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Sunday 28 February 2010

Worth a read and other things

Interesting thing, habit. I'd kind of got into a routine of posting my oneaday stuff late at night, often in a hurry to get it done so I could go to bed - for no other real reason than it usually takes me that long to think of something to say. So when yesterday I ended up writing and posting much earlier in the day, it kind of threw my evening out. I was left with one of those nagging feelings that I ought to be doing something else besides watching tv and I just couldn't shake it. That aside, there was a certain amount of satisfaction to have got it over and done with and out of the way. Hence my attempt to repeat this today.

Although it doesn't make for much of an actual blogpost, I have been enjoying doing a 'worth a read' roundup of the week - although I do read as many of the posts as I can each day, I quite like having a Sunday catch-up. And Google Reader makes it that much easier.

Anyway, without further ado, here you are:

A Grandia Tale by Lauren (because I still have my PC copy of Grandia somewhere in storage and now want to play it again)
These are the sheep that I walk past to and from work every day by Sean
Feeling sexy by Chris
Cheescake Brownies by Jennifer (because they sound so damn good)
Tolkein: why I don't hate him like you do by Jazmeister
Temple of Love by Rachel
Demystifying games by Chris
I <3 by Daniel

This week has obviously been a good week, and it was actually quite tricky to pick these ones out - there were a lot more I could have added.

Oh, and can I just mention, for those very kind people who have added me to their blogrolls, my name is Kirsty. Not Katy (due to a misread very early on in the life of #oneaday I suspect).

Saturday 27 February 2010

I've started so I'll finish

When it comes to games, my perseverance has been somewhat lacking recently. I'm gradually wearing Mr.B down in my attempts to persuade him to let me buy a 360 and/or PS3, but don't feel like I can totally justify it until I've completed more of the games I've got for the consoles we already have.

Christmas left me with a huge stack of games thanks to gifts and a trip round a 2nd hand games shop where I just bought a load of random stuff because it was cheap. Some of which weren't even worth the £1.99 I paid for them, but that's besides the point.

My list of owned but unfinished games currently looks like this:

PS2
Dark Chronicle
XIII
The Da Vinci Code
Atelier Iris 3
Persona 3
LoTR The Third Age
LoTR Fellowship of the Ring
FF XII
Myst III

Wii
Zack&Wiki
CSI Hard Evidence
Tunguska

DS
Scribblenauts
My Sims Kingdom

Mac
Fable (the Lost Chapters)
C&C Tiberium Wars

I suspect the problem is that I don't have the time or concentration usually to pick one game and play it often enough so I keep forgetting where I am and what I'm supposed to be doing when I do play them. And some of them have just failed to grab me altogether. I did finally manage to complete Zelda Spirit Tracks last night, so need to pick one to get on with next. Most likely Fable or FFXII - depends whether I can kick Mr.B off the PS2 (he is addicted to Need for Speed Underground) for long enough...

Friday 26 February 2010

Nordic Walking

After my trip there this afternoon, I wanted to write today's post on the Systembolaget, but was a little concerned that it had the potential to turn into another rant so I'll save it for another day. Instead I just wanted to mention the phenomenon that is Nordic Walking.

We see loads of people doing this round and about, mostly older people, quite often in couples, and it has fascinated me since we arrived. I don't know how much benefit there is to it but they all look quite fit and healthy when they're jauntily striding down the road, so I'm quite tempted to give it a shot. Mind you, strolling down a path that is narrowed from the snow with an old lady determinedly nordic walking towards you can actually be quite intimidating. I jumped into the snow out of the way just in case - those sticks are not supposed to have spikes on the bottom as far as I know, but there's no accounting for what home modifications these innocent looking white haired little old ladies might have done...

Here's a short semi-related video that made me giggle at the end:

Thursday 25 February 2010

'Forced' maternity leave

I read this post by Sweden's EU minister Birgitta Ohlsson earlier this evening and found myself rather frustrated.

