Thursday 31 December 2020

World of Carp



I'm working in the garage when a man comes in. He has a goatee beard and little round glasses. He reminds me a bit of Ben Elton or something. Do you remember Ben Elton? He was very right on and into political correctness, wasn't he? Always going on about political correctness, he was. Ha ha! Anyway, the man is driving a Ford Mondeo and he's just filled it up with petrol. I'm surprised because you would think it might be against his principals or something.

'Pump six and this,' he says, or something, and he picks a packet of Toffos from the rack and hands them over for me to price them. Do you remember Toffos? A man's gotta chew what a man's gotta chew! Ha ha! Do you remember Brucie's Generation Game?

I scan the Toffos and the machine makes a bleeping noise like a robot - like Metal Mickey in fact, or something. Do you remember Metal Mickey? I'm surprised the man wanted Toffos. He looks like he'd rather have picked a packet of tofu! Lefties like that, don't they? They eat tofu and veggie burgers, and they have leather patches sewn onto the elbows of their jumpers. Their kids always have names like Jocasta or Xerxes or something. Ha ha!

It's terrible how they've treated Tommy Robinson, isn't it? He was only saying what the rest of us were thinking. Do you remember thinking? That's what we used to do in the old days before the internet and He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, or something. Thinking was like our version of television, and we used to think all sorts of things, but of course you're not allowed to do that these days in case you think something that the liberal media elite don't like, such as how the US election was obviously rigged - a man on YouTube said so, or something.

'That will be £5.64,' I say to Mondeo man.

He gives me a tenner and I give him his change. There's a picture of the Queen on the tenner. Good thing there aren't any illegal Muslims here. They wouldn't like that - a picture of the Queen. They wouldn't like that at all, but you can't say anything about them because you're not allowed. Do you remember the Queen? We Are the Champions was their best one, I think.

I'm waiting for the man to leave but instead of going back to his car he goes to look at the mucky magazines. Meanwhile a lorry pulls in at the diesel pump, or something.

 



It didn't look much like this because this is a toy truck which I bought at the corner shop, for some reason. It's really small. A real lorry driver wouldn't be able to fit in the cab, and also it doesn't have an engine. You wouldn't be able to transport much gravel in the back of this lorry, because it's so small, or something. Who remembers Larry the Lorry on the telly when you were a kid? Always getting into trouble, wasn't he?

If Mondeo man was driving this lorry he would fill it full of tofu or kale then drive it to a lesbian women's workshop or something, but they wouldn't let him shag them because they're lezzers. Ha ha!

After a while the man decided he didn't want to buy a magazine after all so he left the garage. I don't know why he didn't just go back to his car and drive off after he'd paid. Maybe he wasn't in a hurry. There must have been some explanation, something light-hearted and partially reliant upon the audience's collective recall of some humourously substandard juvenalia from the seventies described in a tone amounting to the written equivalent of a sort of half-hearted semi-ironic shrug or something, but I can't think what it was.

 



Look! It's Malcolm Muggeridge! He used to be on the telly all the time when I was little, and if that isn't fucking funny then I don't know what is.

Who remembers John Tyndall? I know they say he stole some women's knickers from Woolies but I don't think he did it, personally. It might have been the other one. I think he was supposed to be a bit of a whoopsie, although we're not supposed to call them that any more, or something. Anyway, there's nothing about it on Wikipedia.

Do you remember Get Up and Go with Mooncat? He was a green cat from the moon. What was that all about? You're probably not even allowed to say he was green any more, or something.

Please buy my book.

Thursday 24 December 2020

Thanks a Bunch, 2020



I've seen it suggested that David Bowie was the glue which held the universe together. He died in January, 2016 and we had an extreme right wing game show host running the country by the end of the year so it feels as though there is at least a grain of poetic truth to the claim. From where I've been stood, most of this year has felt very much like the grand finale to that ball of dung we got rolling four years back, with everything having been tainted by association.

Simon Morris died at the end of 2019, as did Carol Childs. Their deaths felt like part of the same shitty process and as such seem to belong to this year in so much as that that's where the shadow has been cast. I loosely knew Simon for two decades on and off. We wrote to each other. I contributed to a few bits of music he did and he contributed to things I'd done. We had a ton of mutual friends. He was found in the River Wyre and it was almost certainly suicide. He was a couple of years younger than I am.

I knew Carol from Maidstone College of Art back in the eighties. We hadn't really kept in touch but then she turned up on facebook as everyone does sooner or later. We'd been good friends at one point. It was cancer.

My wife's grandmother died on January the first. She was in her nineties so it was hardly unexpected, which didn't really make it any easier.

Simon Morgan was killed in a road accident in April, 2020. He worked at Discovery Records in Stratford-upon-Avon when I was a teenager and as such sold me my copy of Never Mind the Bollocks. He was one of the good guys.

Another one of the good guys was Tim Webster who died in July. It was cancer. I'd known him when I lived in Medway and he's present in my best memories of the couple of years I lived there. I still can't quite believe I'm living in a world with no Tim Webster.

Jim Peet died a little after that. I knew him briefly in Maidstone and he was romantically involved with Carol Childs for a while. I'd actually forgotten he'd died but came across mention of him when looking up the timing of Tim Webster's passing on facebook; because the year has been such that it's been possible to forget the deaths of people I didn't know quite so well as I knew others.

The New Year's death of my wife's grandmother coincided with Squidward, our neighbour to the south, upping his campaign against us and our cats. He's an elderly, orange man with too much time on his hands and who regards himself as the sort of person who should probably be living in a better neighbourhood. He knows doctors and dentists, proper people, and he doesn't like cats. This is unfortunate because we run an actual cat colony from our home and are officially licensed to do so by the City of San Antonio. Our cats very occasionally poo in his garden, as do raccoons, opossums, and other neighbourhood critters for which we aren't directly responsible. He tried to take us to court for damage done to one of his beloved automobiles - of which he has three - claiming cats had scratched the paintwork of the car in question and so reduced its value, despite that a cat's claws aren't any more capable of inflicting damage on the paintwork of a car than are my own fingernails. Anyway, we had a fence built between our two houses, not so much to keep the cats on our side as to facilitate our being able to spend time in our garden without having to look at his wrinkled orange carcass or the ludicrous pony tail into which he ties what little hair he has left.

The death of my wife's grandmother and the commencement of hostilities with Squidward additionally coincided with the company changing my wife's conditions of employment, obliging her to work from home. It had seemed like the office petitioned its employees every six months or so, asking who wanted to work from home because it was the way forward and they could make great savings on the office space. Some liked the idea but most didn't. Eventually the company got tired of waiting for everyone to change their minds and told them they would be working from home. My wife wasn't happy about it. In fact, it would be fair to say that she was extremely unhappy about it.

