Tuesday, May 31, 2005

innocent


remember the innocent eye, ear, nose and touch receptors of childhood?

remember how the world was before your senses got contaminated by your intellect? before everything got mediated through the rules, received wisdom, and fashions that you learned? when you could hear a piece of music and have a purely emotional response, unsullied by the dictates of 'cool' or of intellectual snobbery?

remember how beautiful that world was, before you'd made your mind up about everything?

Friday, May 27, 2005

now


now that i've given up thinking too much about stuff, and given up the excessive self-analysis (apart from this rule-disproving exception, damnit...), i find that: i've more time for other people; i'm less self-centred; i communicate better; i get less het up; i do more spontaneous things; i enjoy music and language more; i realise how precious everything is; i realise how beautiful most stuff is; the world opens up in colour.

good.

Thursday, May 26, 2005

bollocks (pardon my french)


ok, so there are two rant-worthy things here, imo: (i) the way the bbc - our 'premiere' broadcasting organisation, apparently - report this story: would they report it like this on the today programme? on pm? on newsnight? no, of course not. but because it's on the web site, they can do simplified/glib/dumbed down, with a sensationalist tabloid headline. and (ii) the essence of this story (it seems to me) is about the desire that the offender radically changes that behaviour - hood- and cap-wearing is not radical behaviour change; it's tabloid gloss.

grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

the rant-inducing story

Pre-Nostalgia


I'm full of good feeling this evening, after another lovely walk through the park. The sun was out, going down in the west (surprise!). There were...

...evening shadows and the distant column of (I can't remember his name -- some aristo-militarist -- the Duke of Marlborough? -- who won the battle of Blenheim, giving him the right to manufacture fags in red and white packets)...



There were...

...squirrels in and around the trees, whose trunks were dappled in the evening light...



One of the squirrels said "Your cameraphone's not too hot in high contrast conditions, is it?" Pretty perspicacious, for a mammal with a brain the size of a walnut.

In this country, I think we're all supposed to be disdainful of grey squirrels, on account of how they have almost completely displaced the 'native' red squirrels from their former ranges. It's as if the greys are thought of as rapacious marauders, 'coming over here' and eating our nuts, ruining the neighbourhood for the indigenous stock. I can't dislike them: they're just doing what their natures make them do -- it's hardly their fault if we introduced them and altered the previous ecological niche balance, is it? And they have such cute, delicate twitchy noses, and Disneyesque eyes...

Down by the lake's wriggling offshoot, there was...

...a blackberry shoot with a nursery of dozens of tiny yellow-striped spiders in a globular cluster, strapped in place with sheaths of web...



One of the spiders said "Your cameraphone's not really up to close work, is it?" Arachnid sarcasm at its best.

On the lakelet, baby coots tried to muscle their way past incipient lily pads, while their parent dove and bobbed, bringing up glistening morsels that caught the sun as they were passed from beak to tiny beak. Insects salsa'd over the surface, backlit, making tremors on the water that expanded as sunlit ripples. Midges bit my head and neck. A heron sat on a jetty rail on the other side of the lake, caught in a shaft of sunlight between the trees. Dark shapes moved in the water and, once, one of the fish leapt. The air smelled of warm, mown grass, and there were the scents of blossom, suggestive of honeysuckle and magnolia.

And all the while I'm drinking this in, there's a bit of me that's already feeling sad and wistful about when I don't live here any more. I wish I could live in the moment more...

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

aurora australis





loads of beautiful pictures of the aurora australis at this British Antarctic Survey-related site. fascinating (provided you don't think about John Carpenter's The Thing).

extended moments


three moments that seem to expand to fill a 'consciousness time' far longer than their actual duration:

  1. the moment between being aware that you're treading on a snail and your boot sole being flat against the ground

  2. the moment between the realisation that you're going to hit the car in front and the actual collision

  3. the moment between hitting the 'send' button and realising that you've accidentally 'replied to all'

Sunday, May 22, 2005

silences


there's a lot to be said for silence: for example, when you've got nothing to say, why not just keep quiet?

i'm a bit fed up with myself at the moment. one of the things i'm really fed up with is my own constant self-examination and self-analysis. even i'm bored with it. i feel the need for a period of welcome silence, and the need to de-centre my self from the centre of my life: i've been taking a good look at that self, and it's getting on my wick.

i need a period of trial separation from myself; to learn how to live again, without my head up my arse.

the end.