Whilst it is admirable that gender equality is such an issue in Sweden, it often feels to me like things have been pushed too far in the opposite direction, to the detriment of women's choices rather than their advancement. Childcare provision is excellent and affordable, which gives women the ability to return to work after having children without too much difficulty - unlike in the UK where childcare is sometimes prohibitively expensive. However, instead of encouraging women to return to work if they wish, rather they are actively discouraged from staying at home to the point where it is almost socially unacceptable to do so. Frequently on official forms the only options are for working/studying/jobseeker/parental leave; there is no tick box that a full-time stay-at-home parent fits in. It may be that a mother staying at home to care for her children is a traditional gender stereotype, but that does not automatically make it wrong. And there is no reason why a man cannot be a stay at home parent either - if they decide that is how they wish to raise their children. But this choice has been virtually taken out of the equation, and that to me is not progress. Birgitta Ohlsson does not want women to be forced into staying at home, she apparently just wants them to be forced into employment instead so they can pay tax, regardless of their wishes.

The main issue of the article deals with compulsory maternity leave for the first 6 weeks after a baby is born. The maternity/paternity leave system here in Sweden is a vast improvement over that in the UK, with it being longer and also allowed to be shared between the parents as suits them, giving the fathers just as much opportunity to spend time with their child as the mother. But whatever you like to think, men do not actually suffer any physical side effects from the birth of a child, and the first few weeks are much less important for them than they are for the mother. Ohlsson has stated that she intends to return to work within a month of giving birth. When the time comes, if she feels like she can then that's great. Unfortunately right now she obviously has absolutely no idea of what is in store. Any new mother will tell you that the first few weeks are difficult. Your hormones are reeling, and unless you are very lucky, you will also most likely be suffering from sleep deprivation. And that's assuming that the birth itself is straightforward with no lasting physical effects, and not even taking breastfeeding and the possibility of PND into consideration.

I don't think the issue should be of the women who are going to 'suffer' from not being allowed to return to work in the first 6 weeks, rather it should be about the women who will be protected from being compelled perhaps by an uncaring employer or spouse to return to work immediately if they are not ready to. One situation will not likely cause harm, the other could prove to be extremely harmful. Whether 6 weeks is an appropriate length of time I don't know, but I believe there should definitely be a set period of 'compulsory' maternity leave for just these reasons. And let's not forget that this is not just an issue affecting Sweden, it is an EU law that is under discussion and not all other countries in the EU necessarily have such an 'enlightened' view on gender equality as Sweden.

Don't get me wrong, I am not trying to say that all women should stay at home with their children, rather that either parent should have the choice if the opportunity is there. Not everybody can afford to live on one salary, but people should not be stigmatised by the choices that they make. Isn't that what liberation is about? Giving people the freedom of choice.

Wednesday 24 February 2010

Sporting allegiances

Before we moved over to Sweden, one of Mr.B's colleagues gave him a bright yellow 'Sverige' t-shirt just so he would know who to support when we got here. And moving to a new country does give a certain sense that you should be cheering them on in their sporting ventures as it would be rude not to. The difficulty comes when your home country team comes up against your adopted country - who do you cheer for then?

We didn't expect it to be much of an issue for a while as Sweden didn't qualify for the football World Cup, and wouldn't necessarily have played against England even if they had. But then came the Winter Olympics. We've taken an interest in both Great Britain and Sweden as they've been going on and haven't begrudged Sweden their 8 medals to GB's 1. But now it's the acid test - Sweden and Team GB are currently going head-to-head in a tense playoff for the last place in the men's curling semi-finals and all of a sudden we have to pick our allegiances.

I'm wondering if it's wrong to just cheer on whoever is winning at the time...

(But on Saturday, regardless of who is skiing from Britain or Sweden, we shall be cheering on Ghana and the Snow Leopard in the Men's Slalom.)

Tuesday 23 February 2010

Braid (in which I pretend to write a review)

Not very well today with something that may or may not be Vinterkräksjuka so am cheating a little and using the sort-of review I wrote on Braid because of Spriteclub.
I'm doing so rather reluctantly, as so many of the #oneadayers are proper games reviewers and this bears no resemblance to something they would probably write. Anyway, here goes (with fingers crossed none of them read it).

