Another Armageddon passes; the first I've negotiated on my own, though I was thankful for that as the crowds were extremely cosy. I discovered that momentum was most easily maintained by finding the nearest clutch of determined teenage boys and tucking myself in till it was time to change streams, or until one of them noticed me. That sounds a lot worse than it was intended to.
There were some amazing costumes - some professional, some of home manufacture. I'll start at the bottom end of the home manufacture scale, which was the guy in the queue wearing a bin-liner and a cardboard box on his head. Possibly he wasn't actually in the queue and just got swept in by the forward momentum.
Then came Captain America and Batman, wearing stretchy material suits with fake abs. Guys - some things are better left in the bedroom, really. Especially when you're kinda dumpy and the fake abs rest on your belly, standing up. And worse, in Batman's case, the stitching has started to come loose and the fake abs are sliding down to coat the not-fake belly. A picture of Del Boy and Rodney Trotter came to mind, but luckily at that point an Assassin's Creed guy tripped over a Dalek so I had a reason to laugh insanely.
Onto the choir of Anime girls. I want to point out that most anime artists are male, which is why all the female characters have such dangerously low-cut costumes. Their real-life faithfulness in adhering to that detail had the crowds narrowly watching them walk SLOWLY AND CAREFULLY on their impossibly high heels, while spectators exuded a mix of hope and dread as far as escape went.
And then there was Daenerys Targaryen. Watchers of Game of Thrones will know that a large number of her costumes involve exceedingly tiny amounts of fabric. The most hazardous areas of the cosy crowds aforementioned were the intersections of aisles, where the sweeping-along involved a meeting of river streams and propelled people into each other. My teenage son found himself at one such intersection opposite a Daenerys who had clearly decided to skimp on the skimp. He knew he was doomed; so he lifted both arms over his head, pushed himself as far as he could to the right, closed his eyes and thanked his lucky stars when he tripped over the Dalek.
It was with a feeling of surrealism that I watched the guy in the Iron Man costume lift his helmet off to reveal dark good looks and a small goatee. Some people clearly take more trouble with their costumes than others.
Cosy crowds mean that certain things finally require to be carried overhead. Like 6 ft silver scimitars, and tiny tired girls. I wasn't close enough to intervene when someone called the name of Silver Scimitar and he turned in the exact arc to sweep Tiny Tired Girl off her Dad's shoulders - but luckily he tripped over the Dalek.
Turns out the Dalek was the hero of the day.
Monday, October 28, 2013
Friday, August 30, 2013
Eight of Cups
There are no eyes here
In this valley of dying stars
In this hollow valley
This broken jaw of our lost kingdoms
In this last of meeting places
We grope together
And avoid speech
In this valley of dying stars
In this hollow valley
This broken jaw of our lost kingdoms
In this last of meeting places
We grope together
And avoid speech
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
Not with a bang but a whimper.
Friday, August 2, 2013
The New Face of Women's Golf
This is Carly Booth, 21, who is playing in the Ricoh Women’s British
Open at St Andrews.
Not dressed like that, obviously, ‘cos there’s nowhere to keep her tees
and pitch repairer.
She posed for ESPN Magazine’s “The Body Issue”.
Her ambition is to improve participation in ladies’ golf. How?
By making it more glamorous.
Leaving that swiftly aside, let us continue to the icky fact that this
photo is how her father found out she had a tattoo. Yes, you read that right.
Her father looked at this picture.
Leaving THAT even more swiftly aside, I imagine that GlenAlmond College
in Perthshire is doubtless trying to deny she was educated there. No, not
because of the nude picture.
Because of this.
The full quotation is :
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings.
But in ourselves, that we are underlings.
Now I appreciate that she adapted it, ‘cos the full quotation is
actually extremely gloomy, but the missing ‘in’ makes that sentence a bit of a
nonsense, ungrammatical and quite puzzling. Apparently it reflects her ‘drive
for success’ (I see what she did thar!) but I don’t quite see how. If she means
she can’t rely on luck to make her a great golfer, that’s common sense, not a
drive for success. And the ellipses at
the end worry me. Are you supposed to turn her over and find the rest of the
quote tattooed on her butt?
