Archive for the Category »Day to day «

And you think English is easy?

Came across this wonderful piece on the internet today and had to share…

I take it you already know
of tough and bough and cough and dough?
Others may stumble, but not you
on hiccough, thorough, slough and through.
Well done! And now you wish, perhaps,
To learn of less familiar traps?

Beware of heard, a dreadful word
That looks like beard and sounds like bird.
And dead; it’s said like bed, not bead.
For goodness sake, don’t call it deed!
Watch out for meat and great and threat,
(They rhyme with suite and straight and debt)

A moth is not a moth in mother,
Nor both in bother, broth in brother.
And here is not a match for there,
Nor dear and fear for bear and pear,
And then there’s dose and rose and lose –
Just look them up — and goose and choose,

And cork and work and card and ward
And font and front and word and sword.
And do and go and thwart and cart –
Come, come, I’ve hardly made a start.
A dreadful language? Man alive,
I mastered it when I was five.

Category: Day to day  One Comment

Life continues at 40…

I’ve reached a notable milestone in my life. 40 years have passed since I was inflicted upon the world!

On average, I can expect to be about halfway through my life, so for a bit of reflective navel gazing, an inventory of things I’ve done/achieved/contributed to date is probably not inappropriate.

Firstly I’ve found a wonderful wife with whom I am still in the process of raising 2 young, but increasingly active, boys. All three are a constant source of fun, laughter, joy, despair, frustration and everything else that goes around with being part of a family. One has reached his first decade, the other nearly 7. I’ve been happily married for over 15 years. Not bad in this day and age apparently.

I have a wide circle of friends, mostly associated with my hobbies of Astronomy, Writing, playing obsolete computer games and mucking about with cars. You’re all stars, (literally as it happens, or at least, rather animated bits of old deceased stars!) and I thank you wholeheartedly for being my friends.

I’ve got a Labrador again! :)

I’ve started one amateur society, and helped with the genesis of the another. Both are still running and are great successes. Most of this can be put down to the teams that contribute to them.

I’ve averaged about £1,500 to £2,000 a year donated to charities in various fashions.

I’ve written a book. More than one actually. Two are ’sort of’ published. The third is awaiting me getting to grips with the final round of editing. I’ve committed (stupidly) to get this done this autumn. Watch this space.

I’ve been on telly a number of times, having a friendly altercation with Jeremy Clarkson being the highlight – I still maintain that Subaru Impreza’s are ghastly, ugly cars!

I’ve been invited to Sir Patrick Moore’s house for a personal tour and a play on his piano.

I’ve had a reasonably successful career despite being made redundant 3 times, starting out as a lowly software tester and slowly moving up the ranks to become a senior manager at one of the City of London’s key financial enterprises.

I’ve kept a half decent roof over my family’s head, and have managed to knock the mortgage down to about 23% of the value of the house. I’ve saved some money for a rainy day. Hopefully nothing short of a dire financial disaster will derail us now.

I’ve travelled a lot, my tally of countries visited is in the high 40s (unlike me!) and I’ve seen a great deal of what our beautiful planet has to offer. There are many more places I’d like to explore, but I wouldn’t feel short changed if I stayed in Blighty for the rest of my days.

Most of all, I’m happy and healthy (other than a heart scare in 2008 – I have LBBB). There are lots of things I’d still like to do, and I fully intend to do most of them… starting with a drive in Ferrari 360, courtesy of my little sister’s birthday present! :)

Charity Go-Karting

Drew will be joining a team from Lloyd’s of London as part of a charity fund raising event at Buckmore Park on the 14th of July.

He’ll be driving in a 3 hours Go-Kart endurance race, on a 1200 metre circuit at speeds of up to 80 mph. These ‘Sport’ Karts also do 0-60 in 3 seconds!

Drew is raising funds for MacMillan Cancer Research and the Farleigh Hospice. The event is being sponsored by Amlin.

Drew has to meet a minimum of £50, but aims to get closer to the £250+ level. Your support would be very much appreciated! Updates on his twitter feed and facebook.

Click below to donate via paypal. You do not need to be a registered user to do this.



Please note – Paypal charges a small fee for their service. Drew will personally make up the difference so that the amount you enter will be exactly what you donate.

If you would prefer not to use Paypal and would rather send a cheque directly, please go here and leave a message to that effect so Drew can send you his address details.

Category: Day to day  One Comment

Friends…

No, not the US sitcom!

Some definitions for your delectation.

Friend. Noun. Value that is found in and often the result of a someone demonstrating the following on a consistent basis:

  • The tendency to desire what is best for the other
  • Sympathy and empathy
  • Honesty, perhaps in situations where it may be difficult for others to speak the truth, especially in terms of pointing out the perceived faults of one’s counterpart

Fair-weather friend. Noun.

  • A person who stops being a friend in times of difficulty.

I had cause to reflect on these definitions over the last couple of weeks.

I’ve always considered myself to have a few very close friends, as it takes me a long time to develop that level of trust. I do, however, have a wide circle of friends who I would not hesitate to help out or ‘look out for’ should the need arise. I would anticipate something similar by return, and this has been the case many times.