For anyone who has never come across it, I would describe Braid as a kind of puzzle platformer where time goes both forwards and backwards.
I can sum it up in two words:

Original
Frustrating

The frustration does of course mean that it is incredibly rewarding when you finally work out how to do a level, but I'm not entirely convinced that the payoff is always worth the frequent temptation to throw the computer out of the window. I don't really understand the relevance of the story but then I never did get to the end so maybe it makes more sense the further you get through.

The whole being able to rewind if you get killed is a great concept, and the fluidity of time and motion varying with each level stops it from getting repetitive. I like the style and artwork but can't comment on the music as I only ever played it with the sound off. It's a good enough game that having played the first few levels on the demo I was really keen to buy the full version. Maybe I'll eventually complete it, some time around 2015.

Struggled for a while trying to decide what score to give. In so many ways it should be a 9, but in the end the aggravation with certain levels was just too much - it almost took it down to a 7, but the fact that you don't have to complete every single level in a world before unlocking the next one rescued it up to a final well-deserved 8.

Monday 22 February 2010

When internal debates go wrong

My lovely Swedish teacher decided to give us extra homework half way through this week in the form of preparing a discussion of an article about women having babies at 60 years old. The fact that we were barely able to talk in basic sentences about ourselves last week without resorting to English is presumably besides the point.

Naturally I decided to work out my discussion points in English first, but this proved to be more difficult than I expected. Obviously a simple statement against it was not going to be enough, but for every reason behind my stance I found I could think of a fairly legitimate counter-point. Things that would have seemed clear-cut to me 10 years ago, now were much fuzzier. Which did make me question whether what I was thinking was actually right. I was originally going to write a post detailing all these points and opposing arguments in the hopes that it would clarify things for me, but unfortunately it didn't and I ended up tying myself in knots.

I admit my opinions are influenced by my own life - whilst my mother was not incredibly old when I was born by today's standards, in the 1970's she was. Maybe I was just an unpleasant child, but I will always remember being horribly embarrassed when I was young by my white haired mum and dad and hated being constantly asked if they were my grandparents. And though I loved them dearly, the generation gap was immense and despite trying, my mother often struggled with relating to the way things were for me as a teenager. She grew up in the second world war, left school at 13 to work in t'mill, and was married with a child by the time she was 20 - all perfectly normal for her generation, and worlds apart from mine. Although as I got older the generation gap did diminish quite a lot and I relied on and valued her knowledge and experience a tremendous amount, especially when I had a family of my own.

So my final answer to the discussion point ready for tomorrow? Jag tycker att det är inte bra för kvinnor att bli mammor 60 år gammal, men det är ett personligt val.

If you disagree, then that's fine. I can probably tell you all your arguments anyway.

Sunday 21 February 2010

Worth a read round-up of the week

In case you haven't had time to read all the #oneaday blogs this week, here are a few you really should not miss:

A cautionary tale by @cidergirli

One a day by Jazmeister (Almost entirely for one sentence in the last paragraph which made me smile)

Rudeness, favours and karma by @sorayaleila

The trouble with cinemas by @Rhiarti

And you should definitely read this and this by Chris about the future of #oneaday if you haven't already.

Saturday 20 February 2010

The S-word

The temperature here today was -13C (windchill took it down to -22C) so that combined with a poorly child made us decide to stay in and have a DVD weekend with all 4 Indiana Jones films. 1st two done today, 2nd two will be tomorrow as I don't expect any improvement in the weather. Hopefully the medium-sized girl will be a bit brighter though.
There has also been constant snow all afternoon and evening, so please excuse the repetition of a frequent moan, but I'VE HAD ENOUGH. All I want to do right now is jump on a plane to anywhere at all that has no snow. If I wanted to live in a country that had subzero temperatures and snow for 3 months of the year I would have moved to Siberia. /endofrant

Evening has been passed drinking the odd bottles of beer left in the fridge and playing Zelda Spirit Tracks - as usual I knew that it was time to call it a day when I was beginning to shout at it for taking too many attempts just to do one little part of a dungeon. Now I'm writing this and laughing at Mr.B constantly swearing at Need for Speed Underground. He too has reached that point but hasn't accepted that it's time to give in gracefully for the night yet.