Here is the full story of her planned contribution to golf :
Miss Booth said she wanted to make golf more appealing for girls. ‘I paint
my nails, I wear big earrings,’ she explained. ‘I wear a lot of colour, but I
wear pink the most.
‘I think it’s only going to be a positive outcome if we all try to make
ladies’ golf a bit more glamorous.
Male golf has been more dominant. We want young girls to see us and think,
“Oh, I love her – I love what she’s wearing”. We want them to pick up the sport
and we want to be good role models.’
Here are her stumbling blocks as I see it.
·
Girls who are into glamour usually aren’t watching golf.
·
Girls who are into golf aren’t watching it for fashion tips.
But I find myself totally charmed by the superb irony of a naked,
tattoed girl announcing that she wants to be a good role model, while at the
same time I am grateful that she did not do this some years ago when my
daughter developed a taste for golf, because said daughter would have run a
mile in the opposite direction and probably be playing netball today.
As to male golf being dominant – well, I’m going to leave the last word
to 82-PGA-Tour-event winner and one of the top players in the world for most of
four decades, Sam Snead.
“Nobody asked how you looked, just what you shot.”
Thursday, August 1, 2013
The Hairdresser Grump
Every time I’ve wandered into a hairdresser on my day off, hoping to fit in a haircut, I’ve been asked if I’ve made an appointment, by one of the three stylists sitting around having a chat and a hot drink. Because if I haven’t, they can probably fit me in three weeks Thursday at 11h01.
At first subtly, then elaborately, I peer around the salon looking for the crowds of customers that require me to have made an appointment three weeks back, but I fail to detect them; in fact there’s an echo in here. Concluding that this salon doesn’t need the business, I gradually work my way through all the local hairdressers, then give up and buy a big scrunchy clip to hold the mess back.
Of course, this state of affairs can’t last forever, and so, finally driven mad by hours under the hairdryer each morning, only to be followed by having the stuff lashed against my face by the wind and plastered flat by the rain, I give in and make an appointment and move heaven and earth to be there on the dot of 11h01 Thursday. After a lonely wait of no more than ten minutes, I am required to make a choice of tea or coffee, which is gravely noted before finally a ridiculously young woman emerges, views my hair, adopts her serious expression and starts poking and pulling at wisps while emitting small hushed mews and widening her eyes to the point where I fear her heavily caked eyelashes will surely Velcro themselves to her fringe and cause her eyes to dehydrate.
“You’re so dry!” (why thank you, I pride myself on my sense of humour) “I don’t know how we’re going to do this. Marcia! MARCIA!”
An identical ridiculously young woman emerges from the mysterious rear of the salon, looking worried. Velcro beckons her over as if afraid of invoking a demon should she have the temerity to say its name, and together they examine my scalp minutely, making small moaning noises and occasionally whispering something incomprehensible. On the only occasion that I inadvertently exposed a hairdresser to a nit she executed a leap of such gymnastic excellence that my daughter was too fascinated to burst into tears when said hairdresser, sheltering behind the furthest possible chair, pointed a trembling, ghostly pale finger at her and whispered,
“Nits!”.
Since neither Velcro or Marcia is showing signs of flight, I assume there is no wildlife, although of course this could be because they are both terminally entangled in my hair.
Finally they straighten, draw back, and exchange grim looks. Velcro draws a deep breath and emits the sort of sigh the mechanic favours you with just before he tells you that the gidget under the dooberry has eroded and needs replacing, but they don’t make them like that any more and you’re going to need a dilithium crystal and godonlyknows where he’s going to find one this time of the day.
“I’m afraid, “ she finally murmers, “that we’re going to have to cut that.”
Reflecting that this is a particularly unfortunate phobia for a hairdresser, I almost miss Marcia’s lecture on the consequences of exposing one’s hair to the sun, the wind, the rain, chlorine….I wonder whether dirty looks and insults from other drivers count, but since Velcro and Marcia are both nodding emphatically at this point I take the opportunity to hastily point out that a haircut is indeed what I am here for, and….
