Despite myself, I did actually watch the England versus
Germany game last night and in an unexpected turn, quite enjoyed it. Philippa,
being sporty, wanted to watch ‘The Boys’ and show her support, so in a rare
moment of marital solidarity I sat with her and forced myself to pay attention.
It was nowhere near as bad as I anticipated, but I think I was probably just
relieved not to be watching another match with Ted.
I won’t go on about it anymore, as I imagine those
of you who like football are indulging yourself in other, more informed, people’s
writings, and those of you who don’t like the sport are doing your best to ignore
all the craziness, and would welcome my blog being the non-ball related haven
that it normally is.
But I have to say, in passing, before I leave the
world of overpaid games-playing behind, that I am very delighted to have two
weeks of women in white outfits at Wimbledon. It is shameful, and not very
modern of me, but it is an annual treat that I did not realise I had missed
quite so much in Summer 2020.
RC 30-6-21
Wednesday, 30 June 2021
Year, months-wise, half over
Tuesday, 29 June 2021
Traditions
With it being two years since we were able to watch
Wimbledon, how good it was to turn on the TV and see the covers on the courts
as the June rain battered down in SW19!!!
The weather has indeed become ‘typical British
Summer’ rather than ‘longed-for Mediterranean heatwave’. Every year we go
through this – getting excited in March about ‘the long six months of joy’
ahead, only to have our dreams drowned by a downpour in April and our enthusiasm
dimmed by dull skies heading into July.
I suppose today will
all be about England against Germany at the football Euros. A chance for
tabloid newspapers to break out decades-old prejudicial headlines and for fans
to sing chants about a rivalry that is so one-way it could be a street in
Yarmouth.
I have met many Germans in the past few years, and not one of them has ever
given me the impression that they consider England to be a major sporting
rival. My compatriots thinking we are a serious challenger to a successful Germany
is delusional. It’s like me thinking I’m a challenger to Albert Einstein for
the title ‘Greatest Physicist Ever’.
RC 29-6-21
Sunday, 27 June 2021
Strange brew
I am experiencing an odd mix of emotions today. I
feel very tired, and yet enthusiastically energised and almost tearful with hope.
I’m not sure how I’m feeling from one second to the next.
I might blame the vaccine, as I’ve had my first dose now. Can’t remember if I
told you about that or not, as my brain has felt a bit fuzzy since I had the
jab done. AstraZeneca was The Blood Clot One, but I don’t think I have a blood
clot. I just seem to have a brain clot. I keep forgetting things. I keep losing
track of time in weird ways. Concentration is a real issue and I seem to be
sleepy a lot of the time. Are those all side effects? Or is it just a combination
of the stress of learning a new job, relief at being vaccinated, and exhaustion
from the whole entirety of the pandemic?
I wish I knew, but it’s hard to answer that question when I keep losing focus
of my thoughts every thirty seconds or so.
Hey, ho. If it is caused by the injection, it’s still better than two weeks on
a Covid ward, right?
Right.
RC 27-6-21
Saturday, 26 June 2021
A review of a peach of a meeting
We had our management team get-together yesterday.
It’s the first time we’d all been together in one room, and there was no real
benefit to that if I’m honest. The whole thing could have been done via Zoom or
Teams and would have been just as beneficial and productive. Maybe more so,
because we wouldn’t all have had to take an afternoon off.
Anyway, Gavin was very happy with how the whole
thing went and seemed to take delight in casting his owner’s eyes out over the
room full of personalities that he has assembled to run his Empire for him.
And Empire might be the right word to use, because
he made a big speech about the possibility of expanding the company over the
next few weeks. I thought the whole point of him bringing me in was to give him
more time to spend with his family, but it seems the novelty must have worn off
because he is now spending all the extra time he has travelling around East
Anglia looking at other sites he might want to buy. He has his eye on a number
of seaside hotels that are currently unused and going to ruin and therefore
available quite cheaply.
One of the other people in the room spoke to me
later and said “Don’t worry – he does this sometimes. Gets all excited about
the idea of branching out and then realising later it’s impossible. Give him a
month and he’ll be on about something else.”
