Brown

1973 was a very brown year, if our house is anything to go by. I didn't give it much thought over the summer, but now it gets dark early and we're inside more often, so we can no longer deny there's a lot of brown about. It hasn't helped that we also accumulated a fair bit of brown furniture from previous residences.

Gareth is particularly bothered by the brownness and often wanders about singing a mournful version of California Dreamin' that doesn't get past the first two lines:

All the leaves are brown
And the walls are brown* (and the doors are brown)
And the bathroom's brown (and the carpet's brown)**
And the couch is brown (and the chairs are brown)
And the Malm is brown (and the wardrobe's brown)
And the stairs are brown (and the window frames are brown)
And the driveway's brown (and the shed is brown)
And the table's brown (and the speakers are brown)***

* "The walls are NOT brown," I protested, "The colour is called Sandstone!"
"Close enough. It's like living inside a biscuit!"

** "The carpet is not brown! It's a sort of beigey-cream."
"Beige is a breed of brown!" said Dr G.

*** Gareth CHOSE to buy gigantic old brown 1980s speakers from Green Hi-Fi so he's got no one to blame but himself for that one.

Recently we tried to jazz things up a little by painting the dining room a sexy shade of teal. Except it turned out a wee bit darker than hoped, so it is a bit like, to quote guess who, "Like living inside the blue Tellytubby". To which I replied that there is no blue Tellytubby. But if there was a blue Tellytubby it would be the same sort primary blue that the dining room appears to be at certain times of day. But neither of us can face painting it again, so we will put up with the blue and brown for now. Like living inside a bruise!

All that said, I love living at Crooked House. We've almost clocked up a year. This has been the changing view from the brown-now-blue dining room:

Winter…

Autumn

Spring!
Spring
Late summer…

Autumn

And now autumn. All the fields are ploughed… now the fields are BROWN.

Autumn

Romeward Bound

Edinburgh to Heathrow flight.

SHAUNA:   Do you think we'll have to go through security again?

GARETH:   No.

S:   Are you sure?

G:   Yes. We're not in Australia trying to get into Geelong or something. G'day! Got any FROOT to declare? SNAKES? SPOIDERS?


Heathrow to Rome flight.

SHAUNA:   How about a smooch?

GARETH:   Not here! People will think we're dogging and they'll try to join in.

SHAME JOB!

I highly recommend shacking up with a foreigner, as cultural differences help keep the magic alive. Today is my and Dr G's fifth wedding anniversary and we still manage to surprise each other. At least when it comes to words. Just when I think I've heard all his wacky phrases, he dredges up another doozy. Like STARVE.

I first fell victim to Starve when he was eating a Mars bar and I was staring longingly at it.

"Do you want a bite?"

"What do YOU think?" I said, moving in for the kill.

Just as I was about to take a bite, he yoinked the chocolate out reach and cackled, "STARVE!"

Apparently this originated at his primary school, when little kids would tease other little kids with promises of bites of lunches, only to cruelly withdraw their offers. You can just picture them in the playground all full of glee, "Hey, want a crisp?.... STARVE!"

I'm not sure if the phrase extended beyond his school but nevertheless it's brilliant, albeit incredibly frustrating when you're on the receiving end of it.

Its usefulness extends beyond food - it makes a concise substitute for the likes of "get stuffed" or "over my dead body". Examples:

  • If the boss thinks I am working overtime this weekend, he can starve.
  • If you think I am going to wash your filthy socks you can starve.
  • If they're going to charge £50 for that shithouse t-shirt they can starve!

Etc etc etc.

Gareth's favourite Australian phrase is SHAME JOB. Again I've not heard it used beyond the borders of my rural New South Wales home town - if anyone out there is familiar with it I'd love to hear from you!

Shame Job is a cry of mockery and scorn. In a school full of pimply teenagers there were plenty of opportunities to use it. The basic procedure is:

Hapless kid does something embarassing ==> Nearest gaggle of students point and shriek in unison: SHAME JOB!

  • Kid trips over a rock and goes flying... SHAME JOB!
  • Kid makes a failed chat-up attempt at the school disco... SHAME JOB!
  • Kid wears their jumper inside out or gets dacked* in the playground... SHAME JOB!

* dacked is the act of some cruel bastard sneaking up behind you and pulling down your tracky dacks (sweatpants/tracksuit bottoms) so the general public gets a look at your unfortunate undies.

