A man. A gamer. An outspoken gob-shite. There are many ways to describe me. I've been writing since I was taught, and after recently getting the bug to be all creative again, I figured it was time to stop plaguing the wife with my varied rants, and vent them here instead.

Monday, 25 January 2010

Smoking Leads To Strange Conversation

For some inexplicable reason, my wife managed to lure me out of my arse-crevice on the sofa last night. I was quite happy, sat watching the brand new series of 24 in oh-so-sexy HD. The cat was on my lap. My ash-tray was within non-cat-disturbing distance, and I had a coffee to hand. The first episode aired and, as is normally the case, it was simply setting things up for the excitement to come. For reasons I know not, wifey then decided we should go to the pub instead of watch the second episode. I don't know why I agreed but I did.

As a smoker, I am forced to smoke outside. This is not a bad thing. I like enjoying myself in environments that are smoke free. I have got used to it, I accept it, and I appreciate eating my steaks and drinking my lager without the stench of tobacco haunting the room. For a long time, I even claimed that the very act of smoking on the front step of your local was a social event. Everyone talks to each other, even if it is just to moan about the fact that they have to stand outside to have a fag.

However, somewhere along the line, people stopped complaining about this. Enough time has elapsed, and people have accepted it. So now I find myself, on a cold Sunday evening, sharing a doorway with a group of people that have long since stopped whinging about smoking outside, and have other things to say. Unfortunately, the other things they have to say are beyond dull.

One gentleman asked where I was from, which is an honest enough question, but the answer of "round the corner" didn't make sense to him. There next followed a potted family history explaining why I came to be living where I am living. I don't know why I told him this. I wish I hadn't. The subject then switched over to family trees; the art of digging through the crap of your families past and seeing how many of your ancestors died of dysentery, or had their hands amputated in cotton mills. This north-eastern gentleman informed me of how an unknown half-brother had contacted him. This half-brother was doing a family tree of his own, and had found a whole new side to the family. So they met up. Apparently, the mysterious brother looked exactly like their shared father, my smoking cohort informed me. Then he informed me again. I had finished my cig by this point. So he told me again.

"He looked more like my father than my and my brother did. Combined!"

And then he told me again. I couldn't get away. In the meantime, my beer was getting warm and flat, and the karaoke fellow was wondering why I wasn't answering his calls to sing some Robbie Williams.

A later trip to the smoking step saw my accomplice take the form of a late-twenties, pissed as a fart woman. Within the space of a fag, she had informed me that she works in Health & Safety for a building firm, that her family moved to town when she was little, that her mother was a heavy drinker, that she has a daughter of 2 years old, that she drinks more now than she did when she was in her teens (a lot more, apparently), that her daughter regards beer as "dirty" and would rather drink orange or warm blackcurrant, and that she fears when her daughter hits her teens and wants to go out drinking herself.

As I stood listening to this woman, unable to get a word in edge-ways, a few thoughts crossed my mind. The main thought was "Does this woman honestly think I care about any of this?". As my ears went into 'on, but not processing' mode, and my head went into automatic nodding, I couldn't help but wonder exactly where us Brit's have cocked up when it comes to drinking. We do nothing but verbally abuse the Europeans, but we seem to be the worst country in Europe when it comes to drinking behaviour. It is common for French children to have a glass of wine with their meals, yet you don't see hordes of French tourists falling out of multiple French bars in Magaluf, spilling the contents of their stomachs onto the streets.

In America, the legal drinking age is 21. Is that any better? We have all seen movies like Animal House, where the college kids get trollied and participate in drunken debauchery. But that is quite contained. They tend to do it in their residences, and don't really bother hitting the local drinking establishments. Because they can't. The drinking age certainly changes the problem into something more manageable, if not eradicate it. But again, when was the last time a bunch of Americans were on the news because of their elibriated antics?

Maybe the true problem when it comes down to it is not the drinking age, not the lack of demystifying alcohol to children, and not the fact that you can buy booze from anywhere at anytime. Maybe the true problem is that we are British. We live in one of the most hated countries in the world. Hell, we even hate ourselves. We are quick to point the finger, and pour scorn and ridicule on other civilizations that do not share our point of view or way of life. A typical British opinion would be, for example:

"Belgians like to have pipe-smoking competitions? MWA-HA-HA-HA! Sad Bastards."