I hope that’s true. I like his set-up as it is now,
and I’d hate to see it endangered by him trying to make it bigger when it’s not
ready for it. But then – what the Hell do I know? I did physics, not economics,
and maybe right now is exactly the right time to be buying up more holiday
properties. God knows the ones we have are fully booked for months on end, and
it’s not exactly certain that foreign travel will open up fully any time in the
near future. There’s also a bunch of people looking to simplify their lives
post-Covid and not have so much responsibility and not spend so much time in
the rat-race, so maybe Gavin can pick the pockets of the ones who own hotels
and get himself a bargain by persuading them to enjoy an early retirement….
Anyway, my main
conclusion from the meeting was that we didn’t do anything we were supposed to
do. It was planned as a ‘finalising the management structure’ agenda and we
ended up losing the whole three hours to pipe dreams.
RC 26-6-21
Friday, 25 June 2021
Why "Comfortably Numb" is the best song ever
I have written this while a little drunk, after
watching Pink Floyd’s “Pulse” concert yet again. But what the Hell – I’ll post
it anyway:
Music can stir your soul. When music is at its best,
it connects with your soul directly. But this song goes beyond that – it makes
a connection with your soul, then lifts it out of your body, gently caresses it,
holds it up to God, squeezes it in its fist and then throws it back into you
with a forceful but caring slam.
Listening to it is not a musical encounter, it’s a
spiritual experience.
Everyone remembers the first time they heard it, and
the way they reacted to it. And every time you listen to it again, you find
something new to entrance you.
Why does it work? Who cares? It could be the
wonderful contrast between the two vocal styles used by the two singers. It could
be David Gilmour’s pain-soaked emotionally raw rendition of the title line. It
could be his sumptuous, almost-unarguably-never-bettered guitar solo. It could
be the way the instrumentation seems to gel perfectly with the tone of the lyrics.
It could be the fact that those lyrics are meaningful enough to bring tears to hardened
eyes and ambiguous enough to apply to everyone.
It could be the incredible third act, in which Gilmour’s guitar becomes another
voice, carrying on the tone of what came before and then screaming its way
through the final, dying moments of the track.
Or maybe it’s simply a combination of everything. A
culmination of the confluence of a collection of geniuses, working at the
height of their individual powers and lifting each other into a previously
unreached apex of artistic brilliance.
It is as close to perfection as you can get. Nothing
about it could be improved. Not one beat. Not one note. Every decision made was
the right one – from the strange pronunciation of the work ‘sick’ to the number
of notes the ‘I’ is held for before the last line of the chorus.
If you are reading this and are not familiar with the song I am speaking of,
then I implore to rectify that immediately. Find it, start it, sit back, close
your eyes and allow yourself to be taken to places you never knew existed; some
within you, some without.
It is beautiful beyond words.
RC 25-6-21
Wednesday, 23 June 2021
White line and red faces
Well, last night was quite an experience. Have you
ever seen a guy in his late 80s leap to his feet and look like he’s about to
put his fist through his own television? If so, then you’ve experienced
something very similar to what I went through with Ted.
I’m not a huge sports fan, as you know, but it was nice
to see that - having not being allowed back into a football stadium for well
over a year - England fans celebrated by booing the opposition’s National
Anthem and then singing abusive songs about the Scots. And when I say ‘nice’ I am
of course being sarcastic. So much for ‘football is one family’ and ‘we just
can’t wait to see live sport again’. Quick note to England’s players - there’s
no point taking the knee on the pitch if your fans are behaving like jingoistic
c**ts in the stands.
I distracted myself from the pain by making silly anagrams
of the names on the back of the players shirts. In a moment that brought a
proud smile to my face, I realised GREALISH can become SHAGLIER.
In other news – 16,500 new Covid cases reported in the
UK today? My prediction that we’ll be thrown into reverse on 5th
July is looking better and better.
RC 23-6-21
Monday, 21 June 2021
Solstice Shitstorm?
It doesn’t exactly feel like we’re approaching the
end of June, does it? Everyone I saw onsite today was wearing a coat. I suppose
that’s the downside of being on a caravan park that’s close to the sea – any hint
of a coastal breeze and you’re going to be ten degrees cooler than a few miles
inland.