Shame Job works best with a broad Australian accent. You must bellow it loud and pack as many vowels as possible into the shame bit, so it becomes: SHAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYYUM JOB!

Shame Job is now our default phrase for when one us does something stupid or if someone on the telly is doing something stupid. Try it on your friends next time they cock something up - I guarantee you it's fantastic fun.

MotoGP is Dead

UNTIMELY BLOG ENTRIES
A backlog of drafts published long after they were relevant.
Episode #1 — September 28, 2008

Valentino-rossi Valentino Rossi zoomed to his sixth MotoGP world title in Japan this morning while I snoozed soundly in my scratcher.

It’s hard to believe that just two years ago I would set the alarm to watch the long-haul races live. I planned my social engagements around the MotoGP calendar. I actually fainted from excitement at the final 2006 race in Valencia. MotoGP was thrilling, unmissable, daring, dangerous, dramatic and addictive.

And now it just. SUCKS. BALLS.

It started last year when the 990cc machines were replaced by wimpy 800′s and they also changed the tyre rules. Sure it was nice to see Australia’s Casey Stoner steal the title but with a few exceptions, every week he’d just ping into the distance and finish twenty minutes before everyone else while Gareth nodded off on the couch despite me whimpering, “No! WAKE UP! It’s still good! Something exciting is bound to happen soon. You can’t give up on MotoGP!”

This year has been even more abysmal, with the exception of Laguna Seca where Casey and Vale fought like dogs until Casey fell off for no good reason. Gareth has stopped watching all together and even the most pathetic diehard like me cannot muster any enthusiasm. The BBC commentary team is barely disguising their boredom – today it was so desperate Steve Parrish actually did a shoutout for someone’s birthday.

The situation is summarised by the brilliant MotoGPNews.com:

“Last season was terrible – a cavalcade of tedious events sparsely interjected with droplets of averageness. 2007 didn’t just lower the bar – it dropped it onto the earth’s crust in what we thought was the lowest point it could have reached.

But how wrong we were… 2008 has stamped the pathetic bar into the putrid quagmire whilst successfully claiming that the biggest surprise was the lack of big surprises.

Surely 2009 can’t be as bad? Well we said that at the end of 2007. Expect a 2009 season of utter mediocrity that way you’ll only be slightly disappointed.”

Personal lowlights:

  • Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes feigning interest in their matching leather jackets at Laguna Seca
  • The environmentally obscene floodlit race at Qatar
  • The inaugural Indianapolis round with three (3) spectators and cyclonic winds

The BBC’s Suzi Perry doesn’t even bother showing up to half the races because she has seen into the future and the future is dull as dog shit. The only highlight of the season has been Matt Roberts getting more screen time – he writes a great column too.

I fear for the future of MotoGP. It was one of the few interests Dr G and I truly shared and if he can’t be bothered with the bikes what it is to become of us? I’ll have to climb more stinking hills and drink real ale so we have something to talk about, dammit. 

Carmelo Ezpeleta you have ruined my sport and my marriage, you greedy bastard.

UPDATE: Season 2009 is actually pretty good so far! The new single tyre manufacturer rule has leveled the playing field somewhat. There is hope for the future.

UPDATE UPDATE: ACTUALLY, Season 2009 ended up being equally dull. DULL DULL DULL. MotoGP is clearly doomed.

The Gift

GARETH'S DAD: I want to give you a wee bit of spending money for your trip to Australia.

GARETH: That's okay, thanks. I don't need any money.

GARETH'S DAD: I want to give you some money!

GARETH: I don't need any money!

GARETH'S DAD: Say it's for your birthday! Take the money!

GARETH: I don't want to take the money!

GARETH'S MUM: Either you take the money now, or you take it when we die!

Valentine’s Morning

SHAUNA:  You've stolen all the blankets AGAIN!

GARETH:  What we need is separate blankets.

S:  Why not separate beds?

G:  Why not separate houses?

S:  Why not separate countries?

G:  Yeah, great idea! I grew here, you flew here! As the saying goes.

Death of a Wankerphone

2009 so far:

1. Gareth nearly burned the house down. Or as he would tell it, I nearly burned the house down. It was an unfortunate alignment of random objects:

i. My make-up mirror, the one that magnifies your advancing years in spectacular fashion, was sitting on top of a cupboard, and then along came…
ii. A giant blazing beam of sunlight coming through the window (sunlight in Scotland in January, WTF) which bounced off the mirror and bored into…
iii. Gareth's "Executive Chair", which is made of some faux-leather crap so it started to smoulder … which Gareth discovered upon returning to a smoky office after lunch.

