Thursday, September 29, 2005

Theatre of the mind

So, the theatre last night then to see my group's production of a Chorus Line, and excellent it was too. I don't know much about dancing having been primarily built for comfort, not the other, but I thought they kept in time brilliantly and did all the other dancey stuff that dancers do very well. What a critique...

I have a Zen calendar on my desk at work which proffers a different gem of wisdom per day. My favourite remains, "to do great work, a man must be very idle as well as very industrious". Well said. A lot of the sayings are about Buddhism and "the way", which I neither understand nor subscribe to, both states inextricably linked. I was once impolitely shown "the way" with an upright middle finger when I asked a Buddhist hot dog vendor to make me one with everything.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Durchfall

Having not written anything for a couple of weeks, I clearly have a diarrhoetic urge to purge my system of my surplus thoughts. Incidentally, the German for diarrhoea is "durchfall", literally "through fall". Nice...

I've just been cast as a baddie in Aladdin to go up just after Christmas. It's basically an opportunity to make small children cry without the usual need to talk to them, hold them or anything else which makes them burst into tears and go running to their parents. Don't kids say the funniest things?

No, they don't. They say incorrect things which as adults, we are meant to find funny, but I don't think encouraging ignorance is a laughing matter. Unless you want to be a doctor. Laughter is apparently the best medicine, but try telling that to my cousin. He got knocked over by a car and despite laughing at him for a good hour afterwards, he still had a broken leg and collarbone. I feel sure he appreciated the irony.

Friday, September 16, 2005

Wannabe Scriptwriter

One of my top 75 friends also has an excellent new blog, all about her best efforts to become the next big thing in scriptwriting. It's here -
http://wannabescriptwriter.blogspot.com/ - so go there, once you've read my work again obviously...

Thursday, September 15, 2005

A novel idea

As threatened yesterday, here is my (incomplete) shot at literary stardom. By the look of it, I must have been reading Sebastian Faulks and that ilk at the time. It was only two and a bit pages of scrawl which doesn't translate to much on the written page. I'll stop babbling now as there's enough nonsense written below.

Hello. Introductions before instructions, as my mum used to say. My name is Frank Johnson and I'm from a cosy part of Yorkshire called... well if I told you, you would never have heard of it, so we'll leave that one for now. My story is not a strange one, but it's worth listening to, believe me. I doubt you will have met many people like me, especially in a place like this.

I was born to Jean and Bill; Jean my mum, Bill my dad. That's my little joke. There was a lot of laughter in our house - and love. When I arrived home from school, my mum would be waiting with a hug and a bevy of kisses that grew more embarrassing as time went on. Sad really. I miss them. My dad, well I suppose he loved me in his own way. Whenever we knocked on the door of his shed to tell him that dinner was ready or that the man from the council was here (that happened quite a lot), he would always smile the sweetest of smiles which would light every corner of that dingy shed, before it receded, as did he, to a place within him that no man or woman, not even my mum, had ever seen. That beautiful smile would illuminate every ounce of the man before darkness once more flooded the void.

We played on the street, we being myself and Grace, my younger sister. Her name is actually Matilda on account of my dad registering the birth, and unwisely going against my mum's wishes; Grace was her choice. Matilda thus reverted to a middle name and dad retired to his shed. He occasionally called her Matilda. I think that was his way of rebelling. He never was much of a fighter, dad. Please don't misunderstand me, he fought tooth and nail to get the most for his family, but when it came to confrontations with the one person who had his measure, he knew when to stand off. Most of the time at any rate.

I remember an incident with Grace when she went away to Brownie camp. A blazing hot day it was as we walked to the train station. I was a reluctant passenger on that journey and an even more reluctant and impromptu porter. "One week in Devon" read the note from Brown Owl. "Seven months in very changeable weather" was the interpretation. A trunk almost the size of me and enough bags to make even our local bag lady, Maggie, choke on her collection of polythene and paper. Apparently, her husband left her and she simply opted out of life. She has a bath every couple of weeks at a neighbour’s house, the time lapse presumably to clear the smell. She does reek, but always has a kind word, in amongst the mainly incomprehensible expletives that is. If I ever decipher “ooo kin fu in bur”, I may well be offended. In fact, I think I’ve just worked it out and I may need a lie down.

As I walked, carrying the trunk on my formative young bones, my dad, carrying the rest of the bags, foolishly suggested that perhaps Grace should help to carry her own luggage, walking as she was with her packed lunch, an amalgam of corned beef sandwiches and tinned milk, since you ask. Mum met this with a firm, yet polite, “no”. Dad knew better than to take it any further. If only… “She’s got to learn to stand up for herself, Jean, or else she’ll end up like your mother.” No sooner had the words left his mouth, than the air changed and birds scurried off their branches to the relative safety of the family nest. “Pardon,” mum enquired. “Nothing,” stuttered dad. “My mother?” continued mum. “My mother? MY MOTHER?” And that was that. No great denouement, yet I swear that not one word passed between them from then until Grace stepped back off the train a week later. “Do you think that Grace should carry her own bags, Bill?” “No, Jean.”

Sadly, I wasn’t afforded the luxury of choice and I carried Grace’s luggage back home, my hunchback now bearing witness to the fact. I learned very quickly to limit my waving-off duties to the confines of my “sick” bed, illnesses which miraculously cleared on Grace’s departure, only to return and disappear with similar haste about a week later. What I wouldn’t give for an affected illness now. And my family…

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Here goes...

So, a blog. How to start my first ever appearance on the internet, certainly my first written contribution and certainly the first time fully clothed. Plenty of paragraphs. That should fill the space.

I've created this because I want to leave my indelible mark on the world around me, and the council seem intent on painting over my best graffiti, so here I am. The words I have to share are not original, but their positioning may well be. My thoughts are recycled, but carry the resonance of truth. If I can convey to you, the bored housewife, exactly what makes me tick and how I view the world, I will have conveyed to you exactly what makes me tick and how I view the world.

This isn't as easy as I expected. As with every other being aspiring to drag themselves out of their self-made hole, I have of course written a novel, since we are told that there is a book in every one of us. Not true. Within us, there are three pages of nonsense, and therein, enough plot holes already to make even JK Rowling blush.

I think I get it now. My next entry will logically be my three or so pages of novelistic drivel, typed up for your supreme lack of pleasure. Can someone remind to do that please? Ta.