Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Gig
It’s a while since I have been to a gig, and I had forgotten that standing only gigs and me are not altogether compatible. Firstly, there is the personal distance space problem. I need at least 18 inches between me and anyone else (unless the anyone else is Tom) and this is not something you are going to get at such a gig. I hold my handbag in front of me in the hope that it will deter people from getting too close, or at least act as a buffer zone between me and them, but other people just don’t care so I will have to try and put up with this one. The other one is height. I am not that short, but there are always taller people. Although I suppose one only needs someone of the same height to stand right in front of your line of vision and that’s that. The worst people are the ones who don’t seem to be able to keep their heads still - because they are leaning in to chat to their friends, or doing some implausible side to side dance movement. You end up moving your own head in the opposite direction thus probably sparking of a chain of head waving all the way behind you, each person in the column cursing the one in front of them. Within moments of finding my place (which of course will shift marginally in the course of the gig, but never by more than by a few feet.) I have nicknames for some of those surrounding me who are already really really getting on my nerves. They are not clever names – blond bobber head, whose head is apparently attached to a piece of elastic suspended from the ceiling, the short-arse twats in (porkpie) hats, who are treating us to out of tune drunken renditions of the Dandy’s greatest hits as a taster before the gig starts, the gregarious red headed menace, who, in the course of the gig, will get increasingly affectionate in direct proportion to the number of pints of cider she imbibes. (Although towards the end, they are not whole pints due to spillage.). I continue to grumble silently to myself about their irritating antics, which can basically be summed up as their ‘getting in the way of me seeing the lead singer on the stage’, until I realize that I am not really enjoying the music as much as I should be, and I attempt to switch off this internal diatribe. It’s not long though before it comes back, because a pint of beer’s or whatever’s worth into the set all of my potential sources of annoyance – invasion of personal distance space, people getting in the way etc are exacerbated by the onset of passers by. Or pushers by to be more precise. I would be afraid that one of them might actually push me over as they shove their way back to their spot, sloshing beer on my legs and arms as they go (where on earth did the beer that landed on my head come from?), or stumble back to the bar for new supplies. But I am saved by the fact that my feet are firmly glued to the floor by the sticky morass of half-evaporated beer, that reduces any attempts at dancing that I might have made (which are pretty much zero anyway) to swaying around a bit, rather lamely. Later this issue will be remedied as a gradually developing shallow lake of fresh beer will dissolve the sticky stale stuff, thus liberating my boots.
The girl with the red (by which I really do mean red, not ginger) hair solemnly tells Tom that it is his duty as a very tall person to stand behind her at all times, and at some point turns round to kiss him, and then apologetically strokes my cheek.
Tom is stoichal about it.
I am vaguely surprised that it is so obvious that I am with him, as we haven’t exchanged more than the odd word in the last hour.
At this point she is kissing most people.
After two hours, the lights go down and then come right back up. The gig is over and my knees are temporarily locked after two hours of standing. But we along with everyone else manage to shuffle through a sea of spilt drink, empty bottles and semi-smashed plastic cups, to collect coats or purchase t-shirts.
I bliss. I can’t wait for the next gig I am going to.
Saturday, 5 February 2011
Kant v Cant
It was a bleak night. Cold, really cold and wet. Not a good night to be out and about in Berlin. But that’s where he was, and to avoid being out and about he went into a bar. He was feeling uncharacteristically morose. Sometimes being a children’s presenter/narrator just sucked all the joy of life out of you. Having to be jolly all the time could be a strain, so he ordered a small glass of beer, slumped on a stool at the bar and sighed.
“You look troubled young man,” he heard a voice say. Brian reeled round. The man who was addressing him was in his 50s but his hair style looked like something from the 18th century.
“No, I’m fine,” Brian said.
“I see we have something in common.”
“Sorry? What?” The other man was looking at the credit card that Brian was fiddling with. “Our names. Cant. Kant. Although my grandfather was Scottish and used the same spelling as your name. Cant. I use the K spelling. Immanuel Kant.” The man held out his hand, and Brian took it.
“I’m er Brian Cant, but you already know that,” he said looking self-consciously at his credit card.
