Wednesday 30 November 2011

December's Project - The Festive Photo Frenzy.






Well, hello!

As promised this morning, I've been thinking about a project for December.
I am aware that I'm rapidly developing a reputation for being a Scrooge/Grinch type character, which feels a little bit unfair... I don't hate Christmas at all, but I do hate the commercialism which surrounds it, and the fact that the hype starts so early.

As far as I'm concerned, Christmas starts in December, and personally I wouldn't put the tree up until a fortnight before the big day, largely because of pine-needle hell (takes a tree, central heating and cats to create!) That aside, I love Christmas, and all is trappings. It's just not so much fun these days, and full of memories. Phil was a total Christmas fanatic, we had a loft full of decorations, all of which stir up emotions I tend to lock tightly away. So Christmas is ....difficult.

Over the last few years, I've ignored Christmas, volunteered at a Crisis Christmas Homeless Shelter, and avoided any of the places we went in the past. None of these made it better, but they did enable me to cope. Last year I had a Christmas Tree, and I decorated it. It nearly destroyed me, did that little tree. So many memories, so much happiness... so far away.

*sigh*

As December approaches, planning Christmas and New Year parkruns has pushed Christmas firmly into the picture, and it occurs to me that perhaps I should approach things differently this year. I'm not going to ignore Christmas, nor am I going to soak myself in it until I nearly drown.  I'm going to try to make some new memories, savour some of the old memories, and to enjoy what is happening around me.

One of the things that I'm going to do in order to try and ensure this happens, is to take photos of things which are festive - anything which makes me smile and has a vaguely festive theme. And I'd like to share this project:
One photo of something festive to be put up on my blog everyday in December - a record of the mission which regaining my Christmas Spirit will be.
I'm calling this project  Festive Photo Frenzy and you're all invited to join in.
One photo a day, of something festive in your world. If you like, a couple of lines of explanation!

I've made a button, and a grab box, and everything, so if you fancy it, please have a go - pop the button on your blog, leave a comment, and I'll .... be really grateful!!



GRAB THE BUTTON HERE - copy and paste the contents of the text box.....









Day 30 - 3 wonderful things that happened this month

First things first - the most wonderful thing is that I actually completed the 30DHN project. OK, so some posts went up late, some were left with huge gaps in and filled in later, but they were all done. And possibly as a result, I have gone from having 3 followers to having 7. I can cross of one of the tasks from my '50' list, and I actually - for the most part - enjoyed it! It's surprising how difficult it is to find time everyday to put a few lines together, and it's very easy to leave the blog un-touched for days.  It really helped to have a focus for each day's post so a huge "Thank You!" to Desiree Fawn for her beautiful blog from which this idea originated.

So Fawned 30 Days Hath November


And now for something which some people wouldn't give even a second glance to:

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Photographer: Iain Morton
My companion for all 4 parkruns this month has been the lovely Matilda Stockwell. Possibly better known to the world at large as Lime, this little one actually seems to have perfectly content to spend 30 or so minutes at a frighteningly early hour every Saturday perched on my shoulders, or on my hip, or even tucked under my arm! I've really enjoyed looking after her, and feel kinda honoured that her Mama trusts me enough to leave her in my care - thanks Dani!
The reason that this is wonderful, other than the things I've said above, is that I don't generally like Baby children (they're fine once they can talk, and are responsible for their own toilet needs!) but this particular Babe has captivated me somewhat... and I'm looking forward to seeing her grow! 
Also, as the picture below shows, we've now reached the point where Lime is actually having fun whilst the parents punish themselves enjoy themselves on the parkrun course!

rdp 22 - n,d,s
Photographer: Lucy Wernham


The Third wonderful thing that this month has held was the discovery of the mooncup. I'm not going to go into great details here - just want to say that as an alternative to tampons/sanitary towels, the mooncup is life-changingly fabulous. (and it's environmentally friendly!) if you want to know more, click here.

PMT - Jacky Fleming


And so we are at the end of November... but maybe not at the end of daily blogging... watch this space...

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Day 29 - Some place I'd like to visit

There are many places I'd like to visit - at the moment the idea of somewhere remote and stark is appealing - which probably says something about my current state of mind!

I'd like to visit somewhere where there are puffins - preferably not in a touristy way.

The Outer Hebredes, The Western Isles of Scotland, Scoma - any of those places would be fab.
I've always loved Puffins, from having seen them on TV in a documentary as a kid (and of course 'Huffin' & 'Puffin' in the Enid Blyton classic The Sea of Adventure !!) and would so like to photograph them myself. I think some time in a very low tech wilderness type environment would be great - I'm feeling overloaded with life at the moment ....*goes to check calendar....ahhh. yes. that's why....* I'd like chance to detox!

They have the funky beaks!!

& they do the thing with the top to tail fish
 Of course, I also want to go to New Zealand.....

