An undercurrent of resentment

I didn’t have to go to work today. I suppose I don’t have to go to work at all, nobody is forcing me; all I have to do is resign and become destitute rather than facing the daily struggle to drag my ennui out of bed, into the shower and into the office.

For the past few weeks, since returning after my medical leave, the journey into work has been very challenging. Not because of the usual dreadful traffic, but because I’ve been suffering from a weepy left eye. It’s at its worst in the morning and about twelve hours later in the evening. I’d have assumed this was hayfever if both eyes were affected, but it’s just the one that feels as if it has a growth manifesting itself under the eyelid twice a day.

It’s got the stage where I have to drive to work with a tissue over my left eye; other commuters looking at me in puzzlement through their rear view mirrors. “God, love, we all hate going to work, but there’s no need to cry about it.” Once at a place of safety, eye drops or an Optrex eye bath bring momentary relief, but soon, the itching and stinging returns.

What I could do with is getting a pair of swimming goggles and filling the left one with Optrex. Genius.

My day off
So today I didn’t have to go to work. I’d booked it off to take my car into the garage and I wasn’t even going to pretend to be doing any work like I have to when I’m in the office.

After being given a lift back home from the garage by mother, I figured that, since it’s boiling fucking hot and nobody wants to be inside, I’d spend the day on my little bench in my little yard. After pegging out a load of washing – all gussets aligned neatly, all facing the same direction – I sat down and attempted to actually read an actual book on my Kindle.

Yes, I have a Kindle even though I hate reading.

Shut up.

As I sat down on my bench, it struck me how much noise people can make, just by being there. I’d expected my peace to be interrupted by the fucking cockerel, but there was a constant toing and froing as my neighbours, their two children and one of their friends went backwards and forwards from the house to their garden via two gates, both of which slammed shut with a wooden “BANG!” followed by the metallic rattle of the two sections of the latch closing shut. This happened every two or three minutes. For three hours.

Do you know what it’s like when you don’t notice something, but when you do, that’s it, and it makes you want to kill things. For example, people who don’t close doors by hand who instead let the fucking things slam shut every fucking time they go through them every fucking minute! What is wrong with people that they can’t hear the same noise as me?

I started to feel resentful. This is a day of my holidays that you’re disturbing; it’s ok for you, you’re a teacher and you’re off anyway, for six weeks, but I’ve actually taken today off as leave and I can’t relax because I am oversensitive to your gate.

They’re lovely people, a lovely young family who’d do anything for anybody, but days like today make want to go and rip their hearts out with my bear hands. Bare hands. I don’t have bear hands. Bears have bear hands.

Withdrawal
Perhaps I’m feeling a little bit tetchy because I’ve decided to stop smoking and drinking. I’ve not had a cigarette since last night and this, coupled with a half hour walk in 25ºC heat to my parents’ from the garage this morning, followed by an hour at my parents’, followed by the journey in a non-air conditioned car, all with a drippy eye and terrible hair, I think the combination of factors made me a little more sensitive to the banging gate.

So yes, when I say I’m going to give up drinking, I’m actually lying. I don’t think I’ll ever return to being teetotal, but I’d like to be just an occasional drinker rather than an habitual one.

Buzzy things, flappy things, bitey things
I discovered “Very British Problems” on the Twitter last night and, scrolling through their tweets, I found this:

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It made me laugh, but as I was writing this, I was distracted by the sound of a miniature helicopter trying to take off from the shelf above my front door. Of course, a massive moth had managed to make its way into here under cover of darkness and was undergoing its death throes in the heat of the sun as its every fibre and every last molecule of oil in its stupid flappy wings evaporated in the heat. Moths are fuckers with their stupid drunken flapping in the “sort of, not quite, oh maybe” direction of people’s heads, bumping into lightbulbs and general ugliness.

The house is full of bluebottles too. They come in through a massive open doorway, only to spend hours trying to leave by bashing their heads in against double glazing. I particularly like it when they manage to get caught between the blinds and the window, that constant “bzzzzzzz, bang, bang, bzzzzzz, bang” does wonders for my nerves.

I need a lie down. I’m going to take to my bed and count how many times I can hear my neighbour’s gate slamming over the next couple of hours.

Heatwave

As I start to compose this, the temperature in my little study is 27ºC as the residual heat of the sun still radiates through the blinds that cover the window behind me.

What a scorcher!

