Sunday, August 28, 2005

Pogue Mahone (The only bit of Gaelic I know...)

My mother has this strange misconception that somehow getting up at the crack of dawn in order to set off on holiday makes the holiday all the more exciting. It doesn't. It just makes you tired. Added to this my mother has made it her aim in life to find something wrong with absolutely anything: the airport is ugly; you can't get coffee on Ryanair unless you pay extra; Dublin is ugly.

Actually, Bristol Airport looks like it has come flatpacked from Ikea in a job lot with Exeter and Guernsey and all those other small airports which have suddenly become "International" airports, which means they fly to Ireland and Alicante as well as Aberdeen and Manchester, and Ryanair is literally "no-frills": you don't even get a complimentary sick bag.

As for Ireland, I think my mother expected it to be all green rolling hills and crofts populated by fiddle-playing, potato-eating leprechauns who say things like "top of the morning to you." (These people, incidentally, take leprechauns rather too seriously.) Instead we are flying over flat countryside smattered with what seems like a disproportionate number of graveyards. As for Dublin, it is jammed bumper to bumper with traffic and seems to be largely populated by short, elderly nuns and drunk English tourists on stag weekends, though it also apparently has a sizeable ethnic population that surprises my mother so much that she feels it necessary to point to every Chinese restaurant and express her amazement. What's more, while we're out shopping, one of these happy little Irish folk nicked our hubcaps.

My family originated in Moutmellick, which is in County Laois, but they came over to the UK early in the twentieth century to work in Bradford. This depresses me: Mountmellick is a small town and living there would drive me to distraction, but I don't think Bradford in the 1900s would have been much of an improvement. But I get the impression they were fairly desperate. Wandering round the cemetery in search of ancestors (yes, this is the way I spend my holidays: picking my way through gravestones while the rest of you sun yourselves in the Mediterranean), I realised I was walking on hundreds of unmarked graves. A cheerful "Irish Heritage" signpost tells us that during the potato famines so many died that they were not given proper burials, just thrown into a pit. The sign can only guess how many bodies are there, and it reckons around 300. Mountmellick has a population of 3000, and we only visited the Catholic cemetery. My relatives are also anonymous: wooden crosses don't last long and the only people you can still find from that era are the rich ones who could afford huge stone angels on pedestals.

I haven't been to Galway before and as we have no known family from there I don't have to spend my introduction to it walking over dead people. Instead I go for a wander round the town and bizarrely cross paths with a double decker bus that seems to be populated by men in dresses and bears the proud (if slightly apologetic) slogan "Galway Gay Pride", and by the looks of it all 30 or so of Galway's gay community seem to have turned out for it. On the other side of the road a group of evangelical God-botherers have hoisted up their own banner, which is much larger and more professional, and are singing to them. The vast majority of people are walking past seemingly oblivious to the presence of either.

Galway is nice, I particularly recommend the Cathedral, where I bought a rosary of shamrock-shaped beads for My Catholic, but I am aware that most of you are not interested in Cathedrals and will have been somewhere rather more interesting than the West Coast of Ireland, so I will leave it at that.

I was amused, however, as our jumbo landed (with a bounce, which I'm sure isn't meant to happen) to see a car parked on the other side of the airport fence and a chap in front of it relieving himself. I wonder if he thought he'd found a nice deserted place when suddenly, mid-piss, he realized that 200 bored passengers were watching. Some of us even waved.

Sunday, August 21, 2005

I was bored...

At least if I publish these here then there's a chance five or so of you might read them... if you're bored too.

I now have a mini following of Catholic Smiths fans. I'm quite glad they don't know my real name.

Right, I'm off to Ireland. Have a good week.

Px

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Dumbing down? Us?

My cousin achieved ABB in her A Levels, and consequently doesn't need to go into Clearing. Which is a shame, in a way, as there is the most intriguing array of courses available. She could, for example, study Culinary Arts at the University of Central England (i.e. fancy cooking in Birmingham), or "Licensed Retail" at the University of Central Lancashire (selling booze in Preston, where, incidentally, you can also study Tableware Design if you feel so inclined). Or she could study Industrial Packaging in Swansea (for some strange reason this hasn't proved a very popular course, so if anyone is still floundering, there's an idea for you.) I wonder what "Outdoor Studies" entails? You can do "Outdoor Studies" and Manchester Met, and my boss says it could be anything, maybe French or History, or Industrial Packaging, except that the lessons take place in the open air. There are also some wonderful combinations available. It certainly does keep your options open doing English and Cell Biology, or Crime Studies with Drama (Staffordshire), which presumably equips you quite well for a role in "The Bill". There are also some extremely specific courses: at Leeds Metropolitan you can do three years in "Managing Major Events", only to be outdone by Yachting Studies, apparently taught at the Southampton Solent University, which I've never heard of (it turns out it used to be the Southampton Institute.) The UCAS website can be quite fun if you're bored. But then, I'm easily amused.

