Sunday, February 28, 2010

Thought For the Day Number 8 - With the Rabbi Anders Weiss

 ..religious leader, psychologist, spiritual guru and arbiter of good taste..

 Two teutonic aphorisms for today, the first one  just a paraphrasing really:

"Life is like going to the dentists. You think the worst is still to come and yet it's over already".   Bismarck

"Was mich nicht übringt macht mich stärker".  Nietzsche

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Productive Weekends Can Cost Money

Having had by our standards quite a productive Saturday at the Puumaja (well, we left the house and went to various shopping centres) it occured to us that productivity at the weekend seems to be directly in proportion to money spent.

OK so we got a new fridge in, a new mirror (in fact the first proper one, there's nothing vain or effete about the Puumaja  Crew, whatever else it is) various other bits and pieces and sorted the problem of the blocked mobile, but none of this was done for nowt.

Conversely, a day spent magnetized to any soft kind of furnishings, or even pacing up and down in decreasingly small circles can cost next to nothing, though doesn't leave much of a sense of accomplishment at the end.

So there it is - spending money is great, it shows you're doing something!








Friday, February 26, 2010

Short Post About Short Emails

The Puumaja Crew loves this. How many of us have overflowing inboxes that we can't possibly attend to as adequately as we would like to or even at all adequately say 'aye'! The Puumaja certainly does and we don't even work in the conventional sense of the word.

So the premise here is, keep your email responses to a maximum of two sentences (or three, or four, or five but no more). That way you treat email more like SMS messaging rather than a vortex that sucks you in all day long, preventing you from actually doing anything. There's nothing that can't be said in that amount of space.

Not an excuse for poor punctuation, grammar, spelling, or etiquette, that can be just as grating as a Joycean stream of consciousness on a Monday morning, just keep it simple.



Thursday, February 25, 2010

Should Friday Be Abolished?

We hear a chorus of 'a thousand times no' or words to that effect, but anyway, there's a genuine case to be made I believe.

The Puumaja isn't just making this assertion because we work from home, and so Friday doesn't have the resonance that it once did. There's something irksome about the wastefulness of it, in our view. From the air of anticipation first thing on a Friday morning, possibly even starting on Thursday evening, to the mandatory, hysterical "let's get to the pub at 5pm and stay there all evening", at least in the UK, and amongst emigre brits wherever they may be found, thus wiping out much of Saturday as well, to the 'novelty' of 'dress down Friday' to the general attitude of " let's just not do anything", which can be found all over the world I expect, Friday is really a huge vortex placed towards the end of the week (but not quite) which simply sucks all productivity from the remaining days into it and spits it out somewhere in the middle of the dark ages.

We think the muslims have got it right in simply making Friday a holy day in which you should just spend all day hanging round at the mosque, doing nothing concrete, since that's what everyone does anyway (bar the praying).

The fact remains, Friday promises so much and yet can never deliver. Even if you steer clear of a hangover (in which case you didn't drink enough and the night out turned out to be a bit flat) we don't believe that anyone can honestly look back and say "yes, all that was worthwhile" when all they did was that four hours trip to the country in the pouring rain at the end of which they just crashed out and fell asleep, or settled down with a lukewarm and overpriced takeaway curry for that that 25 minute long comedy slot which just ain't as funny as it used to be. In any case it's only two days away from Sunday, so you might as well start looking backwards to that, as much as start looking forward to Friday some time around Wednesday lunchtime.

So what to do with it, there are after all seven days in the week. The etymology of the name may give us an idea. We understand it refers to an ancient nordic goddess called, amongst other things, Frigg, presumably hence all the frigging around that goes on on the day, who had some kind of fertility cult associated with her. So that's what we should be doing really. It's the day of procreating! Who can oppose that? And procreating is of course, well, productive, so it would be in keeping with the idea that productivity levels should in fact be through the roof on the fifth day.

In any event the Puumaja is aiming to have one hell of a productive day tomorrow, starting early, and getting things done and, even if there's no procreating as such the attitude change should be for the best.



Wednesday, February 24, 2010

The Kiyosaki 401(k) Knell..

The first and possibly last time I'll ever post a link to yahoo! finance, and it's not even particularly relevant unless you're in the states, but it's a good article, in my humble, from the ultimate economic doom-monger (problem is he may well be right) Robert Kiyosaki.