Monday 28 November 2011

Day 28 - A skill I'd like to learn

Ummm - Time management???

Seriously.
I'd like to learn how to use photoshop properly, and how to edit photos take in RAW...

I'd like to learn how to plaster a wall and any number of DIY skills.

My DIY attempts to date....


I'd like to learn how to get enough sleep.

(I can't believe it's only monday!)

Sunday 27 November 2011

Day 27 - Myself, 1 year ago

Saturday 27th November 2010.

It being a Saturday, it was a parkrun day.
It being 2010, it was a Banstead Woods parkrun.
Me being me, I was volunteering, at the finish line as the backup timer, & taking photos.
and of course, as is the case for all the BWp photos at that time, I have copies in the archive on my external hard drive.

This is what I found:

End of lap one for the lead runners - Chris Phelan running his first parkrun after a 5.5 month layoff. He was really nervous! First picture shows me shouting encouragement at one of the nicest people I know, having taken photos of his approach.

IMG_2712 - Copy
Photograph by Nick Cresswell (I think!)

Then we have a series of multi-tasking shots - cheering, timing and taking photos - all is cool as long as I remember which button I'm pressing, when!

27th nov 2010
Photographer: Nick Cresswell

Once it was all over, it would appear that I walked back to the car park with a triumphant Mr Banstead Woods. If my memory serves me well (and it usually does) we were having an intense step by step deconstruction of the run Chris had just done, followed by a discussion about the progress being made with the set-up of Riddesdown.

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Photo by Andy Stalley

For the record, RDp wouldn't have happened without Chris Phelan's support - it was a really lengthly process, with discussions involving a whole lot of land management teams - and I'm not calm enough to stay patient through all of that. Chris was a great source of ideas, and we owe our event to his encouragement and enthusiasm.

Saturday 26 November 2011

Day 26 - Something I'm looking forward to...

This one is so simple:

The End of Term!

Friday 25 November 2011

Day 25 - The contents of my purse

Hooray - an easy one!

First of all purse = actual cash and cards receptacle, or handbag?

Well, one is inside the other, so can do both  - mwahahaha!

The bag is a purple Kipling one (because I love the monkey keyrings) and has lots of zippy pockets.

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In the main compartment, the following things are stuffed:
  • Brown leather purse*
  • An almost empty water bottle
  • An orange (nom nom nom)
  • An empty compact flash card case
  • An 8gb SD card
  • A yellow highlighter pen
  • Pink quilted 'Amy Florence' pouch, containing parkrun registration scanner
  • Hot Air Balloon 'Amy Florence' pouch containing parkrun dongle, and my dongle.
  • The Blackberry
  • Old Morrisons' receipt (for £52.78 - that's a lot in Morrison terms)
  • Ibuprofen Box (which actually contains co-codamol)
  • Dry-wipe board pen
  • New cheque book, still in envelope
  • Small Welsh flag on a cocktail stick (was decorating a cheese board in Snowdon)
  • A hard boiled sweet (from a thai restaurant)
  • Two lil-lets. (when I wanted them, could never find them!)
  • A ring pull from a drink can
  • 65p
  • Some dust.
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In the big front compartment:



  • A photo of me and Phil
  • A folded up flyer from Belt Up's 2010 season at the Southwark Playhouse
  • A very bent nail file
  • 3 rubber headphone ends.
  • 2 hair slides
  • 3 tooth picks (?!?)
  • 1 dymo printer label thing saying 'hoya' (I know why. I'm not telling.)



In the inner back pocket:
  •  A pair of Gore running gloves
  • A tiny sparkly note book
  • An NCP ticket from Fairfeld Halls
  • Ticket from LOTR marathon showing at BFI imax
  • Money off vouchers foe 'Hampshire's finest Gardens'
  • A broken yellow lanyard
  • Two old  teabags, one leaking tea-leaves
  • AA battery
  • A large paper clip
  • A fake moustache 
  • A small luminous cat sticker
  • tea leaves....grrrr
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In the small top pocket:
    _MG_3460


  • Ticket from Southwark playhouse - with total cost of £287.30 - school trip, I guess!
  • Thread Bear Loyalty Card (I don't believe I've ever been there!)
  • Torn ticket stub from HP 7 part 1.
  • £10 note - love it when that happens
  • Red squeaker from Red Nose Day several years ago (Phil put it there to make me laugh. It does!)


*And in the purse itself: 
  • Tesco vouchers
  • Tesco points coupons
  • 5 first class stamps
  • My Driving Licence
  • A Lottery Ticket from the day after my 40th birthday  (it may have won, I haven't checked - numbers are 02,03,04,18,19,36, was for main draw on 10th August...)
  • Train Ticket from Kenley to Newcastle - souvenir from the GNR.
  • Cafe Nero and Wild Bean Cafe loyalty cards
  • A business card for the Rt Rev'd MArtyn Douglas(!)
  • A cheque I never paid in (has a v important passcode written on the back)
  • Cash (some of which came from the main body of the bag a minute ago
  • Cards:  Priory Farm loyalty card; Oyster Card; Debit Card; Tesco Club Card; Credit Card; Old Orleans Discount Card; Boots Advantage Card; Fusion Card; EDF thank you card.
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Wow. A lot of stuff. And where, please, are my keys.....anyone???? * panic*.......