“Glad to meet you Mr Cant. What brings you to Berlin on such a harsh night?”
“Oh I don’t know really. I’ve just always wanted to visit here, although obviously picked the wrong time of year.” Brian smiled ruefully. “I suppose I just wanted to get away from my job for a while, and I had annual leave.”
Immanuel frowned slightly, but didn’t say anything, at first, then
“And what is your job Mr Cant?”
“I work in television.”
“Television? What is that?”
It was Brian’s turn to frown in confusion. “You don’t know what television is?” he asked incredulously.
“No. I have… been away for a long time. Modern technology is a mystery to me, but I would be interested to hear about this television.”
Brian wasn’t really sure what to say. This man must be a nutter, but…
“Well it’s a device that allows you to broadcast moving pictures on a screen to anyone who has a receiving device. And it’s categorically one of the most life changing inventions of the last century. Apart from dishwashers.”
“Is that so? Interesting. I would like to see one of these devices. Does everyone have one?”
“More or less. People find it imperative. The government in England even give out grants for old people to have them. Do as you would be done by and all that I suppose.”
“Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law,” Kant mused.
“Sorry,” Brian said “You’ve lost me there.”
“Do as you would be done by,” Kant elaborated.
“Sorry, I”
“Never mind, liebchen.”
And so began a new friendship. Immanuel would come round to visit Brian in his rented apartment, and they would spend many an evening watching and discussing the philosophical profundities of Trumpton and Camberwick Green, and very occasionally Chigley, although Brian never let his new friend see Playaway. It was just too embarrassing.
“You look troubled young man,” he heard a voice say. Brian reeled round. The man who was addressing him was in his 50s but his hair style looked like something from the 18th century.
“No, I’m fine,” Brian said.
“I see we have something in common.”
“Sorry? What?” The other man was looking at the credit card that Brian was fiddling with. “Our names. Cant. Kant. Although my grandfather was Scottish and used the same spelling as your name. Cant. I use the K spelling. Immanuel Kant.” The man held out his hand, and Brian took it.
“I’m er Brian Cant, but you already know that,” he said looking self-consciously at his credit card.
“Glad to meet you Mr Cant. What brings you to Berlin on such a harsh night?”
“Oh I don’t know really. I’ve just always wanted to visit here, although obviously picked the wrong time of year.” Brian smiled ruefully. “I suppose I just wanted to get away from my job for a while, and I had annual leave.”
Immanuel frowned slightly, but didn’t say anything, at first, then
“And what is your job Mr Cant?”
“I work in television.”
“Television? What is that?”
It was Brian’s turn to frown in confusion. “You don’t know what television is?” he asked incredulously.
“No. I have… been away for a long time. Modern technology is a mystery to me, but I would be interested to hear about this television.”
Brian wasn’t really sure what to say. This man must be a nutter, but…
“Well it’s a device that allows you to broadcast moving pictures on a screen to anyone who has a receiving device. And it’s categorically one of the most life changing inventions of the last century. Apart from dishwashers.”
“Is that so? Interesting. I would like to see one of these devices. Does everyone have one?”
“More or less. People find it imperative. The government in England even give out grants for old people to have them. Do as you would be done by and all that I suppose.”
“Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law,” Kant mused.
“Sorry,” Brian said “You’ve lost me there.”
“Do as you would be done by,” Kant elaborated.
“Sorry, I”
“Never mind, liebchen.”
And so began a new friendship. Immanuel would come round to visit Brian in his rented apartment, and they would spend many an evening watching and discussing the philosophical profundities of Trumpton and Camberwick Green, and very occasionally Chigley, although Brian never let his new friend see Playaway. It was just too embarrassing.
Wednesday, 6 October 2010
Nostalgia: fond memories
Playing in the woods, or just being in the woods on my own. Children can't do this anymore, it would seem (dodgy men lurking behind every other tree paranoia), but in the 70s we were allowed to go off on our own as long as we were back in time for tea/dinner. They were steep woods, and a favourite thing was hurtingly down on my bicycle, especially down one path which had a hollow in it so one effectively flew over it. There was a clearing with a weeping willow in it, whose branches were so low that one could creep under them and hide there, sitting on the horizontal tree trunk that was near the ground. Climbing trees and watching people going by, knowing that they didn't know you were there, watching them, was also a favourite.