Of course, it also meant she was a couple of months ahead of the curve when the global pandemic hit and we all had to work from home. It's a year later, and she's acclimated to working from home, but I wouldn't say she's changed her mind about the idea. Unlike myself, she's very much a social animal and doesn't do well during long periods of either isolation or solitude.

Fluff died in February. He was our oldest cat and was about ten. He had cancer and had been in decline for a couple of months. We had to have him put down and it tore my fucking heart out.

Charlie, our rabbit died in October. We'd taken him to be neutered because we'd been given a female rabbit, rescued from someone's garden. Three days later, it seemed like he wasn't doing so well. My wife took him to the emergency vet in the middle of the night and he was dead by the morning. Maisie, the female rabbit, passed about a week ago. She was about eight months old and had evidently been having a rough time when someone found her in their garden, and then gave her to us. It took her about a month to recover, to begin to seem healthy. She had a couple of good weeks, then went into decline again. The vet took an x-ray and suggested that it was a miracle she had survived so long. She hadn't been born right. Her insides were all wrong and she was never going to have a long life to any sort of standard, which is probably why she'd been dumped and ended up in someone's garden. She was beautiful.

I have no fucking words for any of this shit.

Justin, our neighbour two houses to the north, got out of prison in June. He'd done five years, or possibly four, for abuse of a senior, whatever that means. I date his return to the time when I began to notice stray dogs in our street, because Justin likes dogs. From what I can tell, Justin's animal care entails feeding table scraps to dogs he either obtains or steals from somewhere, then letting them roam the street at all other times. Justin suffers from schizophrenia and learning difficulties. Also, he's a fucking arsehole, a judgement I quantify by adding that I've known plenty of schizophrenics in my time and plenty of people with learning difficulties, and there aren't many of them whom I feel I could justifiably call fucking arseholes.

Justin's mania manifests as voices in his head, or occasionally as hallucinations. He terrorises the neighbourhood, breaking into people's yards, spending an hour sat on our porch at 2AM, attempting to kick our front door in one Sunday afternoon, smashing bottles in the road outside our house causing me to puncture the tires of my bike. The cops main concern seems to be that we don't do anything to upset him. His mother refers to him as a sweet boy after telling us about long telephone conversations when Justin was in prison during which he made repeated threats to kill her, over and over and over.

I also date the disappearance of three of our cats to around the same time that Justin came home - Grace, Holly, and Bean. Grace and Holly had been with us for at least five years. Bean was a baby, about a year old. They were generally settled and we loved them, although Holly seemed to have found a second home somewhere else and would occasionally stay away for several days at a time. Grace, by way of contrast, didn't seem to spend much time outside, preferring either the cat tree in the corner of the living room or my sock drawer.

Bean was one of four kittens rescued from a different crazy neighbour with a cat who had never been spayed. He was the smallest, the runt, all black and half the size of the others when we took them all in. Bess was terrified that he wouldn't make it, but he seemed pretty feisty to me and we made sure he got plenty of cat milk. He came to regard me as daddy and provided much comfort after Fluff died. Even at a year old, he was a small cat, and he spent almost every evening sat on my chest, obliging me to slouch back into the couch. He even smelled amazing. My wife has told me about that baby smell thing which some mothers experience with their newborn children, and somehow I had something similar with Bean. I loved that cat more than anything.

Then, one Monday about a week since I'd noticed Justin's latest doomed pair of stray dogs hanging around the street, Grace, Holly and Bean all failed to show up for breakfast on the same day, and haven't been seen since - now six months ago. We've had cats go off the radar before, but not usually our cats - those who live with us in the house - and never three of them all at the same time. We had yet another new kitten turn up at the beginning of the year, so it's possible they may have been disgruntled by her arrival, and there are all sorts of potential explanations which aren't horrible and which don't involve dogs, traffic, our cat-hating neighbour to the south, or our schizophrenic one to the north, but it's hard to get past the statistic of all three vanishing at the same time. I tell myself they probably found good homes, somehow, or at least that I don't know for absolutely certain that anything horrible came of them.

The new kitten who turned up at the beginning of the year was small and grey. We'd seen her in the street and mistaken her for Grace, who was likewise small and grey. It was obvious she'd been abandoned but we couldn't get near her. We left food out but watched her getting skinnier and skinnier as the weeks went by. Then one Saturday she ran up to us, meowing her head off as we stood in the front yard. She was skin and bone. We took her in and fed her, and she improved but slowly. We named her Professor Jiggly after a cat in a popular meme which had been doing the rounds on social media, or Jiggly for short. Then after about a month she dramatically coughed up what looked like a chicken's shoulder blade. We suddenly understood her failure to thrive and she at last developed an appetite, growing into a big, beautifully rounded, grey cat with the loudest, most persistent meow you've ever heard.

Another month after Grace, Holly and Bean disappeared, Jiggly also failed to show up at feeding time and hasn't been seen since.

All through this, all the while we were running up to a presidential election which really felt as though it was going to be the last. Those claiming to be in the know suggested that there was no way Trump could win a second term, but they had said the same thing first time around and I wasn't going to get my hopes up. We'd had a year of bullshit and a killer disease running riot with a president who believed it was all a hoax because someone had told him so and that was the version of the story he preferred; and George Floyd was murdered by those sworn to protect and serve, with all the usual Trumpanzees parroting how cops have such a hard job and need our support and anyway maybe George Floyd had kinda sorta deserved it as you would realise if you were prepared to do your research. I watched half the country reveal themselves to be bitter, mean-spirited, selfish, barely literate, racist children crawling over one another for the privilege of being first to polish master's apple while claiming these flaws as somehow representing strength of character, a form of courage even; and I say that as someone who understands why people might despise the left, because I too occasionally despise elements of the left for the exact same reason, but I'm not so fucking stupid as to mistake passing resentments for a pseudo-spiritual calling.

I've lost track of what Trump actually did this year, or what he failed to do, because there was some fresh example of his failure as a human being occurring about three or four times a week. He identified people who don't like fascism as the enemy at some point, which you would think might be a bit of a giveaway. I'm sure I remember him jovially calling for acts of physical violence against his liberal opponents, just like with Mussolini and the castor oil. I know it wasn't this year, but he never did get around to openly condemning the Ku Klux Klan - all of which cult members will denounce as either fake news, or a courageous example of free speech, or a side issue and a distraction because just look at how great the economy is doing, providing you don't take too much notice of anyone who actually understands the economy.