Friday 19 February 2010

Perceptions

Since moving abroad, I've come across some interesting perceptions that other countries have about the British. Not so much from the Swedes (the only thing they've ever commented on is England's inability to deal with snow), but just before Christmas I was talking to the Polish mother of one of my daughter's friends. She was asking me what I was looking forward to about going back to England, and when I only half-jokingly said 'the food', she looked really surprised and replied, "But the food in England is really terrible isn't it?" I confess I found myself struck entirely speechless by this blunt response, and only managed to muster a half-hearted defense. It wasn't helped by the fact that what I was mostly missing consisted of things like proper chips and nothing which would be considered a shining example of British cuisine.

This subject came up again earlier this week, when one of the Brazilians in my conversation class asked perfectly seriously, "But isn't English food all just meat and potatoes?" And the worst thing was, all the other people around the table were nodding in agreement! She was also convinced that all English people are obsessed with the Queen and was actually quite disappointed to be told that we weren't.

It appears that those trying to champion British cookery abroad have some large way to go just yet.

Thursday 18 February 2010

A lull

As anybody who's read my posts from the last couple of days will probably have noticed, I'm going through a bit of a #oneaday lull right now. Not that I haven't got a smattering of things to write about tucked away on one of my various lists, but none of them are particularly interesting to me at the moment, and therefore the words don't want to play nicely.

However, I'm determined not to give up just yet. I started this process to work on my self-discipline of writing something every day, and hopefully improve the nonsense that I do write. Whether or not that is happening I don't know, but I've impressed myself at the number of consecutive days I've actually managed to post something on here. Even if on occasion it has been the height of utter drivel.

So you're not getting rid of me just yet. And if you haven't read Chris' post on the continuation of #oneaday then you should. It's far more interesting than this.

Wednesday 17 February 2010

Untitled

No title for this post, because there's no theme. Feeling particularly 'meh' right now, so here's a few random nuggets from the day.

- Swedes are known for not being very sociable in the winter, so it looks like Spring might actually be on the way. The old man from downstairs spoke to me in the lift this morning. He very kindly spoke slowly and in simple words so I could understand what he said, and I actually managed to respond with 3 whole words in Swedish.

- It's been snowing again all day today, and the weather forecast is predicting the same for another 8 days which is adding to the depression. Even the kids are starting to get bored of the weather now.

- Played XIII on the PS2 for the first time this evening; loved the style, but struggled immensely with the controls. It's a very very long time since I last played a first person shooter type thing, so hopefully with a bit of perseverance I might improve and not die every five minutes.

- Never underestimate how much excitement can be generated by the simple act of making biscuits and cutting them out with animal shape cutters with 3 small sous-chefs.

- My youngest will be starting dagis (preschool) in April for 15 hours a week, which means that I will have some time to myself for the first time really since the middle one arrived. She can't wait to go; I'm torn between being hugely excited and incredibly sad that my last baby is not a baby any more.

Goodnight.

Tuesday 16 February 2010

Conversations

First Swedish conversation class was today. Not quite as bad as I expected (after sulking round the flat like a stroppy teenager who doesn't want to go school this morning) - I really thought I would be the least capable of stringing a sentence together after my performance in recent weeks, but I surprised myself with what I managed to come out with. And I was by no means the least able there, not the best, but not the worst.

I am in awe of the other ladies in the group though. There are 2 Brazilians, a Bulgarian, and a Dutch woman. The fact that they are all managing to learn Swedish via English rather than from their first language made me feel incredibly inadequate. I comfort myself with the fact that my Swedish accent is better though. (At least I think it is.)

Next week we have to talk about our hobbies. I should probably find one that's more interesting than 'playing on the internet' between now and then I guess.

