I’m not unaware that this blog will often contain rants about the stupid and ridiculous things people do for the most stupid and ridiculous reasons, which, frankly, can sometimes get a little depressing. Sometimes it’s worth making a conscious effort to remember that we are responsible for brilliance.
There is a lump of matter in our skulls that can think its way beyond primal survival instincts and contemplate its own mortality and place within the cosmos. It can ask and answer questions about not only its origins, but the origins of the universe within which it finds itself. We can place ourselves in the shoes of those who are less fortunate and help them.
Complex and sophisticated languages, music, architecture, storytelling and many other forms of creation and expression. Not only the ability some have to create, but the ability of others to appreciate it. To respond on a deep emotional level to another person’s creation and either understand what it was they wanted to say, or take an entirely new interpretation of it beyond the creator’s original intention.
People you wouldn’t look at twice on the street are transformed into desirable, sweaty sex gods/goddesses if they’re standing in front of you playing music that fills your head with noise and your bones with vibrations. Moving pictures or written words become real and important because we have an imagination within which they become tangible things.
I know there are a many people in the world who aren’t in any kind of position to appreciate these things the way I can, and I know there are many things that aren’t right in our world – hell I usually moan about most of them right here, but we still have potential. Maybe we’ll realise it before we go under.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Black Friday – another step along the road to madness.
So in previous years, it seemed to me that Black Friday and
all that it entailed was an American thing. I could always enjoy stories of
fights in queues and punters being maced all for the sake of grabbing the last
50-inch plasma TV in the shop for a third of the usual price, and then feel
slightly superior in that typically English way that makes so many others hate
us.
But this year, the UK press and UK retailers have managed to
induce Black Friday madness in earnest in our fair isles. There goes my snobby
smugness – we in the UK are now as possession obsessed as those ‘Mericans ever
were. It’s another step along the road to spelling colour without a u, allowing
any inbred mook to own a gun and shoot black people, or voting for the party
actively trying to be the dumbest in elections (although with UKIP's recent
frightening gains, we might already have that one in the bag).
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Some of the ways in which having kids has ruined me.
When
people talk about their kids, it’s often in the kind of way that makes me want
to puke. Not the declarations of love and happiness – that’s normal, but the
suggestion that they are something other than regular kids. You know, not every
kid is a world class genius sports star in waiting. Sorry to disabuse you of
whatever notion you might have had. Of course, I too get ridiculously proud
whenever one of my girls does something cool like spell a tricky word or ask a
perceptive question, so I can’t really rant too much about that.
The
honest truth is there are some things having children has made worse, not
better. My bank balance. Traffic jams. The already crippling overpopulation
problems. Also, my enjoyment of fiction, in all its forms. I cry far too easily
now, and I’m blaming my kids. Jeopardy or tragedy involving children or even young
adults, with a focus on the lost potential of a young life lost. Depictions of
cruelty to, disregarding of, or annoyance with children (not that I don’t get
annoyed with them. So I’m a hypocrite. Shoot me). Now that I have an intimate
knowledge of just how dependent children are on constant, unconditional love
and acceptance to develop through their early years, these things shown on film
or TV, or written into books leave me a wreck. That never used to happen.
Seeing
them becoming more sophisticated with every year on the one hand makes me eager
for some of the things I’m looking forward to sharing with them, while on the
other makes me increasingly fearful that an inevitable misstep will leave them
going down a different path to one I wish for them. It’s sometimes enough to
make you sick with fear, this crushing feeling of responsibility. It can also
lead to a determined resoluteness to do your absolute best for them, come what
may, which can be freeing, although too often is restricting instead.
Quite a
few of the people I know who are also parents will talk of what they might have
made of their lives had they ignored this biological imperative to reproduce.
Where they might have gone, what they might have done. This, I am certain, does
not make them unfit parents, but more realistically human. For sure I’ve missed
out on some probably fantastic experiences because I had children. It is okay
to lament the loss of this other life.
But. Like the majority of those other parents, given the chance not to have them part of my life, no matter what other eventuality might persist, there is nothing that could remotely tempt me. To watch day by day as these individuals take shape, with their own thoughts and their own ideas, is incomparable. It makes living with the sickening fear born of the creeping feeling of inevitability that you're bound to do something that messes them up irrevocably worth it.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
A chequered history of opinion.
I recently looked back over a number of previous posts on this blog and it feels odd how when you’re removed from a specific post, in particular the feelings and circumstances that caused you to write that post, by years or sometimes only months, it isn’t always easy to remember how you felt when you wrote it. Some of them I’m still quite proud of; some are written pretty decently and get the point I was trying to make across fairly well. Others...well. Others come off like off-the-cuff ramblings about who knows what. I sound like, not to put too fine a point on it, a bit of a dick.
In spite of this embarrassment, I’ve decided to leave them where they are, like so much Internet flotsam and jetsam (thanks to an old Internet friend by the name of Flower for that quite charming turn of phrase). Not only that, but for the moment I think I’ll continue with the odd burst of nonsense. Frequency of posts has been declining for some time due to other time commitments (some important, like my wife and kids, some not, like my Xbox), but I will try to keep to a once a month minimum. I know how the whole of the Interwebs hangs on my every word, after all.
