The House Husband

with occasional entries by The Dean

Go away and never come back!

So, here’s a question for you: What have Tallulah Bankhead, Carol Channing, Minnie Driver and Justin Timberlake all have in common? Apart from being in films I mean. I’ll tell you later.

Today was a great day! I went to the fracture clinic at Frimley Park and was discharged! They don’t want to see me again. I was told, if I needed to see them, that I knew where they were but, basically, I just have to keep up the physio (forever, I assume). I think I’m their wonder patient. They are very happy with my progress and healing abilities. I told them it was the vodka.

I asked if I could have a copy of my x-rays and they let me photograph them but, stupidly, I didn’t take the one with the break! I blame the guy controlling the screen because he missed it. Anyway, this is what it looked like when the plaster came off.

Take my hand, it no longer comes off

Meanwhile at home…it was bitterly cold up the park this morning. Actually, it was bitterly cold everywhere. we even had small flurries of snow when I was at the hospital. But, in the aprk, the icy chill from Moscow was making itself felt. not that it stopped the girls running around like lunatics. Or, maybe that was the idea.

Running back to me in their winter coats...and coats

At one stage, this dog spotted them and sneaked up on Carmen. Scared the living daylights out of her, making her scream and run around my legs. Day-z, leaping to the defence of her big, cowardly sister, then chased the poor thing across the park and back to its owner.

The rare Bat Eared Corgi wants to play with the bashful poodle

Cold or not, it was still beautiful and the girls loved it.

I also had fun with mum, when I rang this morning. Using a wonderful little web-tool called join.me, I was able to control her PC across the Internet. Sadly I wasn’t able to fix her Skype problem but we’re investigating other possibilities. We were able to play with the PC because poor dad was once more in hospital. Hopefully he’ll be out in a few hours.

And, finally, what do Carol Channing, Minnie Driver and Justin Timberlake have in common? Well, they all had a birthday today. Tallulah would have been 110 (had she not died in 1968), Carol was 91, Minnie 42 and baby Justin a very young 31.

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Feeling the cold

It was -5 in our garden this morning when I woke up. It was pretty bad in my head as well. I am feeling awful. While talking to mum and dad on the phone this morning, my voice gradually started to disappear.

Apart from going up to the park for a walk, I have done little more than snooze, drink Lemsip and take Sudafed. And I’m wrapped up.

I did manage to take a few photos in the park. Here’s a few.

I love the way the birds in the park send out a warning as I approach. This little fellow was clearly telling everyone there was a human and two small dogs very close by.

Watch out! Human about!

I’m not sure what this is (Mirinda?) but he’s clearly been feeding in our garden. He looks exceedingly well nourished.

Now, where shall I eat today?

And here’s a nice shot of Carmen in her coat. Following yesterday’s FSI, coats were mandatory today.

Boy, this walking is hard graft

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And I should have said that the blue stuff (yesterday) is for squeezing.

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Hale and Hearty

I have just recovered from my yearly dose of ill health. It’s always a simple cold and it generally only lasts 24 hours. 2011 was no exception.

It struck without warning on Monday. I was happily walking the dogs around the park – we decided to take the track that leads down to the stream and by the murky pool – enjoying the summer insects and flowering weeds, when I was suddenly struck by an attack of sneezes.

I do not suffer from allergies (not even of any kind) so I was pretty sure it wasn’t anything to do with a sudden influx of pollen. Actually this wasn’t always true. I was once allergic to feathers but this seems to have vanished over the years. Curry used to cause a few problems as well but I beat that by using an extreme form of aversion therapy courtesy of Lister on Red Dwarf. To be absolutely honest, I am pretty allergic to general intolerance but this doesn’t really affect my nose.

So, first it was my nose. After the sneezing abated, my nose was blocked for the duration. It then spread to the rest of me. My head started aching and my muscles began to fall asleep. The poodles were a bit confused as we slowed down, my steps getting shorter, my pace retarded. The final walk to the house seemed to take an age. By the time I walked into the house I knew I was going to be rendered inoperable for a day.

I managed to stay awake long enough to chat to Mirinda and then collapsed. She had had a lovely dinner date with an ex-colleague which I wanted to hear more about but, sadly, my brain was only taking in selected bits. Like the fact that the rumour about her being removed from the Board of Directors without being told was actually incorrect. She wasn’t and she was told she wasn’t. Talk about ruining a great story.

Tuesday was spent mainly comatose, drifting in and out consciousness, incapable of doing anything except having a Lemsip each time I woke.

The fact that I have a coffee addiction always helps when I have a cold. When sick, my body doesn’t crave caffeine, which means I just get more and more tired which, in turn means I just want to sleep. It is the sleep that gets rid of the cold. That and the Lemsip.