Monday 15 February 2010

Sacrifice

When I was 8, one of my best friends lived in the street behind ours. Each week we'd club together our pocket money and buy sweets and little bottles of Ben Shaw's fizzy pop which we would then hide in a gap in the hedge at the bottom of our garden for the day and raid every so often while we were playing. There was always a packet of Parma Violets in the stash which I secretly loathed (and still do), but went along with as they were her favourites.

A couple of years ago we were chatting, and this came up in conversation. "We always used to have to have Parma Violets," she said. "I hated them, and only got them because you liked them."

The moral of the story? If you're going to make sacrifices for your friends, make sure that they're actually necessary first.

Sunday 14 February 2010

#oneaday blog posts of the week

I could have written something about Valentines Day, but it wouldn't really be that interesting. So instead, here are some links to just a few of the stand-out #oneaday blogposts I've read this week.

Silence is Golden by @jenjeahaly

Things I cannot do #2 by @Jam_Sponge

Blog #44 by @matmurray

Midnight Manouvres by @Rhiarti

My problem with... Facebook by @adamenglebright

The man who gave me my laugh by @strybe

Sweet disposition by @SchillingC

Go away and read them. And all the rest.

Saturday 13 February 2010

228 days

228 days. That's how long we've been living in this apartment and I'm starting to feel every minute of it. Don't get me wrong, the place itself is not actually that bad as they go, and I have nothing against flats in themselves, but I've just had enough.

The last time I lived in a flat was pre-children, and was in a shiny new complex at the Royal Victoria Dock in London. I quite liked it there, despite the couple upstairs who argued very loudly all the time; and being under the flight path for City Airport which meant you couldn't hear the tv every time a plane came over. But then I was in the pub (which was actually a boat, in the dock outside - best local ever) most of the time anyway and my flatmate was at work or away, so it didn't really matter.

Living in an apartment with kids is an entirely different matter though. It's one thing having limited space and no garden when there's only 2 of you, but quite another when there's 5 of you. Having to pre-book the laundry for one half-day slot a week is a huge pain as well. The people living directly above us are quite noisy - they have a child who runs around in hob-nailed boots every night at about 9pm, and what sounds like it must be a rowing machine that is in use at 6am and 10pm every day. And then there's the electric guitar that appeared last weekend. Someone somewhere else in the building has a drum kit which thankfully seems to have been broken since the summer.

All of which makes me overly paranoid about how loud we must be to the people living directly below us, and I seem to spend all day telling the children not to run around and to keep the noise down to a respectable level. Not that they're that bad, they just get carried away with whatever game they're playing and forget. So it really irritates me that I'm so conscientious about not disturbing our neighbours but other people don't give a monkey's. I mean really - an electric guitar and drumkit? I don't worry so much about the people next door as they have a newborn and the only time I've heard it has when I've actually been outside on the landing waiting for the lift.

It does provide amusement at times - we get a great view of what's going on in the street; and then the other evening, a woman from upstairs got out of the lift on the wrong floor and tried to unlock our front door with her key about 3 times till I opened it and just looked at her and smiled. I've been convinced I was going to do the same thing since we moved here so I'm glad it was her and not me. The endless hot-water and the ease of only having to pay one bill a month (rent includes electricity, heating, internet, tv and everything else) has been really useful too.

Having said all that, I'm now going to go away and nurse the guilt that I feel after we spent 2 whole afternoons in a row playing Guitar Hero with drums. Please cross everything you have that we find a house soon - the next piece of noise-making equipment upstairs brings back might just send me postal....

Friday 12 February 2010

Usernames

The origins of my username are sadly prosaic - kirtle is just part of a nickname that one of my sisters has called me for years.
Years ago in the early days of my internet usage when we spent many hours in telnet talkers, I was originally known as Titus (Gormenghast was one of my favourite books at the time) but changed that to Fuschia (Gormenghast again) due to the unfortunate side effect that when sending direct messages you didn't have to write the person's full name, so Titus was inevitably abbreviated to Tit which caused immense hilarity amongst the teenage boys.
When I signed up for my first yahoo email address, kirtle was what jumped into my head and that it what I have used for pretty much everything online ever since. It's sad, but I almost identify as much with being kirtle as being Kirsty.

