker to do it properly than check out all the bogus locations. It bothers me when people cheat at the Wherigos – the whole thing is a fun little game to play on your phone. The geocache at the end is just an added bonus if you like that sort of thing. There are those that do, and they do the Wherigos pretty much right away. After a while those using the cheat programs come along just to get their geocache count up. I wish they wouldn’t.
Some chap went round Kings Wood doing my Wherigos last week – reading his written geocache logs it is plain he did them properly and laughed out loud at them. Which is what I intended.
 
I Munzed, got Wordle on the fifth attempt, and took the dogs out. I went outside to see that winter had officially arrived. In my world the first day of winter is the first day at the end of the year when I have to scrape ice from my car. Scraping didn’t take *that* long, and we were soon on our way.
We drove to Orlestone today as it is closer to home than Kings Wood and makes for a shorter walk. Our usual walk round Kings Wood is four miles and takes an hour and twenty minutes. Our walk round Orlestone today was a mile and a half and took thirty-five minutes. Mind you I had a minor melt-down when I looked at my watch at the end of the walk. The same walk round Orlestone used to take an hour when Fudge used to dawdle and pootle round with everyone else waiting for him. Without Fudge along these days we walk the same route in half the time.
I had this stupid idea that being so cold today that the mud would be frozen and the dogs wouldn’t get filthy. Sadly it wasn’t, and they did. We had a warm shower when we came home.
 
I set off to work. Being at Pembury today for the late shift I drove through the -hursts and the -dens. It was a very pretty drive, marred only by the lorry which had got itself wedged at the sharp corner at Goudhurst church. Luckily I didn't have to backtrack that much to find an alternative route.
 
As I drove the pundits on the radio were talking about the supposed failures of maternity services in the UK.
It turns out that most of the problems come from all the expectant mothers having this starry-eyed idea of how a perfect birth will go. Sadly very few of them seem to have realised that having a baby is a dangerous game. Furthermore everyone is allowed choice in their treatments these days, so wannabe mothers are leaving decisions about medical intervention too late when things are going iffy. And then rather than realising this, the media continues to blow the relatively few tragic cases out of proportion and make no mention of how many births happen without incident (lots). And consequently there's a recruitment crisis in midwifery. Who's going to study for years for a job which has a decent chance of getting you crucified in the papers?
And so more and more mothers are looking outside the NHS to have their baby. Often with a doula. There was an interesting interview with the UK's head doula.
I say "UK's head doula"; actually there isn't one. A doula is someone you pay to be your birthing partner who has absolutely no medical qualifications whatsoever. From what was being said some are good and some act as though they are consultant gynecologists and cause quite a few problems themselves.
It turns out that people are very happy to go running to the papers every time the NHS is involved with a tragedy, but those who've employed doulas tend to keep quiet when it all goes pear-shaped. And can you blame them? It would seem that having turned away free expert medical care, they've paid good money to an unqualified quack.
The UK's wannabe head doula being interviewed was some woman who was trying to form a professional association of doulas. She wanted written standards of practice for them all. But as she said with no legal control of them, there is nothing to stop the rogue ones taking the money and doing what they please.
I get so cross with this sort of thing. What I do is legally controlled with all sorts of checks and controls. Why isn't doula-ing?
 
“er indoors TM  had given me orders not to come home without tea bags (on pain of death) so I stopped off at Tesco to get some.
I got cross there too. Dozens, if not hundreds, of customers were blundering about quite literally crashing into each other with only one (me) seemingly aware there was anyone else in the shop.
 
I got to work and did my bit. As I do. I must admit I wasn't keen today.  Periodically I looked out of the window and saw it wasn't raining. There was so much at home I could have been doing, and yesterday when I'd been at home it had been hossing down.
Another reason I wasn’t keen was that I was on a late shift at Pembury. By the time I’d scraped the ice off the car and navigated my way home through pitch-black lanes it was gone ten o’clock.

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