The wood is still there, but it seems like it's been thinned out. A game of hide and seek wouldn't work now. There's liitle undergrowth and the trees have no foliage low down. Ironically the adjoining piece of land which was once home to just brambles and gorse bushes, which would burn down most summers (probably arson) now seems to have grown into a wood. A good thing, but it's not my wood.
The wood is still there, but it seems like it's been thinned out. A game of hide and seek wouldn't work now. There's liitle undergrowth and the trees have no foliage low down. Ironically the adjoining piece of land which was once home to just brambles and gorse bushes, which would burn down most summers (probably arson) now seems to have grown into a wood. A good thing, but it's not my wood.
Friday, 20 August 2010
Cats killing stuff
Lily caught a bird this morning - a starling I think, half alive, its beak pathetically - bathetically? - soundlessly opening and shutting.
I screamed (definitely pathetically) for, I think, the first time in my life (I used to have nightmares about not being able to scream, so I suppose this was progress) which at least made Lily run away with it. Although not in the right direction. She trotted upstairs, Basil close behind, and I sat holed up in the sitting room not knowing what to do. Or rather knowing what to do, but being too afraid to do it.
Anyway, in the end, I summoned up the nerve to open the sitting room door. Basil had stolen it off her (a pattern developing here – that’s what happened with the last mouse that he found the morning after Lily caught it – he ate it and promptly regurgitated it – obviously not fresh enough - leaving a stain on the otherwise rather nice wooden kitchen floor.) When I finally summoned up the courage to open the sitting room door in order to go upstairs, he was in the kitchen and Lily was sprawled on the floor in the hall. Basil was growling over the plunder he had stolen from his sister. She didn’t seem to care. In fact she looked extremely pleased with herself, stretched out, blood on her chin and neck. The smugness didn’t entirely go after I shouted at her and plonked her in the kitchen with Basil. He was still there – just tinged with a hint of resentfulness.
I didn’t know what to do then. The bird was dead at least, but I really didn’t feel like scooping it up, even though not doing so would potentially mean another stain on the floorboards. So I just shut them in there and tried to calm down.
I know. Cats. Dead things. It comes with the territory, but usually if the things are alive we can save them and this was their first bird (that I know of.) It's their nature, I realize, but I'd rather they didn't bring it (their nature and the bird) into the house.
I did feel somewhat proud bizarrely though, and utterly wrongly for a vegetarian, but mainly shaken.
I screamed (definitely pathetically) for, I think, the first time in my life (I used to have nightmares about not being able to scream, so I suppose this was progress) which at least made Lily run away with it. Although not in the right direction. She trotted upstairs, Basil close behind, and I sat holed up in the sitting room not knowing what to do. Or rather knowing what to do, but being too afraid to do it.
Anyway, in the end, I summoned up the nerve to open the sitting room door. Basil had stolen it off her (a pattern developing here – that’s what happened with the last mouse that he found the morning after Lily caught it – he ate it and promptly regurgitated it – obviously not fresh enough - leaving a stain on the otherwise rather nice wooden kitchen floor.) When I finally summoned up the courage to open the sitting room door in order to go upstairs, he was in the kitchen and Lily was sprawled on the floor in the hall. Basil was growling over the plunder he had stolen from his sister. She didn’t seem to care. In fact she looked extremely pleased with herself, stretched out, blood on her chin and neck. The smugness didn’t entirely go after I shouted at her and plonked her in the kitchen with Basil. He was still there – just tinged with a hint of resentfulness.
I didn’t know what to do then. The bird was dead at least, but I really didn’t feel like scooping it up, even though not doing so would potentially mean another stain on the floorboards. So I just shut them in there and tried to calm down.
I know. Cats. Dead things. It comes with the territory, but usually if the things are alive we can save them and this was their first bird (that I know of.) It's their nature, I realize, but I'd rather they didn't bring it (their nature and the bird) into the house.