Throw a Bigger Rock - Walt Gleeson

Canfield, Proctor, Nightingale, Zagler, Hill, Robbins, Tracy, Aaron... step aside please..there's a new success guru in town! Walt Gleeson is a highly successful, internationally renowned author of motivational books and CDs and other products. With a career spanning over half a decade, he has enthralled readers all over the world, from Alaska to Florida and from Hawaii to Rhode Island, with such titles as You Can Do It!, You Can Do It! Too, Literally Make Your House Work For You and Become a Billionaire Whilst On The Toilet. Here, Walt expands and improves upon an old teaching by synergizing it with his own native Nebraska wit, to bring it up to date for the i-Wap generation.

You know one of the  greatest personal motivators of all time, at least until the twentieth century, Jesus Christ reportedly said 'let he who cast the first stone have a bigger one thrown back at them', in a story which only appears in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas, and even then might be a later addition, probably by schoolboys in the Greek lessons in nineteenth-century public school Britain. But nevertheless he was an important spiritual teacher and I happen to agree with him on this. But I'd like to add something more to it.

Throughout the last few decades we've seen a lot of upheaval and destruction directed toward us. The war on terror, Eye-rack, Uzbekistan, El Garagua and the confusions in Western Ireland to name but five of them. But through it all one truth has remained steady, that of sticking up for yourself and throwing back a bigger rock at your opponent. But I say, why wait for someone to cast a stone? Why not just chuck a big rock at your problems straight  off the bat?

Let me example-ize for you. Supposing you're a guy, 22 years old who's been working a few years and is afraid he's already past it. The boss has only given a small pay rise, the corner cafe has stopped serving those delicious lattes you used to treat yourself to every half hour, Shelby have brought out a new model which makes yours now obsolete and looking like something from the "wacky races", and with the 401k situation looking more and more direr and direr by the year, your retirement years are looking pretty bleak.
But stop, wait! Throw a rock at it - now I'm not just talkin' any old run-of-the-mill housebrick, that'd be too easy; I want you to find the biggest rock in the yard that you can possibly pick up, and just pitch it there and then at your problems. You'll find it immensely empowering how they seem to melt right away, a feeling of serenity will descend on you for the rest of your life and noone will think you're a lunatic.

Then carry that rock round with you in your pocket to remind you of everything that you have to express aggression towards, and pull it out of your pocket at regular intervals in case you forget again.

Walt.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Small Change is Just That - Seth's Blog

Another great post from the inactively-folicled one, which kind of echoes something which he (and consequently I) had posted on a couple of days ago, that of fearing things which ain't actually going to come to pass anyway.

He homes in this time on something which I've increasingly come to realize is bollocks, that of fretting over tiny little bits and pieces of money, easy to do, rather than, for want of a less grating phrase, getting the bigger picture. In other words, that old 'catch the pennies..' myth. If that is all you do, then pennies is all you are likely to get (and nowadays they're presumably worth even less in real terms than when this old adage was not so old).

He even, in an assertion that I can only sit back and admire, makes the claim that money worries are merely the lizard brain in action (see this post for more on that).

So if one can stop running on lizard power and/or behaving like a hoary old puritanical maid during rationing times, maybe this so-called crisis would up sticks and f*ck off.

Easy to say. Harder to implement. But then the truth often is.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Top Financial Tip for Today

What does the Puumaja crew know about personal finances? Pretty close on absolute zero, so that puts us in good company with the lions' share of so-called financial experts you get on yahoo, the UK media and TV shows with titles like 'Business Brunch' or some such...

..so with that disclaimer out the way take or leave this or do with it what you will, but I read today that if you're investing in equities and bonds (which I wouldn't bother with myself, just sticking to something real like gold and silver and, er, real estate) you should invest your age (as a percentage) in bonds and the rest in equities, unless you like fast living. So, if you're ten, you should invest 10 per cent in Government bonds or even company-issued ones (make sure they carry the 'investment grade' tag, if they're in the UK) and the remaining 90 you can piss up the wall trying to 'beat' the markets.

The Puumaja, being about 100 years old, will be sticking stolidly to bonds then.

