Christmas Likes and Dislikes Meme!

This weeks meme can go one of two ways! Are you still decking the halls and excited about Christmas or are you being a Scrooge this year? You can do either your Christmas Likes or your Christmas Dislikes Meme!

Well I’ve done both. So here first are my Christmas Dislikes:


1. A present you’d hate Sox, handknitted
2. Worst place to spend Christmas Anywhere religious
3. Hated carol Away in a Manger
4. Worst Christmas food Too much chocolate
5. A non-Christmas tree It isn’t Christmas without a tree!
6. Your worst ever present A tacky plastic shoehorn from my aunt in Canada; I wrote her a poem of (non) thanks and haven’t had a present from her since!
7. Worst thing about Christmas Day itself The rest of the year
8. Nasty Christmas Drink Pernod; disgusting at any time!
9. A non-decoration A crib; isn’t it idolatry?
10. Annoying Lights Illuminated inflatable santas
11. A seaside postcard OK here’s one I’ve not seen before
12. Person you least like to spend Christmas with Any religious maniac

1. christmas socks, 2. the reason Jesus came the first Christmas.jpg, 3. Lindsey & Sydney singing Away in a Manger, 4. Chocolate Fondue Fountain, 5. No more Christmas tree 🙁, 6. Dice.jpg, 7. Winter, England., 8. Pernod 2, 9. Christmas Crib from Ortisei, 10. Inflatable Diptych, 11. Postcard from Dick, 12. aah, Capitol Hill in the springtime…


And now for my Christmas Likes:


1. A present you’d like £2M
2. Favourite place to spend Christmas At home
3. Favourite carol The Boar’s Head
4. Favourite Christmas food Smoked salmon; we’ve made ourselves a tradition to have smoked salmon sandwiches and champagne at lunchtime on Christmas Day and then our Christmas meal in the evening
5. A Christmas tree Oh there has to be a well decorated tree
6. Your best ever present Noreen, my wife; we agreed to marry just before Christmas and told our parents over New Year
7. Favourite thing about Christmas Day itself Snow, not that I’ve ever seen a white Christmas
8. Favourite Christmas Drink Champagne, or beer!
9. A decoration A wreath on the front door
10. Fairy Lights Yes, and lots of them
11. A Christmas card or greeting OK, here’s a Christmas card
12. Person you most like to spend Christmas with Noreen

1. Hidden Money – Can you see what I see?, 2. Christmas Home, 3. Boar’s Head Carol, 4. smoked salmon, 5. Golden Christmas, 6. Just exactly what DOES happen when you kiss a toad?, 7. Harz Railway Winter 2006 #8, 8. Celebration toast with champagne, 9. Christmas wreath, 10. Day 265 : Fairy lights, 11. Christmas card, illustration, 12. Norn Albion

As always these are not my photos but please follow the links to enjoy the work of the photographers who did take them!

Created with fd’s Flickr Toys.

Reincarnation

We were talking over dinner tonight, to a background of renaissance Christmas music (mostly Giovanni Gabrieli) and the subject of reincarnation came up – as it does with us not infrequently.

As regular readers will know I don’t believe; I don’t believe in very much of the non-ethereal variety. Except that, to quote Shakespeare, “there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy” (Hamlet, Act I, scene v). One of the things which I do consider at least likely is some form of reincarnation. No, I know it doesn’t make sense; I just have this inner feeling that it is so, at least in some way, although quite how I have no clue. It’s real gut feeling stuff; and because I have this feeling it makes me reluctant to be very prescriptive about other peoples’ beliefs being completely wrong – who is to say that their beliefs aren’t right (at least for them) – rather than just not something I can feel the need for.

Anyway Noreen and I were remarking on the fact that we still don’t understand how we ever got together and have stayed together – even to the extent of enjoying good sex at 5.30 this morning (and that we calculate is 30 years almost to the day since we first had sex). Noreen also commented that while not understanding how we have got this far, she feels we may well have done it before. Hmmm, yes, maybe so. Although maybe not this way round; who knows we could have been a couple of Tudor gay boys?! And even maybe not as humans.

Noreen went on to comment on the fact that I have the feeling of having been a religious in a previous life. Well yes. It might account for my “irrational” liking for the traditional Latin Catholic liturgy, despite my lack of belief. (Mass is a spell; and it is especially potent in Latin.) I do have the feeling that it is all just too familiar and I could well have been a catholic priest; although not necessarily in England; perhaps Venice or the like around the time of Gabrieli or Monteverdi? I don’t know! Not really much more than that.

