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SAIL – Ropes, beaches & butterfly catchers

27 Saturday Aug 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

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Chapter 3.

Tom likes walking along the beach. He also likes walking to the beach. He likes the smell of the earth in the woods that you have to walk through to get to it.

Tom has been going to the beach regularly now for almost a year. Well, 7 months. And a week. 
The main entrance to the wood that leads to the beach is just at the end of The Avenue – a road full of big houses that back on to the Golf Club.

His dad goes to the Golf Club – but only if someone invites him. Tom doesn’t go through the main entrance to the wood though. Tom cuts across the main road and in through a gap at the roadside.

The wood is big; the tree canopy high and the air is cool; and there is a big crater-like bit in the middle of it that with a bit of work could be something amazing – like a moon station or A Knight’s Lair.

There is an old camp made out of branches and bits of scrap stuck together into a dusty criss-cross thing full of shadows – but he doesn’t know who built it: it has been there forever.

There are tall peeling white trees growing up the sides of the dip. The trees have grown over in an arch, tunnelling the light down to a small bright torch-like circle of light at the end.

Tom likes the idea that there is a magic land where dragons might live or some such thing through the arch and into the circle: but not really.

At the other side of the wood, furthest from the golf course, there is a break in the bank and the barbed wire. Once through the gap, the earth gets sandier and the thicker trees transform to pine ones, their needles like a spongy mattress on the ground where the earth turns to sand.

Tom likes the way the smell of the air changes on a windy day as the sea breeze blows through into the woods.
 Salty pine.

Tom likes Pine trees. The other word they use for them – con-if-er-ous – Tom has to break down into pieces and say slowly, otherwise he tends to rush it and say carnivorous, which is silly as the trees are hardly going to eat a hamburger or sausages or something. But then again there are carnivorous plants that eat flies.

The air in the woods gets this weird rubbery whiff every now and then – which really throws him. This is a recent thing though – last week a boy at school showed him a condom: took it out of the pack and blew it up like a balloon. Tom tried to do the same but he suddenly felt a bit funny putting his mouth over the bit where you’re apparently meant to put your willy in. Then his lips and fingers got in a muddle and the ribbed tube of puffed air fired off around the playground, frootling and parping as it went.
 The wood sometimes smells like condoms.

The beach is the best place, ever. It is long and curves around a bit of land that sticks out into the sea: a promontory as the local national Trust map describes it.

The bit of land used to have a big house on the end of it but it’s been pulled down now with only bits of old rubble left.
Tom knows because he climbed up there once.

Apparently, in the Second World War, a spy lived there and used to send messages to German U Boats with a torch or something. He was ugly and had a strange wart on his nose that people couldn’t help but look at apparently – but he was caught and put in jail or shot – or so the old man with the Labrador that Tom sometimes meets on the beach says anyway.

They talked a bit once. Tom hadn’t meant to. It was just that Ceasar and the man’s Labrador started doing the sniffing thing to each other and Tom and the man ended up standing by them as they sniffed. Then Caesar decided to jump on the man’s dog: which had all got a bit embarrassing. So they chatted to cover their embarrassment: well Tom’s at least.

Some days (increasingly), the beach looks like someone’s kicked their shopping down it .
 Once it looked like someone had actually kicked Tom’s mum’s shopping down the beach because, on closer inspection, the various wrappers, tins, packets, empty drink bottles, and the fish finger and cereal boxes,  were exactly the same as the stuff Tom’s mum buys – exactly the same – except for the rotting dead seagull; and the half a flip flop, the discarded bike tyre: and a pair of broken funny glasses with the big nose moustache and eyebrows: but exactly the same otherwise.

Tom doesn’t only walk on the beach with Caesar. There is a bit of the beach furthest away that he goes to on his own. It is a funny bit of beach. All flat and quiet. He never sees anyone there. Which is fine. He gets to think about stuff: like Kathy, and the stealing problem; Nigel’s mother; and other stuff: like his bike being un-cool.

Today, Tom is thinking about Mrs. Goodrich, ready salted crisps and the school caretaker sorting that thing out with those boys who’d been pushing him around. Oh, and he’s picturing himself kissing Kathy but with the body of Daredevil. And perhaps with his blindness as well. That would make all of his senses super sensory. So the kiss would be to the power of like 100.

He kicks the shell in front of him. Tom likes the way shells leave soft shapes in the sand that just melt away; that disappear as if by magic.

He is on the special part of the beach today. The sea is very quiet and flat.
 He walks a few yards and comes up to the Tie. The Tie is his name for a great piece of heavy rope that comes up the beach out of the sea and ends in a huge knot tied to a huge wizened old peg in the ground.

It seems like a million years old, gnarled and polished. The knobs on it look a bit like Nigel’s stones.

The Tie is a kind of distance marker for Tom’s mood. If he’s slightly ticked off he might walk as far as it but no further. If he’s in a massive funk he usually walks straight past the Tie, for a little way at least, until he gets bored and turns back.

Today is no different. But Tom is feeling a little strange today.

He doesn’t like the way everything about his life seems so… so flat today. Not that he doesn’t feel that way most days but today he cant’s seem to fly away from his own head.
His daydreams normally do the job. A small dream of pop stardom, Minecraft fame or maybe being really cool and Nigel’s mum thinking he was cool perhaps; 
Or just being on a flying dragon for a bit of a laugh, though of course they didn’t exist: not in East Anglia anyway; something like that usually sorted things. Just not today.

Sometimes he day-dreamed that he could make time stop so that he could go and kiss anyone he wanted too. But he used to get lonely very quickly in that dream; and anyway, everyone’s eyes reminded him of his dad’s eyes so he didn’t stay in that dream very long. He only really began the dream to be able to kiss Kathy without her pushing him away. It just went wrong and got a bit lonely when he could kiss everyone. He liked the idea of kissing Kathy. And the girl in the sweet shop perhaps.

While Tom is thinking of kissing, something happens that really surprises him.

As he walks back past the Tie he stops.

He looks at its gnarled knobs and the huge rope. As he does so a big fat fist of an idea, like Sandman’s huge sandy hand in Spidey 2, seems to punch him in the head. BOOM.

He will undo The Tie. Yeah. Why not.

He studies the huge flaxen rope for a bit. He wonders whether he can undo it. Tom is a little shocked by this sudden need to untie the Tie but he isn’t quite sure why. He leans down and touches the rope. He likes the way it feels under his fingers. The rope is very thick and frayed but it’s really soft to the touch. The underside is all slick with green slimy stuff and hangy-down green bits.

Tom flicks through the reference book in his head: algae. Or Zombie slime.
 He sees that some water and some grains of sand have clung to his sleeve where he’s reached around and under the rope. He pulls the sleeve up and tries to dust them off. The grains stick to his fingers, so he stops. They remind him of breadcrumbs.

He takes the end of the rope and pushes and pulls it a little: the knot is very loose. It slips through easily. He pulls the rope through, unwinds the last hitch and looks at the rope now undone laying across his left arm and into his right hand. The rope is really thick: as thick as his leg. But it is surprisingly light. He tosses it up in the air and it seems to almost float back down. He puts the rope on the floor, laying it alongside the Tie.

Tom looks at the Tie (though having untied it he wonders whether he now needs to change its name).

He finds himself hypnotized by it. The wood is veined and lined, like a long, wise face: a long ancient face in the sand. A tree face: like the long faces of the old trees in that film. He reaches out and runs his hand over its smooth surface. He rolls his hand into a soft fist, pushing it into and around the deep worn dent where the rope had been rubbing and pulling against it.

Tom finds himself wishing that he was a rope sometimes. Then he could just untie himself: well, the ‘himself’ that he doesn’t really like: the ‘himself’ that lives in that house with those parents and that sister: and that life. Tom will check his life to see if there’s any evidence of beautifully worn bits like on the Tie. Nope.

Being a rope doesn’t really fit into his secret set of super powers but that doesn’t matter as he is thinking of binning them anyway since he overheard Kathy calling John a baby for wanting to be like Iron Man.

He suddenly feels bored and hungry. Breadcrumbs. Fish Finger breadcrumbs. The rope: a long fishing line to great big fish fingers. Fish Fingers as big as ships. Fish & Ships.

With this expanding idea  in his head, Tom shuffles off down the beach.

His mind wanders. It wanders over to Nigel’s mum. It did that a lot at the moment. Mrs. Goodrich also pops up again. He is feeling that funny feeling. He thinks that it is the same feeling that makes his sister want to meet boys: dangerous boys that she knows their parents won’t like – boys who wear expensive trainers while living in very small houses with their mum.

He kicks the next shell that comes up in his path. It skittles across the sand until its edge catches end on, turning sharp left into the soap-suds sea.

Tom walks on.

Unseen, the rope far behind him laying across the beach stirs. A million quadrillion grains of sand dislodged by his untying, shoal around the hidden length of the rope snaking in through a slot in the rolling grey back of the sea to some dark deep place beyond.

The rope’s end moves, a few millimeters perhaps? towards the sea’s edge – or perhaps not even a millimeter – maybe. But none the less, move it does. Withdrawing.

 

 Odd Jobs

‘So unlike his Grandfather’ Michael had thought when he first made the connection between the boy and The Old Man.


At first Michael had thought the boy was just a born victim: one of those people that just seem to walk through life with a ‘kick me’ sign permanently attached to their back.


His hand traced across the bench surface to the edge of the paper towel where the spoon sat attentively, his distorted face caught momentarily in its shining upturned bowl.

Pursuit was something that Michael knew a lot about; the sound of it, the smell of it; the sheer lung bursting ‘mnng’ of it. Michael had often been the pursuer: and he was very good at it.

Eventually though he had become the pursued.


One day, with little warning, his conscience had turned on him, wild eyed and angry, dripping with such bitter vengeance that to spend even the smallest passage of time in the quiet black silence of his own company terrified him. Once started it had rarely let up; harrying him first through his sleeping and then through his waking hours.

It was only after many years of self-inflicted solace, willing himself to face the anger and shame naked, without distraction or excuse, that he had finally become able to spend much time alone and happily so.
 Michael had originally come here, to the school, to hide: his escape not from some act of criminality or legal wrongdoing – his country had demanded and he had obeyed – but from the product of his service. He had to untie the knots that his acts had sheeted through his heart and soul.

He had thought that the monotony of the school: the odd jobs: sweeping up the rubbish: fence painting amid the smell of the freshly petrol-cut playing field grass; dispensing acid blue tablet after tablet into each urinal every other day; wrestling the twin brush polisher and its acrid smear across empty parqued corridors; light bulb maintenance: quiet sanctuary found in desperately dull and repetitive acts.

Therein lay their beauty he had thought, their simple powerful attraction. Perhaps the monotony of these acts, the very act of becoming one of the invisible people undertaking the relentless and inane maintenance of things unseen; someone whose everyday was as far from his previous incarnation as one could of thought possible; that would save him. Save His Soul: S.O.S.

Blue Tablets. Urinals. That reminded him: there were some particularly nasty biro scratchings that he had to remove from a cubicle wall in the Girls’ Toilets. Girls were so different to boys in so many ways but both seemed to become one in their shared cruelty. Funny thing graffiti. Seemed a bit old fashioned now, hiding your own bitter insecurities by scratching some nasty words about someone else on a wall. These days Children teetering on the barbaric edge of puberty were far happier txting cruelty, circling a chat room or blocking and burning faceless avatars in digital hyper space. Old school graffiti seemed almost courageous in the face of the digital cowardice of the average teenage troll.

The graffiti referred to Kathy: the girl that the Davis boy hung around with. It would be removed before break-time, a small act of damage limitation. Kathy was worth protecting, if only for her rare taste in boys.

He had become so used to seeing the Davis boy alone. He was quite unusually taken aback the day he first saw them together. Michael thought that she would be quite overwhelming even to a young boy of exceptional maturity; and the Davis boy was about as far from that as you could get.

How the Davis boy interpreted her was beyond Michael; but so were many things.
 To Michael the girl seemed highly contradictory in her character: both tomboyish and yet at the same time very physically self-aware: feline almost.
 He also noted that though in some ways she struck him as street smart and worldly, in others she also seemed to be, consciously at least, devoid of any idea whatsoever as to why her chemicals and the boy’s might be wrestling so violently in the ever-decreasing space between them.

 

 Chapter 4.

Tom loves teatime. It’s a great time of day; though a little weird sometimes.

Tom walks into a kitchen that smells of fish fingers. He loves fish fingers.
He puts his earlier fish finger musings down to telepathy, one of the many superpowers that he hides from the world, along with his human form’s Silver-Surfer like ability to merge like molten shiny metal into the surface of the bath water and his ability to invisibly extend his stride to superhuman lengths, thus rendering him able to cover great stretches of ground while outwardly looking to anyone watching him as if moving at a normal human pace.

He has recently downgraded his cosmic ability to harness electric energy to sub super level 3.
 He had originally thought that his harnessing powers were far greater than could be explained by science. But, having taken Dr. Reed’s ‘empirical’ (February New Word No.17) approach to the science of super-humanity, a closer inspection of his socks revealed that they contained a far greater percentage of man-made fibre than his mum led him to believe. They were in fact supercharged conductors of electro energy all by themselves. His Intel Outside.

As if to prove the point, his socked foot scuffs the kitchen lino as his hand brushes against the oven door firing a static charge across his hair and teeth. There you go.