I guess the point is that everybody changes, and looking back on this page serves as a sort of catalogue of mine.
In spite of this embarrassment, I’ve decided to leave them where they are, like so much Internet flotsam and jetsam (thanks to an old Internet friend by the name of Flower for that quite charming turn of phrase). Not only that, but for the moment I think I’ll continue with the odd burst of nonsense. Frequency of posts has been declining for some time due to other time commitments (some important, like my wife and kids, some not, like my Xbox), but I will try to keep to a once a month minimum. I know how the whole of the Interwebs hangs on my every word, after all.
I guess the point is that everybody changes, and looking back on this page serves as a sort of catalogue of mine.
Thursday, July 24, 2014
The UK press: Still awful.
So certain dark corners of the UK press published some
articles about British people who had sex on holiday. Can you believe it? Yeah,
me too.
You can almost imagine the kind of conversations that took
place in the office of the rags that ran with the non-story:
Hack: Hey, Jimmy! Guess what?
Jimmy the intern: What’s that, sir?
Hack: British people go on holiday and sometimes have sex
while they’re out there!
Jimmy the intern: Yes sir. Happens quite a lot I’d imagine.
You seem surprised, sir.
Hack: Well, jealous mostly, son, but you’re missing the
point!
Jimmy the intern: The point, sir?
Hack: This is a perfect opportunity for some good old
fashioned slut shaming!
Jimmy the intern: Um, sir?
Hack: Well, take this one girl who apparently sucked off 20
or more men, all for one cocktail! Don’t you think it’s worth using up our
front page in an attempt to ruin the rest of her life?
Jimmy the intern: It seems to me sir, that if she wants to
do that, she has every right to. Could be, sir, that she did it for the experience,
rather than the cocktail. The distressing thought also occurs that she
considered agreeing to have 20 or more penises in her mouth at that time was
preferable to being beaten and raped by 20 or more frustrated dude-bros later
on, sir. An executive decision, if you will sir.
Hack: Jimmy lad, no bugger’s going to read a story about
that shite. She should have gone with the rape option, at least then we might
have had some sympathy for her. Although we’d probably still have made it her
fault; shouldn’t be out drinking, wearing the wrong thing, that sort of thing.
Jimmy the intern: But sir! A man has a choice – to rape or
not to rape! Regardless of what the woman wears or how she acts!
Hack: Quiet Jimmy! You can’t talk like that here. Before
long, you’ll have people thinking we should teach boys not to rape rather than teaching girls how not to be raped. For shame Jimmy; who’s side are you on,
anyway?
Jimmy the intern: Side, sir?
Hack: And then there was that other girl, the one who had a
threesome on stage in a club! Allegedly. We even have a picture of her face!
Her whole life is ruined, just for indulging in a sexual experience that isn’t
really all that rare! Today is a great day to be an arsehole journalist, Jimmy!
Jimmy the intern: Hmm. Sir, clubs like that have been using
live sex shows as a holiday season climax for quite some years. It really isn’t
anything new. I feel like I have to ask sir. Why no judgement of the men
involved in this? No photos of their faces? No childish attempt to ruin their
lives?
Hack: Son, I’m beginning to wonder if your heart’s really in
hack journalism.
Jimmy the intern: I’m beginning to wonder if you have a
heart at all, sir.
Hack: No, we’re not going to judge the men. That would
suggest the possibility that a man can be faced with a vagina and do anything
other than fuck it.
Jimmy the intern: Oh, bravo sir! You’ve now managed to
insult both genders. Well done, sir, well done indeed!
Hack: Jimmy, I get the distinct feeling you’re mocking me.
Jimmy the intern: Not at all sir. I’m so filled with disgust
and disdain for the putrid festering sore that is your outlook on life that mocking
you would suggest I think you capable of change. No sir, I only wish for your
death, for the sooner you and anyone who shares your views are dead, the better
it will be for all of us. Good day sir. Don’t expect me back tomorrow.
Hack: Hmm. He’s probably gay. At least I know our editor
will love this stuff.
Addendum (30th July 2014):
It turns out that the tabloid front pages that I
scanned in my local newsagents may not have told the whole story. Shocker. It
may be that the whole thing started when the woman involved in the
multi-fellatio incident may have been promised a free holiday. Undertaking her
task she then discovered ‘holiday’ was the name of a cocktail. This means that
some of the imagined conversation above may have been even wider of the mark
than it was originally. What that has done is kind of illustrate the point
about tabloids even more strongly – if they’d have gone with that angle, then
it would have been information worth reporting – anyone involved in that sort
of distasteful trickery needs to be taken to task – if that stunt isn’t
illegal, it damn well should be. But good old Mr Red Top decides to lay into the
woman. And only the woman. How can these shitrags call themselves newspapers
when they lie so much? I think I might stop even scanning the front pages.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Proud of the wrong things.