I spent most of the year expecting the worst, and that the worst would be followed by an indefinite suspension of the democratic process in order to somehow secure freedom by preventing the election of anyone politically to the left of Adolf Hitler. Suddenly there would be more Proud Boys on the streets of our cities, possibly working in conjunction with the cops. I didn't really expect the knock in the middle of the night, just looking for dangerous liberals, communists, or anyone who ever read a book, but then I didn't really expect the repulsive orange fascist to be elected president in the first place. About a month ago, I learned how to handle and fire a handgun. Biden had already won the election, but the fact remains that half the country voted for Dorito Benito, having lived through the first four years of his presidency and apparently thought it was just fine. I've really come to dislike the human race this year.

I'm still alive at the end of 2020, and I don't have cancer to the best of my knowledge. Others have had it much worse, but it has nevertheless been an unusually shitty year.

Hopefully, the only way left is up.

Thursday 17 December 2020

2019 in Meaningless Pie Charts


As 2018 shuddered to a halt and I struggled to recall what the fuck had happened in 2018 Without Notes - being too lazy to trawl through my diary - I decided that the coming year would be different. I would note down what I'd read, watched, listened to, where I had eaten and so on, and I would do it every single day, and then I would offer a corporate style end of year report on 2019. Unfortunately, as I examined all of my data on the 1st of January, 2020, I realised that I had a much greater quantity than I'd anticipated having to process, so great, in fact, as to potentially suck most of the fun out of the enterprise. Nevertheless, I'm reluctant to waste a good idea, or even a fucking stupid idea, so here it is at long, long last, following a lot more work than it really deserves.

 


WONGA
I spunked away a total of $8,463.09 on groceries and assorted household goods in 2019, household goods here meaning food, cat food, soap, shampoo, beer, hay for the rabbit, cleaning supplies, and occasional stuff for the garden such as a new trowel or a bag of grass seed. Of course, my wife paid half of this sum. Generally speaking, I buy the stuff at our local supermarket on the way back from my daily twenty miles on the bike, then she pays me back half of my total spending at the end of the week. As we see from the graph, the extremes both occurred during the summer, a stratospheric $839.73 in August dramatically falling to just $385.34 for the month of September. This is because I went back to England to see my parents in September and left my wife to cope on her own. The cost of mailing groceries back from the UK would have been prohibitive. I'm not sure how I ended up spending so much during August. Maybe I was stocking up on Top Ramen for the kid, it being one of the three things he eats.

CYCLING
For five days of the week, I try to cycle twenty miles so as to prevent my turning into Stan Ogden. My odometer registered a total of 28,956 miles on Tuesday the 1st of January, 2019, and a total of 33,683 miles prior to my setting out on the morning of Wednesday the 1st of January, 2020. Additionally, the aforementioned odometer failed on a couple of occasions during 2019, usually when I'd accidentally knocked the little magnetic dingus mounted on the wheel out of wack. At the time I estimated that my odometer had therefore failed to account for 8 miles travelled. Amending the total to account for the lost mileage, I therefore deduce that I cycled 4,727 miles during 2019.

 


Inspection of the resulting pie chart reveals that during 2019, I cycled 14% of the total distance I've cycled since I began using an odometer back in October 2009, which is interesting.

BOOKS
I've usually got a book on the go as I read quite a lot, mostly novels but including comic books here and there. I read a total of 93 things during 2019, including 18 comic books, 8 non-fiction, and Papercuts by Bernadette Cremin, which is poetry.

 


As you can see, poetry isn't really my thing, although most years it occupies a mere 0% of the pie chart, so this represents a binge by my standards. I've compiled a top ten of my most read authors of 2019 which, as with all of these things, should be taken as an approximation for several reasons. Firstly, I read four back issues of Fantasy & Science Fiction which I haven't counted just as I haven't counted other multiple author anthologies; and otherwise, I read four novels by D.H. Lawrence, three each by Charles Bukowski, William Burroughs, Arthur C. Clarke and A.E. van Vogt, and then there are a further seven authors of whom I read two works each; so it doesn't make for a tidily sequential top ten given that chart positions two through to five are interchangeable as are six through to twelve, and I've excised the final two authors - Philip Purser-Hallard and Kurt Vonnegut - simply because they're at the end of the alphabet. So my most read of 2019 are, for the sake of argument, as follows:


1 - D.H. Lawrence.
2 - Charles Bukowski.
3 - William S. Burroughs.
4 - Arthur C. Clarke.
5 - A.E. van Vogt.
6 - Martin Amis.
7 - Daniel Bristow-Bailey.
8 - Fletcher Hanks.
9 - Mark Millar.
10 - New Juche.


I can't really see the point of listing all 93 things I read here, so anyone who cares that much should refer to the appendix of Missing Words which will be published at some point in 2021. On the other hand, here's how much I was reading and when:

 


Here the extremes were February and September. Of the twelve titles read during February, only two were comic books, so I guess the rest must have been slightly breezier than I remember; and as for September, as mentioned earlier, I flew back to England that month so my usual reading habits were slightly disrupted, plus I was proofreading my own Bricklaying the Charleston which I haven't counted because it would be wanky, and I guess Abraham Merritt's The Face in the Abyss wasn't quite the page turner I'd hoped it would be.

As you will see below, I've additionally correlated the information regarding date of publication so as to determine which decade (or century) produced the bestest books and which was the most boringer. Perhaps unsurprisingly, most of what I read was produced during the twentieth century, with twenty-six titles having been written since 2000, and just five prior to 1900 of which the earliest would be Voltaire's Candide of 1759.

 


Should any four-eyed brainiacs be reading, the four important nineteenth century novels (or at least collections) I read were Thomas Hardy's The Return of the Native (1876), Nikolai Gogol's The Overcoat and other Tales of Good and Evil (1842), George Eliot's Silas Marner (1861) and the Marquis de Sade's Crimes of Love (1800) which I offset with Bill Strutton's Doctor Who and the Zarbi (1965) and a couple of eye-wateringly weird Fletcher Hanks collections so as to keep my feet on the ground and retain some kind of understanding of what's going down with the kids on the street.

MOVIES
2019 was apparently the year during which I began referring to them as movies rather than films due to my ongoing Americanisation (although it should be noted that I still can't bring myself to spell Americanisation with a z). For the sake of argument, I am here referring to anything which doesn't quite seem to count as a TV show, so hour-long comedy specials and certain one-shot documentaries are included. Anyway, I clocked up a total of 57 movies or might as well be movies during 2019 - Stan & Ollie (2019) and Spirits in the Forest (2019) at the cinema (or movie theatre as I have no intention of ever calling it), Won't You Be My Neighbour? (2018) and Straight Outta Compton (2016) on DVD, and the rest on telly. There were a few which I saw while crossing the Atlantic on a plane in September, but I failed to specifically note which ones so I'm afraid we'll just have to soldier on in the absence of that information. Let's have another pie chart.