I am committed to watching a game of football with Ted
tomorrow. Beryl spoke to Philippa at the weekend and said something along the
lines of “Can I please, for the love of God, borrow your husband to babysit my
husband during the England game? None of his offspring are available, and if I
have to sit here while he moans and swears his way through a 90-minute match I’m
liable to end up braining him with a saucepan.”
So, despite having as much interest in Euro 2020 as I
have in the contents of a Robbie Williams album, I shall be winging my way
Northwards in time for the 8pm kick-off.
We’re having a big
meeting at work at the end of the week. Gavin wants to have a ‘check-in’ get-together
to have a review of how the new management structure is working out, which is
funny, as we still haven’t been told exactly what we’re all responsible for, we’ve
just been mucking in and getting things done as they crop up. But there’ll be
food available, and it’ll be good to get ‘the team’ in one room and see how
they feel about my first three months or so in the job. Actually - it’s nearly
FOUR months. My God, how time flies when you’re constantly anxious and
white-knuckle-riding your way through the complexities of learning a new
position.
RC 21-6-21
Saturday, 19 June 2021
Weekends feel Weird
I don’t miss my time as a Filling Station
Sub-Division Sub-Area Sub-Par Mini-District Mini-Manager (or whatever the Hell
my job title was) but I do miss the familiarity of the routine I had while I
was doing it.
I’m settling in well at the new job (is it still
‘new’ a few months in???) but I haven’t yet got myself into a pattern of doing
certain things on certain days. This means that I spend most of the time just
dealing with things as they come up, and so there’s nothing to tell me what day
of the week it is. I think, with the seasonal nature of the industry, it might
take me a couple of years to start feeling comfortable with everything,
especially with the constantly changing fun and games of Covid restrictions and
travel uncertainties. In the supermarket retail game, there were certain busy
times of year, but there were also incredibly busy times of each week, and
those tended to be consistent. With holidays and holidaymakers, things tend to
be more haphazard and arbitrary (at least that’s my conclusion based on what
I’ve experienced so far).
Having said that, we do have set days for change
overs, so the site gets much more active on those days, and there’s a lot of
new people to deal with, but most of them are quite chilled about the process,
and everyone has an allocated arrival time so that, in theory, we won’t have a
backlog of people queueing up to collect their caravan keys.
I keep thinking I’ll be overwhelmed soon, because
we’re heading into the busy Summer period, but the truth is that we’re almost
at full capacity anyway, so it’s not as if we’ll suddenly be 40% busier come
mid-July. Unlike retail, there is a finite number of people we can have onsite
anyway – we’re never going to have more people here than there are beds
available, so in that way there’s an absolute limit to how over-run we might
be.
I guess all this is just nerves and uncertainty and
not yet feeling absolutely sure about myself and my new position. I’ll be fine
by 2024, I’m sure!
RC 19-6-21
Friday, 18 June 2021
Variant Sweepstake
Watching ‘The Delta Version’ wing it’s merry way
through the young and unvaccinated like a virus-infused knife through
unprotected butter, it’s obvious that we’ll have to face a return to
restrictions at some point in the not-too-distant future. That’s depressing, so
I thought I’d have some fun with it. I’m inviting people to join me in a little
game of ‘Pandemic Predictions’. It’s really simple. Just answer this question –
“On which date will Britain’s ‘irreversible’ roadmap have to be reversed?” All
you have to do is pay me £10 to enter, register your chosen day, and if you get
it exactly right, or if you’re the nearest guess in the event of no-one getting
it bang on, you win some money. Personally, I’m going for July 5th,
but you may think we’ll last longer. If you want to take part, just contact me
with your bank details so we can arrange payment of your entrance fee….
RC 18-6-21
Thursday, 17 June 2021
Fans
I have to say it’s nice to be in the middle of a
football tournament without having to deal with a bunch of
supermarket-visiting, replica-shirt-wearing, knuckle-dragging, lager-drinking,
obscenity-shouting, bile-spitting racist neanderthal thugs. I do not miss my days
of putting up flags around the garage in a display of mock patriotism and
selling multipacks of Carling to every man who stops in for petrol.