(source: "Smarter Investing", Tim Hale, 2nd Ed 2009, Prentice Hall, pp 39-40)

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Your Most Vivid Fears Virtually Never Come True - Seth's Blog

My older brother posted a very short post which I'm cheekily gonna expand on for once, rather than post a very short precis of what he wrote...

...He essentially says that we always attend to the people/situations/organizations that scream at us the most - at the price of neglecting those things most important to us, that will actually move us along.

I know I do this. Someone calls with an urgent job, a request to cover for them, or a bill reminder comes in and instead of saying, in the nicest possible way "screw ya, I'm going to spend the afternoon researching a field I'm interested in", or brainstorming this or that idea, or even just reading a book or going for a walk,mass panic sets in we fall in line like lemmings (do they fall in line? I know it's a myth that they commit mass suicide. Oh well,we  unthinkingly fall into line anyway).

Noone wants to be the worm that turns, the one that doesn't do what everyone else is doing and runs the risk of all the vivid shock horror images people have of being buried in a pauper's grave as a penalty for standing up for themselves. It's the mentality that keeps people in a shitty job earning a pittance and going nowhere, forever attending to 'urgent' matters, failure in which will result in sure death.
 
I should know I was one of the lemmings myself once. So give yourself a break. Literally if need be. Just remember all those fears of plane/car crashes, financial ruin, murder, disastrously failed relationships etc., whilst they can happen, very rarely do so, and shouldn't be a reason for you to destory your own life every bit as much (only in a much more protracted way) as those catastophes would. In fact those that believe int he law of attraction (don't think that includes Seth but I can't be sure) would have it that it's solely the relentless thrashing of self with these bogie stories that ends up in them becoming reality.

Not sure this is exactly what Seth meant but I've enjoyed running with the ball for once..

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Britain Wins a Gold in the Winter Olypmics!..

..I still hang my head in shame and colour up to the extent that I don't need to worry about winter heating whenever I think of that ski jumper...but at last there's something to be genuinely, if not proud of, reassured by.
Despite having no winter to speak of (although I gather this year was an exception) and a multiplicity of better things to do than stand around in the cold watching a couple of square jawed, android like and seemingly  utterly humourless men/women move around on snow and ice, "we" have bagged a gold in the winter olympics, and it's only a few days in!
So well done, Amy Williams, who managed to beat a load of the aforementioned nordic types and/or local Canadians in the alarmingly-named skeleton event, to bag Britain's first gold in the games in 30 years!
Actually I don't know why I'm coming out with this 'we' and 'us' stuff, when I'd normally disapprove of such misplaced jingoism (can jingoism ever be 'placed'? I don't know), given that I (and you) had absolutely nothing to do with her success or otherwise. Reminds me of a sketch I like..






Thursday, February 18, 2010

Stupid Questions I've Asked on Yahoo Answers Down the Years and Selected Answers. No. 2

..this was before Miliband...


Question posed:
"Home Secretary Job Description?
Is pomposity a prerequisite for the position of Home Secretary of the UK? I saw an article from the latest in a long line of puffed up middle aged men (Blunkett, Clarke etc) in which he announced he's 'not a quitter'. Which is the UK population's loss. But there again any successor would be the same".

Selected Answers:
1. Must be Scottish and an ex communist.
2. Must be able to spin his failures into successes.
3. Must be able to dodge criticism by wheeling out his junior ministers to take the flak.
4.Must be willing at all times to blame previous Home Secretaries for the fact that the Home Office is not fit for purpose.
Yes, yes, yes...-ed 
 
To be fair Labour is not capable of coming up with a better candidate than John Reid - he should not be removed. He is definately the best they can manage.
Ok but you've committed the 'definately' misdemeanour so why should anything you say or do be taken account of? - ed

Must be able to take responsibility for the poor practises of previous post holders.Must also be able to blame their poor performance on the practises of previous post holders.Must also be fat, middle aged and boring
or just plain blind.
Ha ha, like it - ed 

Inept, clueless, brainless or braindead, arrogant, totally incompetent and helps if your also corrupt!!!!
Got you - ed. 