 


There doesn't seem to be a whole lot to conclude from this beyond that I watched a bunch of films, of which 31.6% were documentaries. I watched ten in September, which was doubtless thanks to being stuck on a plane for roughly twenty hours, and I watched just one in January, but the month by month viewing statistics don't really seem sufficiently fascinating to be worth preserving in the form of a chart, not even to me. My top ten, based purely on which ones I liked more than others, is as follows:


1 - Mean Girls (2004).
2 - Stan & Ollie (2019).
3 - A Christmas Story (1983).
4 - El Camino (2019).
5 - Dolemite is My Name (2019).
6 - I, Tonya (2017).
7 - Dark Star (1974).
8 - The Damned: Don't You Wish That We Were Dead (2015).
9 - The Laundromat (2019).
10 - District 9 (2009).


I can't be bothered to compile a bottom ten, but the worst was probably X-Men: Dark Phoenix (2019) about which I can't remember a single fucking thing, which is interesting given that I can remember the far superior comic book it was based on in some detail and I'm not actually sure how many decades have passed since I read it.

Turning to the dating of all the movies and might as well be movies I've watched, it's probably no great surprise to see the statistics dominated by the last ten years.

 


This is because I'm fire and proper quality innit and I can't be doing with none of your grandad flicks, yeah? You get me?

TELLY
I am aware of having stated - and with some frequency - that I don't really watch much television, despite which I somehow managed to catch 215 episodes of Wheel of Fortune during 2019, so I suppose what I actually mean is that I try to watch only things which seem worth watching, rather than sitting there with my face glued to the screen like some fat knacker more or less regardless of what's showing. Nevertheless, my viewing habits are apparently such as to result in a corpulent mass of data which I've found more or less completely bewildering, even impenetrable, some nine months after the fact. In an attempt to tackle this data, I'll begin with the simple stuff, specifically my top ten most watched shows of 2019, which are as follows and include shows from both regular TV and streaming services:


1 - Wheel of Fortune (215 views).
2 - Boardwalk Empire (56 views).
3 - Episodes (39 views).
4 - Jersey Shore Family Reunion (26 views).
5 - Kim's Convenience / True Detective (24 views each).
6 - My Name is Earl (23 views).
7 - King of the Hill / Mindhunter (21 views each).
8 - The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (20 views).
9 - Carnivale (19 views).
10 - The Good Place (14 views).


I've neglected to account for episodes of anything where I either gave up half way through, or which was simply on in the background as I did something else, although it should also be noted that this top ten is as much representative of which shows simply had a greater number of episodes than others and therefore only indirectly reflects how much I may or may not have enjoyed them. Also, it's actually a top twelve seeing as I watched as many episodes of Kim's Convenience as I did of True Detective, and the same even tie occurs with King of the Hill and Mindhunter in joint seventh place.

Anyway, during 2019 I watched 887 episodes of 185 shows. Of these, 585 were viewed on streaming services, principally Netflix or Hulu, and 288 on regular cable television because we get tons of HD!*, plus there were 14 DVDs in there somewhere. Admittedly this does look very much like an absolute fuckton of telly, although broken down works out at an average of 2.43 shows a day, which sounds about right.

 


As we can see, an impressive 19.5% of all television I watched during 2019 was actually Wheel of Fortune.

 


Here we see my viewing figures as they fluctuate in terms of the full year, determined by count of episodes rather than shows, with the lower part of the graph referring specifically to episodes of Wheel of Fortune for the sake of comparison. My initial analysis of the data describing my general viewing suggests the August peak may have been caused by the increased Texas heat obliging me to spend more time inside the house at that time of year; followed by a trough in September resulting from my visiting England and being therefore unable to watch the Wheel during that time; presumably leading to a second peak once I returned to the United States in October and caught up on all of the episodes I'd missed. However, the data referring specifically to Wheel of Fortune reflects this pattern only in a vague sense and may be additionally influenced by the network tending to show only reruns of the Wheel during the summer months, therefore rendering it less essential in viewing terms.

FOODS
My wife and I tend to eat out a couple of times a week. According to the statistics we dined out - or at least I dined out - on 192 separate occasions during 2019, meaning we ate out 3.69 times per week for the duration of 2019 - generally Thursday and Saturday evenings because it gives me a break from cooking, then Los Dos Laredos for lunch on Sunday, but sometimes also Saturday.

 


I don't know what happened in April. I don't remember going on a diet. Anyway, my top ten most popular eating places of 2019 were as follows, although it's numerically a top twenty-five given tied positions at seventh, ninth and tenth places.


1 - Good Time Charlie's (31 visits).
2 - Los Dos Laredos (29 visits).
3 - Sabor Cocinabar (16 visits).
4 - Jim's (9 visits).
5 - Tandoor Palace (7 visits).
6 - Hung Fong (6 visits).
7 - The Hungry Farmer / Taqueria Cazadores (5 visits each).
8 - Sea Island (4 visits).
9 - Bandera Jalisco / Cheddar's / Hooters / Longhorn Steakhouse / Tong's Thai (3 visits each).
10 - The Barn Door / Blanco Cafe / Cracker Barrel / El Bosque / 410 Diner / Jacala / Magic Time Machine / Mamacita's / Papagayos / Pho Plus / Taco Tote (2 visits each).


For the sake of full disclosure, the establishments I visited just the once during 2019 were as follows: Al Amir / Babil Cafe / Bamboo Biryani / Bangkok 54 / Bar-B-Cutie / Bill Miller's BBQ / Burger Boy / Burger King / BurgerFi / Café 37 / Café in the Park / Curry Royal Tandoori / Denny's / Earl Abel / El Jarro de Arturo / Ginger & Co. / Guajillo's / Heitmiller Steakhouse / J. Alexander's Restaurant / Kai / LA Crawfish / La Fonda / Las Tapatias de Jalisco / Luby's / Mediterranean Turkish Grill / MezzeMe / Pig Stand / PoPo / Pot Belly / Rehoboth / Rising Café / River Hofbrau / Sapporo / Tarka, TGI Fridays / The City Arms / The Flying Saucer / The Lion and the Rose / Tomatillos / Triple C / Triple T / Wagamama / Whataburger.

A couple of these were in England and MezzeMe was in Austin, but otherwise they're all in San Antonio except for River Hofbrau which was somewhere on the way back from Austin but was sort of crap anyway. Although J. Alexander's, Bar-B-Cutie, and TGI Fridays stand out from this final group as significantly underwhelming, most establishments at the lower end of the list are only rated thus because it's pretty hard to beat Good Time Charlie's or Los Dos Laredos, and certainly the notion that I patronised Denny's, Bill Miller's and Guajillo's in particular just once during the entire year seems peculiar. That said, I seem to remember having the shits after eating at Bar-B-Cutie so it'll be a while before I go back there. They should probably place greater emphasis on food hygiene and less on having a fucking stupid name.