It was nice to be out of the sun today, but my God
it was muggy. Muggier than a big mug with a picture of someone’s mug on it. We
had the air-conditioning blasting in the office and I still felt like I was
dressed in thermals and a jumper. Maybe I’m ill….
I seem to have made a good impression so far at
work. I’ve managed to meet most of the staff at all three sites I’m sort-of
responsible for, and Gavin says they’ve all said very nice, complimentary
things about me. I’m not sure what those things might be, as the most I did on
any of my visits was to have a walk around and chat to people. Maybe they were
impressed by the way I wear my shoes….
RC 17-6-21
Tuesday, 15 June 2021
Up, Uppity, Upper
I am on the upturn of my usual mood swingings and
feeling optimistic about everything. Strange how the world does not really
change that much, but my perception of it, and thus my reaction to it, can
change in a matter of days.
Maybe I should buy a tent more often….
RC 15-6-21
Monday, 14 June 2021
Mega Moniker
One of the cleaning staff that works on swap-over
days at one of the sites I’m looking after is called Athena. I just wanted to
acknowledge in this blog the absolute joy I have at having met someone called
‘Athena the Cleaner’.
RC 14-6-21
Sunday, 13 June 2021
Canvas
We have bought a tent. A proper one. A decent,
family-sized one that we can have fun camping in, even if it’s just in our back
garden because the ongoing virus shenanigans prevent us from leaving the
County. It was second-hand, but in good condition. I think the couple bought it
with the idea of visiting lots of festivals last Summer, so it’s basically sat
in their garage while they’ve waited for everything to re-open again. In the
meantime, the lady of the house has had a change of heart and decided that spending
time living in a home that is basically a sheet, probably in the middle of a
muddy field, and almost certainly surrounded by suspect youths and
ne’er-do-wells is not something that she ever really found that attractive. So
they’re getting rid… so we swept in with a bid and now we have a tent.
I’m very excited about the prospect of giving it a
go at home sometime soon, but less excited about the idea of having to grapple
to erect the bloody thing, as the instructions seem to have been printed in a
language that doesn’t exist anywhere in Europe, and the accompanying pictures
are of a tent that is nothing like the one inside the packaging. But there we
are – life is an adventure, especially when you’re camping, so we’ll give it a
go on the back lawn soon and see how well we get on. It’s hard to know which is
more likely – Philippa and I falling out while trying to co-operate on putting
the thing up in the first place, or Philippa spending one night in it before
realising she hates the whole concept and vowing never to do it again.
RC 13-6-21
Thursday, 10 June 2021
Winter thoughts on Summer days
This may be bad planning, and an example of people
not learning the lesson of 2020, or it may be incredible foresight and
sensible, but either way we have booked and confirmed our Chesworth Christmas
Get Together. Hannah and Nathan, Sister Sophie, Philippa, Mathew and I
ensconced away in a delightful cottage, in which we shall enjoy the Yuletide
season together and overindulge to the point of explosion. It’s done, it’s
decided, and it’s a nice thing to look forward to, whatever the Vaccine Rollout
and Pandemic Palaver of the coming months might bring.
RC 10-6-21
Tuesday, 8 June 2021
Optimism fades, like a sunset
I am watching the daily rates of infection go up and
mentally preparing myself for Lockdown 4.
Sorry for the pessimism, but I fear that once again
the un-rules-following British public and the un-lessons-learning British
government are inadvertently conspiring to send up all back down Coronavirus
Cul-de-Sac.
It’s never good to project ahead, especially given
the ever-changing nature of the pandemic situation as we’ve been experiencing
it for over a year now, but I do find myself looking a month or so down the
road and seeing a time where I am fielding hundreds of angry phone calls from
wannabe tourists who have had their holidays cancelled yet again. I also –
admittedly in the dark of night when my soul is at its darkest – find myself
looking further ahead still and seeing a time where life in England has taken
on an irreversibly altered state and we’re all limited to seeing people who
live within a 6-metre radius of our feet. I shouldn’t be so glum, I guess.