“Not that you can’t get a good quality protective product to cover your hair before you go into the water, and cover it with your swimming cap. “ Marcia points out.
“Oh.” I murmur weakly, feeling rather better. Although I still find myself concerned about the need to do commando-style dashes from one patch of shade to another in order to get from the carpark to the office, not to mention the reaction of my manager when I explain that I can’t expose my hair to the danger of wind, and have to stay home today.
“Okay, “ says Velcro briskly, clearly relieved to have the bad news off her chest; “let’s get you to the basin.”
I am no sooner prone on the leather chair with my neck on the rim of the basin than the apprentice arrives with my coffee, which I balance precariously, blindly, and by feel on my lap while Velcro lists the products that the apprentice needs to slosh through my hair (why, when half of it will be off soon?). The apprentice turns on the water spray, which is so hard I can feel the splashes soaking my collar, asks me something incomprehensible, then goes ahead and rubs, combs, rinses and repeats several lotions and potions through my thoroughly soggy hair. By the time she hauls me upright and wraps a towel the size of a small country around my head the fumes have made me so dizzy I spill my coffee; but luckily it is ice-cold anyway.
My robe duly replaced, I make my careful way to the chair the helpful apprentice pulls back, balancing the fluffy white mountain on my head rather precariously. Annoyingly she takes it off almost immediately to comb my hair. Velcro appears from the back, this time armed with a determined grin. The apprentice pulls up a trolley piled with Instruments, Velcro positions herself on the stool behind me and I wait for the Catechism.
She doesn’t disappoint me.
“Have you had your holidays, then?”
I mutely shake my head and adopt the vacuous expression that will indicate I am ready for the Sermon – this consists of a monologue regarding her holidays, requiring only the occasional Yes, No or Cool from the captive audience. We have reached Corfu before she interrupts herself to tilt my head back, examine my hair critically and ask, “There, how’s that, then?”
How’s what, I wonder? I realise she is starting to stack Instruments back into the trolley, and stare hard at my reflection, trying to see something to hinge a compliment on. Getting rather panicky, I examine the floor, to find a number of tiny piles of hair arranged in a neat circle.
At this point, I rather feel the need to explain the CUT bit of HAIR CUT, and she stares at me in shock.
“You mean you want it….SHORTER!!!?”
I nod meekly, not meeting her eyes.
Her eyelashes venture dangerously close to her fringe again, and I panic. It is clearly time for the Blessing and the Departure. Pulling out an industrial-sized hairdryer with one hand while expertly piling more Product in my largely unchanged hair, she sets to work with gusto.
“You won’t recognise yourself,” she promises me, and I groan. Recognising myself is not the problem, seeing myself is. I get ready to leap out of the chair and shriek, “No hairspray, please!” but as always, I am too late.
Considerably lighter in pocket, I slink back to my car, hoping I don’t bump into anyone I know. Not that they’ll recognise me; and not that I’ll be able to see them; I’m just a bit worried about the permanent effect I might have on their health, given the way that small dogs are cowering away from the smell of my hair.
So, I went to the barber. She doesn’t Do Appointments, you just pitch and she deals with you when you reach the front of the queue.
She wraps a robe around me, sprays my hair and gets snipping, and when she’s finished, she brushes the hair briskly off the robe, takes a sensible sum of cash off me and gets the next punter onto the chair.
It’s that simple. No washes. No Product. No Blow-Wave, no Hairspray, no Holiday Chat. And it took less than fifteen minutes, notwithstanding no Appointments.
It occurs to me I must have spent about three weeks of my life at the mercy of hairdressers, having things that I do not either want or understand done to my hair. Maybe this is why men stare at women in bewilderment when they complain about not having enough hours in the day.
NB – there are not enough hours in the day.
And I conclude that I am a grumpy old woman. But I am a grumpy old woman with $70 more in my pocket than I would otherwise have had, and enough time for a walk on the beach AND the ability to see where I am going!