MUSIC
Finally we come to music and the subset of data which proved ultimately so expansive that I almost couldn't initially be arsed to correlate it. As a rule, I listen to two, occasionally three CDs when out on my morning bike ride during the week, sometimes a couple of singles as I'm getting ready to go out on my morning bike ride, then other stuff at home for some of the afternoon, almost always vinyl albums, unless I'm writing and need to concentrate.

Apparently I listened to 1,185 compact discs, records, tapes, and singles during 2019. This breaks down to 511 CDs, 375 vinyl albums,  126 vinyl singles, 103 cassette tapes, 69 downloads - mostly listened to after burning to CDR - and one solitary CDR which wasn't originated from a download. These figures count double disc sets as single albums and additionally describe the number of times I've played albums, rather than describing the number of albums I've played, if you see what I mean. Also, I've ignored albums or CDs where I've listened to less than half of the thing before switching to something else, and tapes while I've been editing them as sound files for public sharing through my Ferric Archaeology blog - which I count as work rather than listening. Anyway, let's take a look at these figures as a pie chart, seeing as we haven't had one since we were discussing Wheel of Fortune.

 


I was fairly sure I listened to more albums on vinyl than on compact disc, so it just goes to show how wrong you can be.

The top ten - but actually sixteen due to a few of them being evenly tied - artists whose work I listened to the most in 2019 are as follows, with total number of discs, tapes or whatever media indicated in brackets. Peter Hope and David Harrow seem to have turned up on a number of shared releases as well as recording under variant names, but it seemed tidier to give each his own listing encompassing all names under which they have recorded.


1 - David Bowie (43).
2 - Peter Hope (37).
3 - David Harrow / 2Pac (29 each).
4 - Residents (24).
5 - Sleaford Mods (19).
6 - Apostles (18).
7 - Ice Cube / Mrs. Dink (17 each).
8 - Cabaret Voltaire / Haystak / Snoop Dogg / WC (15 each).
9 - Lil Nas X / Sex Pistols (14).
10 - Einstürzende Neubauten (13).

 

The top ten albums or equivalent works I played the most in 2019 were as follows, again with full number of plays indicated in brackets. This list is a little more arbitrary than the previous one given that I'm not allowing for tied results, so those albums occupying the sixth to the ninth position, for example, could be in any order, each of them having been played ten times.


1 - Lil Nas X - 7 EP (2019) DL (14).
2 - Haystak - Portrait of a White Boy (2004) CD (14).
3 - Hero Of A Hundred Fights - [Hero Of A Hundred Fights] (1999) CD (12).
4 - David Bowie - Hours (1999) LP (11).
5 - Tangerine Dream - Electronic Meditation (1970) LP (11).
6 - Mrs. Dink - D(EE)P R(IS)K (2019) DL (10).
7 - Peter Hope & David Harrow - Wrong Acid EP (2019) DL (10).
8 - Shangri-Lies - Drain / Greed / Hunger (2019)  DL (10).
9 - Stephen Mallinder - Um Dada (2019) LP (10).
10 - Residents - Mark of the Mole (1981) LP (9).


Finally, for the sake of being thorough, here are my top ten most played singles of 2019, again in a slightly arbitrary order so as to avoid the number three slot being shared by twelve records all of which I listened to twice.


1 - Peter Hope & David Harrow - Feel / Fear & Love (2019) 7" (7).
2 - Mansun - Wide Open Space (1996) 7" (3).
3 - Sleaford Mods - Sleaford Mods (2018) 12" (3).
4 - Caroline K - Don't Believe It's Over (2019) 12" (2).
5 - Grace Jones - Slave to the Rhythm (1985) 12" (2).
6 - Marc Almond - The Boy Who Came Back (1984) 7" (2).
7 - Nocturnal Emissions - Stem Cells (2018) 10" (2).
8 - Peter Hope & TBC - Apple Eye / White Grass No. 2 (2019) 10" (2).
9 - Psychic TV - Unclean (1984) 12" (2).
10 - Sex Pistols - The Biggest Blow (1978) 12" (2).

The factor which I've found most surprising about the above data is that I don't actually listen to music as much as it feels like I listen to music. Asked to guess how many times I've listened to WC's Revenge of the Barracuda in 2019, for one example, I would have said twenty or thereabouts but it was actually just six times. Additionally, I've had the impression that the majority of my listening has been dominated by rap, but let's see what the pie chart says - and keeping in mind that certain slightly arbitrary lines have had to be drawn for the sake of brevity in deciding what constitutes a particular genre.

 


So my impression was more or less correct, naturally prompting the question, what sort of rap?

 


As we see from the chart, I've mainly been keeping it locked to the west coast for the duration of 2019, yeah boy, albeit not exclusively because I'm all about keeping it real. Having moved to America in 2011, I now feel a bit less weird about listening to quite such a high percentage of American rap, although it will be noted that I'm still, strictly speaking, not representin' my hood (in a general sense) in this respect, despite my top two albums of the year both being rap albums from the south, respectively Atlanta and Nashville if anyone cares. Additionally, this pie chart should not be taken as an indication that I ain't be feeling UK rap and or grime or whatever the hell it's called this month, for indeed my general opinion is that the standard of UK lyricism generally exceeds that of these shores by some margin, however 1) I'm a white man in his fifties and am therefore subject to certain limitations when it comes to what's going down on the road with the kids and that, not least due to the aforementioned road now being on a different continent. Word to the motherfucker.

 


Here we see the data approximately correlating the years from which the music I listened to during 2019 was derived. Thankfully, it seems I'm not quite an eighties man in the sense of a number of my contemporaries who subscribe to the belief that it was more fun when we was growing up and with none of that swearing like now and that the first Go West album really does contain some classics if you'd just give it a chance. I find the pathological need to experience new music and to keep a finger on some notional pulse a bit peculiar, by which I mean this kind of thing seen a while back on facebook:


'I'm fifty-one. My favorite bands right now are Otherkin, Bad Sounds, Spring King, Sundara Karma, Inheaven, Kagoule, Vant, and Moaning. I can't see myself ever not listening to new music.' - Mike Tully

I actually looked up a few of those and they were mostly shit, and more than a couple of them sounded like something from 1979 for some weird reason; but, mid-life crises aside, obviously it's nice to hear music I've never heard before from time to time, regardless of vintage. The one hit registered in the graph for 1869 was Wagner's Ring Cycle, in case anyone was wondering, which sort of counts as music I've never heard before (for example) because it was probably the first time I've played it all the way through, despite having found the three disc set left outside on the pavement by someone back in the nineties.