Fish Fingers.
The essential and only rule regarding Fish Fingers is that they are super-crunchy; sometimes potentially a little burnt on the outside (which requires grilling them for 4 minutes longer than it says on the packet).

The achieving of this super crunchiness inevitably leads to shrinkage of the actual finger of fish meat itself which in turn creates the much prized ‘gaps’ into which the condiment of choice can be applied.
When said piece of crunchy fish finger with shrunken fish stick gets swooshed around the plate on the end of a fork these ‘gaps’ collect the condiment of choice (ketchup in Tom’s case) surrounding the finger of fish inside.

Breaking the Fish Finger into three pieces is recommended as breaking it in half just makes for a high level of disappointment after just two crunchy bites.

The crunchy, crumb-iness is a key part of the whole fish finger moment.

The combination of slightly spongy fish stick and over murdered breadcrumb case, when chewed into one-ness a few times makes for a really toasty mash. Top-banana-full-enjoyment is achieved by allowing your tongue to turn the mash around for a while to get the most of the burnt-crumb-ketch-oven-fish-tray-ketch-bread-board- ketch-crumb-fish-burnt-fish taste before swallowing. Nice.

Tom shuffles into the bench seat at the breakfast counter. He does not understand why they call it a counter because counters are what they have in shops; but his Dad says that it is the American style of living. His dad loves America. He watches all of the American forensic cop shows as well as a healthy assortment of ‘supernatural-sleuth-meets-child- prodigy-who-becomes-a-Medium’ shows.
 His mum calls it ‘getting his NETFIX’

His Dad sometimes imitates the voices of the tough cops when on the phone to his friends. But not only are most of the really, really tough CSI/Medium/Cop people on telly women: but also he isn’t actually very good at sounding like the men ones he can remember – which makes Tom feel embarrassed when his friends or Nigel’s mum come around to visit.

Nigel’s mum doesn’t say anything but his dad usually ends up sounding a bit like the bloke with the funny accent at the Post Office (who is always drunk; apparently).

His mother, still in her work uniform but now wearing slippers, moves about the kitchen. Tom drops his arms into his lap and then puts his face sideways on the counter top. It feels cool and nice against his cheek.

The smell of the Formica reminds him of the way his skin smelt when he had chickenpox; a sort of sweet funny smell; like John’s Nan’s talc. The reason he knows what John’s Nan’s talc smells like is because they spilt it all over the floor by accident while nosing around in her bathroom cabinet last year.
 He can see some tiny grains of sand on the formica surface. They must have come off his sleeve. He feels for the wet bit. It is dry now; almost. He blows towards the grains and watches as they tumble across the Formica surface.
His chest makes a funny wheezy noise at the end of the blow.
 Tom looks through his arms at the floor. He moves his head to one side as his mum’s feet scuff past. He hates her slippers.

Nigel’s mum wears shoes that are brown or black with pointy toes. Tom finds the way that she walks in them really nice. He thinks her ankles must be weak though because her legs seem to wobble every time she takes a step; which must be painful or uncomfortable. It also makes her bottom move from side to side a lot.

His mum’s ankles never wobble. Not because they’re all big. She doesn’t have ankles like the old ladies at the bus-stop, all puffy and wrapped up in a big bandage.
 Tom’s Mum is young really. She’s just got ‘not skinny’ ankles.

Wonder Woman has big shiny wristbands that deflect bullets and rockets. Nigel’s Mum has ankles.They are like the ones he sees on the women in the fashion magazines at the hairdresser where Tom’s mum goes to once a month.

The Vicar at the Christening they all had to go to recently – no Kathy and therefore rubbish – had said that there is a reason for everything in this earthly life.

So perhaps his Mum’s ‘not skinny’ ankles are a clue: to something.

Tom imagines that he has another mother, a real mother, who is an alien; and that she has left him with his Earthly Mum and Dad (agents of the Empire barely disguised as human) but only until she comes to claim him again on the death of his real father, the Grand Galactic Vizier, at which point Tom will take up his rightful place as heir, ascend to the throne and ultimately and majestically lead the Empire in a big Universal punch-up with some rather ugly aliens.

In this other world – a ghetto waste-scape that looks a little like an American version of Ipswich after a few bombs and the odd fire – everyone has Supercharged Subarus that convert into x wing fighters; which is quite useful.

This is all highly classified information of course.
 Tom remembers Kathy telling John that she thought that him wanting to be Iron Man or Captain America was childish so Tom tended to keep his intergalactic-ness to himself; mostly.
 His mum puts the fish fingers and peas in front of him. The fish finger joy backed up by a number of peas (straight from frozen) means Tom stays quite chirpy until the last pea explosion (you place the pea in the middle of your tongue and press the tongue upwards until the pea effectively pops with a little ping of pea-ness).
 Suddenly, Tom doesn’t want to be here. He wants to go to his bedroom.

At times like these, when his bubbly balloon suddenly pops and flops inside him, he notices that she watches him, his mum: looks at him in a strange almost otherworldly way.
 Not otherworldly as in the alien woman in Voyager episode last night. That would be weird. That woman was from the Phargel Constellation, had streaked blue hair, wears a short skirt and has an inappropriately tight top of strange scales that edge round her ribs and only half cover her ‘not small’ breasts. (Tom felt very grown up when he said or thought the word ‘breasts’.)

No; his mum just looked Otherworldly; like she was looking at him from the bottom of a bath full of water.

Tom could see her mouth making words to herself and pulling faces while she jabbed at the peas that had escaped into the sinkhole.

He recognised what she was doing because her face looked like his felt when he was having conversations with Kathy in his head – only realizing that his face was moving because people on the bus were staring at him.

The Lost Hours between a chirpy, fish finger scoop teatime and the nine o’clock news tended to pass unnoticed – hence their name. Tom spends them in random model making – a killer combination of coloured brick, old tat and mixed kit pieces – school-book leafing, cunning parallel universe Minecraft interjections (imagined) and daydreaming of course – nose pressed firmly to the varnish card cover of his science work book; though as the Lost Hours are by their very nature not recorded or measured you’d be hard put to piece together exactly what went on at any given time

The games console that he got last Christmas lies in a pasta pile of leads and controls to the right of his bedside cabinet. Being cheap, it broke within two days of him getting it so he just pretends that he is another ‘thumb crazy computer game kid wasting his life away, losing the power of both speech and physical movement in the process‘ as the newspaper his dad reads had it pegged.

The short walk upstairs is pretty uneventful though somewhere in his head he is vaguely aware that being 40 or so sock scuffs into the journey he shouldn’t touch anything metal. By the time he gets to the top of the stairs this brain wave has been over-ridden by the occupational hazard of his having to open his bedroom door to get in it.
 The massive static shock from the door handle makes him jump, as always.

Tom opens the door and looks at his room. The room doesn’t look like much. A box. It looks like a room someone has made up to pretend that a boy like Tom might live there but not really; which is true in a way.

All of his comics are tidied into a pile on the white and once flat packed desk that he had helped his dad put together. (Tom’s dad lost one of the plugs that held the side panel tight and Tom found it and his Dad squeezed his shoulder and he half put his arm around him until he stopped.)

The only computer in the house that is any cop is in his Dad’s office in the spare room. The computer in Tom’s room is really a glorified word processor from his Dad’s shop. It doesn’t have any graphics packages to speak of or anything like that and there are sooty edges around the input slots where it used to sit in his Dad’s stock room sucking up the dust from the furniture foam in the Returns room. (There was a lot of dust, as Bernie, his dad’s old and very wheezy, puffer-wielding warehouse man would tell you at the slightest opportunity.)

So the computer in Tom’s room just sits there, not doing terribly much.
The desk was meant to be a way of helping him do more grown up stuff: a place to do his homework and ‘pursue interests’ he might be, well, interested in: like advanced model making, learning a new (Earthling) language. It should have also included Googling really difficult words or funny pictures – but that would require a computer that worked.)

Tom never really got further than reading his comics when he came to his room. He certainly didn’t do homework. He hasn’t told his Mum that he owes about 20 bits of it to Sausage Beard.

In the back of his mind somewhere, Tom reckons (though ‘hopes’ might be a better word) that something really monumental is going to happen – something that will make the world forget completely that he owes any homework.
Maybe the stalking alien pod robots will arrive in a big bang of huge explosions and cause so much chaos as they chase people around the planet that everyone will forget everything:

His Mum and Dad will forget that they don’t like each other.
 His Dad will forget to take them to a Harvester for his mum’s birthday and take them somewhere brilliant and different instead.

Kathy will forget that Tom tried to kiss her in the woods.

And Tom will forget that he thinks he is rubbish.

The second hand on his plastic non-digital clock ticks noisily. 
It starts to get dark, as it always does about now.
 In the book Tom is reading in English the writer said that ‘darkness fell’ which they all though was a bit random; like darkness was an old person or someone with too much shopping.
 Tom also thinks it’s a funny thing to say: but it makes sense in a way because it is like someone drops a big blanket over the world; a big blanket that falls in super slo-mo.

When he switches on his table lamp the walls do this weird thing – where they change from hard white plaster with posters and stuff stuck on them to molten lava or big dark blankets that seem to move a bit when you look at them out of the corner of your eye.
He picks up a comic.

He hears them downstairs now; his parents. They always try to keep their voices down but it never works. They always end up shouting in the end. Calling each other names.
 He knows when his Mum is upset because he can hear her slippers scuff, scuff, scuffing around from one side of the house to the other: she has a habit of walking from the lounge to the kitchen, turning around and walking back into the sitting room because she has remembered something else that she wanted to say to his Dad.

His Mum is scary when she gets mad. She uses words like some people use poison darts or ninja throwing stars. Maybe Tom’s mum is a ninja master of flying dagger words (Tom loves that film; sneakily watched it at Nigel’s house when his Mum was out).

When he told his Aunt Bea that when his parents argued his mum sounded like someone from one of those legal eagle or high court programmes on the telly, Bea had said that his Mum was naughty to do that.
 Bea didn’t know this but Tom overheard her having a go at his mum on the telephone telling her to ‘get over herself’ and to stop it – ‘you’re trying make him feel bad – like he’s stupid – and you know it. So stop it – its wrong’.

That seemed pretty fair to Tom – if she was picking on him because she knew he couldn’t keep up or match her, that was like bullying – like the bullies knowing that you can’t run fast – or pronounce a certain kind of word – or understand their riddles.
 His dad is a bit weird. But he is not stupid.

There was a time when Tom and Jaqui, his big sister, would still have bothered to sit downstairs during one of their parents’ fights, even though all of his Mum’s walking in and out of the room had never failed to make him feel a bit sick – like he was on a boat in a rough sea.

He puts the comic down on the desk after a few minutes: Creepy Tales. It is an American horror comic. It is brilliant: short stories of people who have boarded ghost trains and planes, fallen into the twilight zone, woken up with wings, played cards with the devil and some such.

Tom slump slides further into the chair at his desk. One finger reaches across the desk and catches the edge of the small plastic bag – drawing it back across the surface towards Tom’s face. The same finger rummages ina plastic fold and drags out a shining flat square from its interior.

He smells it first, the acrid plastic and ink: his new CD purchase. Genius. His previous weekend’s purchase.

Tom couldn’t resist taking it out of the bag, holding it up to his nose and thumbing the sleeve edge a lot on the bus home, the security sticker seal yet to be broken.
 He used to think that having a new CD was brilliant because it made him interesting. Until the rip download kids laughed at him. Ripping free music was all well and good but if you don’t have a proper computer and no smart phone, well, CDs it is!

He thought McFly rocked. He had planned the day perfectly. The purchase was made at approximately 11.15am on Saturday morning from the Resale/Second Hand music shop (the only half groovy place in his town, England, Earth and the Universe).

This allowed 15 minutes for the journey home and then a full one and a half hours of appreciation before lunch.
The final act – placing the CD in the player (an old one of his sister’s) – took place only once you had checked the disc for scratched messages from either the band or the record label and made sure there were absolutely no smudges, scratches or bits on it.

Tom’s dad had found him squinting at a CD sleeve and started banging on about the lost treasure and pleasure of the record sleeve – how you took home the sacred vinyl  – unwrapped it and tapped its heavily printed cardboard sleeve – how, you’d get into the real detail – the small print – of how all the credits in the sleeve note had to be read in full and memorized – The band members, the catchphrases and in- jokes, their instruments, track listings, track duration, guest musicians by track.
Then there was the producer, engineer, assistants, coffee maker, clothing designer credits, studio/s (usually including a re-mastering at somewhere windswept and international like Montreux or L.A) the record company, the distribution company, rights reserved, the ‘with thanks’ listings with funny bits, the names of the tour manager, roadies, lighting company, haulage and equipment shipping(live albums only): every last detail to be read hundreds of times; searching for a new piece of information to be shared, something in the background of a picture unnoticed, the labyrinth of hidden jokes to be discovered.

Information was power his father said.
 Tom didn’t have the heart to point out that that was what Google was for.

Nigel has an i-phone AND i-watch of course so all of this was lost on him. He just downloaded. And Tom was at least one working printer away from printing out the sleeve notes, even if he had wanted to.

Jaqui just listens to the music. She reckons reading writing on the packaging is for losers.

As Tom studies the small writing it collapses into a big squeeze of black scratchy lines and blurry pictures.

He raises his head from the desk.

