Archives for: July 2008

13/07/08

Permalink 12:35:57 pm, by mister2 Email , 1082 words, 2986 views   English (UK)
Categories: Grouch Corner

10 STEPS TO A BETTER LIFE

Last week our revered Prime Minister made the news by advising everyone how we could save money in these times of inflation and belt tightening.

His astounding tip? Throw less food away.

Then someone wrote to the Daily Mail with a different piece of advice. If crossing the road were illegal then we would save many lives. Perhaps those who remain on the same side of the street from birth to death would qualify for a government-funded bonus.

So I got to thinking of 10 things that make life unpalatable and which would improve our lives no end if they were addressed by the Prime Minister. I have listed them below, along with the benefits to the community and a suggested sentence for those who choose to ignore this advice.

- Cyclists who use the road when there is an adjacent cycle track. Cyclists complain (often with just cause) that other road users make cycling a dangerous activity. Why, then, do they insist on using the road, preventing me from passing and frequently riding so close to my passenger door that I fear the paint has been removed, when there is a perfectly adequate cycle path next to them which is only used by (surprise, surprise) cyclists? Sentence: Strapped to the road for 30 days as a speed bump. Cycle helmet optional (though probably not as hard as their skulls) Effect: A more stress-free journey for me, and less money spent on touch up paint.

- Motorists who drive at 25 mph in a 30 mph zone (nothing wrong with that if conditions dictate) then slow down as they pass a speed camera. Do they think they get a reward for going slower? Or do they just like pissing people off? And I must say they are usually elderly and wear a hat. Nuff said. Sentence: Follow a trailer of pig manure at a distance of 2 feet, from John 'O Groats to Lands End, at 3 mph. At random intervals the tractor stops dead. Effect: Reinforce the idea that too slow a speed can be just as annoying and dangerous as too high a speed.

- Texting on a mobile phone. People do it when they are on tea break, at work, in the supermarket, in the street, crossing the road - the list is endless. One 'deal' I noticed is an offer of 600 free texts a month. 600??! That's 20 texts a day! Or more than one every waking hour, whether that person is at work, eating, on the loo or even having a bit of nookie!! Some days I speak less frequently than that. What on earth is so important that you need 600 chances every month to tell someone about it? Sentence: Superglue thick sheepskin mittens to the perpetrators' hands, give them a full Mandarin Chinese keyboard and don't release them until they have used up one month's allocation of texts. Effect: Lower my blood pressure as I don't have to avoid these idiots on my travels by foot, car, bus, train ...

- Unnecessary calls on a mobile phone. I was walking by the local Asda a few days ago when I learned that a lady needed the loo so she had gone to Asda, getting some shopping whilst she was there. I often learn that people are 'out shopping', 'can't fiind the correct size of baked bean can', or that they are simply asking the recipient of the call what they are doing (answering the phone, dummy). Invariably these snippets of banal crap are discussed at full volume as if there is no phone to actually transmit the message. Sentence: Confiscate the mobile phone for 1 month and make the guilty party walk to whoever they 'need' to talk to. Effect: See above

- Inarticulate young people. 'Ug' seems to be a common phrase among teenagers, meaning anything from "OK" to "Excuse me but I think your trousers are on fire". Why they feel like communicating in a 50,000 year old language is not completely understood but I suspect it is related to brain development (or lack of). "Good morning, how are you?" "Ug." Pah! Sentence: Speak the words 'please' and thank you' 50,000 times in each of the major languages of the world. Effect: Having concluded the esercise the people concerned will have grown up and be able to communicate rationally.

- Cards from the Post Office informing me that I was out and that I have to collect my parcel personally. I know when I'm out. Many people know when they are out. It's called Going To Work. And the reward for Going To Work is to go to the local Post Office after work in the rush hour, queue for a hour while the staff laugh at you from behind a one-way mirror, then produce every document have ever owned just to prove I am me (or you are you). Every courier service I know (DHL, UPS, City Link, Interlink and so on) allow for re-direction to another address. The Post Office prefer to keep my property and lose it in their own time. Sentence: Make the Post Office keep all junk mail as 'non-deliverable' and ask the public to drop by and pick it up. Effect: Post Offices around the country would be blocked with useless rubbish and the service can then be put out to private tender, as it should have been years ago, giving more leisure time and reducing stress levels.