2. My book got translated into German, Finnish and American, so I've been pimping it to the max before it is consigned to the multilingual remainder bins of history.

3. Last night I washed my iPhone. Before you say anything Mothership, I didn't leave it in my pocket. You know I always check my pockets. Except for the 756 times I left crumpled tissues in them and you would bellow from the laundry, SHOORRRNNNAAA, and my heart would run cold.

Anyway, let me walk you through it.

i. On Sunday morning I emptied my laundry bag onto the bed and sorted the dirty clothes ready for washing.
ii. Went off to eat brekkie and forgot about clothes.
iii. 5PM and waiting for the Tesco Man to deliver the groceries. Sometimes he calls if running late, so I took iPhone into the bedroom and wedged myself up against the window. We don't get mobile reception at our new place but sometimes you can get half a bar at the window if you're lucky.
iv. By coincidence the Tesco Man arrived at that very moment so I chucked phone on bed and answered the door.
v. 6PM. Groceries were packed away and I remembered the dirty clothes. Went back into bedroom, didn't both turning light on and scooped up pile of clothes. Put the washing machine on.
vi. Can't find my phone anywhere.
vii. Four hours later, I remember that I've got clothes in the machine. I remove the clothes and there is the stupid phone. Dead, dead, dead and stinking of lavender.

I bought the iPhone last September after months of turmoil as to whether I should buy something so frivolous. It would go against the frugal farmgirl roots; I'd always been on £10 a month pay-as-you-go. But I eventually succumbed to lust and walked out of the O2 Shoppe with the goods, wobbly with fear and guilt.

It was like when I moved out of home and purchased Heinz tomato ketchup instead of Home Brand. Or when I first bought Nike trainers instead of Leisure 7s or plastic Apple Pies. I thought God would come busting through the clouds and say, "YOU. DECADENT. FOOL!" and vaporise me then and there despite my begging, "Please sir, I got them from the factory outlet."

I loved that phone; I named it Basil. The whole time I was waiting to be mugged because you just know, deep down, that you're not someone who's meant to own that sort of thing. But I never thought I would ruin it by my own hand, for crying out loud.

Googling revealed that I wasn't the only donut who's washed their phone. Apparently laundered iPhones have come back to life after being left in a bag of rice for a few days.

"Arborio or basmati?" Gareth yelled from the kitchen.

"Basmati," I said, reasoning that because basmati cooks quickly, it would heal my stupid phone quickly. Yeah that makes sense. Zoe joked this morning that we should have used arborio as it absorbs more moisture, and tonight I am looking at my cloudy-screened paperweight in its ricey-Tupperware coffin and sincerely wishing I'd thought of that.

Anyway, that was a very expensive load of laundry.

I just wanted to say, yes it was a Wankerphone as Gareth called it. But I loved it and it was very useful. I will miss my Mr Plow ringtone and how a photo of Gareth flipping the bird popped up when he called. I will miss listening to podcasts, checking train timetables, obsessing over to do lists, misspelling things with the touchy keyboard, compulsively checking email and squinting at electronic books.

Most of all I will miss the alarm clock. You could select noises such as "Harp" or "Robot" or "Bark", the latter which sounded like a German Shepherd saying, GET UP OR I'LL BITE YOUR FUCKING LEGS OFF. But now I must rely on the Scottish sun to wake me up. If it can set a chair on fire surely it can get me out of bed in the morning.

Buffed

present.jpgAs of today I'm 31. Bloody hell. Dr G gave me a present* wrapped in sandpaper and duct tape! That charmed my pants right off.

Realising at the last minute that we were all out of paper, he was inspired by The Durutti Column's 1981 album, Return of the Durutti Column, which had come in a sandpaper sleeve. This in turn, according to Wikipedia, was "inspired by a Situationist joke, a book – Guy Debord's The Society of the Spectacle – with a sandpaper cover to destroy other books on the shelf".

The duct tape was totally his idea though.

* if you're curious, he got me the remastered Mogwai Young Team which satisfied the nerd in me and a contribution to the New Camera Fund. Woohoo! If only the compact-somewhat-manual-and-good-in-low-light camera I long for really existed :)