Umpft umpft umpft baa da da umpft umpft umpft baa da da umpft umpft umpft worp worp worp wa wa wa wa umpft umpft umpft


The banging tune seeps through the plaster-board wall between his bedroom and Jaqui’s. He knows it’s plaster board with an echoey gap because he had once tried to screw a large volcano clay model of his attached to a bit of chip board to the wall with his dad’s hammer. The hole stayed a hole for about a month.

It’s D Wayne or R. Kayne, Kanye K, Canned Key Or Key West pumping out of Jaqui’s room: which is good.

Not because he really likes Who Wayne Whatever.
 He doesn’t really know anything about him apart from the picture on Jaqui’s wall.
 It’s good because the general noise helps to drown out the voices coming from downstairs.

He gets up and turns towards his bed. Tom makes his body go straight like he’s been hit by a small caliber, high velocity bullet from a gun. The Sniper’s Choice.
 He falls face down onto his bed pretending to fall from a really high building, like the fat guy with the beard in CSI the other night. His face presses into the cool pillow.

Maybe he should learn to be a stuntman; spend all of his time falling off really tall buildings, leaping bikes over canyons and living in America somewhere surrounded by comics and being able to buy Frothing Blood capsules any time he wants to. He lets his arms and legs go limp.

He wonders if there is an exam in Stuntmanship. Or Stuntpersonship – Mrs. Field’s would never allow an exam for ‘anything-man-ship’ in her school.
He listens to the sound of his own breathing for a bit. It sounds funny, like the sea. He thinks about the Tie for a bit. Maybe he should go back tomorrow and tie the rope back on.

His mind wanders to Kathy.

He wants to think about her in that way that makes him feel nice: but he just thinks of how she flicked his ear really hard as he walked down the corridor to Double Maths and then ran off laughing when the shock made him turn right, crash, into a locker and cut his lip.

 

 Memories

Michael’s eyes pull focus, the bright wrap of air in front of him falling away into a featureless bleached blanket.


It’s nice here. In the white nothingness .
He waits for his mind to play out any distinct memories of his own beginnings with girls across the white screen in his head. Small wisps of things flitted in and out of the edge of his consciousness. Always so difficult to recall these things he thought.

Michael spent a lot of time butterfly chasing memories across his subconscious, net flailing this way and that. He would, though rarely, sweep one towards him, just for a moment, hold it up towards the light, breathless for just a moment, before it quickly and silently slips the net and is gone.

These rare moments came in all manner of formats: a smell, a song, a flash of fabric, a passing movement, hair raised skin, a texture, a play of light refracting.
 A few skittish recollections shuttered up inside his head: of clumsy fumbling; fibs and bravado; presents promised; the slipshod clumsiness of pretending to know how things worked.

None of them are tangible enough to grasp and feed into the process running in his head – so he backs out of the realm of the butterfly catcher, and the wrap of white nothing comes back into focus.
 Graffiti. Michael believes that you can discover a lot about someone who indulges in graffiti: the highly personal and cruel kind of graffiti at least.

He had little to comment on the graphic vagaries or tribal tags that were regularly spewed across the side of railway tracks, tube tunnels, and, curiously, the walls that ran behind Supermarket.


He had daubed the odd wall himself. His neck ran hot with shame at the memory of some of it. He had become quite adept at hanging cruel ridicule on a wall, for all to see.

Spiteful; mean; spiky words fashioned to cut down a person where they stood. Or simply words set to inflame the simple minds of those most useful to his bright, all-white cause – those quickest to anger and confrontation.

There was no artisan skill, no crafting of Michael’s art. He simply carried the urge to render petty hatreds on any vertical surface he could find with him, from school wall to garrison latrine to public podium.


(It did not matter where in the world he peddled his trade: every encounter with them – foreigners – seemed somehow to hone the ugly little crusts inside him, and the twisted anthropology of his own superiority.)

He had found it a very short and simple walk from a wall to a pamphlet and from the pamphlet to a website forum and from there to the hustings.

As time passed, all those things that sat strangely in Michael, had begun to draw together:

To say Michael had a fragile sense of self and a troubled soul was a remarkable understatement – and there were a few things vying for top spot in the Why stakes:

his deeply buried insecurity, teased nicely into shape by his beautiful, elegant yet feckless mother – a woman who slashed the spiritual and emotional cord between them at exactly the same moment as she dispensed with the physical one:

his Tom Brown schooldays concept of manliness pumped into him on the playing fields and prefect studies of his desperately provincial major-minor school

the small-minded provincial bigotries of his father, and the mediocrities that passed for Member’s at his father’s club; trading smug little sips of superiority across the lip of their gin glass:

the shocking banality of war and battle and the cruelties; the staggering abdication of humanity and conscience that glory and winning demands; and the faces that never leave you.

It was that young man, with all those things rattling around inside him that The Old Man had spied that day as he passed the town hall.

Michael, his straight military back racked high on his hips, the thirst of his recent tours of duty being quenched by a little bitter-soaked British summer evening.


The Old Man had walked up to Michael and handed him the Manifesto.

Michael remembered how he had immediately felt unnerved by The Old Man’s look: the man who would in no short time become his ‘boss’ and mentor: and he remembered how quickly he had set aside the small red light that flickered in the back of his mind in the fix of The Old Man’s green grey eyes.

Michael looks up and away from the memory, as if to control it; moving it back into a manageable form; back into its box.

He looks across the room towards the corner furthest from the door.

One erupting crack runs through the linoleum between him and the cupboard set in the far corner – tracing the ragged line of his gaze: its erupted edges revealing the equally erupted concrete beneath it; as if a rope running under the floor between him and the cupboard has been wrenched upwards to reveal a deeper truth.

 

 

JulianBorra©2016

AUTHOR’S NOTE: In the process of publishing this story to the blog I am altering the original text of the Kindle Version. The blog published version will be the most up to date edition.

SAIL – The End of the Beginning, CheeseBurgers & the Running Boy

19 Friday Aug 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Screen Shot 2016-08-19 at 12.29.07.png

THE END OF THE BEGINNING

An un-ironed old man sits sipping cool lemonade, a thick-rimmed glass tumbler clutched tight to his advancing stomach.

His forehead, beaded and shadowed under the broad rim of his Borsalino hat, wrinkles intermittently, a rippling rumba to the words inside his head.

Tinny music from his ‘new wife’s’ old radio crackles the length of the garden, alarming two finches flitting amongst the branches.

The finches remind the old man of two bickering children he once knew: girlish voices at the edge of his memory echoing through the shadows of his beautiful and very English garden.

A Sandpiper percolates between the rhododendron bush and the large privet hedge edging the west side of the garden.

Its yellowish legs and white shock belly flash in the half-light as it engages in a near miss with a portly Collared Dove flying in the opposite direction at a dignified 40 degrees.

The sound of the sea reassures the old man, its salted rolls riding up against the sandy shoulders of his small stretch of quintessential East Anglian beach below, just beyond where the green lawn drops away from sight.

The vast stretch of water in front of him is deeper in its hue than he remembered, the cool grey-purple pitches of the North Sea now long gone, now replaced by the obsequious blue of the Mid North Atlantic.

Once there was a time when he could see clear across the water to the skies of Nordic myth: Asgard used to float somewhere above his not very wild blue yonder as the setting sun warmed his back.

Now the sun sets across the water in front of him – and a thin thread of land runs like a sore across his horizon and a scar on his future, a small grey speck at its middle.

Titusville: ridiculous name for a town. And only a few miles from the launching pad of ‘Man’s greatest journey’.

They thought going to the Moon was something. Lord knows what they were thinking about this. He certainly knows what he thinks. And as he thinks it, the very large and very American Collared Dove, currently sitting above him in his very British ash tree takes a shit on the shoulder of his unstructured linen travel jacket, as if to simultaneously both underline his thought and file an objection.

There was a time when, if there was one thing he knew, it was that the Britain he loved was ‘going to the dogs’. That seemed like such a distant certainty now.

He had taken to wearing the linen travel jacket everyday as a totem of their ‘journey’ to wherever in God’s name they were going.

He looks at the bird slop edging down his lapel.
 The old wives’ adage crosses his mind.

‘Good luck my arse?!’ he mutters as he dabs at the dropping with a well-worn silk hankie.

Good Luck? Not for him. Not bloody likely.

 

 

2 DAYS EARLIER

The salt water at the base of the sand bank pools in swirls of ribbed green grey, its job done.
 The tide, having yet again successfully deposited tons of deep-sea detritus along the East-Anglian coast line, is now withdrawing to its place further out to sea to contemplate its next tidal ‘dump’.

A passing silver and blue sweet wrapper plasters itself against an very old, very gnarled, very large wooden peg (more a mooring post if you will) set half way up the beach, whipped there by a snap of breeze.

A heavy wrist-thick flaxen rope runs up from the sea to spool around the wizened peg, shining green dreadlocks knitted into its length.

Two knots, like staring eyes in the long weather-worn face of the peg, look curiously over the top of sweet wrapper, as if reading it like a paper.

BraCao Ping screams the bright writing on the front of the wrapper. BraCao Ping: a testament to the fact that no one can make confectionary quite like an impoverished South American country can; especially one with tons and tons of gelatinous and potentially toxic animal by-product to play with.

The wrapper’s haphazard graphic flag of madness flutters against the peg.

A light grasp of Colonial Old Spanish and Barrio vernacular would tell you that BraCao Ping is a ‘rip ping of sweet hot thing for your mouth’.

‘A Unique Flavour & Texture’ the pack says.

BraCao Ping’s principal ingredient is synthesized in a laboratory to do a smart and passable impersonation of a citrus fruit (though which fruit no one was quite certain).

The wrapper grows restless. There’s a whole beach to play on. And the large peg suddenly seems a little…well, inert.

The cloud shadows roll across the beach, their sun-burned fringes flaring about them.
The wrapper sets off to follow them.

There was a time when the BraCao wrapper would have traveled almost six thousand miles to wash itself up on this beach – but not any more. Not even the half of it – or the half of the half of the half of it.

Funny old world really.

 

CHAPTER 1.

Cheeseburger. One of those words that starts to sound quite funny if you say it a lot.

Cheeseburger cheeseboorga chizzbirga chissbuwrga schisbuga, shisbugga, shisbugger. Bugger.

Tom likes cheeseburgers. He loves Nuggets. Loves Large Fries – especially the ones left right at the bottom of the cardboard sleeve because they are smaller and crispier and have more salt on them. The other good bit is that by the end of the box-bottom scrabble your fingers smell of friesnuggetfiletburgernoodlesbatterketchup – which means you can stick them under someone’s nose.

As Tom walks past the fast-food restaurant, he notices that the deep fat fry and plastic smell wafting across the pavement transforms itself to the sharp citrus medicinal shower product smell sliding out of the Chemist next door.
Weird.

His Dad takes him to the restaurant sometimes for a treat. It has bright red plastic seats and a fat old lady who sits at the serving counter looking utterly disappointed with life. The restaurant is called Ken’s Lucky Fried Chicken but written to look like KFC; which is a bit of a con.

And they don’t just do pretend Kentucky Fried Chicken. They do pretend burgers, nuggets, filets o fish and Chinese take away.

His dad says if Ceasar (their dog) ever goes missing he’ll know where to find him. Or order him. Tom walks on.

He kicks at an old Ready Salted Crisp Bag skipping along the pavement towards him. Its open end closes itself around the toe of his trainer. Tom tries to kick it off but it just rolls down further over his trainer. It now looks like his trainer has pulled a rather jaunty red hat on. He looks around. He doesn’t know anyone. Thankfully he is on his own.

Tom spends a lot of time alone funnily enough. He walks everywhere because his bike is always broken. (Not really; it just isn’t a very cool bike so he avoids riding it mostly). He walks up and down the high street quite often and likes to look in the shops. Sometimes he runs up and down the high street because the cool boys from school try and put him in the waste bin outside the Library.

Tom looks around him: his eyes flick from one side of the street to the other. The sound of the crisp bag rackling on the end of his foot keeps him alert. It reminds him that smart phones are the Great Satan: and that he doesn’t want to be on Youtube; again.

The boys and the waste bin thing is embarrassing: but not as embarrassing as when the girls from his school do it.
Which is why he spends a lot of time ‘not at the bus stop by the war memorial’ and ‘not outside the Sweet Shop’ where they tend to be.

Where Tom ’is’ is mostly defined by where he is not: in life anyway.

He likes to go to the beach near his house though. He goes there a lot. It is like a beach that he saw in an old film that his mum was watching one Saturday afternoon. His mum thinks beaches are ‘Romantic’. Tom was going to use the word romantic at school but he looked it up first, which was a good job; it turns out that it doesn’t mean what he thought it meant.

Romantic is a word Tom thinks but would never ever say: saying it would mean a ‘slapping’ from anyone close enough to deliver it: or Kathy holding him down and doing the ‘spit-dribble-on-to-your-face-almost-but-not-quite’ torture.

He likes the feeling of her sitting on him and he thinks she does too but then her face goes funny and she smacks his forehead as she climbs off him.

Tom likes Kathy. They kissed once – ish. She lives in a house just down the road.

He likes her a lot: fancies her maybe. She is nice looking in an eldest sister kind-of-way but not as in a weird fancy your own sister way but someone else’s sister.

Kathy makes him feel a bit weird in a nice way so, yup, definitely more than just a friend.

