Friday, April 24, 2009

Oh We'll Never Never Survive, Unless... We Get a Little Crazy!

Don't you just love Seal? I mean, who couldn't love lyrics like that. :)

It's Friday here, and I'm contemplating my wonderful life in the upcoming months. I'll be going to DUBLIN! AND ENGLAND! AND SCOTLAND!!!!!

Wow.

Maybe God's lining me up for a final farewell to the UK? I don't know... I always think "this" trip will be my last.

My work contract ends in mid-June. I don't have anything else lined up as yet. I keep hoping for (yet another) extension here, but you just can't tell.

So, what do you do? Save money like crazy and live for today, I think.

Well, I don't save as much as I should... but I think... if I don't do the things I really want to do - how will I know if I'll ever get a chance to do them in the future. So, I typically grab all the gusto now. Not one for delayed gratification, me. :)

Anyway, so how *will* I survive? Your best guess and mine is that it will come down to faith that things always work out for the best and that I'll find the position I was meant to find. I've prepared somewhat. What little I have plus the unemployment insurance should float me til I find something else.

If you know of any jobs for tech writers - let me know!

In the meantime, let's get a little crazy!

I'll be working the registration desk for the Austin International Poetry Festival tonight. Hope to see some old friends I've not seen in awhile.

Want to come with me, read poetry, and live for today?

Your crazy tech writer/poet friend...

Me

Monday, April 20, 2009

Daft Lass

Well, remember me telling you about the amazing War of the Worlds show that I'm missing because it's only in the UK and only in June?

I'm GOING!

Yes, that's right - not one but TWO trips to the UK this year.

http://www.mcd.ie/home/fn.php?c=6047307&ar=thewaroftheworlds

I decided to go to the Dublin show because:

a) Dublin's on my bucket list
b) It's the first show of the series in June

And I convinced myself for tons of other reasons as well. LOL

Now, to find the money!

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

If tha knows nowt, say nowt an appen nob'dy 'll notice.

I was just chatting with someone about what England *was* like in the early 80s. Some of the stuff that I found particularly funny at the time:

1) Fast food Wimpy burgers made with quasi meat (many fillers), lettuce, tomato, and cucumbers.

2) The fact that we have the same words for completely different things. For instance, the English really don't have American pickles. But they do have a "Ploughman's Pickle" which is more like a relish. Oh, here's an online description:

A brown sauce based pickle with chunks of crisp vegetables used to accompany meats, cheeses, pies on the plate or used to kick up the flavour in a sndwich.



Here's an American pickle:



How about jelly?

This is British Jelly (which we call Jello):



This is American Jelly - which is sort of close to a jam or marmalade without the bits of fruit in it. It's made only from the fruit juice.



You see how confusing it can get?

3) Trying to understand a fast-talking, dyed-in-the-wool Yorkshire butcher at the base store. OMG... LOL... I was trying to find you a YouTube snapshot of what Yorkshire sounds like, and I found this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u89rOI8z8Oc&feature=related.

I actually liked this one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eO1keD1pHQQ&feature=related. More of an academic view of the dialect.

And here's an interesting blog on't: http://www.openwriting.com/archives/2008/07/true_yorkshire_1.php#more

Anyway, enough for one morning, me ducks. :)

Tirrah

Monday, April 13, 2009

Could this be the magic...

I've been reading a lot about finding myself lately. You'd think after 51 years on the planet, I'd know something about life. Anyone that says they do are kidding themselves.

Life is a huge mystery. It's wrapped candy on Christmas morning. It's wide eyed, over-the-top, magnificent beauty.

But sometimes it sucks. :)

Travel, to me, is like taking the wrapping off the candy and standing there in wide-eyed wonder at what's there before you. It's taking chances and visiting places you never would have dreamed existed. That's kinda one reason why I hate rigid schedules - though it looks like I have one at the present for this trip.

Even travel sucks sometimes though. Like the fact that I have two stops on my way over this year. That's going to suck mightily.