I also have the feeling of connection with the Chapel Royal at around the time of William Byrd (so late 16th century). (Byrd is one of my heroes. Why?) Again it just feels all too familiar and comfortable. I doubt that I was Byrd himself and I am doubtful that I was a Tudor recusant (although both are possibilities). More likely I was a singing boy or perhaps another of the Gentlemen of the Chapel Royal, or even a priest associated with the chapel establishment. What I can be fairly sure about is that if I was a priest at this time, it was not the same priesthood as the one I mentioned above – because remember that at the time of William Byrd England was protestant and although considerably more catholic than we traditionally think, it was wholly Prayer Book and not Latin Tridentine. Again I can’t pin this down any better; which leads me to feel there is a good reason why and that I shouldn’t try.

I do also wonder why it is that I find some aspects of other religions comfortable and familiar: some aspects of Buddhism; odd glimmers from Zen; some pieces of Shinto. (Why else am I drawn irrationally towards Japan?) Have I had lives in these environments? Similarly have I lived another life in Norway, to which I also feel drawn? I have no idea. Except that I have no illusions that I would likely have been a peasant wherever I was; maybe a priest or monk or some similar in some places/times (that’s just another gut feeling). We can’t all have been Henry VIII or Cleopatra!

It is interesting too that I feel I’ve likely not always been male. Maybe not always human, but I’m less certain about that. Why should I always have been male in any previous life? If I have been a woman at some time(s) then it might explain why I have this curiosity about what it is like to be a woman (a curiosity which my late father also professed). No, I have no illusion that I would have enjoyed/preferred being female, or it would have been better – I’m sure I wouldn’t; different, yes, but unlikely to be better or worse; but I would like to have that understanding.

Yet there are some eras for which I have no feeling and little interest: the Age of Enlightenment; the Victorians; the Romans; Egypt and Arabia; Africa. Maybe I was never there; or I was too abused? Who knows? Who will ever know about these things?

My only other feeling is that reincarnation – if it indeed exists – isn’t simple. It isn’t “my soul from this life is passed entire to someone in a future life”. (Let’s leave aside the Hindu possibility that we can become other animate beings — cows, flies, fish, whatever. In passing I once had a Hindu colleague who was strict vegetarian; he wouldn’t even eat an egg because it might be his grandmother reincarnated!) No, I have this feeling that our souls may well subdivide, and possibly combine with bits of other souls, before being “re-implanted” for the next life. However a quick search has not led me to any religious system which expresses reincarnation in this way.

That is about as much as I know; if indeed I know that much. And it is all based on absolutely nothing apart from some (some will say, delusional) inner gut feelings and wonderment at why some of these things are so comfortable and familiar. Nothing at all concrete to go on – but then which of us has? Deeply unsatisfactory for a scientist, a heretic and an unbeliever!

(I’ve put a fair few links in this item in the hope it may help others to understand some of the background.)

Follow this Weblog

I’ve now added a box on the right where you can sign up and tell me that you follow this weblog. Here’s what Blogger say about following:

What is Following?
Do you have a favorite blog and want to let the author and readers know that you are a fan? Well now you can do that and more with the Blogger Following feature! You can even keep track of the blogs you follow via your Reading List on the Blogger dashboard.

Of course you don’t have to use the Blogger Reading List to follow; other weblog providers will have other methods, and in fact I follow other people’s weblogs using their RSS feeds and Google Reader. As with so much it is a question of what works for you!

So it would be nice (for me anyway) if those few of you who do take an interest in what I have to say here (however fitful that interest may be) sign up as followers. If nothing else I then know a little more about my audience! Thank you!

Credit Crunch Amusements

Came across these the other day.

Things are now so bad with the credit crunch that women are having sex with their husbands, because they can’t afford the price of batteries!

What’s the capital of Iceland? About £4.20

You know there’s a credit crunch on, when you go to the cash point and the machine asks if you can spare some change…

I bought an advent calendar from Woolworths yesterday – but all the windows on it are boarded up!

Well they amused me! For about 10 seconds.

New 12 Days of Christmas Meme!


New 12 Days of Christmas Meme!, originally uploaded by kcm76.

An extra Flickr PhotoMeme this week: A New Twelve Days of Christmas …

“The Twelve Days of Christmas” is an English Christmas carol which enumerates a series of increasingly grandiose gifts given on each of the twelve days of Christmas. It has been one of the most popular and most-recorded Christmas songs in America and Europe throughout the past century. [Wikipedia]

Create your own series of 12 gifts you would want …

One true love
£2M
Three ravishing concubines
Four miles of my own private sunny, sandy shoreline with nudist beach
Five stone less weight
Six winning lottery numbers
Seven days a week, every week, of warm summer sunshine
Eight hours good sleep every night
Nine percent interest on our savings
Ten green bottles of wine a week
Eleven acres of natural ancient woodland
Twelve month-long holidays a year

1. Mon Amie la Rose – IMG_1165a,** 2. Red Head, 3. Heart,** 4. Morning Light,** 5. 5-peace-stones, 6. lottery, 7. Too good to eat?, 8. tsukareta nya~,** 9. leon’s nine lives,** 10. wine bottles-10, 11. Buche bei Oberbantenberg,** 12. Wintery Temple**

As always these are not my photos but please follow the links to enjoy the work of the photographers who did take them!
(The starred ** photographs are from my Flickr favourites.)