He does not have many other friends. John is alright in an OK way.
They like the same things, specifically doing nothing in particular.
John’s dad is very nice so they tend to talk about him most of the time. John seems to need to talk about his dad a lot (which is weird because, from what Tom can tell, his dad isn’t around that much so he can’t be that great). Tom does not like talking about anything much these days so it works out just fine. But John lives on the other side of the town and is only allowed to ride his bike over to see Tom once a week.

So he is a friend; just not a ‘see you tomorrow’, stones up at your window, back garden neighbour kind of friend.

There is also Nigel. Tom visits Nigel every now and then to keep his mum happy (Tom’s mum that is, though she says that it makes Nigel’s mum happy as well).

Nigel and his Mother live just two houses along. They used to live in a big house in the village near by.
Nigel likes to polish stones and has a stone polishing kit. Tom knows that Nigel is a bit soft. He has a soft face, and his hair is very shiny and thick. Tom imagines that’s what rich people’s hair is like. Nigel’s mum has thick shiny hair too. Maybe that is what the advert means when it says a ‘rich, lustrous sheen’: maybe it means that the shampoo gives you rich people hair.

Nigel goes to a private school up the road. Some of the boys from the town shove Nigel around a bit when he is at the sweetshop, stealing his money and giving him kicks.

Tom’s mum feels sorry for Nigel’s mother who seems to be in their kitchen a lot – and cry a lot. Tom thinks she looks like a sad angel; like she should be an actress or something.

She tends to smile at Tom while he eats his breakfast. She sometimes smiles in a scrunchy-eyed-squeezy-tear-down-the-face way which makes Tom feel a little odd.

Roger, the man who lives across the road from Tom’s house drives a Yellow and White sports car. It is really smart.

The man likes Nigel’s mum too. His wife doesn’t though.

Tom thinks this is a little unfair and he can’t see why she gets annoyed when her husband takes Nigel’s mother for a drive to ‘cheer her up’.

Roger thinks he is above everyone else on the estate: including his wife.

Tom heard him calling her ‘silly cow’ once but not in public. It was only because their kitchen window opens on to a small alley that runs through to the parade of shops: and you can hear everything if the window is open.

Tom doesn’t like Roger.

Tom does like chocolate: but he likes stuff like the walnut whips his Mum gets at Marks’s the most – and biscuits, though they make him feel a little bit sick sometimes.

His Aunt Bea taught him to bite the top off a Walnut Whip and then lick out the centre which should be creamy but isn’t because the ones they’ve got have been in the cupboard for a while

Some of the chocolates at the Corner Shop are pretty duff.

Mr. Sharpa the shopkeeper probably buys old stuff so half his bars are usually a bit spongy and not good for ritual eating.

That’s why Tom feels OK about stealing stuff from his shop: because it is old (though he did take a whole new Box of Rolos once).

It’s ‘a cry for help’ apparently, his stealing; or so the lady that turned up at the school to talk to him said.

He’d been caught stealing again (big deal – it was only the third time) and the school had asked him to talk to her: Mrs. Goodrich.

She is about the same age as his Mum. But she is alright. She doesn’t look all worn out like his mum. She has shiny hair like the woman in the advert and Tom looks at her legs a lot.

Between not very nice Roger, Nigel’s shiny hair and crying mother and Mr. Sharpa’s duff chocolate, life can get into a little bit of a tangle as far as Tom is concerned.

But there’s always Kathy.
And Mrs. Goodrich’s legs.

 

2.

Tom loves going into Mr Sharpa’s shop.

He loves the way it smells.
If he shuts his eyes, the smell of all the different sweets make mad coloured patterns behind his eye lids: like looking through his kaleidoscope, though the newspapers that smell like the compost bin at the end of the garden ruin it a bit.

Having a frozen statue kaleidoscope eyelids moment just inside the doorway of the shop isn’t always the best idea.

The fat bloke who smells of tea bags and waits until everyone has left the shop before he buys his newspaper walked straight into Tom, knocking him out of the way.
Three times by last counting.

The fat bloke always seems ‘preoccupied’: the polite word Tom’s Aunt Bea uses for when you’re lost in your own little world daydreaming or something.

Tom doesn’t think Fat Bloke gets just how brilliant it is to have sweets that smell like kaleidoscopes.

The shelves with all the magazines on make Tom a little dizzy sometimes.

He found out from Dr. Benson – or Dr. B as his mum calls her – that this is possibly because the varnishes used on the magazines to make them shiny have quite a lot of chemicals in them.

Maybe that’s why the grumpy bloke who smells of tea bags bumps into him.

Maybe all the chemical smells from the magazines he takes off the top shelf have gone to his brain.

Funny place the top shelf.
 Very mysterious. Tom is not quite sure exactly what is so bad to be kept up there, but given what seems to be freely available for the dumb boys with smart phones at school to look at and snigger about the magazine stuff must be REALLY bad.

When Tom tries to look up at the magazines on the top shelf his neck ends up at a funny angle and his head feels really, really heavy for some reason, which makes his neck hurt and gives him a headache.

He doesn’t mention that to Dr. B though: just because.

He doesn’t go near the shops at the moment.
Not that he wouldn’t like to given half a chance and an armed guard.

He’d like to go to the shop a lot more often: Mr. Sharpa has a young girl working for him who is really pretty and Tom would like to talk to her. Well, more than just the universal ‘Just those…oh and these. Ta. Thanks’ vocabulary of your average confectionary transaction, which was all he’d managed so far.

Not that he knows when she’d find the time to talk to him. She is always on her mobile ‘you know like yeah like, you’re kidding, never, I would! – laugh laugh – you never? – cackle caw – tosser’.
She’s boom tasty.

He noticed the other day that she walks home along his road, so she must live nearby. He knows that her brother is called Vince and he works in the Greengrocer on the high street.

Tom is definitely interested in a ‘I know she’s not Kathy but…’ kind of way, though he’s not exactly sure what being interested actually entails.

So, it’s not because he doesn’t want to go to the shop. He does. And it is not because of the stealing.

It’s the hitting that’s the problem.

Shops that smell of Chocolate and funny smelling magazine varnish should have a health warning as far as Tom concerned; especially running up to Guy Fawkes’ Night.

It started when West goose-necked him after he didn’t hand over the contents of his pockets immediately.

West was after the usual of course: an expensive smart phone, until he copped a load of Tom’s ancient Nokia hand me down.

So after that he just moved onto pilfering any loose DS games, actual money (mental), cool pens, kit. Anything.

What West finally got out of Tom was £2.37 in assorted change, one Driller Killer badge with a broken pin stem (lifted off Jaqui’s last squeeze), a biro with Reed Employment written on the side, and an old chocolate coin from last Christmas.

Tom had found the shiny coin in the far corner behind his bed at the end of a ’machine-gunned spy falling from a helicopter down into the ice crevice with fading out scream to make it sound like he’d fallen a really long way’ moment.

Maybe that’s why West has decided that Tom was his new ‘bitch’. (Tom doesn’t get the use of the B word, given that West is most certainly white, never been to prison, isn’t in a proper like you see on the telly gang – and he doesn’t breed dogs.)

Being told by Miss Goodrich that ‘West is probably just a boy who obviously translates the inadequacy of his upbringing and his continuing battle with obesity into negative physical actions and demonstrations against weaker boys’ didn’t really help.

In Tom’s world, West is a fat bullying tosser. And Tom is his bitch. And that really wasn’t going well for him.

Things weren’t helped by the fact that Tom thought he was saying ‘batch’ at first. Afterwards Tom realized that West was actually saying Be-atch but how was he to know.

West got annoyed that Tom didn’t understand what he was saying at first, as if it made it less, nasty.

When the contents of Tom’s pockets finally lay scattered on the floor in front of West, Tom thought he might get laughed at for carrying around a Christmas Coin in the middle of June. But West was bored by then. And momentarily distracted. He’d spotted Nigel’s rich hair coming down the road. Nigel called to Tom but Tom just scooped up his debris and slunk off. No fear. Soz Nige.

Anyways, on most occasions West just hit Tom or nicked his sweets or most usually both.
And to be fair to West, he did have some creative flair. West liked to give his bullying a seasonal flavor.

In November the light violence was brilliantly illuminated by gunpowder.

A load of rockets had been nicked from Mr Sharpa’s shop in the week before Guy Fawkes Day.

The Whodunnit question was answered the next day by the screaming whizzwhistle of a rocket as it hurtled past the sweet shop door on its way towards Tom’s head, fired from inside a nearby hedge.

It wasn’t just Tom of course. West also fired them at passing cars: oh, and cats.

West used to live on the estate on the other side of the town before he moved two roads along from Tom.

Tom’s dad said the estate was full of unsavoury types – dodgy he called it. Full of trash.

The dodgy estate has two-story houses made of red brick with slate roofs and scruffy old curtains in the windows.

Some of them seemed quite happy to have their trash actually in their front gardens.

Some have put a drive in with ‘crazy’ paving. Tom doesn’t know what’s so crazy about it. Something about the place made Tom feel really depressed. Tom thought that was probably what made boys like West unhappy and made them hit him and take his sweets.

He supposed that’s what the ‘physical actions’ were that Miss Goodrich had spoken about.

Tom has heard that West nicks mobiles off the older kids so, in one way, Tom is glad that he hasn’t got a smart one, but in another, he still feels a real loser when they all show each other stuff off the internet and instagram each other.

Tom knows the estate that West comes from because the bus to the open-air swimming pool goes through there.

Tom likes the swimming pool. He likes water. He likes to take a deep breath and make a star shape, and just sink to the bottom, the sound like a big wooly wet blanket around him, till his chest feels like its going to cave in and die.

21 Seconds is his best. But he thinks he might have forgotten to count 13, 16, and 17. He gets really dizzy so it is more like 18 seconds.

But the water isn’t as much fun as the sea. Tom loves the sea. He also likes the beach that the sea rolls up over.

  

Running.

Michael sits at a table beneath the window. He faces into the room’s interior, both feet planted squarely on the ground in front of him. His body tips slightly forward, the weight of it pitching down each leg, the pressure closing down the tiny space between the ball of each foot and the floor. He enjoys the feeling of connection.

A thin, flat light pours over his head, fixing it in a halo of bright, fragile air. The table at which he sits is set lengthways against the wall beneath the window, a chair placed at either end of it.


Michael sits at one end of the table, his back against the metal seam between the glass above and the steel panel below.

The table’s steel legs seem to hang beneath it, their patina of rust and chipping like long tassles to the floor.

(The whole school building is constructed out of concrete, steel panel walls sprayed pastel blue and green and windows set into peeling white steel frames – a mixture of clear and frosted wire security glass and toughened plastic panes slightly bowed by the sunlight of fifty some summers.)


The stiff, plaster-beige folds of Micheal’s work coat gather beneath his leaning frame. His left hand is set firmly on his knee: the other hangs, slung over the side of the cracked and chipped table-top.

Michael sits, a little lost in himself: as always.


The air hangs in a warm, hollow fold at the centre of the room.


The cooler stagnant smells of oil, electricians tape, stale tea, cooked meats, wood pitch and the inside of drawers hang like shadowed cloths around the room’s edges.

(The reek of the previous Caretaker’s cheap and profusely smoked cigarettes has finally lifted, though it has taken all of Michael’s six years here for it to do so; the pocked tar muddied ceiling tiles above him the only evidence now of the thick tobacco plumes that once stained the air.)

An inconsistent sun pours in through the frosted wired glass. It falls across the polished steel toe-caps of Michael’s work boots, creating two dark shadows which appear and disappear as the sun tides in and out.

He looks at the floor.

The cracked plastic flooring has begun to reveal the similarly cracked concrete beneath.

Michael is lost in thought until, quite suddenly, the present rushes into the room, with the escalating caw of the boiling kettle and the shrill whistle that always follows it.


Michael smoothes his hand across his mostly grey hair with its yellowing blonde temple streaks like sandstone welts through granite.

He shifts his weight forward and goes to stand. The tightly wound long muscle strands, unseen beneath the time-shined fabric of his work trousers, allow him to undertake this action with a lightness, pace and deftness that verges on the feline: an unusual physical characteristic to find in a fifty-something year old man. 

It is a physical characteristic in which Michael still takes enormous yet silent pride. His own memory might fail him every now and then but his highly trained muscle memory never did.

As he walks across the room towards the sink, where kettle and mug perch, he is suddenly struck by a feeling of ‘ inconsequence’ so powerful and yet so banal as to, for the merest fleeting second at least, give him little reason to even complete the next step.
 He stops.

The feeling passes, unlocking his legs in the process

 As he approaches the bench, something outside the room catches his attention.

The muffled sound of one pair of running feet swiftly followed by three or four more pairs in hot pursuit, spills in from the outside.


The sounds are accompanied by a frosted shape and then four more, rushing past on the other side of the glass behind him.


Though no external sign of interest in the outside events seems to invade the locked room of his routine, inside Michael every sense crackles and turns, unfurling their antennae to collect every miniscule scrap of information they can of the pursuit outside.

The sound of running decreases until the white hum of the ordinary returns.

The kettle coughs a couple of puffs of purposeful steam through the loose fitting lid and the cream and brown plastic switch pops ‘off’.


Michael absently flicks through the rolling file of young faces that he stores in his head, each carefully logged and categorised. There are many boys and girls that the first pair of running feet could belong to: many that spend the last ten minutes of every class hiding in the hollow bleak cavity of fear that bubbles up in their chest before break-time; a quietly worn fear that seizes them every time they come to having negotiate the space between one class and the next; every journey peppered with the potential for some kind of nightmare scenario: sometimes succeeding but mostly failing in getting past unscathed.