The Secretary of State for the Home Department, commonly known as the Home Secretary, is the minister in charge of the United Kingdom Home Office and is responsible for internal affairs in England and Wales, and for immigration and citizenship for the whole United Kingdom (including Scotland and Northern Ireland). In certain other countrie....
this has been cut short given that it was the actual job description and so failed to answer the question in the spirit in which it was asked (and was just copied and pasted from wikipedia I think).- ed



Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Thought For the Day No. 7 - With the Rabbi Anders Weiss

 ..religious leader, psychologist, spiritual guru and arbiter of good taste..


 To love is to show goodness. We all understand this love and cannot understand it otherwise. But love is not found only in words, but in the actions we perform for the sake of others.


Do not search for pleasures; rather, be prepared to find pleasure in all that you do.
John Ruskin



Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Cliches and Stereotypes are a Good Thing - Seth's Blog

Some weeks ago the wooden house crew posted about annoying cliches and stereotypes. Unbeknownst to us, the two words are synonymous for more reasons than one; they actually have a common root, as Seth posted today here .
Creative gaon and soothsayer for whatever generation we are in now that he is, Seth was able to identify something positive from cliches, something we'd never done here.
The turning things on their heads bit I like a lot (e.g. Richard Branson is hardly what you'd call a steretypical CEO; I wonder how an ESL teacher wearing an expensive Italian suit would go down? Probably quite well in this part of the world).
Anyway he trumps us once again and manages to be both thought provoking and entertaining at the same time - how about that for a cliche!




Couldn't be arsed to find the e grave symbol on new keyboard for the word 'cliche' - ed


Monday, February 15, 2010

Mänd is much better than Lepp..

...I've discovered that mänd (pine wood), even if it's been lying around a bit in the snow and gotten wet, is superior to white alder. It burns for much longer (you only need to turn your back on the alder and it does a Hiroshima there and then in your grate) thus giving more heat, or better value heat for money, or something like that.
It does generate Pompeiian amounts of ash though (one day I'll stop using spurious metaphors but not today) which together with having to trim the dry bits off as kindling to get the fire going (you can stack the wet stuff around the sides, it dries out like, erm...Gerard Depardieu's farm in "Jeanne de Florette") makes for more work (boo!).
Watch out for more dubious tips later on this winter...




Sunday, February 14, 2010

Thought For The Day No. 6 - With the Rabbi Anders Weiss

..religious leader, psychologist, spiritual guru and arbiter of good taste..

"In ancient times, even in the Middle Ages, people believed that not all nationalities were equal, and some, such as the Persians, Greeks, Romans or French, were better than the others. We can no longer believe this...Nationalism is a prejudice based on the inequality of peoples".

L. Tolstoy again.







Saturday, February 13, 2010

On This Day 350 Years Ago...Pepys' Diary

 13 February 1660...in the weeks leading up to the restoration...

George Monck, 1st Duke of Albermarle was a very shrewd character who had been a royalist general in the civil war but later manged to be the governor general of Scotland under Oliver Cromwell. By this time he had led an unopposed army down to London in support of the Parliament (which had been in disarray since Oliver Cromwell's death a couple of years before) and like every true political survivor/collaborator, keeping his true political colours very close to his chest. The ensuing parliament was strongly royalist in its nature and led to the restoration of Charles II as King.


This day Monk (sp.) was invited to White Hall to dinner by my Lords; not seeming willing, he would not come. I went to Mr Fage from my father's, who had been this afternoon with Monk, who did promise to live and die with the City, and for the honour of the city; and indeed the City is very open-handed to the soldiers, that they are most of them drunk all day, and had money given them.