Beyond this is much wider circle of ‘people I know and would have a pleasant conversation with’, but I simply don’t know well enough to elevate to ‘friend’. Your definitions may vary a bit, but hopefully you have something similar.

I’ve never been one to shy away from a contrary view on the basis of it being unpopular. I will be pragmatic about such things, as there is no use in ‘winning the battle and losing the war’, but where I perceive a wrong or injustice I will attempt to right it.

So it came as something of a dismayed surprise to me to that some people I had on my mental list of ‘friends’ displayed none of the characteristics in my first definition above, and rapidly dropped into (and in one case below) the second definition when I expressed a strong opinion about the conduct of a local public service. This despite my having put myself out for them a number of times in the past.

If you’re a friend of mine you’ll stick with me. You may not agree with me 100%, and if you think I’m seriously off-base you’ll take me aside and tell me. Our friendship will be all the better for it. We’ll laugh, we’ll cry, we’ll puzzle through the tough times, we’ll wring our hands in despair, we’ll celebrate the successes. We’ll remain friends. I’ll invest time in those relationships.

If you’re not a friend of mine and you show you’re interested, have a thought beyond yourself, show some creativity, if you’re willing to come alongside, help, persevere, see the potential, praise others and work hard – you’ll find the same returned and more. You’re a friend I just haven’t got to know yet.

Otherwise you’ll get a polite smile, a friendly nod, perhaps even a snatch of conversation. That’s all a fair weather friend deserves.

Here’s to my friends. You know who you are, and I thank you for it.

Category: Day to day  2 Comments

Virtual Reality

There are a lot of uncomfortable stories associated with meeting people in real life, particularly after you’ve formed a long standing impression of them over the internet. We’ve all heard of the underwhelming impressions of meeting potential partners from dating agencies, and the horrors of internet pedophiles ‘grooming’ their victims from the innocuous one-sided mirror of a web browser.

It was thus a pleasant surprise for me to meet a fellow writer, blogger (is that a word?) and ‘80s Space Combat Simulator Fan‘ and find that he was quite as erudite and charming in the real world as he is in the virtual one.

A fortuituous turn of events allowed us both to meet up in London this afternoon after a number of years of exchanging comments on internet bulletin boards. We had time to share a pint and chat about writing, space games and old computers. We clearly had much in common and could probably have chatted for hours, but our conversation was cut short by the inevitable passage of time. We both had trains to catch, so half an hour was all we had.

Despite this we covered a fair bit of ground, and hopefully laid the foundations for future meetings. I’m really fortunate to have meet a lot of people both in person and across the internet and it’s great to put a face to a userid and an avatar. I never cease to be fascinated by what other people do and what they’re interested in.

I’ve always subscribed to the view that I’ll trust people until I have a reason not to, and as such have a number of rewarding friendships with people I’d never have known if I’d adopted a more cautious outlook. I hope this marks the start of another one. Great to meet you, John!
Category: Day to day  3 Comments

Football, not a ‘beautiful’ game…

I’ve always disliked football.

I can probably trace this back to standing in the cold (and rain and uphill against the wind) at school always being the last, or usually second to last next to the fat kid, being picked for teams. I don’t know quite why this was because I was quite good at sport at school, being second in cross-country running and a bit of a demon at badminton. Clearly this was a bit limp-wristed and not good enough for the gods of football.

When I was picked for the teams I was always relegated (Is that the right word? Do I care?) to ‘defence’, which was obviously the ‘Hades’ of football. All the self elected elite got to play in far off and exotic positions like ‘Left field’ or ‘Centre Forward’ which meant they actually got near the ball on occasion.

‘Defence’ was a position of inferiority characterised by standing around in the cold and mud waiting for the brief periods of panic when the ball did come in your direction, swiftly followed by the opposing team’s top players charging at you; blame and recrimination marched closely behind as the ball passed the goalee, a chap who (in my view) was the only one who had an even worse job than us.

It was cold, wet, miserable and utterly boring. Football clearly never wanted me and the feeling was mutual.

I discovered in history lessons that football originated as a game played by yobs kicking an inflated pigs bladder between villages with scant regard for property or chattels in between. Apparently few rules were applied and the ‘game’ usually ended in a brawl. Not much changed there then.

Later I read in biology that sports, particularly team sports, are the result of mankind being denied a more natural way of ‘marking their territory’. Tribal associations played out in a game, rather than direct conflict. I’d kind of hoped we’d matured beyond base instinct, but clearly many of us haven’t. Still, it beats peeing up lamp-posts I suppose.

Football was inexorably liked with delinquent behaviour in my mind, and I’ve seen little to break me away from this early observation. The English are particularly bad in this respect. The reputation for post match violence and pre-match intimidation is shameful.

I don’t know if I’m the only person in the whole of Europe who hasn’t got the slightest interest in this overhyped and pointless game, but it seems like it. Work stops, traffic stops, people get stupidly drunk and all the decent pubs are ruined for the duration.