Michael looks at the wall, one hand on the kettle. Who’d be 12 years old – and weak.

Michael’s hands instinctively reach out to rest on the edge of the bench on which the kettle and mug sit.

He places his thickened palms face down on its cool surface
.

The chopped and sawn indentations of a thousand small cutting and shaping jobs had removed the bench’s perfectly tooled right-angled edges a long time ago.


The candy-striped scores, ruts and scours in its surface filled with decades of every colour and hue of paint, present a jolly depth and subtext to the surface’s dull brown flatness.

He enjoys the familiar feeling he gets from setting his hands upon the bench, the bristling of it across his neck punctuating his thoughts.


The first set of running feet had been quite particular – a little clodding: as if a pair of outsized shoes strung from jangling trousers were being repeatedly thrown to the floor.


The Davis boy.
 T. Davis. Yr. 7.

At this moment of informed recognition, if you knew Michael’s face really well –  if you could read the infinitesimal shifts his emotions rarely played up into his face, you would have seen a brief shift in Michael’s expression, an ill-defined echo of some deep-seated memory, a feeling, passing across his face.

Funny old world. Goes Around Comes Around.

 

JulianBorra©2016

AUTHOR’S NOTE: In the process of publishing this story to the blog I am altering the original text of the Kindle Version. The blog published version will be the most up to date edition.

23.06.2016

18 Thursday Aug 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Aspiration, BREXIT, Childhood, EU, Halcyon Days, Identity, Little England, Populism, provincialism, Roots, Sovreignty, UKRIP, United Kingdom, Xenophobia

Simon-English-Channel-12.jpg

Why dig up an 8-year-old, slightly clumsy, over-written story to publish in chapters on a blog?

Firstly because ‘SAIL’ (the writing of which I scratched over for 2 years) has a good heart and some redeeming tracts of writing in places (just).

But mostly because one very British day in June and the aftermath of it compels me to do so.

The nature of the story – that of a young boy who inadvertently unties England and in the process of doing so unites himself with his true beginnings – has an additional resonance given the spiritual and soon to be constitutional separation of our fair island from our Europeans cousins.

So that is what I shall do.

Starting tomorrow, I will upload two chapters of SAIL, on every successive Friday for 12 weeks.

I will put the Amazon Kindle Publishing link at the bottom of each published chapter if you feel the need to leap ahead; but after 24 short weeks you’ll have it for free.

Accelerating History, Universal Rules & Tappist Conundrum

20 Monday Jun 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

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Back to the future, Bowie, Castro, Cold War, Conspiracy Theories, David St Hubbins, Dia De Los Muertos, facebook, Frank Cannon, GOOGLE, Guy Fawkes, History, Interior Design, JFK, Kevlar, Kruschev, Low, Marilyn Monroe, May Flies, Moore's Law, Mrk IV Continental, Rum Bean Stew, Simon Schama, Spinal Tap, Street Food, Will-i-am

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The future is Now – or just a hop, swipe and a quark in front of the moment we’re in – apparently – and every leap forwards we experience just another masterful identification of yet another inflection in technology – another opportunity or possibility seized by one silicon valley giant or another (and at which they ferociously throw themselves like a clown-masked bank robber sprawled across the bonnet of Frank Cannon’s Mark IV Continental, money spilling from his pockets like confetti, killer app strapped to his oversized gloved hand, joker grimace mouth frothing with messianic fervour).

And as each Now is seized, another rush of them pop up in its wake. Not one. Many. Nows are like May Flies, their single short life, their moment in the sun though brief and bright, is followed by not one but many more, their job of expanding their universe efficiently and economically done. And like May Flies, those Nows and the wave of possibility and opportunity that accompany them are coming thicker and faster than ever as technology and the Moore’s Law slingshot applies.

But there’s the question (if you can be arsed to ask it).

These Nows, and the infinite relentless possibility that comes with them are coming thicker and faster BUT are they rushing towards us, and if so what’s pushing them? Or are we rushing towards them – and if so, what’s propelling us?

Are we in a delicious Pull relationship with that point somewhere between the far side of the Now and the leading edge of tomorrow? Is the mesmeric possibility and galloping expectation of ‘what might be’ seducing us to rush at ever greater speeds into that space, self-propelling ourselves on the accelerating nature of tech capability?

Or are we being pushed? – bullied and bumped by the expanding exploding mosh of what has momentarily just been…by history, its knee relentlessly in the small of our back: its open palms flat battering against our shoulder blades – oooffff – sharp shoves with vertebrae clicks as the metronome of our progress?

And if it is the latter, when did quaint, doleful, dusty history get so pushy?

Though providing a huge potential for sounding a little like David St Hubbins from Spinal Tap (how could we forget his musings on Infinity – “if the universe is indeed infinite, then how – what does that mean? How far is all the way, and then if it stops, what’s stopping it, and what’s behind what’s stopping it? So, what’s the end, you know, is my question to you.”), the question of whether we are being pushed towards the future (and if so by what) or whether the future is rushing towards us is a rather fun thing to ponder,

My interest lies in the two camps that seem to vie for attention in this Tappist space. On the one hand the Historians have always felt very strongly that the answer to every human question yet to be asked has already been answered somewhere in history so they would say that history reaches forward into the Now and the Near Future continuously, shaping, poking, and priming them as it goes, and, ultimately isn’t everything rather circular anyway in our Goes Around Comes Around world?

And on the other, the futurists have a tendency to simply view history as the collective debris strewn behind our relentless pursuit of that great big beautiful rush  of ‘Now’s – the past simply the rusting wreck of all that furious Doing and Being – the landfill of quadrillions of previous ‘what is’ and ‘what could be’s – and a fistful of ‘maybe’s’ – now old; spent; finished; past; dead.

It would be fair to say that in our tech-fuelled accelerating world one might be forgiven for believing that the Futurists are ahead

Bar the odd Simon Schama moment and the old farts watching Time Team re runs – and a small deep fetish for period dramas – it’s all i Robot, Future Shock, cyborg, Artificial Intelligence, the upcoming sensory smack addiction of VR, multiple Wireds by Will i am, and the ‘prism-meets-kaleidoscope-meets-mirage’ of social network identity.

But for my tuppence worth, I believe we are not being drawn towards the relentlessly multiplying possibilities of an accelerating life powered by accelerating tech.

We are being pushed towards them.

Life is not accelerating – history is. It is also expanding and deepening as it does so. Technology is not accelerating future opportunity; it is amplifying, multiplying expanding and accelerating the Past at an exponential rate, which in turn pushes the future. (I can hear the sound of a split hair readying itself for further splicing!)

The Past is throwing more and more data, options choices, threads and wormholes over our shoulder into the path ahead.

The old, odd, sloth-like and highly personal model of living history – a straggly tendril poking us along our merry way, or popping up for some reason every now and then – has transformed into a high, broad and deep wave of such staggering proportion that the sheer critical mass of it relentlessly rising up behind us presses us forward at ever greater speeds.

History has stopped being the inert supplicant to the edgy today and ever more glamorous tomorrow. History is no longer dusting off books and only getting noticed when the 120 pound muscled-up Now feels like kicking sand in its face.

History is now the big kid on the block. History has changed its diet. History is bulking up, doing free weights, and running faster and further than ever before. History’s arms are more ripped and wider than ever. History’s shoulders have expanded, laying on more muscle and width. History has binned the old singular enormo-head of massed experience, chronology and intelligence and now rears up like a hydra, multiple heads sparking, spitting and snapping in every direction at once.

History is so NOW. Alive. Vibrant. Ripped. (Ooohhh.)

And this History is no meathead. This History has taken up Humanities. Broadening its mind at the speed of light fibre. This history ‘listens’. And it learns.

The old, mean, sharp dry propagandas of the old History – mean, brittle, myopic, self interested, closed, elitist – have been supplanted with a broad minded, expansive all seeing History, fired by myriad reference points and concurrent history threads on any given subject – all of which can be viewed ‘in flow’, hyper linked to each other in a cats cradle of information, opinion, feeling, insight, record, and data. History is not only alive. Its groovy: switched on. Tuned in.

For example, lets take an era of historic record – The Cold War. In our new hyper connected world, at the touch of a screen I can explore the Cold War not only from the vantage point of general historic record; the standard expository account as set out in a geo political or military text book but also through ‘pulling up’ what’s out there (About 65, 100,000 results in 0,62 seconds according to GOOGLE) delivering everything from random Wikis to blogs to current affairs programmes and texts from the time, government papers subsequently released by interested 3rd parties (web platforms & activists): treatise on How and why – profiles on whom – the JFK lens? – the Khruschev lens? – the Castro Lens?  – suddenly Ive got Marilyn Monroe conspiracy films with my Bay Of Pigs and a recipe for Cuban Rum Bean Stew in front of me. There are personal biographical and autobiographical accounts of living memory (both politicians militarists, civic officers and everyday people) to swim in.

I can have a shufti at the confrontation through the 1st and 3rd person filmic, musical and artistic reminiscences of people who ‘lived it’. I can virtually experience Cold War happenings, using Google Street View to walk the streets and dark corners of the Eastern Block to bring a narrative reminiscence to life. I can listen to recordings, interviews; watch reams of old newsreel. I can even consider it through the lens of how the art direction of movies focused on the period have inspired new wave designers in a kind of New Wave Cold War Hot Looks Chic – with a range of soft furnishings furniture and wall papers that celebrate concrete block builds papered with the rural mirage of big florals rendered in a palette that cold best be described as ‘Bowie Low’ Orange

This sea of multi dimensional multi perspective references is universal.

Technology allows me to drown myself in my own historic tsunami on any given subject.

Now this new, expanding, deepening, towering hydra tsunami of history can be broadly separated into two forms.

Near History & Far History

Far History has nothing to do with timelines or chronology – Far History is the kind of history which is only occasionally drawn into our everyday consciousness – the type of history that is farthest away from our Now.

Far History is only drawn up for or by a particular reason. For example, I watch the film Book Of Life with my children; they ask me about The Day Of The Dead. I follow up with a little light research on Dia De Los Muertos and suddenly I can drown myself in an avalanche of semiotic, cultural, religious, geographic, artistic, musical rendition and reminiscence. And the odd street food recipe.

To put it another way, Far History is everything beyond the peripheral vision of a facebook timeline and a linked-in profile update.

Near History is the one to watch. Near History is the pushy one here. Near History is the type of history that is expanding to the greatest degree. Near History is the staggering funnel of information, data, reference, touch point, perspective that rushes outwards across multiple channels and platforms from any one moment, action, experience or occurrence to deliver social, cultural, economic and environmental context of staggering breadth, impact and effect.

Think of it in personal terms for a moment. Your ‘history’ was once something gentler, broadly of two parts – the highly personal – ‘Close to you’ version. Spoken memories. Photo albums. Diaries. Familial reminiscence. Shared experiences between neighbour and local. With a  nice and highly engineered ‘Part Of This’ national identity draped over the top for when bigger stuff came along – football, war, European Union, holidays, collective cultural rituals (Guy Fawkes Day).

But it was slow, intertwined, indistinct. Ambling.

Now every moment explodes with Near History – the old personal intimate ‘close to me ‘ stuff amplified to staggering proportion by the connections pictures films shares links likes revelations news sources contextual materials.

Near History doesn’t pop up eventually, a little way down the track. It goes off like a grenade – rising up and billowing around us so quickly that we are living in it – the Near History is now a part of the Now.

It is this expansive explosive Near History rising up behind every moment we live that is pushing us forwards.

Near History is not in service to Moore’s Law. It is what fuels Moore’s Law. The exponential multiplication of capability, capacity and functionality is forced forwards by the Near History of every innovating, applicable and expanding moment in technology that has just been in service to every expanding moment we’ve just lived and the legions of multiplying Nows lining up just in front of it.

I think.

Anyway, if you’re facing the future, throw away the rear view mirror, strap yourself in, pop on some flash goggles and turn that Kevlar round to face the back. And let History, especially the Near kind fire you forwards.

 

Disney, atoms, spinal tap & the power of the Melancholic hum

21 Saturday May 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

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Abrahamic peoples, Atomoles, Brian Cox, Bruch's Violin Concerto, Cradle of Civilisation, D Minor, Dissonence, Feed The Birds, Gnostic Chanting, Hebrew Spirituals, Kracow, Lydian Harmoniai, Mach Piece, Mary Poppins, melancholia, Mellin, Octaves, Rad-energy, Robinson Crusoe, Sentimentality, Sherman & Sherman, Spinal Tap, The Crusades, The Law of Harmonic Repulsion & Attraction, The Moors, Theory of Musical Equiliberation, Thermism, Travers, Walt Disney

thenewdaily_disney_290114_mary_poppins.jpg

Why do some pieces of music seem to overwhelm us with emotion?

There are some pieces of music that seem to tear down the defences of even the coolest cucumbers and the most rational beings – stirred to high emotion by the mellifluous cadence of the piece.

And there always seems to be a minor key mooching about in there somewhere with the more melancholic or sentimental pieces of music. Certainly in western cultures those Minor keys are right up there with best of them in the profoundly moving department.

How can we forget Nigel Tufnell and his unforgettable Mach Piece – in D Minor

“I’m working on in D minor which is the saddest of all keys, I find. People weep instantly when they hear it, and I don’t know why.”

