"I'll admit I may have seen better days, but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail, "(Margo Channing)
At last!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THE SUN
A sedate Hen night
Tomorrow Sunday I am working nights (Monday too) so it will be nice to get back to being Mr Miniver on Tuesday
Chutzpah by the bucketload, and I am Mrs Miniver!!!
Jonney Highfield was in excellent performing mode, and we had a great time on catch up before and after the theatre yes in ALL BAR ONE!.It was like old times doing theatre and a few beers:
Read most of Mrs Miniver by Jan Struthers on the train, and must admit I was a little disappointed as it chronicled her life ( and rather privileged one at that) before the war so was very different to the 1941 film version. One sentence did hit home with me and I realised that me and Mrs Miniver ( or indeed Jan Struthers) are very alike!!!in certain ways, as she/they seem to enjoy the small things that mean "home"
"She reached her doorstep. The key turned sweetly in the lock.
That was the kind of thing one remembered about a house; not the size of the
rooms or the colour of the walls, but the feel of the door handles and the light
switches, the shape and texture of the banister rail under one's palm; minute
tactual intimacies, whose resumption was the essence of comming home"
The other George,I am fitted for a new suit ! antiques club
Went to Chester, and got fitted for my wedding outfit! A very camp salesman organised my clothes and flounced around with very thin lips when I walked in! (I was wearing my green mini welli slip ons!!! which I am sure ruined his day) He asked me what my waist size was and when I said 36, he looked me up and down like John Innman and said very pointedly "36! I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I. DOOOOOON'T THIIIINK SOOOOO" I very almost laughed but did go a shade of crimson when he measured me and proved he was right!! Oh the shame!
The wind is awful today, little George on his lead resembled a small hairy kite, so we all had to walk on the leeward side of the sand dunes. Off to Antiques club with Janet later, which should be fun, I think it's all about Arts and Crafts movement. Well actually it was about the life of William Morris which was generally interesting, however the speaker did concentrate on tapestry and wallpaper design a little too much. The church hall was full of grey hairs (about 40!!!) and the usual ankylosing spondylitis 80 year old lady was fast asleep on the front row!! The information the speaker gave of Morris' Red House at Bexley Heath was facinating and the house (now owned by the National Trust) was quite beautifull.
Spring, a fight at the vets and scrooge
Stormy weather
I want us to experience crisp dry frosty days with weak sunshine as we are supposed to be experiencing this time of year, and I want to get stuck in with the field, which resembles the quagmire out of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) !
Worked last night and had an hours sleep this morning before toileting duties. Now I cannot complain as I chose to have a new puppy, but it does feel like hard work after 60 minutes sleep.! The beach walk woke me a little and got thinking of a polish doctor who has just left ITU to go back home. A warm, gentle and ever so self depreciating woman in her early thirties, this doctor had taken the chance to move her young family over to Wales to start a new life. She seemed to struggle with the UK culture and language, but coped , with humour and dignaty. Universally the nursing staff ( historically very tough cookies to win over) liked working with her, and we all were shocked to find out that she is suffereing from terminal cancer, which was diagnosed quite suddenly after a short period of back pain. It is strange , but working amid sudden death and disability, as we do on intensive care, the nursing staff are well used to seeing lives that have been torn apart; yet, the speed of her diagnosis and subsequent departure has created a huge wave of shock and despondency amongst us all which is dreadfull. I was reminded of another close collegue of mine from Sheffield who had been diagnosed with cancer in very similar circumstances. Her funeral was perhaps the saddest I have ever experienced, as it was devoid of any humour or irony. I know this seems like a stupid thing to say, but I always feel that funerals should be bitter sweet, with loss mixed with normal, happier memories. I always remember the rather dry clergyman stating that my collegue had a full and happy life and qualified this by stating she had always enjoyed "Time Team" on tv. ! I almost cried at the emptiness of his remark.!
Message to self.................get more sleep
Guilt
Anyhow was watching an advert and it featured a teenage girl who is angry that her family is eating her healthy "Kworn", warning her brother off she hisses
"Touch my food...feel my fork!"
well it made me smile......