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

nature notes coda


i managed to get a snapshot of one of those big snails, with a teaspoon for scale:



awesome.

Monday, May 16, 2005

gush


have you heard KT Tunstall's The Other Side of the World from her Eye to the Telescope disc? it's perfect.

porky


walking round the Blenheim estate this evening, i noticed that i'm getting a beer belly: round and taut. horrible.

time to make a change: i've been neglecting my health and fitness. i need to start a new project -- operation pork lop.

nature notes


(from my walk in the dull, chilly evening.)

  1. monster molluscs: the biggest snails i've ever seen in the wild, dragging themselves across the cut strip towards the road. i thought they were mushrooms at first: they had very pale -- almost white -- shells, and their soft parts were very pale grey, with hints of pale green and tan in places. the shells were -- ooh, that big: about two inches in diameter. you wouldn't want to tread on one of those in the dark...

  2. marauding mammals: walking along, i could see a pale green apron of fallen leaves around a tree: it looked as though it was having its own private autumn. as i got closer, i could see individual leaves and lumps of foliage falling. looking up, i watched two squirrels darting about, stopping, and systematically eating their way through the leaf growth, after which they'd let the mutilated clumps fall to the ground. they were literally shredding the canopy. i couldn't work out what they were eating: i looked at some of the fallen residue, and could see a few caterpillars in amongst the buds; there were also proto-nuts embedded in the new growth. any ideas, nature lovers?

Sunday, May 15, 2005

Saturday, May 14, 2005

Something...


...cheery.

There's a new Wallace and Gromit film out in the autumn.

consistency


The US's drive for democracy and freedom continues in Uzbekistan

C2H5OH


Alcohol, like nature, abhors a vacuum.

It will fill any vacuum, however ill-defined that vacuum's shape.

This can be good. It can also be bad. I oscillate between those two interpretations.

Friday, May 13, 2005

FICT_003: autumn


The bus stops up at the crossroads, where the old sheep drovers' track meets the big road linking the two nearest towns. She's going to head north east: the town there is near the sea, which she's never seen, but would like to, and it's on the main railway line. She can get anywhere from there.

It's pitch dark by the time the bus comes, lights white through the light rain, scouring the tarmac with a sweeping, cold dazzle. She reaches back into the darkness of the wooden shelter, feeling for her rucksack, dragging it across the damp floor of rough planks, and imagining the woodlice and spiders back there in the rotting, scuttling dark. The moist, soft, familiar smell of home almost makes her choke, but then the bus door guffs open on its gas strut, spilling orangey light onto her shoes as she steps up, over the cold puddle that's draining into the gutter.

The bus's windows are steamed up, but she swipes a clear arc on the glass and cups her hands into a shielded tunnel of reflection-free darkness, trying to see the landscape through the wet night outside. The bus sweeps a corona of light in front of it, but, to the side, she catches the pale smear of the passing hedges, distant yellow farmhouse lights, and -- once, she's sure, just before she falls asleep -- the grey swoop of an owl's wings.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

FICT_002: autumn


She needs people around her who love her. She needs to be with people who won't judge her. She needs to be around people who will let her be herself, and who will laugh with her, and at all her jokes, but who won't laugh at her, even when she's at her most ridiculous.

She can't stand to be judged, or laughed at. If people who don't know her make judgements or assumptions about her, it makes her incandescently angry: her ears and cheeks burn, and she can barely speak. It's as if these ignorant, baseless judgements destroy her, negate her existence, undermine all the depth and self-awareness that she's developed. They know nothing, and they have no right to make judgements about her. How dare they?