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BUT is ‘sadness’ really a universal minor key thing?

Melancholy in the western world may well reverberate through its minor chords. But such is not the case for many other cultures who can find joy and happiness in chords or harmonies that might have western ears sprinting for the Kleenex and a teary lie down.

The minor chord features heavily in both some African and Asian wedding music. Someone recently pointed out that in the Lydian Harmoniai of Ancient Greece which was designed specifically to evoke melancholy most closely resembles our major scale – and not a minor tear to be seen.

To be fair the ancient roots of our musical heritage have travelled a long and complex road – from music or harmony as one of the first human technologies – a way of expressing complex emotion, information and occasion – to their more recent shadings the result of its continental shifts out of the cradle of our current civilisations beliefs and influences.

Music or musical Harmony as we know it has bounced and bobbled around to a most staggering degree, spouting up from the rhythmic heart of Africa, thrown northwards to be strung high on the strings of the pre hellenic tribes to those deep in the Syrian basin; to roar out in the soaring song and melody of the Abrahamic peoples and faiths, via Palestine, through the Monastic Orders of the Crusades, up into the mellifluous discordant chanting of the orthodox churches into the throaty baritone of steppe Russian and Cossack singing and echoing amongst the walls of the ghettoes of Kracow; or carried on the warm, sandy  Gnostic breezes to turn up towards the Mediterranean, clipping the southern rim to meet the war-ish Moorish wails and chants: to vault the seaways into southern Spain and the monastic orders to collide with the Cantorial Melancholy of the Renaissance rendered dissonant by the long Asian shadow of the Venetian  merchant and underwritten by the colder airs and arias of the Middle and Northern European marches.

In a nutshell, harmony has been around a bit – and its been a little loose with its favours. Harmony has found itself sad and happy in so many different contexts that it doesn’t know its major arse from its minor elbow when it comes to the proving of what makes a sad or happy musical sound, note or chord.

You could say that for a broadly consensual idea of ‘sad’ (for that read minor) chords to have percolated to the top of that millennia-long journey shows their immutable and inherent power. But on the other you could say that every sequence of harmonies or notes, having travelled that road, would by now be laden with ‘context’ – the shaper and colourist of emotion in music.

This historic cultural criss-cross, the subsequent assimilation and blurring of musical cultures might explain why the chord sequence of ‘Lord, Hear my prayer’, the French Taize Christian spiritual has a decidedly Hebrew quality in the way in which its chord sequence descends and ascends, and whose chord succession has a remarkable similarity to some of the orchestrations from Disney’s Mary Poppins (more of which later).

In music particularly, there is much debate about how ‘melancholy’ or emotional characteristics are given to certain notes or chords – back to Nigel Tufnell and D Minor, the saddest of chords.

Specialists in this area point to the Theory of Musical Equilibration to explain the relationship between music and emotion. They see notes and chords as not inherently emotional but as a process of Will – a process which sets chords and notes in relation to particular cultural social and temporal contexts. The theory contests that it is these contexts that ’dye’ the notes chords or harmonies with emotion.

An example perhaps of this theory is the song ‘Feed The Birds’ featured in the 1964 Disney film Mary Poppins. Written by Sherman & Sherman. There is enormous contextual substance and potency in this song for generations of western adults and their children (as the adults tend to pass down their cultural ‘mores and memes’ through sharing of the things they loved as children, and the children in turn love what their parents love as an act of belonging – emotional adhesion).

It is said that Travers, the lady who wrote the story of Mary Poppins, on hearing the suggested song Feed The Birds wished instead for Greensleeves (which Wikipedia notes as being in E Minor as is much of Feed The Birds) to be the soundtrack to Mary Poppins – as it was quintessentially English. The quintessence of Feed The Birds I would venture is of a very different tribe.

There is an underlying spirit in the music of Feed The Birds that for me is inextricably linked to the Hebrew spirituals and the eastern European musical traditions. The echo of the yiddisher musical culture of eastern Europe seems to rise up in so many of the composers of these ‘melancholia’ or nostalgia pieces. The Sherman brothers are but one example.

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The composer of another great and renowned melancholic piece, the theme tune to the 1960s TV serialisation of Robinson Crusoe, was originally from Kiev in the Ukraine. And though there are some parts of this score that sound more Bond theme than anything else, the core of it, is distinctly eastern European for me. There is a point about 3 minutes and 40 seconds in where it transfers from a bombast Bond-like orchestration to the most heart wrenching solo violin. The echo of the first 60 seconds of Bruch’s Violin Concerto in G Minor is not difficult to hear – and seemingly a similar wish in Robert Mellin to incorporate Jewish inspirations into his music, as Bruch did so many years before.

In much the same way as Feed The Birds, the soundtrack for Robinson Crusoe is quite extraordinary in its ability to overwhelm the listener with feelings of profound emotion – both joy and sadness in perfect harmony.

These both make very good exemplars of the Theory’s concept of how Context (yearning, simpler times, naivete, longing, loss, when the world was young, carefree, endless summer) ‘dyes’ the music with emotion

The yearning in these pieces does seem to reach beyond simple sentimentality though. There was a profound feeling present when I first heard them. This pre-sentimental, pre-nostalgic effect is played out in the numerous comments that can be found underneath their youtube listings – ‘as moving as the first time I heard it’ is a reoccurring refrain. The fact that these pieces of music have become sentimentalised and dyed with emotion is I would suggest a secondary effect: an outcome of their initial impact and the mesmeric effect they had on the viewer/listener.

I would like to venture that they vibrate with something far greater than simple ‘context’ and dyed emotion.

They seem to vibrate with the power of a far more timeless human ‘voice’.

I wonder whether there are certain harmonies that in their vibration come closer than anything else the millennia of musical story tellers could muster to capturing the vibration of life itself.

That vibration – the energetic shaking of atoms on which all animate existence or life is based – but perhaps its resonance, however fleetingly is captured in some of these pieces.

The Law of Harmonic Attraction and Repulsion tells us that atoms shaking or vibrating at between 42 and 63 octaves per second produce a creative force – thermism – whose transmissive force – Rad-energy – creates association and cohesion – creates ‘stuff’ -the ethereal and material world we live in – Oh, and us. So we are in effect vibrating along with everything else. So why would we not recognise and respond to a fellow vibration in the world and feel drawn – to want to cohere with it – even if it is just a sound, note or harmony

It is a long stretch from the measuring of atomic octaves per second to the sweeping choir of the Sherman Brothers piece in Mary Poppins BUT I would venture that as we find out more and more about our existence and how we fit into the world we live in, especially at a sub atomic universal level, a distant and circuitous link between the octaves or vibration of life and those of musical harmony will eventually be laid out, only yo be met by an Uh Duh! response. ‘Of course they’re linked’ we’ll say.’Whoever was stupid enough to think they weren’t ?!’

There will be a quick populist ‘Brian Cox’ rewrite on the  infinite and unchangeable quantity of atomoles, the base of all matter and their state of constant vibratory motion, then the odd deft collision of both pop and high culture referencing:

What piece of work an atomole.  How infinite in extent, how unchangeable in quantity, how initial of all forms of energy; how express and admirable in action, how like a god!

Closely followed on stage by a rip roaring rendition of:

I’m pickin’ up good vibrations
She’s giving me excitations 

Perhaps a far more complex nature is at work in Nigel Tufnel’s saddest of all chords – one that reaches far beyond the influence of the cultures in which the listener was nurtured: in which they exist – one that reaches perhaps into the realm of our very life’s vibration.

Vibration as a signifier of the most profound life force is a reoccurring theme in many faiths and belief systems – not just in the physical, mathematical treatise of atomoles.

And I’ll bet you two finger cymbals, a Catholic Mass bell and a Buddhic gong that music is our way of reconnecting with the vibration of life.

And perhaps the melancholy we feel when we hear certain music is not only the residue of context and emotional dyeing but perhaps driven by a yearning rooted in its ability to remind us of a more profound connection with the vibration of life: one which we were once so closely aligned with; and to which we have now become strangers.

 

 

Tuppence a bag and a quick weep is a small price to pay for the key to cosmic connection

Homes, Castles, Connectivity & Living the Dream

12 Thursday May 2016

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Broadband, Connected Homes, Cost of Life, Cost Of Living, Dolls House, facebook, gogglebox, Identity, Larger-than-life iving, Nectar cards, Reimagine Prosperity, Ridley Scott, Robin Hood, Russell Crowe, Smarter Lighter Living, tech Businesses, thriving, twitter

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The home bone’s connected to the bill bone. The bill bone’s connected to the sigh bone. The sigh bone’s connected to the…

The difference between our base line Cost of Living and our expanded Cost of Life depends mostly on the size of life we think we’re entitled to.

For most of us, the size of Life we choose seems to be a ‘larger-than-life’ one – regardless of whether we can actually afford it or not. We rarely seem to find meaning within our means these days. Living within our means feels so, well, small.

We’re all rock stars now; super consumers of gorgeous.

And as with many things – our Cost of Life aspirations both begin and end in the home.

Our home is a hub – a hub of Us. A hub that speaks of our aspirations, background, histories and values; the dolls house of our life’s journey, set out like a huge work-in-progress catalogue for the life we aspire to: a  life that looks so good we’d just have to buy it (if we hadn’t done so already, three times over).

The living catalogue of Glorious Me. We’re all on air, on screen and published now, love – our perfect lives played out on facebook and twitter ( “Great Barbecue babe! Rose! Rose! And OMG!…gorgeous new garden chairs! you old fashionista you! #barbietodiefor @barbiegurl” ). Perfect lives, perfect bound by that lovely little digital printing and photo shop down the road into a coffee table book of Us.

Our home is where the Art is. The art of a life lived increasingly on camera and social network (even some of the GoggleBox families seem to be suffering a creeping upgrade to their furnishings).

And in the UK that home reaches far beyond its more recent role as the backdrop and canvass to our gorgeous perfect lives.

Let’s not forget the home enjoys near mythical status.

Because it really is our castle. (Cue Mr. Crowe’s Robin of Loxley speech in Ridley Scott’s Robin Hood)

The home enshrines the right of every man woman and child to self-determination and liberty – each of us the Lord of our own manor.

If I want to crazy pave it, paint it in stripes or put crash barriers on my front lawn, I will.

Our home is connected to our fundamental human right, our sense of belonging, our individual and collective identity, the signature of our citizenship and all that goes with that.

It is our own personal cornerstone in a fair decent and thriving nation.

When viewed through the lens of values ethics and identity, the connected Home for us is a far bigger idea than some tech fest junkies would suggest.

Yes the tech junkie view of the connected home is amazing.

But too often seem to ignore or miss the social and cultural infrastructure within which that home and its occupants exist. And therefore the most compelling of ways in which to connect it and to what.

Yes, the hyper connected home should represent the purest and most uncompromised version of our tech selves. But expansive tech needs meaning.

Connected homes in technological terms are amazing things – but I wish they’d speak of them in human terms – and imbue them with the power to elevate and enable the intrinsic values and aspirations of us, not just house the extrinsic ones.

A home inextricably and invisibly connected to our human needs and desires beyond having the latest something.

Imagine of all that tech was focused on serving one greater and more liberating purpose?

Imagine if the connected home was the killer app in a smarter lighter life for everyone of us?

Imagine if your home was hard wired directly to a smarter lighter model of prosperity – where the technology was put in charge of holisticity, thrift, and the inter-relatedness and integration of all things to do with your most precious retreat.

Imagine if your home sensed everything and watched all. Imagine if it was programmed to act in your best interests?

Imagine if it was the relentless scrutinizer of every opportunity to unburden you? Acting smartly on your behalf, mostly invisibly, with you only ever seeing the benefit of an increasingly improving life at decreasing cost?

Imagine if everything that you carried into your home had a bar code that registered it and simply recalculated your insurance accordingly?

Imagine if your fridge knew what needed to be eaten when – and also made suggestions to you for the left overs in the fridge – popping up with a recipe for the last two eggs, fennel head, three mushrooms and abstract cheese from the market?

Imagine if, having read the calorie counter off your i-watch, the same fridge suggested a meal from your own fridge or larder based upon the exercise you just did?

Imagine if your home knew what size the shoes and clothes were in your house and gave you the heads up if the kids needed new trainers – or those pants were past their sell by date?

Imagine if the shower knew when you’d had enough – timed to switch off after 3 minutes?

Imagine if the grey waste wandered down a pipe to be run through the lawn down through charcoal and into a aquifer, cleaning the water to within an inch of its 7 life cycles life – to pop out again in the washing machine, dish washer, and sink taps?

Imagine if the bioacoustics – sound imaging – in your home shifted the energy utilities to the area of the house you used the most? And the floor tiles generated the energy for the low wattage lighting in every room you walked into?

Imagine a house that gave you the nod when too much screen time had eaten your synapses?

Imagine a bed that kept a record of how much time you spent in REM sleep and re-calibrated your well being regime accordingly.

Imagine a house that could read the bar code on every book in it and give you a re-run suggestion from your own library – instead of just always buying another?

Imagine a home which delivered a change is as good as a rest plan each season – with a small suggestion for how to rearrange or re-see what you have – furniture, appliances, space –  to freshen up everyday life without unnecessary expense?