Thursday 24 November 2011

Day 24 - Something that means a lot to me.

Ok, so there are all the obvious answers, friends, cats, parkrun, family, my job etc, all of which have already had an airing during this month of crazy blogging. I don't particularly want to repeat any of the things I've said in previous posts - although a spot of cutting and pasting would save a lot of time... Anyway, I kind of had a idea for this post a week or so ago, and had half written it - in my head of course - God forbidden and heaven forfend the pre-writing of blog posts *ahem* - earlier this week.

And then there was yesterday. Yesterday was a day trip to Hell, entered by the portal of the gynaecologist's den. Among other things, this delightful little experience made me think again about things that mean a lot to me. Unfortunately, the tone of a post which goes with this train of thought is going to be somewhat different to the initially planned one. It occurred to me that there are probably a number of people out there who may not want to know about the evils of hysteroscopies and who may flinch away from mentions of stirrups...and then it occurred to me that anyone reading this blog can probably handle it!

Mind you, they may not WANT to handle it.
So, there are two sections to Day 24 of 30DHN. Those of a sensitive disposition (particularly male persons of a sensitive disposition) should probably not read past the first section of the following. You've been warned!


I'm guessing that people who know me are expecting a tree-hugging hippy type response here. Well, prepare to be amazed, because the thing that means a lot to me is my mobile phone.


At this moment in time, it happens to be a blackberry, but through the years I've felt similarly about every phone I've owned - from the face changing nokia (I SOOOOO loved that phone) to a variety of other nokias, to the motorola razr - in pink (what was I thinking? my least favorite phone ever!) to the joys of the sony-ericsson walkman phone, to the present bb (and the future android or iphone, doubtless!)
The phone of the moment, whatever it may be is important because of what it represents - contact with the people I care about. Having a (reliable) mobile meant that I could stay in touch with Phil whilst gallivanting around in the West-Midlands, it meant we never had to worry when one of us was later than expected (which only happened, oh, five times a week) and via the magical medium of text messaging it meant many a rapidly smothered burst of laughter during meetings and late late rehearsals. Towards the end, our phones allowed us to communicate continuously, allowing me to get some work done whilst he was in hospital, and ensuring I had a means to communicate the bizarre tidbits of everyday life which made him smile. It also meant when I was needed, I could be there, fast.
My phone has many photos - it's always with me, even when my camera isn't. It contains phone numbers of everyone I need to contact, ensures people can always reach me, and as the sophistication has increased, has games to while away the hours, internet access, and email access. I can always contact people, and they can always contact me. The blackberry has removed the 'no webmail' scenario at school (virtually every member of staff has a smart phone these days. All the kids do!) and also has allowed my twitter addiction to flourish. When the blackberry servers went down, I had a horrible couple of days... although it was also strangely peaceful... feeling very cut off from the world.
My phone also has all sorts of info stored, contacts, passwords and dates - all backed up on the computer, but even so, without my phone, I feel naked. and helpless... I suspect some kind of detox may be required!


The second version - Not for the faint-hearted (or squeamish)