Monday, June 3, 2013
Ranting. This post is a rant!!!
So, this is going to be a rant.
My Saturday suddenly took shape on Thursday. Let me explain. Rosa, from the Writers' Club, had arranged a coffee afternoon starting at 3 on Saturday. I couldn't make it, Beloved Daughter had a golf lesson at North Shore @ 3 after playing 18 holes with good friend E at 9.30, at Gulf Harbour.
E has her birthday this QB weekend. She asked BD to go to movies and bowling with her; BD explained about the lesson and E explained the movie was only at 5, so it could be done if E's parents collected BD from North Shore, which is where they live anyway.
On Thursday, E's Dad, who is blessed with common sense, pronounced that there was no point everyone driving south at the same time, and it made sense for him to collect the girls after golf, drive them both south to North Shore where BD could have her lesson while E practised for an hour.
Again, let me explain. BD and E are cut from the same cloth. Ask them if they want a random hours' golf practice, they'll knock you over as they sprint for the driving range, yelling, "Okay, thanks!" over their shoulders. Get up, buy a bucket of balls and get used to it.
What all of this meant was not only were E's parents saving us driving time, I could make the coffee afternoon. All I had to do was drive up to Gulf Harbour at 2-ish, collect BD's trundler - to save E's parents lugging that all over the place as well as BD's clubs and clothes - and then go home and enjoy coffee afternoon.
BD normally texts me to say "Bottom of 18th" or "eating chips", by way of pick-me-up. When neither had arrived by 1:45 I decided to drive up anyway. I assumed my usual position at the end of the 18th. There were four men in black.
They cleared the green.
They were not these sorts of Men in Black
In the Twilight Series : New Moon, the heroine has a nervous breakdown after the hero leaves her. These are announced by three blank pages with the legends "October" "November" and "December" printed in the middle. I often wish the author of Fifty Shades had done us the same courtesy by printing several blank pages of "Mindblowing Sex At [insert time here]", rather than actually inflicting the cut-and-paste sex scenes on us but I digress. where I was going with this was that blank pages were turning in my mind and they had "Golf Players?" written on them.
It was 2; no parents, no golfers.
Something poked its head up over the top of the ridge on the 18th. I watched, bemused. It was a cart.
Two figures emerged, shuffled around, found stuff. Another two balls emerged; one of them into the rough on the far side of the cart track. Someone got behind the wheel of the cart and drove it down the track, stopped, and got out and started stamping rough. It took me a while to work out he was trying to find his ball.
I'm no rules official. But I'm pretty sure that 'forever' is an illegal amount of time to hunt for your ball while everyone else loses the will to live.
I watched, mesmerised, as they took five-six-seven-eight practise shots for each swing (BD is allowed 1).
It was 2.10. No parents, no texts.
The four elderly gentlemen finally exited the green. One, two and three little white balls dropped onto the fairway, two orange golf bags rose into sight (did i mention, both E and BD love orange?) and shortly after, BD, E AND H, the Lady Captain, who had booked in to play with them, made their way to the green, did due diligence and shook hands.
BD looked surprised to see me, and I waited till after cards had been signed to say, "You know it's 2.25, don't you?"
None of them did. No phones switched on unless you're tellimg your Mum to pick you up next hole.
No way was BD going to have chips and Coke with E and H. Her only chance of making it to her lesson was Me Here doing an Ayrton Senna down to the Shore. On Queens Birthday weekend. When no cop in New Zealand gets leave.
I gave her the binoculars, and relived my youth. Got her there just in time for her lesson. Missed coffee.
So, here's my rant.
I know - believe me , I know!!! that any 4-ball has rights over a 3-ball. But you 4 gentlemen - and I use the word reservedly - chose to watch two speedy teenage girls and their not-slow captain wait on you at EVERY hole, and would not let them play through. Why?
Results.
Me, speeding stupidly with my 15-yo glued to the binoculars to warn me if she saw a police car. A dubious lesson in morals.