She must have people love her, sympathise with her, make allowances for her. It's what she does for other people all the time -- and she's always done it -- so why should it be so much to ask?

But there is nobody left who does any of these things for her, so she's leaving. All the people she loved, and all the people who were kind and tolerant, are gone, disappeared from her life.

Idiots.

The bus should be here soon.

byte-rich evening walk...


...around Blenheim.

Starting at the weir...



...where a pied wagtail hovered between rocks and half-submerged branches, catching insects, and where two coots shepherded their two chicks and fed them food from their dabbling.

As I mentioned the other day, the trees are looking marvellous: so many different vivid, rich colours...



(The red is pretty close to the actuality this time.)

Lower down, you can see the still-incredible complexity and elegance of the individual branch, the individual leaf...



...all combining in immense profusion.

And this beauty works at all scales. From the smooth symmetry and multi-candled/castellated horse chestnut at a distance...



...and zooming in to the individual candles of blossom...



...with their subtle, alternately pink and yellow hearts.

Such fractal delicacy and beauty.

And a big blue sky, brushed with fine cloud and scarred with a distant contrail...



Nice walk.

still hope


not quite over the hill

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

FICT_001: autumn


It's autumn already: another year draining into the early dusk. The fields are turning to their winter browns in the fading light, ploughed and harrowed and soaked by a month's rain. It's been blustery today, with fresh white clouds grazing across the blue sky in the morning, but, as the day's gone on, a gauzy grey cloud layer has smeared between the earth and the sky. Where the sun's setting, behind a curtain of cloud, the fields are bruised brownish purple.

The church sits in a hollow, ringed with dark trees. There's a bluish sheen over the black-green leaves, and she always suspects that the roots have drawn up death from the graves and made into a fine garment. When the sun's set and the congregation have left, and when the wind's flickering through the desiccated branches, the leaves skitter against each other, dry and crisp. In that scratching and scraping she can hear the death of the year coming, and feel the long dark of winter creeping in, unrelieved by high, bright light, or by the touch of warm air on her skin. Winter is as flinty and dark as the church's stones.

She remembers the day they buried her sister here. That was an autumn day, too, devoid of hope or light: a muffling fog that barely lifted all day; the wheels of the undertaker's traditional black wood carriage squeaking and rattling in the mist; the pathetic, straggling group of mourners, with her -- nine years old -- at the front, the only surviving member of the family.

That was nearly ten years ago. It'll be ten years in a month.

She can't remember Esther's face any more, except when she reminds herself with a photograph: even after a few days, the image fades again, like a word that's on the tip of her tongue, but unrecoverable; she can see the outline of the thing that was Esther, but the content won't come. Sometimes, in a dream, Esther will loom over her, smiling, and Rachel will awake with such a vivid sense of her sister's presence that she'll say her name into the darkness -- sometimes questioningly, sometimes emphatically, sometimes resignedly. The dream summons Esther's old shape and smell and weight into her mind, and it'll take a few minutes for the vividness to fade, and for Rachel to subside back into sleep. Sometimes she'll try and hang on to the images and sense impression memories, but they're elusive, vaporous, and they always get away. The poignant, irreplaceable space where the loved one lived, and still lives in memory. After a dream like that, which she'll remember again in the morning, shorn of its immediacy but still sharply moving, she'll be silent and moody all day, railing against the unfairness of the world that can hold up such a clear image and then snatch it away, with no hope of its voluntary recreation.

Esther's grave is at the furthest edge of of the graveyard, in the shadow of the low stone wall and a patchy hawthorn, which is brown and pinched, awaiting the fall of its last leaves. Rachel pushes open the dense wooden gate and goes in under the dark trees, and rests her rucksack against the hard exposed roots of the hawthorn. She stands over Esther's grave, with a ticklish mist of drizzle on her cheeks.