Norman Tebbit is a git. No, sorry, I've just realised that's offensive to people who are gits. Now it turns out that if only we'd persuaded Muslims in Leeds to support the England Cricket team they wouldn't have bombed those tubes. But of course! And aren't we just kicking ourselves now! Why didn't we think of that? I'd better be careful, since I follow Lancashire where cricket is concerned, which is an obvious sign that in the future I am going to blow the crap out of Halifax on account of its being in the wrong county. I don't know how much you know (or indeed care) about Tebbit, but he's also a bit of a fan of Enoch Powell, and he's obsessed with homosexuality, which is apparently to blame for the increase in obesity (Yes, that confused me, too.)
Tebbit almost got killed in the IRA Brighton Bomb in 1984, but they missed and paralysed his poor wife instead. I can't help wishing they'd tried a bit harder.

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

The Queen is Dead

Note to self: chat forums are a bad idea. For the second time in the last six months I am being pursued by a nutbar Smiths fan. But it gets worse: this one's a Catholic Smiths Fan. Off a Catholic Chat forum. I told him "The Queen is Dead" is my favourite album. Apprently it is his too.

Arse.

Fortunately he's in America and so easily avoided.

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A lot has happened the past week, unfortunately not anything that will be of the remotest interest to the blogging community, or, in fact, to anybody. This morning I finally dragged me and my sunburn back to the UK having spent a week wallowing in Guernsey sea, punctuated by sessions on the "bouncy slide"( it's like a bouncy castle. Except it's a slide. On which one can bounce. Cunning.)

I spent this week with my family who are for the most part ageing hippies who heat their houses entirely by solar panels on their roof and live off vegetables dug up from their own back gardens. Over the past week there were 19 of us spread over two houses (including a smattering of tents in the back garden), and that's not including the various visitors who turned up each day to swim and play with us.

I hate Guernsey because I lived there for eight years, and that was eight years too long. So I'm always a bit reluctant to go back. I spent my first day checking emails and worrying about whether or not all my international students were going to find a bank account. Then I gave up, and had fun.

My baby cousin now has her own blog so do leave a post for her if you have a spare moment. It was meant to be called "Skikeythechicken" after her prize pet, but she misspelled "Spikey". As for my other cousins, the middle one is about to get her A-Level results (of no interest to you, but we are all on tenterhooks) and the oldest has just landed herself a great job with KPMG.

I do feel a bit of a hobo at the moment. I will have all of four days at home before jetting off again, this time to Ireland, because my parents wanted a holiday out of the UK this year, and in typical Northern Catholic tradition the only place they could think of was Kildare. Last weekend I was in Liverpool, which was a good preparation for stating with Cousins Et Al: I must have met about 14 people in the house in which I was staying, and I only managed to put names to six of them.

I like Liverpool. I arrived to find the friend I was supposed to be meeting was stuck in a queue in Asda so I wound up with a pint of Black Sheep in the Head of Steam while I waited. The first words anyone said to me upon my arrival in Liverpool was uttered by a weasle-like bloke who said "Hey, can you watch me pint while I take a piss, like?" When he came back he read me his best man's speech for a wedding he was going to the next day.

If a good job came up I'd move up here without too much persuading. As it is, I'm saving up such scenarios to put in my next play.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Panic on the Streets of London...

But quiet, British panic, i.e. panic with an RP accent and just a hint of racism.

My mother calls me now on every occasion that anything remotely terror-related flashes up on the news.

"They've shot someone in Stockwell. Are you ok?"
"Yes, mum, surprisingly I am at work and not tearing through South London masquerading as a male Arab."

Or, as it turned out, a Brazilian.

I went to a Christening last weekend and was the centre of attention purely due to the fact that I work a couple of miles away from where a tube train on which I never travel was blown up.

So this website kept me amused for a good twenty minutes or so. Page 5 is particularly fine.

Enjoy this lovely sunny day, and spare a thought for me in my windowless office.

Px