My BD, stressed out beyond necessary, apologising for something that wasn't her fault.
E's parents, apologising for shit they couldn't control.
Missed coffee afternoon, with no way to phone and apologise.
Rant over.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Saving Amina
What that says is “My body belongs to me and is not the
source of the honour of anyone”
What it means is a death sentence for the young woman
pictured.
“The Wahabi Salafi preacher Almi Adel, head of the almost
comically titled Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice,
warned Tunisian newspaper Kapitalis, "Her act could bring about an
epidemic. It could be contagious and give ideas to other women. It is therefore
necessary to isolate [the incident]. I wish her to be healed."
Healed? She’s not sick. Admittedly she’s been placed in a
psychiatric hospital against her own will by her family.
And how does he plan to heal her?
"The young lady should be punished according to sharia,
with 80 to 100 lashes, but [because of] the severity of the act she has
committed, she deserves to be stoned to death."
Because that’ll fix any disease.
It’s not often I do this. I don’t know how much effect
petitions have on hardcore organised religion. But here’s a link for signing a
petition directed at Amnesty International in Tunisia :
Original article here :
Monday, March 25, 2013
Maybe that's what killed off the dinosaurs..
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2298415/Flexible-stegosaurus-inventive-way-mate-avoid-partners-spiky-back.html
This made my morning.
I can't resist a headline that reads, "Spiky Stegosaurus mated in missionary position to avoid male being castrated'. And I thought black widow spiders and praying mantises were harsh. Apparently "some species adopted the position to avoid the potentially lethal spikes on the rears of the females."
Here's the best bit :
"Heinrich Mallison, a scientist at the Museum of Natural History in Berlin, tested out the theory by designing computer models of kentrosaurus, a cousin of stegosaurus"
And then he used the computer models to prove what the headline says. Dinosaur porn, y'all. And then there was an argument, because that's what scientists do. The other half argue that the male continued to mount the female but just grew very long organs. Like, six feet long.
And that's when I cracked up, because how many castrated dinosaurs did it take for evolution to step in and turn them into porn stars? Imagine the number of disconsolate dinsaurs wandering about staring mournfully at Dat Stiff, Spiky Ass, and not being able to do anything about it?
And the argument will continue, because fossils are all we've got left; and that bit of the dinosaur is soft tissue so it doesn't so much fossilise as decay.
The last word belongs to Brian Switek, a dinosaur expert, who says, "We have never found a fossilised phallus, but doing so would solve many mysteries.'
Let the Hunt for the Dinosaur Dong begin!
This made my morning.
I can't resist a headline that reads, "Spiky Stegosaurus mated in missionary position to avoid male being castrated'. And I thought black widow spiders and praying mantises were harsh. Apparently "some species adopted the position to avoid the potentially lethal spikes on the rears of the females."
Here's the best bit :
"Heinrich Mallison, a scientist at the Museum of Natural History in Berlin, tested out the theory by designing computer models of kentrosaurus, a cousin of stegosaurus"
And then he used the computer models to prove what the headline says. Dinosaur porn, y'all. And then there was an argument, because that's what scientists do. The other half argue that the male continued to mount the female but just grew very long organs. Like, six feet long.
And that's when I cracked up, because how many castrated dinosaurs did it take for evolution to step in and turn them into porn stars? Imagine the number of disconsolate dinsaurs wandering about staring mournfully at Dat Stiff, Spiky Ass, and not being able to do anything about it?
And the argument will continue, because fossils are all we've got left; and that bit of the dinosaur is soft tissue so it doesn't so much fossilise as decay.
The last word belongs to Brian Switek, a dinosaur expert, who says, "We have never found a fossilised phallus, but doing so would solve many mysteries.'
Let the Hunt for the Dinosaur Dong begin!
Who are you calling soft?! |
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Sweaters for Days: Why I'm pissed off about guns in my kids' school.
Sweaters for Days: Why I'm pissed off about guns in my kids' school.: This morning, I was having my coffee, doing my normal Facebook creeping when I found a local news story about the school that my son and da...
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