Anyway to further break it down, my top ten favourite years, musically speaking, were apparently as follows (including a couple of score draws):


1 - 1999 (54).
2 - 1979 (36).
3 - 2000 (34).
4 - 1996 (31).
5 - 2001 / 2019 (29 each).
6 - 1980 / 1994 (27 each).
7 - 1990 (26).
8 - 2002 (24).
9 - 2006 (22).
10 - 1977 (21).


Finally, in case anyone cares, my top five most played albums on a month by month basis were approximately as follows, allowing for  anything played with the same frequency as whatever made number five being omitted by virtue of appearing later in the alphabet. In other words, had I listened to any tapes by AA Book of the Road just once in September, Forever: Rich Thugs would have been displaced.


January
1 - Hero Of A Hundred Fights - [Hero Of A Hundred Fights] (1999) CD (12).
2 - Cabaret Voltaire - Groovy, Laidback and Nasty (1990) LP (4).
3 - DDAA - Ronsard (1988) LP (4).
4 - Undertones - Undertones (1979) LP (4).
5 - Young Fathers - Cocoa Sugar (2018) CD (4).

February
1 - Cosey Fanni Tutti - Tutti (2019) LP (7).
2 - Dentists - Heads and How to Read Them (1990) LP (7).
3 - Einstürzende Neubauten - Fuenf Auf Der Nach Oben Offenen (1987) LP (5).
4 - Haystak - Portrait of a White Boy (2004) CD (5).
5 - Chris Duncan - The Vanishing Mother (1981) C60 (3).

March
1 - Haystak - Portrait of a White Boy (2004) CD (9).
2 - Sleaford Mods - Eton Alive (2019) LP (8).
3 - Salford Electronics - Communique No. 2 (2017) CD (7).
4 - Tangerine Dream - Electronic Meditation (1970) LP (5).
5 - Shangri-Lies - Drain / Greed / Hunger (2019)  DL (4).

April
1 - Residents - Mark of the Mole (1981) LP (9).
2 - Shangri-Lies - Drain / Greed / Hunger (2019) DL (6).
3 - Bollock Brothers - Never Mind the Bollocks 1983 (1983) LP (5).
4 - Infinite Livez vs. Stade - Art Brut fe de Yoot (2007) CD (3).
5 - Apostles - Cartography (1987) C90 (2).

May
1 - Peter Hope & David Harrow - Wrong Acid EP (2019) CDR/DL (10).
2 - David Bowie - Hours (1999) LP (5).
3 - David Bowie - Tonight (1984) LP (4).
4 - RZA - Bobby Digital in Stereo (1998) CD (3).
5 - Antonym - Statues in Ice (1992) C50 (2).

June
1 - Mrs. Dink - D(EE)P R(IS)K (2019) DL (10).
2 - Stex - Spiritual Dance (1992) LP (6).
3 - Residents - Tunes of Two Cities (1982) LP (4).
4 - Shellac - Dude Incredible (2014) CD (4).
5 - Residents - The Big Bubble (1985) LP (3).

July
1 - Lil Nas X - 7 EP (2019) DL (13).
2 - Chrome - The Visitation (1976) LP (7).
3 - Imagination - Scandalous (1983) LP (6).
4 - Princess Superstar - Princess Superstar Is (2001) CD (5).
5 - Charlatans - Some Friendly (1990) LP (3).

August
1 - Nicht Gut - Grönland (2019) C30 (7).
2 - C.W. McCall - Black Bear Road (1975) LP (5).
3 - Mex - Dark of the Moon (1981) CD (5).
4 - Laibach - Opus Dei (1987) LP (3).
5 - Wreckless Eric - Construction Time & Demolition (2018) LP (3).

September
1 - Awkward Geisha - 100 Soft Rock Anthems (2019) DL (4).
2 - Wreckless Eric - Transience (2019) LP (4).
3 - Beatles - Please Please Me (1963) LP (3).
4 - various - Real Time 1 (1982) C90 (2).
5 - Above the Law - Forever: Rich Thugs (1999) CD (1).

October
1 - Pixies - Beneath the Eyrie (2019) LP (7).
2 - Bernadette Cremin & Paul Mex - Mutual Territory (2018) CD (5).
3 - Cabaret Voltaire - 1974-76 (2019) 2LP (5).
4 - Dickies - Dawn of the Dickies (1979) LP (5).
5 - Stephen Mallinder - Um Dada (2019) LP (3).

November
1 - Stephen Mallinder - Um Dada (2019) LP (7).
2 - Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention - We're Only in It for the Money (1968) LP (5).
3 - David Bowie - Pin Ups (1973) LP (4).
4 - Ice Cube - Raw Footage (2008) CD (4).
5 - Nocturnal Emissions - Beyond Logic Beyond Belief (1990) LP (4).

December
1 - Mrs. Dink - Diabolique (2019) DL (4).
2 - Headyello - Road to Elsewhere (2019) DL (3).
3 - Love Unlimited Orchestra - Rhapsody in White (1977) LP (3).
4 - 2Pac - R U Still Down? (1997) 2CD (2).
5 - 2Pac - Thug Life (1994) CD (2).


There I think we have it, because that's already more useless statistical information than anyone sane could ever possibly need.


Any data-mining types intending to somehow use the above information to try and brainwash me into purchase of Babylon 5 DVD boxed sets or listening to They Might Be Giants on Spotify, go ahead. Take your best shot.


*: This potentially confusing qualification refers to an unusually annoying Spectrum internet television commercial and as such, is unlikely to make much sense to anyone who hasn't seen the commercial. Additionally, being just a passing reference to something annoying, it probably isn't funny enough to be worth explaining.

Thursday 10 December 2020

Gun Fun



I've never really had a particular problem with guns, having had very little direct experience of them. I grew up on a farm in England, and being a farm there were rifles knocking around. I used to pick up the spent cartridges when I found them, as I did from time to time, and that was so far as it went.

When one of our neighbours was released from prison and took to terrorising the neighbourhood, my wife's ex-husband lent us a twelve-gauge pump action shotgun which we kept in the closet without any real plan of using it. We bought a box of cartridges from Walmart and felt immediately and significantly less concerned with the unpredictable actions of our dumbfuck neighbour without even having loaded the thing. Whatever shit he might pull next, we told ourselves, we have a gun and he doesn't. Being a pump action shotgun, pumping the forestock to make that familiar click-clack sound is cinematic and slightly terrifying, so we figured it would be enough to send our neighbour heading for the hills next time the voices in his head sent him around to pick a fight with our front door. As it turned out, simply yelling get off my fucking lawn was apparently enough to do the trick. We haven't had a peep out of him since, and that was about a month ago.