So, got a lie in on Wednesday. Bonus. And why was this, I hear you cry.... 'twas because I had an appointment in the middle of the day for a hysteroscopy and (possibly) a polypectomy.
I wasn't exactly looking forward to the 'procedure' (very few women of my acquaintance relish the prospect of removing the clothing from the lower half of their person, lying on a trolley bed with their feet in stirrups whilst a latex gloved (usually male) member of the medical profession peers into areas which shall remain nameless - for now! and that's before anything is inserted to scan, probe, remove samples or have a better look) but the amount of blood I lose every month, coupled with some very spectacular pain is starting to seriously inhibit my life.
I don't really feel that I should have to take three or four set of clothing to work with me, or constantly buy new knickers because of all the pairs that have been totally wrecked by my period each month. Spending 3 days curled up in a ball of pain each month and trying not to kill anyone who gets in my way isn't too much fun either. An unpleasant but not intolerable set of ultrasound scans (internal and external - oh yay!) had created a bit of panic, but a whole heap of blood tests had calmed that down, and I first met my gynae consultant knowing that I have a chocolate cyst (oh the irony!!) on my left ovary - which is probably the source of a lot of the pain - a thickened endometriotal layer (mild endo has been an ongoing diagnosis) and some kind of mass in my womb. The blood tests said all the cancer markers were normal, so no active malignancy, and in all probability a fibroid or a polyp nothing more sinister.
Mr Latex (as he shall be known - you never know who reads these things!) had declared that a proper look with a camera was required, and as I tend to be vvv ill after a General Anaesthetic, he suggested that have it done with only mild pain relief as an outpatient would be cool.
Long story short, it wasn't cool. At all. It fucking hurt. (apparently, not so bad once you've had a vaginal birth - that's helpful, right?) Having the cervix forcibly dilated when it's never been dilated before is definitely not a fun thing. And for those of us who are allergic to local anaesthetic, it's basically torture. I requested - without screaming or swearing - that things stop, at the point where the cervix had been opened, and fluid pumped in to complete the dilation process. Mr Latex did as asked - fortunately - but the pain was worse as he pulled his instruments out, and the room went black - apparently I announced very clearly 'I'm going to pass out' and did so. When I came round, it was to utter bedlam. The bp and heart rate monitors had alarms going off - heart rate over 200bpm, bp at something like 194/152, all very very bad news. Mr Latex is shouting for oxygen - which is rapidly on my face - and my leg is somehow trapped under one of the stirrups. The bp monitor was removed, and they took it in the old school way - not so high - dangerously low in fact. Pulse rate also plummeted as I came round. Oops. Maybe should have gone for the GA route.
The initial verdict was that some kind of tonic/colonic seizure had occured, brought on by the pain, and that as I had a similar episode five years ago, (which led to a set of epilepsy investigations, all of which led to nothing, and I have a letter from a neurologist saying my brain is normal!!) Mr Latex felt that I shouldn't drive and should be referred to a neurologist immediately. And yes. GA and inpatient procedures only from here onwards.
I left (and drove home, in spite of the 'advice') feeling very very scared. It didn't occur to me that he might have it wrong, and in my mind a minimum of a six month driving ban was inevitable, along with more hospital trips. At this point, I was feeling very sorry for myself, battered and bruised (try having a 'tonic/colonic episode' when you're strapped into stirrups and see how your legs look afterwards!) and as if I'd been kicked in the gut repeatedly.
Once I got home, before Kaye arrived to chase away the demon of depression with cake and fish & chips (note the order of that list!) I had something of an epiphany. It suddenly occurred to me how much my health means to me. Initially this was kind of a negative, fearful, 'how will I cope without it' experience, and as the painkillers wore off, the abdo  pains increased, and I could barely sit up, let alone walk anywhere.
This morning, after a sleepless night, I got myself to the doctor's surgery, and my lovely GP fitted me into his already full schedule. His approach was somewhat different to Mr Latex's, as he pointed out that a fit wouldn't have been over in less than a minute, I wouldn't have been lucid and coherent as soon as I came out of it, and if my blood pressure had really been as high as the initial readings suggested, I would have sustained permanent damage, possibly a stroke or a heart attack. (as I have a heart murmur!) The very low readings were more likely to be accurate, as he diagnosed a vasa-vagal faint, not a seizure... The stomach cramps are apparently normal after the intrusion into the cervix, and some mighty painkillers have been administered. Much as I hate taking pills, they may have saved my life today!

So, all's well that ends well? Kind of. I can still drive - although I am intending to try and walk more as a way of life. And I've decided something. I need to do everything in my power to preserve and nurture my health. I do not want to be constantly functioning at 90%, in and out of hospitals and doctor's waiting rooms. So, no more fannying about (pardon the pun!) with the occasional healthy eating day, and a half-arsed exercise regieme. I am going to get fit, and lose weight. I can't change the gynae problems, or the heart murmur, but I can look after what I've got. No more excuses! So there.

IMG_4776
BW parkrun, in thinner, fitter, days!
Photo by Richard Carter

Day 23 - 8 things you didn't know about me (although they may have been revealed in the blog!)

Found this really difficult - everyone who knows me knows almost everything about me - to quote Amy 'you're an open person. Whatever's going on, you broadcast it all on radio Nicki' which is her way of saying I talk too much! The things that aren't 'broadcast' are not for public consumption, and are NOT going on the blog... Dilemma!!!

Here goes:

  • As a child I had an imaginary friend called Marley Whale. I can only guess that her name came from 'Bob Marley and The Wailers' - and I have only the foggiest memory of her presence in my life
    _MG_3431
  • I have a doll who was new on the same day as me - her name is Looby Loo, and she went everywhere with me - if I was feeling a bit insecure, I'd pop her in my school bag. (no, not recently!) I still have her, she now lives in a Christmas Stocking made of felt (thanks Kez) and although she looks somewhat the worse for wear, she still gets hugged when I'm feeling rotten, and she is much loved! 
  • My passport went out of date in the year 2000 and I haven't gotten round to renewing it. I love England and tend to justify my laziness with the passport by saying that I haven't been to half of the places in this country that I want to, so why so do I need to go abroad?
  • I HATE airplanes. I hate flying in them (Although the idea of hang gliding or paragliding is AMAZING!) I react badly to the change in air pressure, and (joy of joys) my ears bleed. (there may be a link between the lack of passport and the fear of flying!)
  • I was determined not to be a teacher. All the way through school people suggested that this was my ideal career, but I wanted to be a journalist. (given the issues I have with deadlines, this is a non-starter!) I continued to insist that I wasn't going to teach (English Lit was always the suggested subject) right the way through university, during the time I spent in Spain (went to learn the language, taught the entire village of Sant Fileu de Guixols - perfect English, and came back with a smattering of swear words in Catalan!) right up until I went Warwick to do my PGCE. I think the deciding factor for me was working with West Sussex County Youth Theatre, and realising that I could teach Drama.... and thus it all began.
  • I never wanted to have children - but spend most of my time with other peoples. Or to put it another way: 'Mummy Clark has hundreds of children. They all live in the world of Drama' (Steven Sayer!)
  • I'm scared of earwigs. (evil little fuckers, might crawl in your ears and eat your brain)
  • I may, possibly, have left the parkrun volunteer vests on the line last night!

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Tuesday 22 November 2011

Day 22 - Some place I've traveled

To the land of Nod....
(aka: the journey up the wooden hill to bedfordshire)

when I return from this epic voyage, I will do something vaguely sensible in this post.
maybe!

Monday 21 November 2011

Day 21 - Something I could never tire of.

Hmm. Not as easy as it sounds, this one.
Once all the obvious things - chocolate, cake, sleep, air, etc - are discounted, it's kind of hard to think of something which, seriously, I can't imagine getting sick of, or at least mildly irritated by.

I was going to say my kitteh cats... who I love love love...

2011-09-03


but after the night of hell that sleepless purry ones gave me last night, (I actually put them both outside at 3am. Then felt guilty so had to go and find them ... I'm off kitteh-co-sleeping at the moment!) it dawned on me that they make me tired, even if I could never really tire of them.

Taking photos is definitely on the list - it's a relatively recent addition to my life (I hope that if Phil is watching from somewhere, he's laughing!) I used to be the one who tutted impatiently whilst waiting for someone to take his photos so we could move on... and I've actually said: 'Why don't you go and DO stuff, rather than stand on the edge spectating and taking pictures' more than once in my time ... and I hate having my photo taken still. However, somewhere along the line, the bug for photos bit me (the all-conquering rise of digital photography was involved...) I wish I had more pics of Phil .. and yes, he did tell me so, although not quite in that context. Now I rarely go anywhere without my camera... and hope to improve my skills in the near future. However - it's not top of the pile owing to all the times I've felt hassled beyond belief to get a set of pictures edited and online - not usually for parkrun, but for school events, family events, etc - and the assumption that I'll take photos and process pics quickly for someone else's use occasionally makes me want to leave the camera at home.

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Relatively new friends, at least one of whom shares & exceeds my obsessive love of photography.
Dani may not like this photo, but Steve used the one I had in mind originally - the love in the Stockwell family is so strong it's visible - and it brightens up the world on a Saturday morning!
Next on the list is friends. (Some of whom I may happen to be related to!) I can honestly say that without my friends - both old and new - my life would not be up to much. When things have been bad, when things have been good, when I've been busy beyond belief, or locked in a cycle of inactivity (it happens!) someone(s) has always been there. When things have been  ... bad, and being on my own has been the only way through, they've been patient and waited for me to resurface. The friends of long standing - know who they are. The newer (mainly parkrun based) friends may not entirely realize how much they are appreciated - so Dani, Steve, (& of course, young Lime!) it feels like a lot more than 21 weeks, in the best possible way. New friends and old friends, those I'm still getting to know - the conversation, the laughter, the tears, the support, the supporting - what goes around comes around, and this particular cycle is one I will never tire of!

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A photo which shows both laughter (look closely in the top left hand corner)
and friends - sharing the love at a post parkrun photo display. 
Laughter...
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well, it made Lime laugh!
Another thing which never grows old. Laughter makes everything better (unless it's mocking, I suppose - although, to be fair, even when someone is laughing at me, I still enjoy the sound of laughter - weird? probably!) many a gloomy day has been saved from descent into despair by something ridiculous (my sense of humour isn't ...usual!) and I've spent many a hours helpless with laughter - in the company of friends. It's good for the soul!


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Mama & Baba




and Love.


Love may seem a strange thing for me to say - but there are many types of love, and I firmly believe that it's what makes the world go round - life is all about love... on so many levels.






and finally... (at long long last!!) learning. 
(yeh yeh, spot the teacher...) Not necessarily of the academic sort - although an MA or a photography 'A' Level are definitely possibilities for the next year or so. For me, learning is all about new skills, new ideas, developing and growing as a person. It's about not just brushing off weaknesses by saying 'that's who I am. that's how I am' but trying to understand what creates them, and to change constantly for the better. It's about not being fixed into one set of ideas and ideals, but being willing to listen and learn, and accept that there are other philosophies, being willing to try different ways. It's kind of about never saying never. It's about reading, researching, investigating, listening, responding, and first and foremost about growing. (I have a very learned stomach!) It's also - and this is the job - about helping others to explore their own pathways, sometimes giving them the tools to find out for themselves, sometimes pointing the way, sometimes encouraging, sometimes rescuing, sometimes simply standing back and giving them space. Always, about supporting, and listening.
For me, without the desire to seek, discover, think, understand and explore life, learning all the way (I hope) life really would be over - may I never tire of wanting to learn.