Normally when I go without a coffee for too long, I get terrible headaches as the cravings set in but not when I have a cold. Therefore, my curative properties are down to my coffee consumption! Well, it works for me. Mind you, my mother tells me she hasn’t had a cold for ten years and she rarely drinks coffee so maybe it’s genetic.

And to be fair, I think it IS probably genetic. Mum never gets sick and my grandfather would never give in to anything as puny as a germ. I thank them both for my tough antibodies. After all, it’s not like I eat a lot of fruit – read ‘none’.

And then, having rested on the edge of life, Wednesday morning saw me almost fully recovered. A bit of a cough and slightly runny nose being the final vestiges. I’m rather glad it happened when I could take a day to sleep, particularly this week. I wouldn’t be very keen on taking a cold on the plane to New York.

I had some odd, vivid dreams, something that only happens sometimes. Though, in saying that, while they are vivid at the time, I can never remember them in any great detail. Although I do remember suddenly thinking I was not asleep and hadn’t been since going to bed at 9. I reached across and looked at my phone – it was 1am so obviously I’d dreamt that I wasn’t asleep. This is always bizarre.

Just before waking at 6am, I had a dream which ended with Mirinda turning up at the house. I saw her sitting outside the bedroom window, behind the wheel of a very big Landrover. Given that our bedroom is on the first floor gives some idea of the size of this Landrover. When I realised I’d been dreaming I stole a peak out the window but she wasn’t there. It also occurred to me that a car of that size wouldn’t fit in our street, let alone pull up alongside our bedroom window.

I stayed in bed and drifted in and out of snoozey sleep until 7am when I was originally supposed to call Mirinda – I am her alarm clock which means I get to talk to her a couple of times a day at least. She’d sent me a text in the wee small hours to ring her later so I rang mum and dad instead.

It has just occurred to me that it was fortunate I was sick on a Tuesday because Mirinda would ban me from our lunch date if I was ill.

In an effort to ruin my lunch date, there was a fatality at Wimbledon, on the way into London (“Some inconsiderate person jumping in front of a train” said a woman sitting opposite me) causing the train to creep along. I think it’s odd when South West Trains announce that a person was struck by a train in these cases. Generally speaking it’s the opposite. I guess they feel better by blaming the train. This, however, is doubly odd when you consider the driver would feel pretty awful about it and SWT is basically shifting the blame away from a suicide to the driver of the train.

Due to this inconsiderate fatality, it took two hours to get into London rather than the usual one. Possibly the most frustrating part was having to listen to the three woman who decided they’d like to sit at my table and natter all the way in. I managed to block them out for the first hour but this became increasingly impossible. When they (almost) heard the very quiet announcement about a train hitting a passenger, one of them asked if he’d get into trouble. “Of course not,” said her friend, “He’ll be dead.

They were on their way to a Take That concert. They were quite old teeny boppers and not what you’d expect the type to go and see a boy band. However, the fact that Take That is more qualified to be a man band now is perhaps enough explanation. I know that Dawn is keen on seeing them but these women where at least ten years older than her.

Anyway, having finally reached Waterloo and heard all about the gorilla hanging from one woman’s handbag which matched a stranger’s across the aisle, I joined the Jubilee Line and hightailed it over to Canary Wharf.

Today my lunch with Mirinda was shared with Ben who was visiting to discuss various things of which I am not at liberty to share…at the moment. We all went to the Turkish place for the usual lovely lunch before I headed home (after walking Mirinda to her door afterwards, of course).

Imagine my total lack of surprise when arriving at Waterloo, to find the trains were still a mess. I jumped on a train which was half an hour late only to find that it was waiting for a ‘fitter’ to fix it. It was packed – the train, not the fitter – and it was a miracle I managed to find a seat. No sooner did I have my netbook out and had started to type than we were told that another train was about to leave for Alton two platforms away.

I joined the hordes streaming off the train and heading towards platform 16 wondering whether it was worth it. A glance towards the Waterloo concourse convinced me it was. It was like the masses of fans waiting to enter the O2 Arena ahead of a Take That concert and seriously not happy about having to wait for their pensioner heroes. One old guy was passed out, his head being cradled by friends, clearly a victim of fan rage. I quickened my steps, pushing aside the slow and glazed eyed tourists and women with prams.

Don’t believe it if someone tells you two trains won’t go into one because I have seen it. More than seen it, I have been squashed in it. If there’s one reason Mirinda has a flat in London, this is it. Extraordinarily, some people stand next to empty seats without sitting down while scores of others stand up. This is something I will never understand. Some of them say they sit all day but who the hell wants to stand up for an hour? Weird.

As we left Waterloo there was a plaintive announcement from the guard saying he was presently squashed into the last carriage and would be around for queries after Surbiton. Surbiton is where half of the passengers get off. Sadly one couple actually boarded the train at Surbiton with headphones blaring and completely oblivious to the rest of the world. Oh, to be a teenager. I live in hope that none day they’ll be listening to their loud rubbish when, deaf to the outside world, they are hit by a train.