She's come to say 'goodbye', in her own way. She doesn't say anything aloud, but stands with her feet on the uneven grass, and takes in the view beyond the stone wall: the flat fields, the hedgelines, the clumps of scrubby trees, the misty horizon smeared into the sky, all in poorly-differentiated tones of grey and brown. Her legs feel inert, and she breathes out heavily, a great sigh of resigned frustration. She wants to stay, but she wants to go as well.

All the greyness, and her indecision and apprehension, make her feel like crying.

So she cries a little, big fat tears joining force with the mist on her cheeks. She's not really crying for her sister, or for loss, but for the realisation that this part of her life is over, and will never come again. She's nineteen.

Wednesday


A much more imposing heading.

It speaks of confidence and authority.

(Except...Blogger isn't rendering it properly, so the effect is lost.)

I will use it often, as a kind of pseudo-NLP trick.

And horizontal rules.

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

t r e e s


i walked around Blenheim for the first time in ages on Sunday: vast sky, fat sun, big cool breeze, pairs of lambs snugglng close to mum, the green grass riffled by the wind and smelling of sheep wee, very pregnant ewes moving slowly and tentatively. bucolic spring.

and the trees. hundreds of tall, mature trees in leaf, with the sunlight filtering/dappling/slanting/dazzling through the fresh growth. so much accessible beauty on a privately owned estate. dozens of pheasants in amongst the trunks.

on the way back, i camerphoned these big red buggers. the colour's a bit false, but they really are a very warm coppery red (copper beeches?)



lovely.

Saturday


I finished Saturday this evening. There's so much that's good about this book, but I can't help feeling -- churlishly, perhaps -- that it doesn't quite make the final leap to perfection. Why? Because there are some things about the last sections that -- even though they depict a situation I haven't been in (not exactly, anyway) -- don't quite ring true to me: a sudden transformation through poetry; a coincidence of role and location; the performance of an operation after a traumatic event. Here, it felt to me as if the internal logic of the story had dragged it away from the novel's rootedness in a tangible, beautifully depicted world of experience, thought and sensation. After the deep conviction and believability of what came before, this last part felt a little...not strained, but a little too neat, perhaps: the shape of the story is satisfied, but not -- for me, at least -- the wider truth of the tone and conviction of the piece. I also feel that some of the socio-political narratives feel a bit clunky...not fully integrated in the characters' voices.

I feel rotten writing this: there's some really beautiful, true and moving writing in this book. I'd still recommend it as a treasure house of spare, precise prose, of great desription (of moods, things, emotional and physical states), and of profound emotional truths. Maybe I'm suffering from a failure of imagination: read it and see what you think.

This is the first Ian McEwan book I've read. I've got his whole back catalogue to work through, and I'm looking forward to it.

Monday, May 09, 2005

monday, monday


it's dark now, and there's rain pattering on the skylight. i'm feeling a bit blue.

i'm nearing the end of Ian McEwan's Saturday. it's a stealthy book. i don't know what happens at the end, but i have a sense of dread about the dodgy/violent character whose car the main protagonist scraped earlier in the day. what's stealthy is the way that the prose insinuates the main character's - Henry Perowne's - voice and epiphanies into your head, drifting from mood to mood and detail detail to detail. also intriguing is the way that Henry's voice - cool, cerebral, analytical, objective - co-exists with those everyday epiphanies, and with the wealth of love in the book: in the section i've just read, Henry visited his increasingly senile mother in her old people's home, and then dropped in on his son's band's jam session; in both contexts, you could sense the intimacy with, and love for, these people - it percolates through the prose, insidiously, and osmoses into you. touching, clever, and intriguing.

Magrittian oxymoron


I'm not saying anything today.