Ooer. That all got a bit heavy!!

for the blog
Some learning - deep thought/sharing knowledge/learning from those who know more!!!
and proof that I'm trying to learn to look at photos of myself without dying.




Sunday 20 November 2011

Day 20 - A Childhood Anecdote

I'm fairly sure that I have hundreds of childhood tales to tell, of varying degrees of interest - but I seem to be out of words....

For now, a picture of me as a wee thing (I'm assured that that is me ... scary!)



Ok, a story came to me in a sleepless moment *ahem - night *

Like the picture, I'm dependent on the words of others that this actually happened, because I don't remember it:

End of summer term, 1976. I'm in Nursery School. Everyone else has gone home, but my Mum hasn't arrived. Apparently I informed the teacher, in a very self-possessed manner, that my Mummy is always late at the moment, and that I think she'd be happier if she could just put me in a cage until it cools down. When asked why I thought that, I responded that I'd heard my Grandad say that to her, and she'd agreed. We went to the door to look along the driveway and see if she was coming. My teacher asked what my Mum looked like, and I responded with 'she's very fat'
Eventually my 8 and a half months pregnant mother arrived - and had to go and have a 'chat' with the teacher...
From which she emerged looking somewhat flustered, having explained to the teacher that she didn't make a habit of locking me up - I'd spent the whole day climbing up trees and having to be rescued, which on one of the hottest days of the year was something of a trauma for a very heavily pregnant woman - hence she'd called my Grandad for help, and he'd made the (joking) suggestion that I'd overheard.
Fortunately for everyone concerned, no further investigation occurred - the fact that I'd said 'fat' rather 'pregnant' had me cast as an unreliable narrator, which seems somewhat unfair, as it was accurate, just incomplete!

The fact that I was 4 years old, and can't even remember the event at all, has not in any way reduced the amount stick my family have given me...even now, when the mood takes them!

Saturday 19 November 2011

Friday 18 November 2011

Day 18 - What I wore today

I didn't get dressed today.
I wore a duvet, and stayed in bed.
It was great.

(WARNING: some of the above may in fact be lies!)

Ok, so I didn't really stay in bed today - but I wanted to, which is nearly the same thing, right?

At some point last year, some bright spark decided that she didn't wear a dress/skirt often enough, or something like that, so in order to prove to the world that she actually is a girl (or at least, owns girl's clothing) Madam created 'Frock Friday' and invited/cajoled/threatened other be-trousered females in the hope of sharing her discomfort. I managed to steer well clear of this, but our Lucy is a persistent individual, and when I was struggling for the last few things on my '50 list' she popped the words 'frock friday' into the atmosphere at just the right moment. Now I have to wear a skirt or a dress at least twice a month. *sigh*

So, here is what I wore today:




Please note - there are already enough pictures of me in this blog. Photo of my clothes is just fine!
No more skirts til December. Ha!

Thursday 17 November 2011

Day 17 - My Family

My Family
In Photographic Form

The Ones who share the same gene pool
(August 28th 2011)
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The Parents


bank holiday picnic

The Brother, the Sister-in-Law, the Niece & the Nephew


Collages

The Matriarch and (some of) her off-spring


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A few of the cousins, both first and second


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The Loonies
(photo by Pete Clark)



The Ones who share the same passions
(whatever those might be!)
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The Drama Family

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The Grown-Up Drama Family


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The Ones that climbed a mountain
('almost' family, and Bryony Jane)

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Friends - The Ones who are the family of choice



The Ones that share the Home
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The Furry Family - Frankie & Peggy




There are many other people who could have featured here - but it had to stop somewhere! The parkrun family had yesterday's blog - and anyone else who is feeling left out - I love you!

Wednesday 16 November 2011

Day 16 - Someone who inspires me.

One of my lovely lovely students, Mary says she is my inspiration. Ellie (another lovely student - who was straightening her hair at the time) says 'Your students are your inspiration.'
I'm not disputing this, actually, but I've already done a post about the wonders of my job, and this post is all about parkrun!

By Friday morning, I'm generally really struggling. Getting out of bed is the equivalent of climbing Everest, and all I want to do is curl up somewhere warm and dark, preferably with chocolate. At this point, everyone else is saying 'ah well, lie in tomorrow' - and I'm looking forward to another early morning - same time as normal - at Warlingham, to set up for parkrun.