And the trip didn’t get any better but, eventually, thankfully and sweating like the proverbial, I left the train at Farnham.

The saddest part of the day was the lack of rain. Believing the weather forecast on the BBC, I wore my raincoat. The only wet was on the inside. Plus, I felt like an idiot walking among people in t-shirts.

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Strange visitor

There is something that visits our garden at night. I do not know what it is. It enters (or exits) the garden under the fence. This I can guarantee as I have been fruitlessly blocking up the holes for a while, only to discover the very next morning, there is a new entry point already created. I have given up blocking the entrance.

It is too small for the poodles to get through and even too small for next doors lunatic, yelping dog. The Crazies (who live at number 30) seem to think it’s a badger, but it’s way too small for a badger…unless it’s a very small badger, of course. At least smaller than the Crazies’ dog.

Sometimes, when the poodles are well away in the Land of Nod, I will sneak out, making as little noise as possible, flash light gripped firmly in hand to try and catch it. I have not seen it yet.

The reason I have to wait for the dogs to be fast asleep is because if they think I’m going outside (and sometimes when I’m not) they charge up the back, barking and yahooing at, what I assume is, a fox. I know we have visits from a fox. I saw it one careless morning when we gave each other a fright. Of course, this will never do when it comes to sneaky wildlife glimpses, so I just wait for them to be comatose.

Well, last night, having talked to Mirinda about it and before tucking myself up in bed, I ventured out into the (very) cold (very) darkness, tippy toe tippy, torch at the ready. I stood, silent as a grave, opposite the hole beneath the fence.

The night was as silent as I – to be honest there was probably a roar coming from the triple roundabouts not far from our place but Mirinda wasn’t there and, for some reason, I only hear it when she is. Not a breath of wind, not a drop of dew to disturb anything. It was so quiet I could hear the goose bumps rising on my arms (typically I’d forgotten to put on a fleece and was standing in my pyjamas and, according to the weather station, it was 1.6).

Suddenly I was shaken from my imminent hypothermia by a Russell…I mean a rustle…deep within the holly bush. It sounded like a blackbird. They always sound a lot bigger and scarier than they really are. Clearly this is some sort of defence mechanism. I think they sound like snakes.

Not that our night time visitor could be a snake. Apart from the fact that there’s only about 7 snakes in the whole of England, it was far too cold and it would have been further asleep than the dogs.

So, there I was, standing uselessly with a torch, pointing it at the holly bush which, of course, was not about to reveal any of it’s secrets, with something fiddling about within it. I decided there was little point in my standing there any longer and went to bed.

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Today I entered, what felt like, a thousand breast relievers into MIMSY. There was only one photograph. I include it. If I never enter another, it’ll be too soon. I’d forgotten how truly dull data entry can be sometimes.

Glass breast reliever, courtesy of the Science Museum

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Buried

I’m still not feeling 100% and, consequently, I had another granny nap this afternoon. I’m not sure what the matter is but I get all lethargic, my head starts to ache and my nose starts to run. A summer cold, as my mum says, is what it probably is.

Anyway, before hitting the pillows, I planted the white sweet peas in the hot border and managed some dissertation work. For lunch I watched Portugal’s annihilation of North Korea (7-0) which was all in the second half. The North Korean team was holding its own and being threatening for the first 45 minutes but the Portuguese were given one hell of a team talk during the break, came back out and couldn’t stop scoring. A highlight was Ronaldo, showboating as usual and failing miserably.

After lunch we went up to the park for a walk. The fair is in town and Carmen was very interested in what was going on with the Dodgems. She stood and stared, alert and excited. I have no idea why. She’s seen stranger things as well as the fair last time! Maybe she has happy memories of last year. Day-z, of course, took no notice at all.

A woman, who I’d swear I’d never seen before, stopped to talk as her dogs sniffed around the nervous poodles. She said she didn’t know I had dogs. She said it in a way you’d expect someone who sees you every day to speak. She fussed over the girls and was amazed they were poodles. She wasn’t mad so I assume she’d mistaken me for some other scruff in a straw hat.

Back at home I crashed out with the poodles for company. Two hours later I felt a lot better and went into the garden with my coffee, the radio and dig bag and I completed the hole for the green cone. It was hot and sweaty work but I felt a lot better having finished it. After dinner I intentionally left a few bits of cabbage, just so I could christen it.

I’m presently watching Spain v Honduras. Spain are playing better than their last game but they still don’t look like world champions. Mind you, no-one else really does either. They are passing crisp and well and creating lots of chances but, coming up to half time, have not dominated as much as they should. They are also playing a bit dirty, faking fouls, elbowing off the ball, etc, which I really don’t like. Still, when they duck and weave and race down the pitch, it’s glorious. And the goal they scored was absolutely brilliant.

Carmen excited by the dodgems while Day-z looks in completely the wrong direction

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