Texas law reputedly takes a sympathetic view when it comes to shooting intruders who have entered your home, and I had - perhaps optimistically - assumed it would simply be a case of waiting for our neighbour to resume his paranoid schizophrenic war on us, at which juncture we could defend ourselves to the full extent of our capabilities and the problem would be resolved to the satisfaction of all concerned. I suppose I should be glad that it didn't come to that, although I'd nevertheless been considering gun ownership for a while, having ceased to trust America's political system to safeguard my family from spontaneous visits by semi-organised groups of extreme right-wing shitheads who don't trust people who read books or who vote for someone they don't like. I've seen them on the television with their Tiki torches so I know that they already exist, and we spent four years under an administration which couldn't quite bring itself to condemn their general type.

Unfortunately, not everyone seems to see it as I do, and editors in particular seem inclined to point out the error of my ways. I write things which occasionally require the attention of an editor, and the most recent one got quite sniffy when I summarised a couple of points from the previous paragraph on social media. Violence begats violence, he opined, albeit not in those actual words, and only an imbecile would have a gun in their home. I pointed out that, having grown up in England, I was reasonably intimate with the general concept of not having a gun in one's home, and indeed with the desirability of the same on the grounds of a society without gun ownership being one wherein people have difficulty shooting each other. He explained again, simply repeating his argument having apparently assumed that I hadn't understood on the grounds that I hadn't simply replied, yes, you're right. Guns are bad. I know that now.

The previous editor had taken more or less the same position, presuming to understand my situation better than I did and even providing links to various articles published by the Guardian to show me just how wrong I'd been. I wouldn't have minded but I wasn't even particularly defending gun-ownership, rather suggesting that the lazy focus on the same as the cause of everything bad that's ever happened might, in certain instances, contribute to whatever the problem may be by diverting attention away from deeper underlying causes; but whoever you are, wherever you are, there will always be someone who genuinely believes they understand your situation better than you do because they've read a book about it or they went to a better school. That's the class system for you.

It would be nice to live in a world without guns, but unfortunately we don't. Maybe one day we'll get that genii back in its bottle, but for the moment there's not much point getting sniffy about it; and for what it may be worth, the argument about how we need our guns in case the American government ever becomes a dictatorship doesn't cut any ice with me either, given the last four years played out without so much as a fucking custard pie targetted at anyone who might have deserved it.

So when Margot invited my wife and myself out to her farm in Medina County so that we could shoot guns, it struck me as something worth doing. I'd fired an air rifle once or twice, but not an actual firearm and it seemed like a good idea to get in some practice. Medina County is some way from San Antonio so it took the best part of an hour to get there. We'd been there before, one new year's eve, and I recall being astonished at the night sky - possibly more stars than I'd ever seen.

Margot is one of the two women I've met who could probably be described as rootin'-tootin' without it being an insult. She invited us in, introduced us to her kid, her husband, her dogs, and Oreo, her enormous pet bunny who may be coming to live with us at some point because she has trouble coping with all of the critters.

She picked out a couple of guns from the safe, filled a hold-all with boxes of ammunition, and then we drove out in her jeep, heading for where she usually engages in target practice. The farm, to my eyes, was distinguished mainly by longhorn cattle of all shapes and sizes - although mostly huge - lazing around the water hole near the house. Otherwise it was scrubby trees on flat but uneven ground for as far as the eye could see - nothing like Sweet Knowle Farm where I grew up, and not even like anything from the western movies I'd watched as a kid.

We drove slowly, the jeep tipping and bucking, Margot telling us about life on the farm over a soundtrack of the sort of grunting metal I've never quite recognised as music. Eventually we came to a halt.

Margot pinned a paper target to a tree and talked us through the process of loading up a clip with bullets, cocking the firearm, all the safety procedures, and all the stuff we've seen in cop shows. I'd spent most of the previous hours anticipating something which deafened me while knocking me off my feet and leaving a massive bruise on my shoulder, so the reality of actually firing guns turned out to be thankfully - and I suppose worryingly - much easier than I'd anticipated. My earplugs were sufficient to reduce the noise to something innocuous, and Margot showed us how to hold guns in the proper way - us being Bess and myself.

Our first gun was a rifle, possibly a Remington - unless that's just who made the bullets. It was small, fairly light, and felt much like an air rifle in my hands. Bullets were loaded into the firing chamber and spent casings subsequently expelled by pulling back and then up on a lever assemblage just as Clint Eastwood would have done, and which felt hugely satisfying. I could almost sense a droopy mustache forming on my face as I shot the thing. The kickback was significant but nothing like so bad as I'd anticipated, and I seemed to be pretty good at hitting the target for some reason.

Next was the 380 automatic, a small, stubby handgun which looked worryingly insubstantial but proved to be just the right weight to keep it from sitting in one's palm like a water pistol. Everything about it was smooth and well-oiled, and I at last understood what is meant by the term automatic. The rifle had required that I cock the gun each time I was about to fire so as to load a bullet into the chamber; which is only necessary once with an automatic, following which one may shoot off the entire clip of seven bullets. Again, the noise wasn't too bad, and the kickback only seemed like it would be a problem when firing off the entire clip in quick succession. The gun required that I support my gripping hand with another cradled beneath - like you see in the cop shows - so as to improve aim and prevent the firearm flying back and hitting me in the face. Unfortunately though, my aim was shite, meaning I would be wise to get in more practice before attempting to - just randomly and off the top of my head - settle an argument with a disagreeable personage by shooting him in the kneecaps.

Finally, we loaded up the twelve gauge, the one borrowed from Byron. It seemed like it would be effective - in some imaginary worst case scenario - but was frankly a pain in the arse to use with all of the complicated cocking and shucking to be undertaken in a specific order. So that was good to know, I guess.

After about half an hour, Bess and I felt we'd got as much as we were likely to get from the exercise so we packed up and came home. For me, it had been strange shooting at a target with a potentially lethal firearm, but nothing like so strange as I'd expected it to be, and it seemed to come naturally on some level; at least, all those rap records suddenly made a lot more sense. Surprisingly, I didn't feel like a different person. I didn't feel the need to listen to Ted Nugent and my views on gun nuts remains more or less unchanged.

For better or worse, I'm now able to do something I may not have been able to do a month ago, so that's good.

Thursday 3 December 2020

Diarrhoea Day



I had a feeling it was going to be that sort of week given that I was scheduled for a colonoscopy on Thursday afternoon, two days after a presidential election which would almost certainly cement Trump to the throne. I anticipated that by the time I woke, future presidential elections would already have been banned due to the confusion caused by having persons other than Trump on the ballot. Some genius would somehow manage to prove that democracy was a threat to freedom of speech, our right to shoot a gun, and possibly all the little unborn babies. I was assuming Trump would win in hope of avoiding the level of despair I experienced first time around when no-one thought he stood a chance in hell. I was assuming Trump would win because it's 2020. I also assumed my colonoscopy would reveal the presence of cancer, because it's 2020, so why wouldn't it?