We’ve survived pretty well up to this point, and it’s not as if the virus is
becoming unavoidable or becoming a guaranteed death sentence, but it’s hard not
to be dragged down into the Pessimism Pit that is constantly being refilled and
stirred by newspapers, politicians trying to make a name for themselves and 95%
of the people on social media.
I had a chat recently with a guy who has a Ph.D. in
Evolutionary Biology, and he was convincingly arguing that SARS-Cov-2 (the actual
virus name, he kept insisting – ‘Covid-19’ being the disease it causes, and ‘coronavirus’
being a term for a whole group of similar viruses) could very well be The Pandemic
That Ends Humanity. (I’ve capitalised each of those words to emphasise their
impact. And because it looks like a cool title for a low-budget sci-fi, or a
novel.) He reckons we haven’t learnt enough about it, and we haven’t treated it
with the respect it deserves, and we keep assuming we’re getting on top of it,
when in reality it may just be toying with us for a while before unleashing a
mutation that we’re defenceless against. Or – Option 2 on his Agenda of Happy
Outcomes – we have to go on living under increasingly more extreme
restrictions, to the point where our modern way of life breaks down and the
whole world collapses in the style of the Roman Empire.
I can see it
happening, if I’m honest. We’re so far down the road of relying on a certain scope
of existence that if that were to be dismantled in some way, we’d be
ill-prepared to cope. Am I making any sense now or am I just stringing words
together that sound like they’re scientific and well thought through, when in
fact they’re just the rambling spoutings of a Man on the Edge of a Breakdown?
I’ll stop typing now, before we find out for sure.
RC 8-6-21
Monday, 7 June 2021
Natural inundation
Our house seems to have been invaded by flies. I
know it’s an expected by-product of living in the country, but it seems to be
much worse at the moment than it’s been at any time since we’ve lived here.
Simultaneously, our garden seems to have become populated by every bloody
pigeon in Suffolk. It’s as if wood pigeons and houseflies have formed an
alliance, and at their first planning meeting it was unanimously decided that
they would henceforth all live at Chez Chesworth.
Bastards.
I don’t mind the birds, other than the fact that
they shit everywhere and keep other birds away from the feeders, but the flies
are a pestilence and a nuisance. Sit still for more than five seconds and you
feel them crawling up your arm. Dare to make yourself a sandwich, and there’ll
be half a dozen winged gits joining you in the feast and helping themselves to
your breadcrumbs. I put up two fly strips on Sunday, and they’re both full, and
still there seem to be more flies than there were at the weekend. It’s never-ending.
A never-ending onslaught of insects. There’ll be ten buzzing around the
kitchen, I’ll successfully swat eight of them, only to turn around and see
there are now twelve flying over the cooker. Are they hiding behind saucepans
and only coming out when one of their brethren is assassinated, so there’s a
continual stream of them making my surfaces unsanitary and driving me slowly
insane? Wouldn’t surprise me. Bastards.
I’m seriously considering buying some spiders.
RC 7-6-21
Sunday, 6 June 2021
Hot and Happy
It’s been another splendiferous Sunday, full of family
fun and serene sunbathing.
I did a bit of a roast and I have to say it was a triumph. A silly idea to have the oven going at 200 Celsius on a hot Summer’s day, but there you go. I kept the windows open and nipped in and out as I needed to. Silverside really is a joyous invention, and now we’re using a decent butchers instead of buying the shit from the supermarket with my discount card, it’s better than ever. Roast potatoes soaked in gravy are a thing of Heaven, and I can’t believe I ever used to eat carrots without covering them in honey first. Still, we live and learn.
Mathew has loved being able to play outside with
very little clothing on. Philippa kept fussing after him and trying to drown
him in sun cream, but he just treated that like a game and kept hiding behind the
bench. I wasn’t concerned about him getting a bit of sun on his body, I was
more worried by his determination to chase bumble bees around. This may be bad
parenting, but I did wonder if it would be best to let him grab one and get
stung, as I can’t imagine he’d want to do it again.
RC 6-6-21