It’s not that we’re even particularly good at it. We last won in 1966. Colour hadn’t been invented, and people walked too quickly in films. Some group of singers called the Beatles were popular. Today we’re far better at motor-racing, yet we don’t get this unseemly obsession about that. We pay these footballers utterly outrageous sums of money for this so-called ’skill’.  Big question then, what do they actually do that makes them worth their inflated pig-bladder salaries?

I also dislike how I am obliged to pay ‘homage’ to it, accord it ‘respect’ or be branded a social outcast when I answer the question ‘So, who do you support?’ in the singular negative. Been there before; small hermit’s cave for me.

Worse than this though are the stupid flags people are sticking on their cars. I bet they are popular with bikers as they are ripped off at highspeed on the motorway. I saw one car with its wing mirrors painted with an England flag, enough is enough!

I was accused last time round of being ‘unpatriotic’ for not following it and hoping that England would be knocked out early. Given that I’m British, but not English, the comment somewhat irrelevant anyway, but I resented it nonetheless.

And what has football got to do with Patriotism anyway?

I endured listening to our ghastly entry in the Eurovision song contest, how much more patriotic can I be?

Roll on July 12th!

Category: Day to day  2 Comments

Social Networking

I’ve been continuing the update of my website and it’s now got social networking functionality added.

At the bottom of each article you now have the option to easily bookmark anything I post with your favourite social networking site. (e.g. Facebook, Twitter, etc.)

Just click the icon, type away and it should appear on your own page using the wonders of Web 2.0!

Give it a try! :)

p.s. Also experimenting with a Gallery (see button at top)and lightbox functionality. If you click on the thumbnail below, it should jump out with a full version of the image. Neat, eh?

They grow up so fast…

Oh dear, cliché overload. I know, I should try harder. A bit pushed for time this morning!

My eldest son, Mark (9), is off to France for four days. He’ll have a great time as he’s going with his classmates and they have a packed agenda.

It is the first time he’s been out of our sight without family members for any length of time, and that sort of thing always gives you pause.

Still, it’s one of those milestones on the way to growing up and it will do him the power of good to be able to start exploring his own personality free from Mum and Dad in a new and unfamiliar environment.

I’ll miss him, of course, but predict I’ll get back a slightly older, more confident son when he returns.

Not that i’ll get much chance to find out… he’s away on ‘Cub Camp’ for the weekend!

Bon voyage, Mark!

Category: Day to day  One Comment

Relaunched website!

Hope you like the new look.

I took the opportunity to update the software version I’m running and add a few extra bells and whistles. I’ll be rejigging the menu structure to match what I’ll be needing as I promote my books a bit more.

A website is a necessity according to most of the indications I have, so I thought it could do with a bit of a make over.

Even the search mechanism works! I’ll add the twitter feed back in shortly.

Let me know what you think!

Disappointed with the 21st Century?

I have to admit, I am.

In the 70s when I was a kid, man had just walked on the moon, we’d launched the Voyager probes to the distant planets in our solar system, we’d landed on Venus, we’d landed on Mars. In a few short years afterwards we’d flown the space shuttle. Even the UK had Concorde and a burgeoning IT industry.

I distinctly remember thinking that the vision of ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ looked distinctly pedestrian in 1985. Alas, 9 years past this point in fiction, there is no spinning space station in permanent orbit, no spaceliners to the moon, no moonbase, no AI computers. Nasa is being forced to choose between visiting Europa and Titan because ‘we’ can’t afford both. The UK is now a fading non-entity in the world, so much for ‘Great’ Britain.

Humanity used to be all about reaching for higher goals and exceeding expections. Sadly, we now have to content ourselves with a facile celebrity ‘culture’, empty political rhetoric and industrial turgity. We’ve lost Concorde, we’re loosing the Space Shuttle, and we can’t afford to ‘go boldly where no one has gone before’ because a bunch of bankers have shipwrecked our economy by spending money we never really had. Public transport is a mess, our education system confused and devalued by interference from so called self-styled ’experts’ who never work at the sharp end – ditto most other public sector organisations – and the private sector is no paragon of virtue either.

Technically we’re not much further forward. Speed increases in computers have hit a wall. Cars are mostly less efficient now than 10 years ago because we’ve demanded bigger and more complex onboard systems. Hey! Atleast we have the iPhone! A triumph of marketing and presentation over content and productivity. Wow.

We seem incapable of tackling the big problems: Environment, Over-crowding, transport, energy use, education, health, pensions. Where are the visionaries who will find a way to tackle these real problems?

Worse, the ‘next generation’ has lost its mojo too. Speaking to youngsters today makes you wonder who their heroes and heroines are. This article sums up the problem better than I can. Where are the Carl Sagans and the Patrick Moores? The Amelia Earhearts and the Margaret Thatchers? The Isambard Kingdom Brunels and the Robert Stephensons? People who can look beyond the moment and see a far far better place?

What’s more… Who’s prepared to put in the effort and hard work to create that vision and make it a reality? Name the people who have inspired you in the last decade. Delete any celebrities. What does that list look like?

Category: Day to day  2 Comments