Thursday, February 11, 2010

Notes To Self - Advice On How To Teach English to Teens

  • Avoid doing it altogether by refusing to teach younger learners.
  • In the event of absolutely having to teach them, e.g. due to covering for someone, just bring the body.
  • Don't try to be 'cool', tough or funny.
  • They are not your equals (or inferiors) or your friends. They are just some foreign teenagers.
  • Don't use the board a lot.
  • Don't try overly hard to find some kind of crazy, exciting big task (it might fall flat on its arse and that's one, two, three hours of your life you'll never get back, for piss all money). Unless you're good at that type of thing of course. Not everyone is.
  • Enjoy the process not the aim, you're not a UK governmental minister in the John Major era setting 'targets' for schools.
  • Ignore the surly one.
  • Definitely ignore the flirtatious one.
  • Don't lecture.
  • Don't worry about "disciplining" people, especially if you're just covering.
  • Don't use hazy memories of your old teachers as a role model. A lot of them should have been in another job; there were a few diamonds in the rough but they were very special people indeed.
  • Don't run through the book on a "by numbers" basis, ever. You can get away with that with adults sometimes, but not kids.
  • Remember you were once a twat too.
  • Just generally don't worry, especially if you're unlikely to see them again, other than in passing, in any case.
  • Relax and enjoy yourself. Forget about it afterwards.
This may of course be crap advice and the author disclaims all responsibility (and still refuses to teach teens).

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Tallinn Internations Plug

This is an organisation which holds monthly get togethers on the second Wednesday of the month (in practice usually at St. Patrick's on Narva Maantee) for anyone of any nationality really. Quite a good mix, and not solely "networking" so fear not.
Interested and in Tallinn, visit the Facebook site.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Stupid Questions I've Asked On Yahoo Answers And Selected Replies...Part 1

Self-explanatory really. Typos etc left in for authenticity.

"When is Owen Paul's follow-up single due?

"I'm a huge fan of Owen's, aren't we all?, and I was wondering if anyone knows when the follow up to 'my favourite waste of time' is due out? He's at risk of failing to capitalise on the success of 'mfwot', given this brief lull in proceedings since the song hit the airwaves in June 1986, perhaps he should change record company?"

...and the answers:

  • It was the Pebble Mill effect that brought an un timely end to the Scottish crooners career.He was caught out trying to mime that once great melody on the old BBC program at 1 o'clock in the afternoons.Ah they were the days! (that was voted best answer in fact..-ed).
  • Lol I just remembered who you mean - "My Favourite Waste of Time"?! I'm showing my age here (36)
    What was the Pebble Mill Incident? Lol sounds interesting!
    He's probably working in your local B&Q telling all the customers "I was on Telly, me"
    (I prefer this answer; anyway 36 is young...-ed).
  • teehee. that was a great single, though. i saw him live once too at loughborough university (get away...-ed).
  • I had to search him to know who you're taking about, when the result came up with the Pebbles Mill incedent it rang a bell. I still wouldn't know him if I past [sic] him in the street and couldn't name any of his songs. (OK then why did you bother answering the question, presumably to accrue points but it was a serious enquiry-ed).
More to follow in the dueness of course...

Monday, February 8, 2010

Thought For The Day No. 5 - With The Rabbi Anders Weiss

his is an affectionate nod towards BBC radio 4's "thought for the day" which was broadcast every weekday morning, oftentimes with the delightfully named Rabbi Lionel Blue at the helm. Don't know if it still is, although I never got to hear it really anyway as it was the signal that I had to go and catch the bus to school. Here the Rabbi Anders Weiss, psychologist, spiritual leader and arbiter of good taste takes the floor..

"Serve your body only when it needs it. Not by creating more ways to please it".
Lev Tolstoy

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Another Funny Jewish Joke..

..since the last one no doubt went down some.

There was the story about the Jewish village in Lithuania, where the villagers needed to get a cow, one that was a good milker.
"Where should we go to buy it" they wondered. "Moscow?". "It's too expensive. How about Minsk?"..

..and so the new cow was brought over from Minsk and continued to provide the village with gallons of milk.

But it wasn't going to last forever and so the question arose of providing successor cows with the same lactative qualities. So the villagers put the cow in a field with a bull and waited for nature to run its course.

Only it didn't. Try as they might they couldn't get the cow to get it on. So they went to see the wisest inhabitant in the village, the old Rabbi, Moishe.

"We've put this cow in the field and nothing's happened".
"Nothing?" he asked.
"Yeah, we tried putting the cow in front of the bull, but it's approaches were rebuffed and so we tried putting it behind the bull.."
"And?" asked Moishe.
"Same thing happened".
"Did you try placing the cow at the side of the bull?"
"Yes, all to no avail. It just refused all advances".

Moishe pondered for a bit.."is the cow from Minsk?" he asked?
"yeah, it is, how did you guess" asked the villagers, surprised.

"My wife's from Minsk" said Moishe.


