A decade ago

Mike is thinking about where he was a decade ago today, then two decades ago.

Since I have fewer than three, I’ll have a little think about where I was five years ago, etc.

Roundabout the end of September 10 years ago was when I first came to Nottingham – now I’ve been here a decade.

October 2001

As an excuse to stay with my friends in Nottingham post-degree and maybe to postpone still further growing up and finding a real job, I decided to do a part time MA in Film Studies and get a part-time job to pay for it.  For much of 2000, I was working at an adult IT learning centre, both as admin then later tutor.  Whilst doing the course, and the day job, I also got on the number 10 bus to Ruddington very occasionally to volunteer in Nick Clegg MEP’s office. After a while, I applied for a job there.  So by October 2001, I was working there part time, and just back from my very first Lib Dem conference, in Bournemouth, where I worked on the Gazette thinking up duck puns, and falling head over heels with a rather nice young man working for the party on his first conference too.  Didn’t last, didn’t go anywhere as he was a wee bit innocent back then and I definitely wasn’t, but I spent the week embarrassing myself, turning red at the drop of the hat and following him around with puppy-dog eyes.

October 1996

This would have been something like my third week at university, staying in self-catering accommodation with four lads.  I came out to them within a few days of getting there, and to everyone else not long after that, which was one of the first nerve-shattering things to do.  I didn’t go to any of the Fresher’s parties, but I did sign up to LGB Soc (those were the days before the T) the G&S Soc, the bellringing society, and eventually made friends.  I was  horribly homesick for the first few weeks, but settled in quite quickly, and quicker still once I’d learned to love beer.

October 1991

This would have been a few months after joining my third secondary school.  My parents moved house, something I saw at the time as ruining my life, taking me away from the people I knew and the established life I had with clubs at school, art lessons on Saturdays (a way of getting us out of the house, as I really cannot draw or paint at all – and much preferred to tennis lessons, which were awful!). The second school was a disaster, and I as a delicate flower didn’t do well.  Transfer to the third by virtue of singing in the church choir, and a bus journey to school.  Horror of horror — all the PE lessons are rugby, not just some 😦

October 1986

At 8, I was happily ensconced in primary school, romping the fields behind my house with a mate from over the road, using his penknife to cut small trees for bows and arrows, playing endless games on the climbing frame, our territory extending from the house, to the fields, to the school, to the park that was miles and miles away, to the shop in a portacabin halfway to town.  But not allowed past either of the main roads.

October 1981 

At three, my life has been turned upside down by the arrival of a younger brother, who’s not yet quite managed twelve months. Sibling rivalry manifests itself initially in pinching the baby and making it cry, and pinching Mum who pinches back.  I don’t suppose I’ll quite have figured out reading yet but it won’t be long before road signs prove puzzling (“Red Juice Speed Now?!”) and I’m spending all my time wrapped up in detective stories, and not quite getting why gay is supposed to be an insult.  Plus ça change, eh?

Video test

Attempting to use a new plug-in for WordPress that lets it show other people’s videos.

WordPress is great most of the time, but this issue has been annoying.

Will VipersVideoQuickTags help me out?

So quick, and so simple! Yay for VipersVideoQuickTags, and yay for LibDemVoice who are using it for Lib Dem TV.

Gore? Oh yes


Gore? Oh yesOriginally uploaded by nilexuk.

Plenty of the old Kensington at tonight’s Titus. One woman near us fainted and someone amongst the standing audience was sick and had to be led out by stewards in cagoules.

The sfx weren’t *that* compelling but the show was generally great. I’d forgotten most of the horrendous details – it really is grim – but laced with comedy as well. Titus in his chef’s hat, arguing over whose hands to cut off etc.

Wonder what tragedies will be in next year’s programme.

Gay fête


Gay fête

Originally uploaded by nilexuk.

Well, the gay fête, sorry homo homemakers’ Autumn Fayre was rather lovely, and very competetitely priced. Lots of stalls, including Tupperware, homemade jam, allotment produce, a knitting group called Stitch and Bitch, and a rather pretty young man demonstrating cookery: “make your own mayonnaise, gaspacho and bloody mary.” Lovely.

There was also a BFI archive film about Women’s Institutes, filmed in the 1940s, that was rather twee. But did you know WI was a Canadian import? I’d assumed it was a quintessentially English institution.

I stayed about an hour, then started to feel my provincial weight in a crowd of city guys with 26″ waists. Lots of perfect tans and expensive shoes slumming it with the homespun produce.

Awful lot of pretty young men with beards. Don’t tell me face fungus is fashionable. It looks better on them than me.

Testing the smoke alarm

No need to waste valuable daylight hours in the pointless pursuit of smoke-alarm testing.