A lot of people are pretty angry with the state of things at the moment. So, led by Brand the wrong even fewer people are being arsed with voting. UKIP recently had pretty decisive victories with about 35% of the vote. Trouble is, only about 35% of people are voting. My math skills are genuinely terrible, but I don’t think that means they speak for the majority. Also THEY HAVE NO POLICIES. Besides mooning Europe and tax breaks for the rich, that is. It’s worse across the rest of Europe with worrying gains by the far right.
Let me put it as clearly as I know how. If you think a group of people are less worthy of respect because they are browner than you then you are wrong. If you think that some folks are not really people, but something less because they fall in love with people of a gender you think, somehow, isn’t the right one, then you are wrong. If you think someone deserves less consideration because they happen to have tits you are wrong. If you think sharing Britain First posts about D-Day isn’t a disgraceful show of ignorant disrespect for the people who died to protect us from the very fascism they promote you are very, very wrong. If you think someone who believes in a different collection of superstitions to you needs to be shot you are wrong. If you think the UK isn’t better for a history of immigration but rather worse, then you are wronger than a wrong thing. If you think having the cheek to be born on the wrong side of a line on a fucking map automatically denies a person the right to try to better their circumstances you are wrong. If you think the best way to measure something or someone’s worth is in terms of money, then you are a fucking idiot. And wrong.
If you are proud to be British or, Jeebus save us, English, then you are proud of the wrong thing. Built a house? Be proud of that. Raised children that don’t grow up to be awful human beings? Definitely be proud of that. Written a book, play an instrument, run a marathon? Be proud. Hell, I’m even proud when I unlock tricky achievements on Xbox. But why oh why are so many people proud of the random circumstances of their birth? It’s not like as a floating unborn consciousness you had the choice of where to get born and thought I know, there. You had zero input into where exactly in the world you came out of your mother, nor did you get to choose her nationality. So what exactly have you accomplished to justify being proud of being British? Splitting the world up by drawing lines on a map is an idea so against my sensibilities it ranks alongside ‘I reckon everything was made by an invisible sky-wizard’ or ‘Let’s measure the worth of everything using metal or paper’. I mean I think it was a bad idea, if that didn’t come across clearly.
Gah. Humans? Fuckin’ keep ‘em.
Let me put it as clearly as I know how. If you think a group of people are less worthy of respect because they are browner than you then you are wrong. If you think that some folks are not really people, but something less because they fall in love with people of a gender you think, somehow, isn’t the right one, then you are wrong. If you think someone deserves less consideration because they happen to have tits you are wrong. If you think sharing Britain First posts about D-Day isn’t a disgraceful show of ignorant disrespect for the people who died to protect us from the very fascism they promote you are very, very wrong. If you think someone who believes in a different collection of superstitions to you needs to be shot you are wrong. If you think the UK isn’t better for a history of immigration but rather worse, then you are wronger than a wrong thing. If you think having the cheek to be born on the wrong side of a line on a fucking map automatically denies a person the right to try to better their circumstances you are wrong. If you think the best way to measure something or someone’s worth is in terms of money, then you are a fucking idiot. And wrong.
If you are proud to be British or, Jeebus save us, English, then you are proud of the wrong thing. Built a house? Be proud of that. Raised children that don’t grow up to be awful human beings? Definitely be proud of that. Written a book, play an instrument, run a marathon? Be proud. Hell, I’m even proud when I unlock tricky achievements on Xbox. But why oh why are so many people proud of the random circumstances of their birth? It’s not like as a floating unborn consciousness you had the choice of where to get born and thought I know, there. You had zero input into where exactly in the world you came out of your mother, nor did you get to choose her nationality. So what exactly have you accomplished to justify being proud of being British? Splitting the world up by drawing lines on a map is an idea so against my sensibilities it ranks alongside ‘I reckon everything was made by an invisible sky-wizard’ or ‘Let’s measure the worth of everything using metal or paper’. I mean I think it was a bad idea, if that didn’t come across clearly.
Gah. Humans? Fuckin’ keep ‘em.
Monday, May 12, 2014
Operation Don’t Die: Update.
It’s been a while, so I thought an update might be required. Truth is, there isn’t a great deal to report. Still waddling along, occasionally upping the exercise for a little while, with not a great deal changing. Things have been quite, while not exactly stressful, a little bit more full on recently. During this time, I’ve managed to confirm that under this increased load, I tend to shovel more crap into my mouth and have a tendency to not give quite the shit I usually do about health, fitness or chub-levels.
If all this sounds like I’m trying to find excuses for failing to lose weight, well, that’s because that’s what it is. I’ve not exactly gone all Cartman, but I have recently lost my weight loss mojo, and I should really try to get that back. We’ll see if I can. Stay tuned kids.
If all this sounds like I’m trying to find excuses for failing to lose weight, well, that’s because that’s what it is. I’ve not exactly gone all Cartman, but I have recently lost my weight loss mojo, and I should really try to get that back. We’ll see if I can. Stay tuned kids.
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