But then, there's the magic. Like flying home from my last trip and meeting two amazing men from totally different backgrounds... we talked life, philosophy, religion, and even sex before the flight was through. One was a psychotherapist, and the other an engineer. Funnily enough, the psychotherapist was downing drinks one after another. Maybe that old addage about people going into psychotherapy to fix their own problems is true? However, I won't take away anything from the gentleman - he was truly a lot of fun to chat with. I miss them both and haven't heard from them since.

It also took me 2 weeks to get over jet lag from talking almost 15 hours straight. LOL

Buttermere in the Lake District was a beautiful surprise.

Meeting strangers at the B&B in Keswick and having one drop me at the train station out of the goodness of his heart another.

Then, there was the B&B proprietess near the laundramat who rudely shut the door in my face when I asked if she might have some change for the washers. There wasn't really a change machine in the laundramat.

I tend to see them mostly as anomalies, though.

I love walking into Ripon Cathedral and feeling the age of the place settle in my bones.

Or the gay guys I met through Sarn who were eversomuch fun! I miss them even now. Perhaps I'll make an effort to drop by their hotel in the fall. :) They run a boutique hotel in London.

The best parts of travel are definitely the surprises - not the plans.

Which is, I think, a lot like life.

Monday, April 6, 2009

What is it about Tea?



I love tea. All kinds of tea! Ok,mostly all kinds of "black" tea. Green teas and most herbals don't interest me much.

I'm not sure where this love of tea came from. Maybe partially because I live in Texas and we drink lots of iced tea here. Maybe because I lived in England? Maybe because I don't drink coffee?

For whatever reason, tea is da bomb as far as I'm concerned.

My favorite is the Wild Strawberry from Fortnum and Mason.



But I also enjoy Georgian Peach from my local tea room (the Steeping Room at the Domain).



Of course, I have my old standby (Earl Grey). And I do like Constant Comment from time to time.

I also have many assorted flavors of loose teas. Currently, in my desk drawer, I have a Peach Decaf from the Steeping Room, and a nice black lavender tea from a local lavender farm. From the Tea Embassy, I have Black Currant Tea and Raspberry Mint tea.

It's a veritable dessert drawer! :)

At nights, just before bed, I treat myself to a nice cup of chamomile.

With all these teas, you'd think I'd attended many, many afternoon teas (of the English variety). But the only tea I ever attended was one I hosted, myself. I did try clotted cream once at the Steeping Room (Americans are way missing out on the boat by not using clotted cream!). It's like a very light, whipped cream cheese.




I'm looking forward to possibly going to a tea when I get to London (if there is time and energy for such a thing). The other thing would be wearable clothing for the event. I tend not to pack formalwear for my trips.

I'll give that one some thought. :)

Tirrah for now!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

April Fools!

'ello me ducks... and how's life in your part of the world? I just got into work and am settling into the day's goings on.

Found out yesterday that we're going to have to take mandatory non-paid days off. I'm not too surprised.

I've been working on a book for the past couple of weeks. Mostly, just idea gathering. I'm hoping all these upcoming days off will allow me to focus on things a little more and maybe get a few chapters written. :)

I also have my resume in with a company that's bidding on a government contract. If they get it, my job is pretty well a lock. So, that will make things much easier all round as far as the planned travel goes.

I'm so glad I have this trip to take my mind off of things like paying bills and the long hours I put in with my various jobs. Yesterday, a friend pinged me about helping him with his resume. So many folks out there are just frightened to death about this recession. My friend has a very nice house that he bought a couple of years ago. Of course, making payments is getting harder and harder to do.

So, I've been finding interesting quotes lately. Let's see if I have any about travel I can pass on.

"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." -- Mark Twain

Without travel "I would have wound up a little ignorant white Southern female, which was not my idea of a good life." -- Lauren Hutton


"Travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living." –- Miriam Beard


Let's see if I can come up with one all by myself.

"If you bring cameras, video equipment, cell phones, and computers on your trip, you're no traveler... you're just a tourist." -- Joy Owen


And that, as they say, is all she wrote. :)