I did feel somewhat proud bizarrely though, and utterly wrongly for a vegetarian, but mainly shaken.
My first (proper) kiss
My first (proper) kiss
My first kiss
Not the best. Not the worst. Is anyone’s? A bit like the first time one has sex, but I am definitely not going down that road on the narrative side of things.
So the first kiss I ever had. I was 15 and he was 22. Now even at the time, or at least shortly after, I did pause to wonder what kind of sicko would want to have some sort of relationship (? Ok I think he really did) with someone who was a mid-teenager. I don’t think he was a pervert though. Just a bit… well thick. Ok this is cruel, but it’s true. He was much less bright, much less knowledgeable than I was. I don’t say this because he was a train driver (you have to have your wits about you for that job) or because he lived at home (economical) or because of his penchant for nylon-heavy v-necked school uniform-like pullovers (which smelt nicely of fresh washing.) And the Bette Davies film thing might have given him brownie points had I been older.
No it was none of these things. He was evidently, lamentably just not that bright.
And I wasn’t remotely attracted to him, although I did quite fancy his
much, much younger brother who ogled me through the tea that his mum served up the one time I went over. My initial snogging session was the result of a kind of setting up by my sister, who, incidentally, later agreed with me that he was a sloppy kisser. And the whole incident only happened, on my part, as an act of revenge/self proving after a couple of friends buggered off to and allegedly did get off with guys, leaving me in the lurch, in a restaurant on my own for over an hour.
On my birthday. (All is forgiven by the way. It was a long time ago, but relevant to the narrative.)
As a consequence, I was fed up, self-esteem bereft (not that I had any self-esteem anyway) and my sister thought that she would cheer me up by taking me to the number one heavy metal nightclub that mid-1980s Sheffield had to offer - Rebels.
Or was it Revels? Always easy to confuse nightclub name with a chocolate one.
It was a classy place. Pictures of naked page three style bimbos on the walls, broken glass on the floor (not a style statement, just a consequence of drunken clientele, and presumably complacent staff) and lots of girls and guys (sorry lads and lasses) in pre-lycra days skin tight white jeans giving their brains a bashing as they banged their heads up and down to the likes of Meatloaf. It was sad, I knew then, but I suppose I was quite excited, doubtless cigarette in hand and Sally’s borrowed clothes on. I really don’t remember. Anyway ‘it’ (the ‘relationship’) lasted a week. There was only so much Bette Davies… or was it Joan Crawford? and fragrant navy nylon jumper that I could stand. (Actually one afternoon’s worth.) So I got my mother to break us up. She rang him and told him that I was too young for him, only being 15 etc. The next year he sent me a huge ludicrously tacky birthday card and rang me to see if I would go out with him now that I was 16.
I suppose it was sort of sweet, but I am not sure how innocent. I always thought it was the latter as well as the former, because I thought he was a bit dim, especially as I got a card the next year not to mention the big valentine cards with bears and hearts on them in the intermediate time, but perhaps given the turning-16 watershed and the ramifications of that in the eyes of the law, maybe not. I’ll never know.
I suppose that while I am on this train of thought, I might as well mention my best worst, chat up line. Not my chat up line, exactly, I hasten to add – I don’t chat people up - but the best bad one anyone ever tried on me…
I’d gone to a night club on a trip up north to visit my parents. Sunny Sheffield. I don’t do night clubs, and never really have (apart from erm Revels, I mean Rebels.) I mean what’s the point. Unless you really like dancing, there’s only one thing they are for, and that’s not having a nice chat and getting to know people. It’s getting off with people. Which I never did, not that I am sure that I wanted to really, but either way, standing with your arms folded tightly and watching your friends (were they really friends?) doing exactly that was the emotional equivalent of a stiletto heal grinding out the cigarette butt of the last bit of your soul or self-esteem. Wrong metaphor, perhaps. There was no way that guys would be wearing stilletos in Sheffield and I wasn’t into girls.
Anyway this time I was 25, so old enough to get into ‘Grab a Grannie night.” Yep. Passed the 20 mark, so a grannie. There was actually a couple on the dance floor that looked really old. Must have been in their 40s, and god so sad, strutting their stuff (how cruel we are when young), but apart from that no one over 28.