And it is worth viewing this on black to bring out the colours!

Created with fd’s Flickr Toys.

Clothing Mini-Meme


Clothing Mini-Meme, originally uploaded by kcm76.

Here’s a mid-week Flickr mini-meme I did some while back. Why post it now? Because I feel like it! 🙂

1. Painted on Jeans… 17/366, 2. Swimwear, by TBA Clothing-250, 3. i’m crazy, but you already knew that, 4. ruby fishing in the emperor’s new clothes on the dock up at camp, 5. naked feet, 6. Nudity

A mid-week mini-meme!
As usual the questions and answers and my usual tongue in cheek (but still semi-serious) take:
1. What do you wear to work? Jeans; just jeans mostly as I now work from home most days, and that’s really only so I can go quickly to the door; a t-shirt and sox only if I’m very cold, like today
2. Who is your favorite designer? You mean someone designs clothes? Oh dear!
3. Where do you get most of your clothes? From my wardrobe of non-clothing, of course
4. Where do you wish you could buy more often? The Emperor’s new clothes store
5. What is your favorite type of shoe? Naked feet; I’m sure barefoot is actually much better for the feet
6. What is your favorite around the house outfit? Nude when possible; clothed when necessary

As always these are not my photos but please follow the links to enjoy the work of the photographers who did take them!

Created with fd’s Flickr Toys.

Oliver Postgate RIP

Oliver Postgate, creator (with Peter Firmin) of many seminal and brilliant children’s cartoons, has died at the age of 83.

Postgate’s first creation was Ivor the Engine (in 1958), followed many, many others including Noggin the Nog, The Clangers and the universally loved Bagpuss. Although I never saw these as a kid (my enlightened(?) parents refused to have one of these “appalling peddlers of trash” TVs until I was at university) I found both Bagpuss and The Clangers as an adult. I loved them and I still do, to the extent that some of the “catch phrases” have become a part of our ecolect, notably “the mice on the mouse organ”, “Professor Yaffle”, “the Soup Dragon” and “Blue String Pudding”.

Here is not the place to write a full scale obituary, but you can find more about Oliver Postgate and his work at:

I have to admit to agreeing with Sarah Vine in the last of those linked pages, that this should be a national day of mourning. The world needs more Like Oliver Postgate.

12 Days of Christmas Meme!


12 Days of Christmas Meme!, originally uploaded by kcm76.

This week’s Flickr PhotoMeme

“The Twelve Days of Christmas” is an English Christmas carol which enumerates a series of increasingly grandiose gifts given on each of the twelve days of Christmas. It has been one of the most popular and most-recorded Christmas songs in America and Europe throughout the past century. [Wikipedia]
Let’s celebrate the season with a 12 Days of Christmas Meme!

A partridge in a pear tree
Two turtle doves
Three French hens
Four calling birds
Five golden rings
Six geese a-laying
Seven swans a-swimming
Eight maids a-milking
Nine ladies dancing
Ten lords a-leaping
Eleven pipers piping
Twelve drummers drumming

1. Partridge in a pear, 2. Turtle Doves 01, 3. Three French Hens, 4. 4 calling birds, 5. Five Gold Rings, 6. 6 Geese a swimming…., 7. On the seventh day of Christmas…, 8. Eight maids a-milking, 9. Nine ladies (20), 10. Ten Lords a-Leaping, 11. 11 pipers piping, 12. Twelve Drummers Drumming

As always these are not my photos but please follow the links to enjoy the work of the photographers who did take them!

Created with fd’s Flickr Toys.

Openings of the Year

There’s a penchant at this time of year for summarising your blogging year by posting the first sentence of the first post of each month. This year I’ve made an effort to write punchier (first) sentences, and in writing generally to tighten up my rather prolix prose style. The following demonstrates that I “could do better”. Here is my contribution …

January. Yes, you read it right!

February. Going to the dogs is what a lot of children in Shropshire might be doing today.

March. I’m still working through the photographs I took on holiday in German a few weeks ago.

April. In the Barber’s Shop. (One in a series of a self-portrait a week.)

May. “Sitting quietly, doing nothing, / Spring comes, and the grass grows by itself.”

June. Albertine. (Photograph of a rose from our garden.)

July. We’ve not done a Friday Five for a long time, so here’s this week’s.

August. The “Feedback” column this week’s New Scientist contains this item.

September. Is it my imagination, or is the wheat harvest about a month late this year?

October. “I moved to London in 1973 to study Chemistry at University College, London.”

November. I’ve no idea now where I found this, but it struck a chord.

December. Anti-Haircut (Another in the series of a self-portrait a week.)

The Verdict? Keep taking the tablets!