Shooty the Drug Dealer was back out of the loony bin. Our neighbour across the way had discovered him in his yard at three in the morning.

'Is there some particular reason why I find you in my yard at three in the morning?' our neighbour asked, not unreasonably.

'I saw a man in your yard and I thought he was going to burgle your house,' Shooty explained helpfully. 'I chased him off for you!'

'If I find you in my yard at three in the morning ever again, I will shoot you with my gun,' our neighbour told him, because it wasn't even the first time Shooty had been discovered in his yard at three in the morning.

Shooty was hurt, explaining that - contrary to all of the evidence - he had our neighbour's back and that he considered our neighbour to be not only his bro but also possibly his dawg, or something. Some of this we heard directly from the neighbour, and some from Shooty's mother who phoned to explain that she didn't know why the aforementioned neighbour was being mean to her boy and threatening to shoot him, and it was worrying because now a couple of Shooty's other dawgs were planning to get the neighbour for being so mean to their trespass prone bro.

'Just another day in paradise,' observed Donna, who lives next door to us. Squidward the fantasist who lives on the other side - the man who knows doctors and dentists and clearly believes the rest of us regard him as something classy to which we might aspire - claims that Shooty left a bag of drugs in his garden. Squidward found the bag of drugs - cocaine and acid, he believes, because those are the sort of drugs that druggers like to take when they want to get high.

Shooty was presumably walking along our street with his bag of drugs, which probably had bag of drugs written on it, when he noticed Squidward's garden.

'Yoink!' I'm sure he exclaimed, one finger aloft so as to illustrate that he'd just had a completely brilliant idea. 'That looks like smashing place for me to take some drugs!'

Unfortunately he took so many drugs in Squidward's garden that he must have got unusually high and forgetfully left his bag of drugs behind when it was time to go home for tea - most likely a mound of mashed potato with sausages sticking out.

Rather than call the cops, as he'd once done when his other neighbour's dog was barking - and for pretty much every other fucking thing ever, come to think of it - Squidward instead popped the bag of drugs into yet another neighbour's wheelie bin, making it difficult for the rest of us to verify his frankly fucking ridiculous story. By the time we checked said wheelie bin, some druggers must have found the bag of drugs and smoked the contents because it was no longer there. It was all very mysterious.

On the Saturday before both the election and my colonoscopy, we can hear Shooty literally howling at the moon in the street outside, just like in the films.

The clocks go back on the Sunday, and I start to get those weird visual migraines, one of them at some point every day when I've only had two or three in my entire life.

I have my colonoscopy on Thursday, but more than anything I'm dreading having to fast the day before, and the stuff they'll expect me to drink. They've said it will be sent to my local pharmacy but with just two days to go, they seem to be leaving it a little late. I give the doctor a call. Someone with an accent I have trouble understanding explains that they've already notified me and that the medication went out a week ago. Some pharmacies only keep prescription medicine for three days if no-one turns up to collect, so mine may already have been returned. I ask by what means I have been notified and he reads out a phone number which isn't mine.

'That's great,' I say. 'I guess I'd better go and see if they still have it. If not, I guess I'll speak to you in a bit when I call to cancel my appointment. Many thanks.'

They have my prescription and there's $85 to pay. If we didn't have medical insurance, it would cost $150, which strikes me as expensive when I'm fairly sure I could get the same job done with milk of magnesia. Still, it's better than putting up with all that horrible socialism, right shitheads?

I have a bowl of French onion soup on Tuesday morning, and nothing after that. I take the bowel preparation drink at four in the afternoon, a 6oz bottle diluted with 10oz of water, then another 32oz of water to wash it down. It's pretty much the most disgusting thing I've ever had in my mouth and it cost $85. It's too sweet, sort of salty, and tastes like it should be purple in colour, except it's clear. More than anything it resembles Dr. Pepper which is the worst flavour in the world, something akin to cheap perfume crossed with dental mouthwash and referring to nothing found in nature; and fucking Trump seems to be doing all right so far. At least it's not the landslide defeat promised by all those Democrat party adverts asking for money on facebook.

I fucking loathe the medical-industrial complex industry, I write in my diary that evening. Felt like killing myself most of today.

The purpose of the $85 bowel preparation drink is to give me such powerful shits as to leave me completely empty by the time they get around to poking their Kodak Instamatic up my arse on a spring. By Thursday, I'm so weak that I have to draw a chair up to the kitchen sink and sit as I wash the dishes.

I examine the packaging of the bowel preparation drink and am able to confirm my worst fear, that the flavour is something added presumably so as to make it more yummy, at least in the imagination of someone who thinks Dr. Pepper counts as a flavour and who almost certainly voted for Trump.

Speaking of which, they still haven't finished counting the votes. Biden seems to be in the lead, but who knows. It's still 2020 after all.

We drive to the Stone Oaks medical centre. I enter an empty waiting room - no receptionist. A post-it note stuck to the window of the reception desk suggests I should ask for such and such an extension number when I call to let them know I've arrived. I don't know why they would assume I know what their fucking phone number is.

I bang on the locked door leading to the surgery and yell, 'shop!'

Eventually someone comes, but only because they expected me to be here at this time, not because I've successfully drawn their attention by pounding on the door and yelling.

I change into a gown and lay on a gurney for about ninety minutes with a saline drip feeding into one arm. I've had a headache all morning but haven't been able to take anything for it because the period of fasting applies to ibuprofen as well as to sausages and pies. I listen to the nurses and orderlies talking about country music.

'I loves me some country,' says one, young with a beard. 'I listen to it all day long but, you know, I never realised she had that many songs. I figured she was mainly just someone from the movies.'

'She had a lot of hit songs for sure.'

'Was that like - when was that?'

'Well, the sixties and the seventies mainly.'

'So was that her main thing, what she was known for?'

'Yeah, that's what she's known for more than her movies.'

'Well, there you go.'

I realise they're talking about Dolly Parton.

Eventually I'm wheeled into surgery. I notice Led Zeppelin on the radio, which strikes me as unusual, and the next thing is I'm back out on the ward, feeling wonderful and aglow with the heroin or whatever it was they used to sedate me. It's all over. The doctor shows me a series of snaps taken inside my own bumhole, which doesn't seem to contain anything I need to be worried about.

Also, my headache has gone.

That evening we eat at Good Time Charlie's, and it's the greatest meal I've ever eaten; Joe Biden seems to be president, so far as anyone is able to tell; and even Maisie, our bunny rabbit seems better, although we didn't even realise there was anything wrong. She had one regular ear, and one which flopped down as with lop-eared rabbits. We assumed this peculiar asymmetry was due to mixed parentage, but today she has both ears held proudly aloft for the first time. It feels as though we've turned a corner.