It was a strange evening. I had been dragged there by a friend, who’s friend we met up with promptly offered me poppers. Now I never get offered drugs, apart from pot – and who doesn’t get offered that – and I wasn’t sure what poppers did, so there was no way that I was going to accept any without doing research, and in the virtually pre-internet days that wasn’t going to happen even after the event. So for me, a bizarre start to the evening.
And then this guy came and sat down next to me, sidling up against me, and uttered the immortal words “You smell nice. What shampoo do you use?”
I was literally speechless for a moment.
I don’t remember what shampoo I was using. Why would I, and the inanity of the chat-up line would doubtless have obliterated any memory of my usual morning hair product anyway. But it was probably whatever Mr Sainsbury’s had on special offer at the time, being an impoverished post-grad student.
I think I danced with him, although I can’t be sure. It’s a long time ago.
Needless to say no snogging.
My first kiss
Not the best. Not the worst. Is anyone’s? A bit like the first time one has sex, but I am definitely not going down that road on the narrative side of things.
So the first kiss I ever had. I was 15 and he was 22. Now even at the time, or at least shortly after, I did pause to wonder what kind of sicko would want to have some sort of relationship (? Ok I think he really did) with someone who was a mid-teenager. I don’t think he was a pervert though. Just a bit… well thick. Ok this is cruel, but it’s true. He was much less bright, much less knowledgeable than I was. I don’t say this because he was a train driver (you have to have your wits about you for that job) or because he lived at home (economical) or because of his penchant for nylon-heavy v-necked school uniform-like pullovers (which smelt nicely of fresh washing.) And the Bette Davies film thing might have given him brownie points had I been older.
No it was none of these things. He was evidently, lamentably just not that bright.
And I wasn’t remotely attracted to him, although I did quite fancy his
much, much younger brother who ogled me through the tea that his mum served up the one time I went over. My initial snogging session was the result of a kind of setting up by my sister, who, incidentally, later agreed with me that he was a sloppy kisser. And the whole incident only happened, on my part, as an act of revenge/self proving after a couple of friends buggered off to and allegedly did get off with guys, leaving me in the lurch, in a restaurant on my own for over an hour.
On my birthday. (All is forgiven by the way. It was a long time ago, but relevant to the narrative.)
As a consequence, I was fed up, self-esteem bereft (not that I had any self-esteem anyway) and my sister thought that she would cheer me up by taking me to the number one heavy metal nightclub that mid-1980s Sheffield had to offer - Rebels.
Or was it Revels? Always easy to confuse nightclub name with a chocolate one.
It was a classy place. Pictures of naked page three style bimbos on the walls, broken glass on the floor (not a style statement, just a consequence of drunken clientele, and presumably complacent staff) and lots of girls and guys (sorry lads and lasses) in pre-lycra days skin tight white jeans giving their brains a bashing as they banged their heads up and down to the likes of Meatloaf. It was sad, I knew then, but I suppose I was quite excited, doubtless cigarette in hand and Sally’s borrowed clothes on. I really don’t remember. Anyway ‘it’ (the ‘relationship’) lasted a week. There was only so much Bette Davies… or was it Joan Crawford? and fragrant navy nylon jumper that I could stand. (Actually one afternoon’s worth.) So I got my mother to break us up. She rang him and told him that I was too young for him, only being 15 etc. The next year he sent me a huge ludicrously tacky birthday card and rang me to see if I would go out with him now that I was 16.
I suppose it was sort of sweet, but I am not sure how innocent. I always thought it was the latter as well as the former, because I thought he was a bit dim, especially as I got a card the next year not to mention the big valentine cards with bears and hearts on them in the intermediate time, but perhaps given the turning-16 watershed and the ramifications of that in the eyes of the law, maybe not. I’ll never know.