Strangely, I don't struggle to get up on a Saturday (at least, not as much as usual!) and when I get into the car, I'm genuinely looking forward to the morning ahead. I've turned up at Riddlesdown with streaming colds, head aches, stomach cramps, the works, and still, I've really enjoyed it - rain, sun, fog...  it's great. When things go wrong - technical stuff, practical stuff, mud-based stuff - whatever! - it's not a trauma, it's a challenge, and it gets solved by team work. The Riddlesdown parkrun team are amazing. The volunteers, who are so willing, so able, and so encouraging; The runners, who put so much effort into the process, running through pain, pushing themselves to do better and doing it with enthusiasm.

And so now we come to the inspirational bit.

I am inspired by every single man woman child (and dog) who is involved with Riddlesdown parkrun. The eagerness to help, the enthusiasm for the event, the feeling of comradeship and sense of belonging that they engender. The laughter, the generosity, the support and the effort - the sense of having achieved something together. Watching pale faces turn pink, seeing the breathing getting harder - blood sweat and tears (and occasionally other bodily fluids) spent in the name of parkrun. Every week, a different combination of volunteers swing into action, and everything just happens... we've had to carry the cart back when the wheel came off, rake piles of grass of of 2km of course before 9am, run through thick fog with zero visability, and all of these things have been accomplished without complaint, with smiles, and above all, through team work.

Before the event, during the event, sorting the kit, at the pub afterwards - these guys remind me that life is worth living. As individuals they have become friends, and I enjoy their company. As athlete they show me that it  is all about the taking part. And as volunteers they prove that anything is possible.

Truly inspirational ...The Riddledown parkrun (dare I say it) family. Thank you all.

(photos will be added shortly!)

An Ode to Movember and all who wish they were hairier

For Steve and anyone else whose mo is saying 'No'!

There was an Old Man with a beard
Who said, it is just as I feared!
Two Owls and a Hen, four Larks and a Wren,
Have all built their nests in my beard.
By Edward Lear



Tuesday 15 November 2011

Day 15 - some style inspiration for the season

This puzzled me - my style is decidedly uninspired.
Someone suggested a scarecrow.
Oh how I laughed.

& then I remembered something.  


THE TRASH HEAP
(aka 'Marjory' from the TV extravaganza that was 'Fraggle Rock') 


She is my God!
I loved her character - bossy and demanding, a kind of Oracle the Fraggles visited for advice, which she would dispense liberally, often in the form of a song. She had squeaky little 'trash-heap bitches'/acolytes  who said: 'The Trash Heap has spoken, mehhhhhhh!' after every pronouncement she made.

Her look is one you could say I have achieved - I think there is still room for improvement, and an trying hard to reach her level!

Seriously, what's not to love!And here's a special bonus:

Video of Madam Trash Heap at the height of her sartorial elegance -the clip is worth watching 'til the end for the immortal 'the trash heap as spoken - mehhh' moment!



And here she is singing and advising... Little things make me happy!




*contented sigh*


Monday 14 November 2011

Day 14 - a favorite film.

I don't often watch films.
This doesn't mean I don't like them - I do.
It's just about time. Watching a film - if it's any good - requires attention, for a solid block of time. If I've got a solid block of time I generally feel I should be doing something 'useful', and if I do sit down to watch a film, I often fall asleep!

I spend an inordinate amount of time at the theatre, watching live performance work, and I can't imagine a life where that wasn't the case - it's what I do. Cinema trips are few and far between - possibly as a direct result of the amount of time spent at the theatre! The last two Cinema trips were both to the BFI imax, once to see the Harry Potter 7.2, once to see the complete LoTRs trilogy in an overnight marathon - a seriously amazing evening/night/morning!!

The film I'm actually going to choose here is, like the LoTRs, really a trilogy of films, and if they are ever shown together (or even separately) at the imax, I'm there!

The Matrix


Wikipedia says:

'The Matrix ... depicts a future in which reality as perceived by most humans is actually a simulated reality created by sentient machines to pacify and subdue the human population, while their bodies' heat and electrical activity are used as an energy source. Upon learning this, compter programmer 'Neo' is drawn into a rebellion against the machines, involving other people who have been freed from the 'dream world' and into reality.

The film contains many reference to ...cyberpunk .... philosophical ideas such as Descartes evil genius, the brain in a vat thought experiment; and homages to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, dystopian fiction and Japanese animation.' (click here for the full Wikipedia page)


I was completely hooked, from the first viewing which was at a cinema in Croydon. Initially, the intricacy of the plot - literally anything could become something other than it seemed at any moment, and there were layers upon layers upon layers upon layers of sub-plots - intrigued me, and I loved the look of the piece - it was all so sleek and all so shabby all at once. I don't think I've ever lusted after a piece of clothing as much as I did Neo's or Trinity's full length leather coat. (and I now own a very similar coat - albeit in black velvet - which I treasure!)