What is wrong with that? These people can enjoy a smoke and not have to worry about meaningless crap conversation with drunken idiots. Sounds genius to me.

So I have decided, at the earliest given opportunity, I will cease to be a smoker. I know this will be hard, but I'm looking at the benefits. Sure, I won't wake in the morning, coughing and spluttering into life, feeling like shit, but still reaching for a fag. Yes, it will do wonders for my health, and food will taste better. But more importantly than that, the amount of crap I have to listen to whilst standing on cold doorsteps will decrease dramatically.

Sunday, 17 January 2010

Shiver Me Timbers Or Blow Yer House Down?

One of the many talents that British people possess is the ability to moan about the weather. Many joke about this, and how we should introduce moaning as an Olympic event in 2012, but it is actually true. Think about it; when you get in a taxi, the first thing people mention is the weather. The second is if the taxi driver has been busy, but no matter his response, how busy he has been is down to one thing. The weather.

We complain that it rain's all summer long, yet on the rare occasions that the sun peeks from behind the clouds for half an hour, we all complain that it is too hot. Similarly, too much sun, and we all long for a spot of the wet stuff. Thunderstorms are greeted like a soldier returning from Afghanistan, and everyone comments about how it will "clear the air". However, the arrival of said storm in November leaves people grumbling because they can't go to the pub.

The winter brings it's own set of problems. Folks living in nice homes in the middle of valleys, or right next to large rivers are flabbergasted when, after a few days rain, they suddenly find that fish are swimming around the sofa, and the milk is being delivered by boat instead of by van. I don't understand the mentality. I live by the coast and know full well that when the wind is up, and the rain is persisting it down that a walk along the prom is likely to result in the good boys at the RNLI being called out to attempt to find me as I bob around in the Irish sea, and a headline in the Evening Gazette will announce to the locals the levels of my stupidity. If you live in these areas, there are certain things you have to expect.

The one weather condition that trumps all others is snow. The country prays every year for a white Christmas because, you know, all your Christmas' should be white. The second that a layer of the cold powdery stuff settles though, and the country shudders to a shivering halt, seemingly unable to grasp the concept of just 'getting on with it'. These past two months have been more of the same. Grit, which is pretty much just salt, is thrown on all the major roads, and some level of movement in the outside world begins to take place again. For a day. Then we have more snow, and everything stops again. And so it continues, until the day that local councils announce, in hushed and slightly embarrassed voice, that they are running out of grit.

This to me makes no sense. If all we need is salt to start breaking down the ice and snow, then why aren't people raiding Cash & Carry's for the catering size packs of sodium chloride. Better yet, in case those lovely people that run these countries haven't noticed, we happen to be on an island. Surrounding us is what is know as an ocean, a large body of water that they seem to have forgotten, contains salt.

Every year, these weather conditions come to test us, and every year I want to literally slap those that complain about it. Sure, poor Mrs Smythe being airlifted out of her two up, two down when the water level has reached her hips is a shame, but why complain? Seriously. Head over to New Orleans and ask some of the lovely folk if they would like to swap places with Mrs Smythe. I'm sure they would. And, when the sun makes a prolonged appearance, bathing us in it's heat, before whinging about how uncomfortable it is as you lay in your bed, think about those people lying on dirt floors, suffering temperatures so extreme that nothing will grow, suffering malnourishment and disease, praying that one day some folks from Comic Relief will come over, shoot a little film, and provide clean drinking water.

And when the entire country is plastered in snow and looks from space as though Britain is a cake that someone has just covered in icing, and we sit there on our corner sofas, in our warm clothes, with our central heating, watching HD television we have recorded on our Sky+ that is beaming forth from the 42" plasma TV bolted to the wall, just think how little you are really suffering. Especially when, half the world away, an entire country just had its whole world literally crumble around it's ears, and bury half of its population. A country where now, for its residents, daily routine involves waking up in the makeshift tent, leaving to see if the aid that has been promised has arrived yet, and walking around whilst trying to avoid the bodies of the dead that lie, decaying, out in the open.

I'm sure the weather is the last thing the people of Haiti have on their minds. My mind, for one, is with them.