I suppose that while I am on this train of thought, I might as well mention my best worst, chat up line. Not my chat up line, exactly, I hasten to add – I don’t chat people up - but the best bad one anyone ever tried on me…
I’d gone to a night club on a trip up north to visit my parents. Sunny Sheffield. I don’t do night clubs, and never really have (apart from erm Revels, I mean Rebels.) I mean what’s the point. Unless you really like dancing, there’s only one thing they are for, and that’s not having a nice chat and getting to know people. It’s getting off with people. Which I never did, not that I am sure that I wanted to really, but either way, standing with your arms folded tightly and watching your friends (were they really friends?) doing exactly that was the emotional equivalent of a stiletto heal grinding out the cigarette butt of the last bit of your soul or self-esteem. Wrong metaphor, perhaps. There was no way that guys would be wearing stilletos in Sheffield and I wasn’t into girls.
Anyway this time I was 25, so old enough to get into ‘Grab a Grannie night.” Yep. Passed the 20 mark, so a grannie. There was actually a couple on the dance floor that looked really old. Must have been in their 40s, and god so sad, strutting their stuff (how cruel we are when young), but apart from that no one over 28.
It was a strange evening. I had been dragged there by a friend, who’s friend we met up with promptly offered me poppers. Now I never get offered drugs, apart from pot – and who doesn’t get offered that – and I wasn’t sure what poppers did, so there was no way that I was going to accept any without doing research, and in the virtually pre-internet days that wasn’t going to happen even after the event. So for me, a bizarre start to the evening.
And then this guy came and sat down next to me, sidling up against me, and uttered the immortal words “You smell nice. What shampoo do you use?”
I was literally speechless for a moment.
I don’t remember what shampoo I was using. Why would I, and the inanity of the chat-up line would doubtless have obliterated any memory of my usual morning hair product anyway. But it was probably whatever Mr Sainsbury’s had on special offer at the time, being an impoverished post-grad student.
I think I danced with him, although I can’t be sure. It’s a long time ago.
Needless to say no snogging.
Wednesday, 18 August 2010
Cant meets Kant
It was a bleak night. Cold, really cold and wet. Not a good night to be out and about in Berlin. But that’s where he was, and to avoid being out and about he went into a bar. He was feeling uncharacteristically morose. Sometimes being a children’s presenter/narrator just sucked all the joy of life out of you. Having to be jolly all the time could be a strain, so he ordered a small glass of beer, slumped on a stool at the bar and sighed.
“You look troubled young man,” he heard a voice say. Brian reeled round. The man who was addressing him was in his 50s but his hair style looked like something from the 18th century.
“No, I’m fine,” Brian said.
“I see we have something in common.”
“Sorry? What?” The other man was looking at the credit card that Brian was fiddling with. “Our names. Cant. Kant. Although my grandfather was Scottish and used the same spelling as your name. Cant. I use the K spelling. Immanuel Kant.” The man held out his hand, and Brian took it.
“I’m er Brian Cant, but you already know that,” he said looking self-consciously at his credit card.
“Glad to meet you Mr Cant. What brings you to Berlin on such a harsh night?”
“Oh I don’t know really. I’ve just always wanted to visit here, although obviously picked the wrong time of year.” Brian smiled ruefully. “I suppose I just wanted to get away from my job for a while, and I had annual leave.”
Immanuel frowned slightly, but didn’t say anything, at first, then
“And what is your job Mr Cant?”
“I work in television.”
“Television? What is that?”
It was Brian’s turn to frown in confusion. “You don’t know what television is?” he asked incredulously.
“No. I have… been away for a long time. Modern technology is a mystery to me, but I would be interested to hear about this television.”
Brian wasn’t really sure what to say. This man must be a nutter, but…
“Well it’s a device that allows you to broadcast moving pictures on a screen to anyone who has a receiving device. And it’s categorically one of the most life changing inventions of the last century. Apart from dishwashers.”
“Is that so? Interesting. I would like to see one of these devices. Does everyone have one?”
“More or less. People find it imperative. The government in England even give out grants for old people to have them. Do as you would be done by and all that I suppose.”
“Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law,” Kant mused.
“Sorry,” Brian said “You’ve lost me there.”
“Do as you would be done by,” Kant elaborated.
“Sorry, I”
“Never mind, liebchen.”