- Eating. Food can contain unwanted chemicals, flavouring, colouring and genetically modified products. It can also lead to obesity. Sentence: 3 month diet of burgers. Nothing else. This will reinforce the idea that eating is bad for you. Effect: General increase in health.

- Drinking. Alcoholic drinks can harm health. Soft drinks can contain sweeteners, preservatives and colouring. Water can contain chlorine, fluorides and aluminium. Sentence: Forced binge drinking every night for a week. This will reinforce the idea that drinking is bad for you. Effect: See above.

- Breathing. Breathing is a dangerous pastime, given all the pollutants and particulates present in the air. This practice should cease immediately. Sentence: Stand outside the local primary school at 'school run' time, inhaling the aroma of 4 x 4 gas guzzlers ferrying one small child around the corner. Effect: Healthier lungs. Cleaner blood supply. No complaints from those who adhere to this rule.

- List making. People who make lists of their top 10 favourite things, worst things, best thing and so on. Especially when they publish these lists in a blog. Sentence: More coffee and nicotine breaks. Effect: Less lists published.

Right, let's get the kettle on ...

12/07/08

Permalink 09:31:54 pm, by mister2 Email , 295 words, 2405 views   English (UK)
Categories: Life

A Bit of D.I.M. Part 4

Haha! I got going on the right hand side and the fun started!

First thing I learned is that a 8mm masonry drill is capable of drilling a 3" hole, 2" deep, in one go. It seems that there was a skim of plaster over, well, nothing at all. However, a quick go with rapid setting cement soon fixed that and I was away again. 3 wall units in a line (after a bit of judicious hacking with a jigsaw to clear the gas pipe in the corner) and they're all up, near enough level and firmly fixed to the wall and each other. I could do this for a living!

Final cupboard was going to be a thin unit mounted at right angles to the corner unit I just put up. Held last unit in place and discovered the door wouldn't open. Can't move unit sideways due to the main doorframe being in the way. Decide I don't want it anyway and clean up the mess I made earlier. Also decide I don't want to do this for a living.

So far I'm still pleased with it - the room seems a little smaller but cosier. And I now have more storage space than things to store - no doubt that will soon change.

Kitchen 08

One slight problem I noticed last night, though. The gap for the cooker seems a tiny bit smaller than I expected. The cooker still fits in but the grill at the top is awfully close to the wall units. Hey Ho, time to go shopping again ...

Next job will be to finish tiling the floor (must remember to remove the door and reduce the bottom edge to allow for the tile thickness). Then it's in with the base units, tile the walls and we're done!

09/07/08

Permalink 01:04:09 pm, by mister2 Email , 281 words, 538 views   English (UK)
Categories: Life

A Little Bit of D.I.M. Part 5

Well, apart from tiling the walls it's done! No major catastrophes in the latter stages, though there were a few minor niggles.

Such as when I was finishing the floor tiles off and ran out of tile cement. So off to the store I went, picked up a 3-ton tub and went to the checkout. The guy in front is buying 14,000 pieces of guttering. One piece is broken so he has to fetch a replacement. 'You don't need another,' I thought, 'That one's near enough!' as my cement lay setting on my floor. Another piece had no bar code sticker, so he had to fetch another. 'You already have 7 of those, you don't need another' I willed, but to no avail. Eventually I got served. The cement was still wet when I returned ...

The other thing was finding out just how true (or not) the walls at that end of the kitchen are. With bottom of the cabinets snug against the wall I had a 1" gap at the top. And a chasm at the side that ranged from ½" at the bottom to over ¾" at the top. Hey, Ho. I did a deft bit of filling and it looks good now. I even filleted between the floor and the skirting behind the fridge to finish off.

Next thing will be to tile the walls and that side of the kitchen is finished. I can't do the other side until I get the window replaced. And I might as well have the two external doors replaced at the same time. Which only leaves three more windows to replace - perhaps I could get that done, too.

I think this is going to get expensive ...

Kitchen 09

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