Sunday, May 08, 2005

wall texture


m a


a fuzzy picture of mum, laughing:



and a crisper one of her smiling:

requiem for a delusion


you get used to dreams dying: the love that doesn't work out; the longed-for college place that turns sour; the house that's perfect for you, but which you can't afford; your desire to be six feet tall.

i have abandoned the big fat novel i've been 'working on' (read 'not working on') since the start of the year. the seed of this project was planted about six or seven years ago, and has ebbed and flowed in and out of my mind ever since: scenes, characters and general structure have grown, shrunk, and morphed into different shapes, but the spine of the thing has been around for ages. this weekend, though, i realised that it just wasn't going to happen: it's tired, it's stale, it's lifeless, it' directionless. it's a flaccid series of tableaux and personal histories, lacking shape and energy.

worse, i can't summon up the energy and enthusiasm to wrestle with it and turn it into something more sinuous and galvanic. this is symptomatic of: my lack of technical skills and expertise; my sense that it's just duty that's keeping me pecking away at the story; my inability to concentrate, and my lack of determination.

when i was on the dole for a few months in 2003, i wrote 150 pages of a different novel, and really felt like i could make it happen: it gave, shape, meaning and direction to my life at a difficult time. now that i'm working full time again, i have to carve out the time to write: i have to display a degree of dedication and discipline that i just don't have. this makes me think that i'm never going to finish anything that's novel-sized in scale and scope.

i've harboured the idea of being a writer for 20-odd years, and yet i've never applied myself to achieving anything in a consistent and concrete way. i think that says everything that needs to be said about the realism of my expectations, and about my dedication.

so i'm packing it in. that dream/delusion needs to be laid to rest. i need to find a different one.

Saturday, May 07, 2005

b a t h


my bathroom window is clear glass, south-facing, and sun-catching, but overlooked by next door's garden, and by the houses behind. being a shy brit, i'm self-conscious, and don't like to have my bathtime ablutions on display. so i let down the blind and hook the string around the tap: this leaves a strip of light at the bottom of the blind, which fans out into the big blue bathroom. it makes the light seem soft and evening-like, whatever the time of day.

you know that noise you make when you sink down into a deep, hot bath, and the copious scented bubbles slide past you and make a honeycombed ruff around your head and neck as you lie back? that mmmmm---ahhhhhhhhh noise? that's blissful, that is.

a g a i n


the form changes as the sun moves round...



neat.

the usual


Refraction:



Reflection:



It took me a while to work out what this reflection was...it's from the bevelled edge of the stairwell, white, gloss-painted wood, reflecting on to the wall. Ribby/spinal look. Makes me think of whale skeletons.
ok, i lied

i need your help with this one. i'm trying to reconcile two sentence fragments:

1. tony blair has 'listened and learned'
2. blunkett

breathtaking arrogance.

Friday, May 06, 2005

real independence and courage


An inspiring story.

odd


i've just been looking at my blog stats, and i noticed that i seem to be getting a load of random links to my blog, from sites that couldn't possibly deliberately link to mine. so...either lots of people are hopping from blog to blog, or someone's doing something weird with some code.

stealing from yourself


another manky day at work. and why? oh, that old thing about feeling that you haven't done everything you should have done, and feeling that what you did do wasn't up to the quality that you'd want it to be.

leaving aside my usual self-scouring perfectionist schtick, i realise that i brought this on myself: at this time of my workplace's month, everyone is in a frenzy to complete their submissions to the body that decides which projects are goers, and which are duds. and everybody leaves it to the last minute, of course. which is fine, so long as you've gathered all your evidence and just need to assemble it (which was the case with me...i'm such a goodie-goodie). but...i had a cascade of people asking me for estimates/process maps of how my team would get their projects done, and i neglected my own work so that i could satisfy these peoples' need for information. which meant that i reached 12 o'clock today with shit-loads still to do, and no fecking hope of doing it all. frustrating: i can never say 'sorry, fuck off, i've got my own problems to solve'.

fucking messiah complex.

fuck, i'm in a bad mood. can you tell?

light of my leaf


Walked round to the paper shop this morning, about 0745. Saw some leaves catching the sunlight and snapped them with my cameraphone. They came out a bit weird...strange glow and flare effects. Looks kinda unreal.

zone


This is a post-election-free zone: I'm fed up with people's simplistic, unsophisticated, glib, knowing, shallow opinions, and with the hollow posturing and 'right-on' sets of comfortable, unnuanced, consensus opinions about facking politics. (That includes my own.)