This suddenly transforms your home into a living evolving magazine concept – where your own home breathes in and out with you, informing and enriching your living experience by empirically understanding how you live and then helping you make the most of what you have. Apply the magazine retailing model and the connected self/connected home idea gets even more interesting.

If your home knew what reward and store cards you had and knew how many points you had accrued it could even suggest how you might use those points to best and most economic effect!

So what does this demand of us that isn’t already being done?

All of the above requires us to look at the Connected Home with Purpose and meaning – which requires us to look down through the lens of human desire and the expansive self – not up through the lens of relentless tech innovation and the optimized self.

If a smarter lighter life was predicated on super smart technologies applied invisibly to liberate the person to unburden themselves from the clutter of a ‘larger-than-life’ life and the confusion and contradiction that comes with it, starting with the bills, that would be an amazing thing.

Suddenly our ability to re-imagine prosperity in our everyday lives with meaning stops being the sole domain of finance houses and home retail stores seeking to expand their footprint in our lives.

Suddenly Tech businesses providing state of the art hyper fast connectivity move into pole position as the enablers and augmenters of a smarter lighter life – the deliverers of a new prosperity model.

And hey, every business category loves a new revenue stream and brand opportunity!!

“So,…yeah Ill take the THRIVE101 Hyper –fast, Invisible-Tech Connected Home Package please,

yup… yup…no…the one with the insurance/water/energy/credit card/retail bundle.

Yup.

Nice.

Nectar Card? Yes Ive got a nectar Card.

2 Million Bonus Points with the THRIVE101 UPGRADE?

errmm, OK, go on then…”

Living memory, resilience & the art of not forgetting

02 Monday May 2016

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Alzheimer's, ard drives, Arts, company culture, data points, degenerative disease, desire, drama, Elegy, Evolution, Gladiator, Identity, Language, literature, Living memory, Maximus, Nock Payne, resilience, self expression, smart phones, Social Memory, technologies, telecomms, The Book Of Life, Virgin Accelerator

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Funny thing memory

We tend to pay little attention to it; until it starts to fail us.

Sometimes its reason for failing us is a conspiracy of genes + environment – creating a disposition to Alzheimer’s and other forms of degenerative disease – the desperate creeping extinction of everything that made us one the whole beautiful living breathing loving human being we are.

At other times it’s disappearance is to do with the impact of new technologies. Recent technologies tempt us to dispense with our need to ‘remember’. Or they diffuse or diminish our natural ability to remember those things most important and valuable to us. In his book the shallows, Nicholas Carr points to how excessive immersion in the internet and the digital world disturbs our ability to transfer and store working memory into our deeper long term memory, reshaping our neural pathways.

Unlike language, art or drama – older human technologies designed to mine, explore, capture, elevate and replay memory and the experience and impact of living – our most recent technologies sometimes seem to seek to simply mathematically atomise our lives and the memory of them until human feeling is viewed as nothing more than a data point – something to be measured calibrated and engineered.

The idea that consciousness, identity and the precious value of memory is a form or condition of existence that can simply be dissected, measured, data pointed, and reengineered by science is a theme explored in Nick Payne’s play Elegy. A woman raddled by a degenerative disease that will eventually kill her is told her condition can be halted by ‘life saving’ surgery – the miracle of science – but only at the cost of catastrophic loss of memory. At which point one has to ask: ‘What life are you saving if not the recollected one; the one filled with precious riches and experiences?’

In some ways the diaspora of memories and recollections once housed in picture frames diaries sketchbooks letters and albums into the lost vaults of smart phone devices and hard drives is robbing us of tangible tactile living memory. This functional un-remembering allow us to abdicate the responsibility for maintaining those experiences, memories or recollections and synthesizing them.  The machine nature of calling up data is very different to the human nature of recollecting memory – the former is perfect, linear, modal and cached, the second, imperfect, linear, messy and overlapping, every journey into it opening up the possibilities of new revelation – as opposed to the same data cache relentlessly replayed like the locked loop in a stored file.

One of the most powerful drivers of our progress and evolution and of our astonishing resilience as a species is personal and shared recollection. Perhaps memory is a just a simple evolutionary trait mythologised – of collected wisdoms and experiences of fear pain survival and joy, regurgitated in fire side stories, tales, mementoes, symbols artefacts and dramas.

But to connect memory or remembering to some higher order of existence – to have created the thread between what is, what has been and what will be via the technology of memory is some proof of our ability to transcend the claw and scratch of base existence.

That the memory of us and what we do may well be a vanity particular to our species – a desperate need for our life to be more than some nihilistic little blip on a cosmic scale.

Nonetheless, our need to try and reach beyond the brackets of birth and death and seize immortality; whether it be through our beliefs, by our actions, the legacies we leave, the children we bear or the blunt tool of extending our physical and conscious existence, is a defining trait in us.

Gladiator’s Maximus demonstrates our need to be remembered as an inspiration of improvement and achievement when he states: “What we do in life echoes in eternity”

To be forgotten is a terrible thing. Immortality, until some scientific trickster or data consciousness A.I. guru makes it otherwise , is mostly an exercise in seeding a process of relentless remembering.

We have a number of simple systems already in place, some rooted in thousands of years of repeated doing and some rooted in immoveable belief systems, and some developed through more recent technologies.

Some forms or remembering have until recently been seen as the sign of mental distress or illness. Take Nostalgia. Sneaking off for a quick youtube binge of TV theme tunes from childhood or rummaging through pictures of old Y Front adverts (love Retronaut!!) and a desperate yearning to watch the infamous Ziggy Stardust Top of the Pops is usually seen by the up-tight ‘its all abut the Now man’ zealots as some mawkish sentimentality BUT recent developments in psychoanalysis have shown that nostalgia is a powerful human tool – and can actually strengthen our sense of self and centre our identity, enabling us to weather greater shifts, turbulence and transition.

Look Back In Joy, a recent Guardian article looking at the power of Nostalgia, focuses on an Greek Born American academic, Constantine Sedikides, who had left the University of North Carolina to become Professor of Social & Personality Psychology at the University of Southampton. He realised that he was using nostalgia to manage the turbulence and dislocation of changing continents. This led him to exploring in far more robust academic terms the role and facility that nostalgia provides us with. His findings are liberating. Sedikides talks of nostalgia as the “perfect internal politician, connecting the past with the present, pointing optimistically to the future” and a mental state “absolutely central to human experience”.

For me this quick blog journey through the Art of Remembering was bough on by a recent collision of banal choices, a profound realisation and professional curiosity.

First up.

The banal. Sky movie choice time with my children. “What about The Book of Life?” – a simple, beautiful whimsical story with a simple point by the master Guillermo Del Toro. Yes, its about greatness. Yes, its about the illusion of courage. Yes, its about true love. yes, its about belonging – but really, it id a film about not forgetting. Relentlessly Remembering is about Not Forgetting. Memory and the act of remembering are the most powerful tools that we have at our disposal. We are all kept alive in the hearts and minds eyes and memories of those who love us and have lived out some part of their lives in around and about us.

Second up.

The profound. In a simple exchange between my brother and I, we reminded ourselves that the effects of my beautiful but now dead mother will eventually need to be shared out between my he and I – the next step in the atomisation of her living memory into our lives and eventually the lives of my children and so on. Each effect vibrates with associated memory – sodden with the context which arrives like a steam train every time they are recalled into being – expressions, sounds, smells, feelings, times and experiences. The atomic truth that an atom never dies – and that the world vibrates with the atomic echoes of every one who has ever lived needs to include the more ephemeral but still equally powerful atomic nature of the vibrations of memory that run through the effects of those we have loved. Their atomic nature is indirectly imbued by their having been part of a life. They are rendered ‘animate’ by those vibrations. This belief in this form of conscious osmosis doesn’t stop at the effects and belongings of those who have passed out of sight. We also apply it to sites and buildings – from Stone Henge and battle fields to the blue plaques on buildings. We make pilgrimages to the hallowed halls of here and there, wishing for the conscious greatness and wellhead of wisdom and learning steeped in their walls to pour out into us.

Third up.

The professional. This curiosity arose while exploring the purpose of one of the Virgin Accelerator businesses I have had the pleasure of working with. In a world of zero hours and the death of the social contract between large corporations and their employees, their idea of a platform that links previous, present and future employees creates a simple and compelling way for rebuilding a powerful and precious social memory into a company.

Social or Living Memory in a corporation or business is increasingly left to chance and the random foray into face-book pages, LinkedIn and the odd Instagram surge. Fully connecting with a company’s Now – amongst its employees, the communities it touches, its customers, its partners and suppliers – is only part of true socialisation

Socialising a company requires more than just acting in the Now. But few companies actively connect their past with their present and even fewer attach it to their future. The anti-socialising of a company – the active dislocation and rupture the social threads that run through it – the ties that bind it from its past to its future – are not just an oversight on the part of the social strategy or HR.

It is not just economic pressures or the trend for zero hours that destroy the social contract and living memory of a business. Many ambitious and venal execs actively dispense with the ‘dead wood’ and not always for the right reasons. This forest fire approach is often simply a way of removing those with a greater living memory of the business than the ‘new’ order now prevailing and controlling it .

Agreed, often the human nature of getting stuck in our ways: fixing things: securing them and subsequently seeing all change to them as alien or dangerous can kill a business; sucking the light and life out of it. But the baby & bathwater approach to removing people who’ve been around too long can rob corporations of a vital cornerstone of their resilience. When done wilfully this kind of action should be seen as an aggression against the business and in turn the shareholder – because it is purposefully eviscerating a source of memory and knowledge that though in its linear and previous form may be obsolete, could be re-tasked and transformed into a new and more powerful resource to greater long term value.

All of these impacts, however great or small, can create a form of Corporate Alzheimer’s – the degeneration of the social memory of the company, and with it the very thing that made the company burn so brilliantly for so long.

In a conversation with a large American telecomm business about how they might help High School kids resist dropping out, I was surprised to find that they struggled to see the value in connecting their ex employees – a truly universal and multitudinous cohort of living memory and life experience – with the young high school crowd via a weekly skype roulette. The idea was simple – for a massive telecoms and connectivity provider to create a showcase of meaningful connections by using social platforms to randomly connect high school kids and oldies to share moments of life and experience to mutual benefit. I realised that to grasp the value of this and institute this type of initiative requires an innate understanding of the power and value of being remembered for ex employees and of memory to those just staring on their journey.

Regardless of what a company gets wrong, and many get much wrong in regards to how they treat their employees over time – the truth is those companies still invest an enormous amount of time and money into training up and expanding the capabilities of their workforce (self interestedly granted but in that mutual self interest lies the truth of the social contract between an employee and an employer).Why let it all walk out the door when the employee leaves?  Because sometimes their tenure was bumpy or you didn’t act in the best manner towards them?

At the close of the Theory of Everything , when Steven and his ex wife Jane watch their children playing in the garden, their exchange summarises the value and potency of connected imperfections perfectly.

“Look what we made”.

For all the mistakes. For all the disappointments. For all the pain. Would you have it any other way? Memory can hurt. But is can also heal. Forgetting is a cop out.

Some people and the companies they run would be all the better for taking this view – and in doing so commit to rebuild their ability to relentlessly remember – drawing a long line from their past to their future. Social or Living memory is not only one of the most powerful human facilities. It could also be the cornerstone of a companies greatest resilience in our accelerating atomizing world.

Purpose, the north star of any company, is one of its tools for Relentless Remembering  – and it becomes meaningless if it is only socialised in the Now.

A purpose must be part of a continuum that reaches from the beginning of a company to its end. And to do that it must exist inside a structure that values and facilitates everyone’s ability to relentlessly remember and be improved and enlightened by that remembering.

 

Faith, banter & Living the Dream

01 Sunday May 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

catholocism, Dave Allen, eruv, faith, Herman Ze German, Identity, jehovah, Jihadi John, judaism, Life Of Brian, M Theory, protestantism, Religion, Science, sharia law, thugee, Wonga

 

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“Christ on a bike.”

“You can’t say that.”

“What?”

“That.”

“Christ on a bike?”

“Yeah.”

“Just a bit of fun. Think its what the Tommies used to shout in the old days when the Padre cycled past on his way to some bombed out Mass.”

“Bit disrespectful isn’t it?”

“Nah.”

“Like that Dave Allen in the 70s – upsetting all of the Catholics in Ireland”

“Blast from the past. We’ll be getting our knickers in a twist about the bloody Life of Brian next.”

“And with fair reason.”

“What?”

“Well, bit of a hatchet job on old JC wasn’t it. And what about all that ‘hook nose’ ‘heebie’ ‘red sea pedestrian’ stuff?”

“God, I loved that bit! “Oi! Big Nose” “Who you calling big nose?”

“Cant think the Jewish viewers enjoyed it that much.”

“Well, you cant be too sensitive can you.”

“Unless Jehovah is a really big deal for you and your faith.”

“Yeah, OK, but blimey, what next? Rename the next series of Luther because the Reformation Protestant purists are going to get all hufty otherwise?”

“No. I’m just saying be a little more respectful to people of faith.”

“Faith? You mean Religion. Faith is not the sole domain of the Holy you know.”

“Yes it is.”

“Really? Faith comes in all shapes and sizes. Even the scientists need it. That M Theory is a bit of a leap of faith – nice theory but whoops no proof – but I cant see a molecular physicist getting all arsey about Hadron Collider gags.”

“M Theory?”

“M Theory – Hawking – chap in the chair – funny voice – believes that there is one total quantum truth for the whole universe – unifying all consistent superstring theories of the universe.”