We’re having a heatwave here in the UK and it is divine.  The temperature has exceeded 26ºC for the past three days and the sun has beamed down on us since the storms that plagued the weekend were expelled.

I love this weather: the prickling of my skin as it’s stimulated by the ultraviolet rays; the perfect temperature; the sound of the fan in my bedroom as it hums through the night; the warmth of the light and the way this changes the colour of everything.

Of course, it’s not great weather if you happen to be stuck in a hot car, but the traffic is easing now that most of the schools have broken up for the summer and I have air conditioning.  At the first sign of the temperature rising as we emerged from winter, I tried the air con in the old/new (OLD) car that I bought in February.  It didn’t work.  After a couple of regasses at my local Kwik Fit, it still didn’t work, so I enlisted the help of the internet to find somebody who might be able to fix it.  He came one Saturday morning, the man with no personal skills, and soon detected a leak in the condenser, he’d get me a quote and call me back to arrange fitting.  Those fuckers at Kwik Fit were supposed to test for leaks before they put freon in the system; to put freon in a leaky air conditioning system is very bad for the environment and probably even illegal.  They’re now on my list of boycotted companies along with Pizza ExpressSubway and Waitrose (although I don’t so much as boycott Waitrose as simply don’t shop there because we don’t have them up north).

The lady from Kool Car, were they called Kool Car?  Anyway she phoned me up to let me know that it would cost £208 to replace the condenser, service my system and regas it.  At this point, I had to make a decision: air con or brakes?  The air con won out; I can always use other vehicles or objects in the road to help me stop, but I simply can not bear the prospect doing without air con. And it is ICY cold, I love it!  So here’s a lesson to you: never get your air con redone in one of those places where they use an all in one machine.

The whole experience has taught be quite a bit about air conditioning systems in cars.  For example, there’s a thing from the evaporator called a drain tube and if it gets clogged, water pisses all over the passenger footwell carpet.  I discovered this yesterday.  Every adversity brings an opportunity to learn.  I discovered Ray the Mechanic on YouTube – the things he did with compressed air!

So anyway, not being a wholly irresponsible driver, the car is booked in to have its brakes sorted on Friday.  Kerfuckingching.  August will see me doing a bit of motoring with actual passengers and I obviously want to make sure that I can slam my brakes on and stop the car if I need to shout at them.

 

Lycra

The sunshine does bring its share of menaces: flying things; smelly things; noisy things; two wheeled things.  Yes, no doubt enthused by the Tour de France’s grand depart from Yorkshire last month, the roads are swarming with idiots in lycra who think they’re Mark Cavendish in that they insist on taking up the entire width of the road for their cycling pursuits and assume that cars should get out of their way – because that’s what happens for Mark Cavendish!  They irritate me, they are a danger to themselves and others, they are often aggressive and they are often completely thick.

The roads are narrowed because of cycle lanes.  Where do the cyclists ride? on the outside edge of the lane.  Or even in some cases, right in the middle of the carriageway with no intention of moving over for motor vehicles.  And then there are the three or four abreast ones who ride along winding country lanes with absolutely no care for the fact that they’re being complete bellends, they relish this.

I’ve had occasions where cyclists have tried to undertake me as I’ve been slowing down to turn left – and yes, I always indicate, yes, I will always slow down to let a cyclist clear a junction before I turn left if they’re in front of me.  There’s an unwelcome aggression that stems from a sense of them being hard done to by other road users.

Red lights mean nothing to a lot of them: another day, another pelican crossing, another near miss with another knobjockey ploughing on through when it was green for the pedestrians and red for him.  A colleague of mine had her jaw broken by one of these idiots in a hit and run.  No way to identify the culprit, no way to bring them to justice.

Some motorists are idiots too, lots of them, but motorists in general are licensed and insured, they are accountable for their actions and they are traceable if they cause an accident and hurt somebody.  So what’s the deal with the Lycra Nazis?  Nothing.  They just whinge and moan and get more road space without anything being introduced to make them safer, for their own sakes more than anything.

I hate them.  Rocky hates them.  And I’m sure the baby Jesus hates them too.

 

Commonwealth

The Commonwealth Games start in Glasgow tomorrow, the opening ceremony starts in ten minutes.  I’ll not be watching.  I SHOULD be watching, but I’ll be fannying around, bringing washing in and that.

One thing about these games is that the we compete as individual UK nations rather than Team GB. I’m hoping Stornoway has its own team.  I’ll cheer them on loudly.  I do love their black pudding.