And so began a new friendship. Immanuel would come round to visit Brian in his rented apartment, and they would spend many an evening watching and discussing the philosophical profundities of Trumpton and Camberwick Green, and very occasionally Chigley, although Brian never let his new friend see Playaway. It was just too embarrassing.
“You look troubled young man,” he heard a voice say. Brian reeled round. The man who was addressing him was in his 50s but his hair style looked like something from the 18th century.
“No, I’m fine,” Brian said.
“I see we have something in common.”
“Sorry? What?” The other man was looking at the credit card that Brian was fiddling with. “Our names. Cant. Kant. Although my grandfather was Scottish and used the same spelling as your name. Cant. I use the K spelling. Immanuel Kant.” The man held out his hand, and Brian took it.
“I’m er Brian Cant, but you already know that,” he said looking self-consciously at his credit card.
“Glad to meet you Mr Cant. What brings you to Berlin on such a harsh night?”
“Oh I don’t know really. I’ve just always wanted to visit here, although obviously picked the wrong time of year.” Brian smiled ruefully. “I suppose I just wanted to get away from my job for a while, and I had annual leave.”
Immanuel frowned slightly, but didn’t say anything, at first, then
“And what is your job Mr Cant?”
“I work in television.”
“Television? What is that?”
It was Brian’s turn to frown in confusion. “You don’t know what television is?” he asked incredulously.
“No. I have… been away for a long time. Modern technology is a mystery to me, but I would be interested to hear about this television.”
Brian wasn’t really sure what to say. This man must be a nutter, but…
“Well it’s a device that allows you to broadcast moving pictures on a screen to anyone who has a receiving device. And it’s categorically one of the most life changing inventions of the last century. Apart from dishwashers.”
“Is that so? Interesting. I would like to see one of these devices. Does everyone have one?”
“More or less. People find it imperative. The government in England even give out grants for old people to have them. Do as you would be done by and all that I suppose.”
“Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law,” Kant mused.
“Sorry,” Brian said “You’ve lost me there.”
“Do as you would be done by,” Kant elaborated.
“Sorry, I”
“Never mind, liebchen.”
And so began a new friendship. Immanuel would come round to visit Brian in his rented apartment, and they would spend many an evening watching and discussing the philosophical profundities of Trumpton and Camberwick Green, and very occasionally Chigley, although Brian never let his new friend see Playaway. It was just too embarrassing.
Monday, 9 August 2010
indian call centres have gone impolite
Is that Mr Firth.
No it's Ms Firth.
Mrs Firth?
No Ms Firth.
Ok I am married but I kept my name, but I certainly not going to go into that with Indian Call Center Person.
Erm it wasn't obvious when I said hello that I am not a 'Mr', I think? Do I need to worry?
"Ok Mr Firth, I am calling about an offer from BT."
"I am sorry but I have a really bad migraine at the moment, so I can't really talk."
Dialing tone.
Here's another.
"Hello is that Mrs Weston?"
"No there is no Mrs Weston here."
"Ohhh ok I will give her a call later."
"No there is no Mrs Weston here. No one of that name lives here. So there's no point."
"Oh, ok"
Dialing tone.
I am not 'Mrs Weston' - hence the title of this blog, although I have just had 3 birthday cards from friends/relatives addressed to Mrs Weston. Jokingly I hope.
For the record Mrs Weston is my mother in law.
No it's Ms Firth.
Mrs Firth?
No Ms Firth.
Ok I am married but I kept my name, but I certainly not going to go into that with Indian Call Center Person.
Erm it wasn't obvious when I said hello that I am not a 'Mr', I think? Do I need to worry?
"Ok Mr Firth, I am calling about an offer from BT."
"I am sorry but I have a really bad migraine at the moment, so I can't really talk."
Dialing tone.
Here's another.
"Hello is that Mrs Weston?"
"No there is no Mrs Weston here."
"Ohhh ok I will give her a call later."
"No there is no Mrs Weston here. No one of that name lives here. So there's no point."
"Oh, ok"
Dialing tone.
I am not 'Mrs Weston' - hence the title of this blog, although I have just had 3 birthday cards from friends/relatives addressed to Mrs Weston. Jokingly I hope.
For the record Mrs Weston is my mother in law.
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