So where does your username come from?

Thursday 11 February 2010

Cafe latte cookies

Being the eternal teacher's pet that I am, I've decided to take in some fika for my last Swedish lesson this afternoon. And this is what I made:



(The recipe below is from Anne's Food - I heartily recommend checking out some of her other recipes too)

Makes about 30

220 g butter, at room temperature
125 g brown sugar
125 g sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
275 g flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
30 g cocoa powder
1 tsp instant coffee
150 g dark chocolate, finely chopped
150 g white chocolate, finely chopped

Beat butter and both sugars until the mixture is fluffy and feels light. Add eggs and vanilla, and beat well. Mix the flour with salt and baking soda, and stir this into the cookie dough.
Now, remove half of the dough and place in a separate bowl. Add cocoa powder, instant coffee and dark chocolate to one of the bowls, and the white chocolate to the other bowl.
Scoop about 1 tbsp of each cookie dough, and place together on a baking sheet. Make sure to leave a lot of room between each cookie - I could fit about 10 on one cookie sheet.
Bake at 175°C for 8-10 minutes.


They taste awesome, and I certainly won't be taking them all with me!

Wednesday 10 February 2010

Snow

I am so bored with snow now. It started snowing 2 months ago, and none of it has gone yet as the temperatures have been constantly sub-zero ever since (except for a couple of days last week when they reached the dizzy heights of 1C). There's so much that they've run out of places to put it when they clear the paths and roads, and dirty snow is piled up everywhere you look. Every now and then some of it gets scooped up into tipper trucks and taken away to who knows where (maybe they're selling it to the Canadians), but they're fighting a losing battle. Happily, what was forecasted for this week hasn't arrived apart from a few flurries this morning, but they're promising more next week.

Don't get me wrong, I don't hate everything about the snow; when it first arrived it made things seem so much brighter after the dim and dark November we had; when you go out into the countryside the trees and fields look so pretty; and it's great fun taking the kids sledging at a weekend. Living in this apartment means that it's always warm indoors, and going out in the cold is a great excuse for hot chocolate with cream and marshmallows when you get back home.

I'm fed up with getting cold toes every time I go anywhere despite my fluffy socks. It takes at least 20 minutes just to get out of the door by the time everyone has put on their snowsuits or salopettes, jumpers, coats, hats, earmuffs, scarves, gloves and boots; and then the reverse process when we get in takes just as long plus you have to find space for all the wet things on the radiators. It will be nice not to have to have soggy newspaper in the hall for people to leave their wet boots on, and not get snow pushed down the back of my trousers by 4 year olds who think it's hysterically amusing every single time.

Most of all, I'm looking forward to being able to see something that's not white out of the window. I miss green.

Tuesday 9 February 2010

The weatherman [video]

Not much of a blog today, feeling somewhat grumpy even though the forecasted snow has thankfully never materialised. Watching this cheered me up though - there should be more weathermen like this around.

Monday 8 February 2010

Analysing the #oneaday bloggers

No, not that kind of analysis - although I'm sure there's plenty there for a shrink to get their teeth into. Around about the time that Mass Effect 2 came out, I noticed that a lot of the #oneaday blogs I read regularly contained a lot of posts that were games-related, which made me wonder just what kind of subjects were the most popular. So, being a sucker for anything that I can put in a spreadsheet (sad, I know) I decided to go through them all and see.

It was one of those things that seems like a really good idea at the time, and then when you get half way through you realise that you were obviously not quite in your right mind when you thought of it. And of course by then you've invested too much time and effort and have to carry on to the bitter end.