Just come home late from the office after your partner is in bed and decide to sneak a few rounds of toast.  Those day-old curled crusts will interact entertainingly with the elements of the toaster and send your smoke alarm into a frenzy of shrill complaint.

Grrr.

Anyway, now I’m definitely awake despite having to get up to catch a train in six hours, look at this – award winning blogger Stephen Tall watching Question Time.  And Pastichio Nuts, who I don’t think has won any awards, watching Stephen watching telly.

It doesn’t get any more cutting edge than this, ladies and gentlemen.

Off t'smoke tomorrow

Off to London for a flying visit tomorrow, to go to this rather unusual sounding event, see Titus Andronicus at the Globe and get a chance to look at my brother’s new flat.

I’ve wanted to see Titus Andronicus live, ooh, ever since seeing Theatre of Blood. I have a dim recollection of seeing a great film version at the Broadway, but I can’t wait to see how they do this on stage:

“Enter the empress’ sons with Lavinia, her hands cut off, and her tongue cut out, and ravished.”

Last summer, during my sabatical at St Paul’s, I popped over the river to see Pericles at the Globe, a very interesting staging with the actors swinging together on ropes for the sea voyages, and using the whole building. I took photos while I was there, which you can see here, but it looks like I was mostly just concentrating on snapping cute people in the audience.

This time the weather is set to be terrible. Although I enjoyed being a groundling last time (using a cheap ticket where you stand throughout the performance) I did find it knackering, particularly on a day when I’d already been standing or walking around London a lot, so I have secured us actual seats. How will the groundlings cope with being rained on? Will we stay dry even in a covered seat?

Off t’smoke tomorrow

Off to London for a flying visit tomorrow, to go to this rather unusual sounding event, see Titus Andronicus at the Globe and get a chance to look at my brother’s new flat.

I’ve wanted to see Titus Andronicus live, ooh, ever since seeing Theatre of Blood. I have a dim recollection of seeing a great film version at the Broadway, but I can’t wait to see how they do this on stage:

“Enter the empress’ sons with Lavinia, her hands cut off, and her tongue cut out, and ravished.”

Last summer, during my sabatical at St Paul’s, I popped over the river to see Pericles at the Globe, a very interesting staging with the actors swinging together on ropes for the sea voyages, and using the whole building. I took photos while I was there, which you can see here, but it looks like I was mostly just concentrating on snapping cute people in the audience.

This time the weather is set to be terrible. Although I enjoyed being a groundling last time (using a cheap ticket where you stand throughout the performance) I did find it knackering, particularly on a day when I’d already been standing or walking around London a lot, so I have secured us actual seats. How will the groundlings cope with being rained on? Will we stay dry even in a covered seat?

A weekend in Wales

I’m not sure, when I put it in my diary, that I realised that our scheduled weekend away camping with friends fell immediately after party conference in Brighton…

… but by golly am I glad it was. A weekend spent with close friends in the still of the Snowdonia National Park was just the tonic after a frenetic week spent with fahsands of Lib Dems in Brighton.

We drove out to Shrewsbury on Friday night, overnighted and continued on to Shell Island on Saturday morning.

Other people, for example, reviewers on this camping website, have patchy experiences of camping on Shell Island. I have come to the view that how good a time you have depends on two factors: what the weather does, and whether you end up, amongst the hundreds of acres of beautiful campsite, next to a group of people you judge to be behaving badly.

Thankfully at the end of September, the site was very quiet, and we managed to find a pitch a good distance from any other sign of humanity. By the evening, a slightly noisy group revealed themselves a couple of hundred metres away, but nothing too seriously annoying.

And the weather? Some of the best I have ever had on the island, in six years or more of visiting. Saturday it blew a gale (about Force 5), but was not otherwise too cold. Come Sunday morning, the gale dropped, and it started tipping down instead. But the rain didn’t last long beyond breakfast time (*my* breakfast time, anyway) and after that, the rain stayed away and we had baking sunshine – so much that it was at times too hot to sit in direct sun. I had not really envisaged sunshine, so my packing had been lots of jumpers etc., and I forgot both sunglasses and suncream. Rather foolhardily, I accidently left my anorak in the office, but being there for a whole weekend without any waterproof clothing at all wasn’t a problem this time.

It’s been over a year since I was last there, and during that time I have been recommending to other people to go. I started to doubt why I was such a keen advocate of the place, but this weekend reminded me. It’s beautiful. It’s a little remote, and therefore peaceful. The journey there through the Snowdon National Park either by rail or car is breathtaking. Standing on the 8-mile sandy beach that stretches all the way from Llanbedr to Barmouth, you are surrounded on three sides by mountains fading away, and sea wherever there’s no mountain.  Although I’ve taken many great pictures over the years, nothing quite does the scale justice.

This time, I made videos: new tent, dancing, waving.