Christ, I'm in a bad mood. Sorry.

Thursday, May 05, 2005

thursday postscript


it's funny how thing turn out...as Prefab Sprout insisted, in their splendid song, it's a Life of Surprises: although I've been feeling a bit manky, and the world's mostly a crock of shit (or a crapberg, if you like), there are little everyday interventions that people make that make everything look suddenly beautiful, and bathed in light: for example, an email from an old friend that triggers deep memories; or an email comment from an esteemed colleague that makes you realise that what you're doing in the 9 to 5 makes a difference to someone; chance discussions in the workplace where you connect with people and realise that those human connections are what makes life worthwhile.

Tiny, everyday epiphanies.

wise guy


Or...my life as a workplace motivational poster...

Do you ever have those days when everything you planned to do goes out of the window? When distractions, unexpected problems, and 'emergent issues' tear up your schedule and replace it with uncontrollable gunk? When you gradually realise that all the important stuff you had to have finished by the weekend is going to have to be crammed into Friday?

I had one of those days today.

I used to get really uptight and frustrated about days like that, days that were clearly 'getting away from me'. Nowadays, I just let them go. They can find their own liberated place in the sun, free from my misplaced desire to control them, and to stop time, and to mould the universe to my convenience. It's not going to happen, is it?

Let them go. All this will pass.

glum-ish


Ever Fallen In Love With Someone (You Shouldn't've Fallen In Love With)? (Buzzcocks, 1978)

I have. Again. I do it all the time.

I think I may just have to have a good blub...

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

scatalogical mishearing


I was going to Sainsbury's.
She said: "I need chocolate"
I said: "Plain or milk?"
She heard "Anal milk?"
She said "ANAL MILK?"
We laughed.

Do you remember the last time you laughed and something came out of your nose? That didn't happen today, but when it does, you know that you're alive, that some things are funny, and that the empty spaces in your head are all connected, and that they allow the free flow of materials between them. This is both gross and strangely life-affirming (in my twisted view).

Tuesday, May 03, 2005

Manic Moggies


There're at least 3 cats out in the back garden, making those bizarre (and hilarious, I think) yowling, groaning, mewling noises: a weird rhythmic counterpoint that rises and falls, changes its dynamics, and achieves a strange circular quality.

I think these noises translate as:

  • What you looking at?

  • You looking at my bird?

  • Any chance of a shag?

  • Get off my manor

  • You're barred

  • Leave it, Fluffy, he's not worth it



Hearing that noise through the dark, and through the open window, always makes me smile. Catworld is a weird place: weirder than Enders

Monday, May 02, 2005

big fat evening cloud


top verse


Seamus Heaney is a wonderful poet: he's the only writer whose works I go out and buy as soon as they're released (remember when you used to do that for all sorts of bands?)

Anyway, here's a site featuring him reading some poems. I think In Memoriam M.K.H., 1911-1984 is particularly touching.

shadows and wallpaper


cheap entertainment


i just watched something rather beautiful, and almost free: i'd made coffee in my big white china cup, and set it down on the table by the window while i munched toast and jam. there was a dark vase behind the cup, and side-/back-lighting from the window.
i focussed on the toast.
some movement in my peripheral vision got my attention, and i turned my head to see steam/vapour coiling up from the coffee surface, greyed by the backlight and contrasted by the dark surface of the vase. i watched, almost mesmerised, as the vapour rose. it's too complex and dynamic to describe briefly (no poet, I), but think of endless variations on: tongues and tendrils; coils, loops, and pinnacles; sheets and swirls; static patterns that hold for a while, then sudden bursts of change and turbulence; smooth curves; undulating pulses; jagged jabs; gassy cones and helixes; constant change and variety, uncapturable and undescribable in words.
amazing complexity and variety, just heat, liquid, gas and a bit of light.
treat yourself...put a brew on and set it down in a light source.