The concept on which the film is based - the idea that reality could all be an illusion brought about by an evil god/scientist (shout out to Robert Nozick, if you please!) - was one which brought back fond memories of first year philosophy seminars, and there are sufficient literary allusions throughout the film to keep even my scarily voracious book-brain happy.

Visually/theatrically, the film is stunning - from the green and black data streams which represent the coding of the matrix (yes, I had it as a screen saver, whirling away, and the poster below was on my wall in the flat in Brighton for many a month!) - to the stunning special effects.


The way the fight scenes work (with the super-flexible, slowed down, sped-up movements) looked amazing when I watched the DVD last night. Over a decade ago, the SFX were state of the art. The notion that everything which happened in the matrix was simply a piece of a program, a line in a code meant that Neo, the super skilled hacker, had simply to think of alternative, and the world would change around him. Bullets stopped in mid air and fell to the ground as he changed the 'reality' of the program world by thinking it different. And beyond all of that, there was a fight for freedom - physical, emotional and intellectual - an ultimately doomed love-affair, a fascinating set of supporting characters and an continually shifting set of rules underpinning the whole shebang.

I'm planning to rewatch them all this weekend. Then they're available for loan to anyone who'd like to indulge!

Sunday 13 November 2011

Day 13 - Something I'm proud of.

I started off trying to think of something profound for this post.

And yes, there many things I'm proud of - the fact that I'm still here, and just about managing to get out of bed every morning. Phil. For fighting as hard and as bravely as he did, without complaining or whining. The newly rearranged home of me. The cats - for putting up with me! My students - for being ace. Riddlesdown parkrun, all the runners, all the volunteers, for being part of such an amazing thing, and working so hard to make it succeed.

And then I decided to stop with the internal hand-wringing (that sounds painful...) and have some fun.

I'm proud of the salad that I've made myself to have for lunch tomorrow. And I've taken its photo!

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Doesn't it look pretty? And all of my 5-a-day are in there.
Contents:

  • Rocket & watercress
  • Tomato
  • Green & Red Pepper
  • Cranberries
  • Avacado
  • Pine nuts
  • some seasoning.... 


This is all part of a new healthy eating drive - for the entire week, I'm going to try to avoid eating any rubbish. No chocolate. No cheese and egg baggettes. No cake (unless it's healthy cake) and no bloody skittles.

Bets on success??? 
I'll keep you posted!


Saturday 12 November 2011

Day 12 - Three Blogs I Can't Get Enough Of...

I'm not a huge follower of blogs - & although I have a Live Journal from 2008 somewhere, I feel like a complete beginner when I look at some of the other blogs out there, with thousands of posts and hundreds of followers. I have 5 followers - and 4 of them are people I see at least once a week! Ahh well, starting small never hurt anyone!


A Lime Less OrdinaryFirst on the list is a lime less ordinary which was the very first (and actually, so far the only) blog I went back to the very beginning of to read it from the start.  Its creator is Dani, now a friend, but when I started reading, someone I'd met a couple of times at parkrun. I felt like I got to know her (and Baba Lime) a fair bit through the blog, & getting to know the whole family for real has been one of the best things about Saturday mornings! The blog is a lovely mix of photos and words, often, but not exclusively, featuring young Lime. I know that Dani occasionally worries that the blog is boring: It really isn't, it's one of the most loving, entertaining and endearing things I've ever read from a mother to her child - and it's an honour to be allowed to share in it!

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Secondly, a blog which is largely a photographic extrazagana:   the happy daisy which is where the lovely Amy displays her photographic and artistic skill (she has plenty of this!) The blog always makes me smile as it is pretty, colourful and often a bit nuts - ever so slightly like the one responsible for it. Amy has the most rapidly changing hair colour I've ever seen - the photo shows an almost natural shade of red - currently it is 'lava red' but anything is possible!

There isn't really an obvious 3rd blog - I enjoy blog7t and papa7t, both written by Steve, (Dani's husband, Lime's Pa) one is all about running, the other is very much in its infancy (ha ha) and is all about the Baba. One day I'll remember to ask Steve what the '7t' is about! To put this as my 3rd blog feels like a bit of a cop out - I know all three of these people personally!

The only blog I currently follow which isn't by a friend is trudging ahead which is all about a family who have adopted a lovely but challenging 'internationally adopted' child. Holly, the mother of this family, has a degree of religious faith which is beyond my comprehension, but the situation she deals with on a daily basis makes me grateful for my relatively straight-forward existence.

So Fawned


I've recent started reading the blog which goes with the button on the left (must learn how to make one of those for myself!) so fawned is written by Desiree Fawn, it's beautifully put together, and she comes across as one remarkable woman. She's also the one responsible for the entire '30 Days Hath November' concept.




So there you have it. Maybe not quite what I was asked for - rebel child, me - but a list of all my blog reading to date - methinks I should do better!