“Superstring.”

“Forget the string – all I am saying is that until there is proof, that’s a leap of faith.”

“No need to get funny about it. All I am saying is that some people have a different cultural sensitivity to stuff like this. Things are sacred for them.”

“Oh, you’re not going to get all Sharia on me now are you.”

“Why not. The Jewish community puts up an Eruv. We all respect the significance of that.”

“God, can we just lighten up. All this stuff is just not…just not how we are. We just don’t get that worked up about this stuff.”

“Great. But other people do.”

“You’ll be banning banter next. And that’s just not British”

“What about Jihadi John?”

“What, the lunatic psycho Jihadi John?”

“Yes. Calling him Jihadi John – is that banter?”

“That’s the Sun for you!”

“Jihad is a religious reference.”

“Yeah but no. Just a bit of name-calling. You’re in taking-the-piss-land mate. Get over it.”

“It’s a bit thuggish though isn’t it?”

“What?”

“You know, all a bit lock stock and two smoking shashlik kebabs. Jihadi John. Cos he’s a Jihadist. Turkish cos he’s Turkish.”

“Well if you’re going to be like that, don’t say Thug.”

“Why not?”

“Thugee – Indian cult.”

“That’s not religion! They were a criminal cult.”

“Look. All I am saying is that, you know, chill out. its a sign of a civilised society. Rising above all the voodoo and the mysticism.Being able to look at it and laugh. I mean its nuts some of it.”

“So a few billion people are all nuts?”

“Yeah. But to be fair most of them are so bloody poor they need some fantasy to believe in don’t they. A thinking person with a decent education – going to see the funny side of all that blood and wine and 70 virgins.”

“Oh OK. Got it. So by your reckoning profound soul searching faith is commensurate with poverty.”

‘Yup. Face it mate, the more stuff we can get a hold of in this life the less we need to negotiate our entry into the next. Why should I worry about 4 Hail Marys, Stamping on a glass and facing East”

“Blimey. So a couple of credit cards, a few fancy holidays and a new sofa and all forms of religion can get binned? You’ll be telling me that Wonga Loans and spirituality are conflicting belief systems next”

“God, you’re a right bag of laughs. Have you got a saddle for that very high horse you’re on? Speaking of horses; I’m hungry.”

“Yeah; Im starving come to think of it.”

‘What about that Herman Ze German. Hot dog & beer place. Wurst sausage I ever had!”

‘Now that’s funny.”

“Hallelujah. He has a sense of humour. Schnell.”

 

 

Living the Dream is a project that seeks a more meaningful and inclusive narrative for what good looks like by exploring the underlying narratives in everyday peoples lives at the intersection where prosperity, consumption and values collide.  

 

 

 

Love, labels, shopping & Living The Dream:

24 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

3DS, B&Q, beyond Our Means, british Virgin Islands, Commercialism, Credit Cards, Disneyland, facebook, Holidays, i watch, i-phone, Living The Dream, Low Profile Tyres, Ocado, Oculus Rift, Shopping, Sonos, supermarkets, Tesco Finest, Thomson Holidays, Valentines Day, Westfeld Shopping Centre

 

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Shopping Labels: love ‘em. And I’ll have as many of them as I can get. And I don’t care what they’re pinned, popped, stapled, taped or tied to. Face creme. Hipsters. Phones. Washing Machines. Waiters. Sun-loungers. Crappafrappaccinolates.

Labels are the living proof that I’m living the dream. Or should I say shopping it. And loving it.

I’m perched on my individually reclining sofa, planning my buy now pay later holiday on an Oculus Rift. Got my very dramatic instagramatic liquid screen life looping on the SAMSUNG. Got my look-at-me-apple-i-watch playlist hooked into the Sonos. Even got my kids hooked on five hundred quid smart phones. Result.

Love my hyper connected super stylish self.

The more kit I have the better I feel. Because I’ve got kit. Shiny new smelling kit. Look at shiny me!  Shining is all I want to do as a stand-up living, loving human being. Shiny means my love is cutting the mustard in the world: I’m providing.

I’m buying like and love at a check out and it feels great. I’m buying branded hotness, smarts, and friends.Seriously, look at my slidy swipy interface app. I’m nailing it. I’m searching for love through an animated Gif. Nice. Add to Basket. Go to Checkout

Got stuff. Give stuff.

Sorry, hang on; let me just put you on speakerphone so every one can hear how on it we are. “Where? The British Virgin Islands? Surprised they let you in babe! Bahh ha ha ha. See you Friday. LOL. XOXOXOXOXO”

Stuff is how I spread the love. Christmas. Valentines. Mother’s Day. Birthdays. Love is a huge pink heart made up of bar codes with a matching card and wrapping paper.

Shop unto others as you would shop unto yourself!

Super Market Super Me. Veg isn’t just veg. 3 for 2 salad bags isn’t just 3 of their 5 a day – its a protestation of love. The cheese. Those breaded fish pieces. Olives with the little red things inside. The lot. The smell of the Ocado bags. Smell my love. The air is heavy with it.

That detergent, the super citrus one I use to wash their clothes, that’s liquid love in a tumble dryer. I could give a serial killer a run for their money in the detergents, bleaches and abrasive disinfectants department. Every one of them is an individual price marked gesture of my love for my family and the squeaky gorgeous life I want them to have. How could I not remove 99% of all germs? What kind of people are you? How could I allow my carpet not to smell of the perfume of a thousand roses. Those roses died for our home to smell like this! Have some respect.

Breakfast cereal? Its more than a bloody cereal. Check out the advert! It’s a highly nutritious hug is what it is. Just because I don’t have time to give one, at least the cereal can. Each one of those boxes is a proxy for my love. Snap crackle and hug that’s what I say. And while we’re at it: send my children out into the cold without a glowing defence shield of warm loving oats? Murderer.

My love is infinite. Resealable. Refillable. Recyclable.

And I can prove it. Look at the balance on my Nectar card and tell me I am not the most loving person around.

I’m a goes around comes around kind of person. Always happy to, you know, do our bit for the planet…just don’t charge me extra! Love the planet. And that Attenborough chap. He’s lovely.

Hang on… feels a little rubbish with everyone’s face stuck in a screen. And feeling a little lonely if the truth be told. Need to update my facebook status. But it means having to check out their third set of holiday pictures this year…I mean its only bloody May. Does he work for Thomsons or something?

Right. Family outing.

OOhh I feel a quick weekend turn around Westfield coming on! Come on every one, in the car, I want to check out that new home cinema set up and your mum wants to nip into Kurt Geiger to try on some post-modern, highly ironic stripper shoes (and I don’t mean the decorating kind!).

3DS? What d’you need your DS for? Oh go on then … quickly.

Westfield.

LOVE the screech of my low profile sports spec tyres as I one-finger-turn in their car park – the sheer weight of those oh so safe tyres turning on my lighter-than-air super-computed steering system. Hell, the car parks itself.

Tell you what though, think I must try harder, I’m slipping. Look at ‘em. Is it me or have all the kids permanently got a face like a slapped arse?

Not even sure if they like me. God, they must like me. We’re bezzy mates. Shopping together and everything. We even have the same face book friends.

You OK? School’s OK? Isn’t it? I’m sure they’re OK – aren’t they? I think I might buy them an education just like the one in Harry Potter – well, they loved the films and you know, always a little space on a credit card somewhere…!

Pricey? Yup, but you know, as the saying goes ‘Short time Living, Long time Debt’ – stick it on a card. Cant take it with you, it’s your credit, you’ve earned it.

Blimey, where was I – holiday – better not mess up the booking. I’ve so booking nailed it. See the love in their eyes when they enter the resort. That’s us that is.

Well I felt like a criminal – when she said that her mate at school didn’t just go to Disneyland – she was actually  IN the Disney holiday advert; in it; you know the one where all the children screech and scream when the parents reveal they’re going to Disneyland.

Well I couldn’t say no after that. OK, you’re going to drop three grand but look at their little faces – I couldn’t not. Where’s the Barclaycard? No, thats the VISA, the Barclaycard… it was with the MBNA one – I used them to get the sofa and those garden chairs.

Just got to face it – you spoil them, don’t you. And I quite like a few treats for myself. I’m worth it. Nan says we’re soft and need to get over ourselves. She gets a bit worked up about our spending. So we bought her one of those Tesco Finest Chocolate Mousse things to cheer her up. Not cheap. But it is Finest. Says it on the box there.

I’m a lover not a fighter

OK, so I’m a bit soft. I want them to have nice things (that bloody nursery paint cost a fortune but you know, first ever bedroom!!).

Sure, I could save up, but you never know what’s around the corner. Could be dead tomorrow. And Pensions! Don’t talk about pensions. Your pension’s just as likely to go down in value once that lot in the City have had their way with it.

House is our pension love. So best get yourself down to B&Q sharpish and get some power tools and fix all the stuff needs fixing then.

No, I want my lot to have the best. I don’t want to feel like some penny-pinching tightwad, especially with old ‘smug as you like’ over the road with his shiny new everything. Sure he nicks it all.

Mmmn. Not sure what to do with all those txt alerts from the bank though. Delete. Wait till the letter turns red. Then I’ll worry about it. Sunny. Haven’t used them. Look alright in the advert. Like that song. Wonder if they still send you a red final demand in the post if you’ve gone paperless?

Oh, well. Sure it must be about drink o clock by now.

 

Living The Dream – LTD Org – is dedicated to finding a new narrative and framework for an aspirational yet affordable UK lifestyle that doesn’t bankrupt us, our children and the planet we live on. Until then we’ll just have to put up and make do with the under-whelming, over-stretched, highly-conflicted muddle-along one we have now.

The fantastic Mr Foxes, Living the Dream & re-imagining UK prosperity

08 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by Thin Air Factory in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Andreotti, Fantastic Mr Fox, Iain Makintosh, Leicester City, Living The Dream, Premiere League, Reimagining Prosperity, Sam Diss, Shortlist Magazine, Social Conscience, The Foxes, Thrift

Screen Shot 2016-04-08 at 10.18.38.png

In a world that only seems to celebrate the gold-plated, flush away consumption of Kim and Kanye, Wayne Rooney’s shopping potential and the gold-plated Lamborghini collection of a playboy oil billionaire, trying to Live the Dream of smarter, lighter life might seem a rather hopeless task.

Why find meaning within your means when everyone and everything seems to be screaming ‘Go Large!’ regardless of whether they or you can afford it or not.

But hope springs eternal. And the odd shining example of how to make the most of what you have to both individual and collective benefit without bankrupting yourself in the process does pop up in the strangest of places.

The world of football for example.

If what’s going on at the moment is anything to go by, football is in danger of becoming a metaphor for the societal benefit of turning away from vulgar money fixations and look-at-me consumption to something a little more meaningful and precious. Something we seemed to have lost along the way.

In a world riddled with corruption, larger-than-life living, vulgar displays of wealth and riches and a blatant almost criminal disregard for the everyday people that the sport should belong to – we have Leicester. The Foxes.

If anyone is currently Living The Dream it’s Leicester.

Andreotti has proven himself to be the shrewdest of the Mr Foxes, thriftily shaping one of the most balanced teams in the sport, and for roughly the same amount of money as Wayne Rooney earns in a couple of months.

The Reaction. Remarkable. Suddenly the football collective voice is being heard. Sam Diss of Shortlist Magazine recently reported hearing a Crystal Palace fan tell a Leicester fan to ‘Win it for us’ when their teams met.

Us. There it is. Shining like a beacon. Deafening in its quiet criticism of a beautiful game turned ugly by greed and profligacy. The collective voice of the everyday football fans who believe that football is bigger than any one footballer. Bigger than any club ‘brand’. And who hark back to a time when watching your favourite game enriched your life not bankrupted it.

Once football was the perfect pleasure – a joy to play or watch at any level  – and wholly in the means of the fans who made the clubs what they are today. But far from enriching them, football now seems only to enrage and impoverish them – and not just financially. The game is becoming increasingly spiritually bankrupt. Morals and ethics seem to disappear out the Transfer Window. Money talks. And everyone else has to shut up and listen – and swallow it regardless of how patently twisted it is.

“Boof. Eat my Goal” said Alan Partridge.

But now “Who Ate All the Goals?” might seem a more appropriate chant from the terraces towards the ‘fat cat’ players, managers and owners that seem to openly mock the average working football fan with their displays of wealth.

There is little to separate the vulgar disparity between the salaries of CEOs and those of their employees and that which exists between footballers and the communities they are supposed to represent and entertain.

So whether Leicester ‘win it’ it or not is less about a football game and more about hope. A hope that the money doesn’t always win. And it doesn’t always make things better. And that a collective spirit can change things. And do the impossible.

My hope lies in this collective spirit wishing and willing Leicester on in the belief that some things are more beautiful and more important than ugly money.

Just imagine – if football can turn away from its current vulgar grasping and increasingly ill-affordable guise, perhaps other aspects of our everyday lifestyle and how we consume it might change too.

Living the Dream might start to mean enjoying life in a construct that isn’t loaded onto 5 credit cards and backed up with a payday loan; and riddled with disappointment even at that.

In the close of the same article Diss cites Iain Mackintosh, die-hard UK football writer, as saying that Leicester City pulling this off will change everything – and not just the Premier League. “This could change the dynamic of humanity itself”.

Here’s hoping.

 

 

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