So today I went through everyone's blogs and put the posts into categories that were arbitrarily and vaguely defined by criteria that exist solely in my head, and here are the results:

No. of bloggers: 43
Total no. of posts (as of this morning): 1141
Gaming: 21%
Film/TV/music/books: 15%
Personal anecdotes and stories: 27%
Opinion/rants: 11%
#oneaday/blogging: 6%
Sport: 2%
Misc: 18%

There are also at least 25 desk-related posts included in one of those categories that I probably should have separated out into their very own, but didn't think about it until it was too late and then couldn't be bothered to go back and alter the numbers. I don't know what the results actually tell us about the people in the #oneaday network, but I feel better for knowing them.

It was actually quite enjoyable to read through a lot of what has been written - there are some incredibly talented people in the network. Some of the blogs made me laugh, some made me cry, they were informative, fascinating, and occasionally bewildering. I was also very impressed at the number of people who have lasted this far. I confess, I never expected to make it past a week or maybe two. But here I still am.

Sunday 7 February 2010

No sleep till Monday

There's something about Sunday nights. Inevitably, I find myself sitting up till the early hours of the morning, for no particular reason except that I just don't want to go to bed. Whether it's a reluctance to let go of the weekend, or a subconscious desire to postpone Monday morning for as long as possible, I have no idea. Whatever the reason, I can always find 101 things to do to delay matters. And even if I do decide to have an 'early' night on a Sunday, I cannot settle and end up getting up again. All of which leads to me being even more tired and grumpy on a Monday, which is a grumpy day for most people anyway.

You could be forgiven for assuming that it's because I have a lie-in on a Sunday morning which scrambles my body-clock. It's true, I did today, but usually Sundays are my turn to get up with the children at whatever godforsaken hour of the morning they decide they're going to wake up and start playing some game that involves lots of giggling.

I've just turned over and found that the Superbowl is being shown. I have no interest whatsoever in American football (there was a few months when I was around 10 that I found it fascinating for some reason and decided I would support the Miami Dolphins, but it didn't last long) - what's the betting that I'll watch the coverage to the end at a scary 4.30am, just because it's on?

This post comes to you with thanks to the inestimable @Cerithomas for encouraging me to get on with it when I couldn't get past the first line.

Saturday 6 February 2010

Better late than never?

It's fast approaching 2am, and I should obviously be in bed. Instead, I'm sat here with a large glass of wine, frantically trying to think of something to put in this blog so I don't miss a day for the first time (the rules do say that the day doesn't end till you go to bed, right?).
The reason being, having discovered that there was nothing on the tv (except an old episode of Silent Witness/Tyst Vitne that we've seen before) and being incredibly annoyed at the numpty upstairs playing the electric guitar, it of course made perfect sense to start playing Fable - the Lost Chapters which arrived in the post yesterday from one of my lovely sisters. That was 5 hours ago, and I've only just come up for air.
The stupid thing is, I can't even tell you 100% that I actually like the wretched game. I loved it at the beginning, and I was liking it again at the end, but there was an hour or so when I was just doing seemingly pointless (and difficult) quests that I was starting to wonder whether it was worth bothering with. Happily, after 2 hours of being really rubbish at fighting, I've finally got to the next bit of story and things feel like they're back on track.
There was a great little werewolf mini-plot which made me think of playing Doom years and years ago, as I had headphones in (to drown out the aforementioned guitar) and every time I thought I'd killed it I could suddenly hear it growling behind me. Think I know what I'll probably be dreaming about tonight.
Will I play it again tomorrow? Quite likely. Although I shall be happier when I find out what happened to all the new magic spells that I learnt which then promptly vanished when I actually wanted to use them.

Friday 5 February 2010

The Gathering Storm (part 2)

I finally finished reading The Gathering Storm a few days ago. The impression I got was something of a whirlwind with how much actually happened, particularly when compared to say books 8-10. There was a noticeable difference in style in the later parts of the book, which was sometimes good as things were moving along and it was also quite easy to read, but also occasionally a little dissatisfying as events were wrapped up in the space of a couple of pages, when they could possibly have done with taking a whole chapter - almost feeling rushed. Maybe that's just because I had got used to the style of the preceding few books where they at times felt unnecessarily padded out, but there was sometimes a sense of unseemly haste.
On the whole though, I did enjoy the book. Plenty of storylines have finally got to where they were going; things are beginning to be explained; and my love for the series has been renewed somewhat - I'm waiting for the next one slightly impatiently anyway.
Overall, I guess I'd give it something around 7.5/10. Half a point of which is for a beautifully resolved minor plotline that I won't explain as that would spoil it.

Thursday 4 February 2010

Unoriginally entitled 'Desk'

By the time the rash of 'desk' oneadays came out yesterday, my own post had long been written; but as unusually today I'm actually sitting at a desk while I write this, I thought I'd jump on the bandwagon even if it is a day late.

However, I'm feeling particularly lazy right now and still have a headache, so here's a photo of it instead of a beautifully crafted description as some of the other bloggers did.



If a picture really is worth a thousand words then that probably makes this one of my longest blogposts yet.

Wednesday 3 February 2010

Getting older

It's finally here. Today is the day that I can no longer hang on by my fingernails to the illusion of being in my early 30's, but am firmly ensconced in the realms of a middle thirty-something.
Yet I don't really feel any older or more grown-up than I did when I was in my early twenties. Despite all the trappings of adult-hood (husband, kids, mortgage), I'm mentally still somewhere around 23. Which means it can prove to be a bit of a shock every now and then when I look in the mirror and see the ever increasing number of grey hairs on my head and the very faint laughter/frown lines on my forehead. Not that there's anything wrong with feeling young, and I certainly don't want to feel old, but I would be grateful to start developing some of the wisdom and sense that's supposed to come with age.

Time for me to go and eat doughnuts with #3 and then have a go with Tiberian Sun that my SiL sent. Later I shall play Zelda on my other birthday present (the DSi) and eat chocolate.

See? I've got this grown-up thing down to a fine art.

Tuesday 2 February 2010

Headaches

I distinctly remember the first time I ever got a migraine. I was about 8 years old, and we were on holiday somewhere down south. After much nagging, my parents had finally been persuaded to take me to a amusement park for the first time and we were in the car on the way there. All of a sudden, my excitement turned to total panic when I realised that I couldn't see properly and had a huge blind spot right in the middle of my vision. Everything goes a bit vague after that, I presume my mother had an idea what was going on, as rather than rushing to the nearest hospital we carried on to the theme park where I spent the day alternately being sick and sleeping in their medical room.
The other very memorable time was when I was at secondary school, and had a nightmare trying to convince the school secretary that I needed to go home - she was obviously labouring under the impression that migraines were something that only adults got, and was incredibly huffy when I had to ask her to help me walk to the door to be picked up because by that time I couldn't see a thing.

So after 25-ish years of them, I've kind of got used to the whole 'Can't see any more, got to go to bed' thing. Generally, I get the aura as a warning, so if I'm lucky I can have taken some painkillers and jumped into bed to be asleep before the headache starts; thus missing most of the pain altogether.
The worst bit though is not the headache, as that only lasts a few hours; it's the hangover I get for two or three days afterwards. My head feels like it's full of cotton wool with a dull ache, my brain goes even slower than usual, I want to sleep all the time, and if it's been a particularly bad one, my speech can be slow and slurred so that I just sound drunk. I know people who suffer with the actual migraine much worse than me though so I'm thankful for small mercies.

It also means that I can't look at a computer screen for very long, so if I'm quiet over the next few days then you'll know why.

Monday 1 February 2010

Washing day poetry

Monday laundry day bad poetry.

There once was a washing machine
That made all the clothes very clean.
"Please stop me!" it cried
As it tumbled and dried;
"This sock has made everything green."
--------------------------------------
Today I must wash
Tvättrum is too far away
Need to use the lift.
--------------------------------------
Lots of clothes
Awaiting in the pile.
Unless I get them clean,
Nobody can get dressed.
Dirty clothes will smell,
Red t-shirts and
Yellow socks.
--------------------------------------
I wish someone would invent
A machine that folds and puts away.
Something I could rent
To save me time on laundry day.
Such a device would be heaven sent
And lots of money would I pay.