Saturday, February 6, 2010

Funny Jewish Joke With the Rabbi Anders Weiss

The anti-semitic Pope had spoken, ex cathedra, and proclaimed that all Jews, such as there were, had to leave the Vatican. Outraged, the embattled Jewish community turned to their spiritual leader, we'll call him Aaron, who asked the Pope for a debate on the matter. If the Pope won the debate, the Jews would leave and if he lost they could stay ad infinitum. The Pope said "ok" (but in latin) but then Aaron made a very strange request; the debate had to be conducted in silence.
Ever a fan of the trappists, and other orders at the more ascetic end of the market, the Pope agreed.
The awaited day arrived and both parties sat facing each other for some time, before the Pope raised his hands and showed three fingers. Aaron did the same, only he only showed one finger. The Pope then circled his finger around his head and in response, Aaron pointed to the ground.
The Pope next took out some holy wafers and altar wine and Aaron immediately pulled out an apple, upon which the Pope threw the towel in "these guys are too clever for me; dialectics was never my strong point at the seminary", he said. And the Jews could stay.
His Cardinals swarming around him, the Pope explained what had gone wrong. "I held up three fingers, representing the trinity. He responded by raising the one finger to represent the one God, that we both worship and have in common. I waved my finger around to show that God was all around us, and he then pointed to the ground, which I interpreted as meaning that God was here with us, right in the room. My final gambit was to pull out the sacraments to show that God absolves us of all our sins, upon which he drew out an apple, to remind us of original sin. I was stumped. He had an answer for everything. They can stay.."

Meanwhile across town, various people were questioning Aaron as to how he'd been able to pull it off.
"Well, he began by telling me we had three days to get out of the city, so I raised a finger to show that not one of us would leave. He then indicated that the city would be cleared of Jews by waving his finger, so I showed him that we were staying right here".
"What happened next, how did you get out of that?" someone asked.
"Dunno." said Aaron. "He just took out his lunch and so I took out mine".

I thank you.

Friday, February 5, 2010

While Andrew Gently Weeps (About His Guitar)...

Dear all. Who'd have thought that selling a simple but good quality acoustic guitar for a bargain price would have proved so difficult, even in a downturn?
I give you, my Strundl (Czech made!) dreadnought acoustic. Little used, the old ad which ran from December had over 220 views I think (they weren't all me clicking on it) and after that expired I placed a new one (with a slightly reduced price) which has had another 130 views..
..2 enquiries and that's it,
The first one phoned me and asked "why are you selling it?"....pause..."why am I selling it?!?!"...ooh, I guess it's since it was cursed by the Egyptian Pharaoah Akhentan and strange things started happening in the house I just had to offload it on to someone without them knowing...no, no, I mean it was used as a blunt instrument in my last bank job....no, no, I used it to smuggle cocaine into the country in....
...the second was a bit more sensible, actually, I'd misread the brand name, it's STRUNDAL in fact. Well, I don't know the Czech language.
Anyway it's still available, price will be hiked if there are a) any more stupid questions or b) any more questions which make me look stupid!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Careful, Rugs!

Having just bought some new and frankly mass-produced rugs (or carpets, call them what you will) for the Puumaja, it's timely that I should stumble upon this ad from 1970s British TV, before I went and polished the floor. It's a wonder they haven't reissued these more recently as I'm sure it's endemic worldwide, slipping on carpets which are on floors which have been polished, probably the biggest killer globally to date..

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

It'll Never Catch On..

I know I'm just a bovine, ignorant, arrogant and dull-witted anglo-saxon oaf (well, I'm half Scottish in fact, the good half anyway) but I found this explanation of the rules of Gaelic Football pretty difficult to follow in places. Terrible background music too.
I mean, I get the part about being able to score goals and handle the ball, but not so much some of the rule changes or how many people make up a side..there again I'm unlikely to start playing at an albeit sprightly 36,

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

One of Our Boys Is Missing - Chapter 2, Hero in the Neighbourhood: Part 3

One of our main tormentors was a Corporal called Baldwin. He'd usually be the bad half of a bad cop/even worse cop double act with one of the Sergeants. He was apparently resentful of the fact that he'd failed both SAS and 53 Assault Reconnaisance Squadron selection, and also been passed over for promotion, and was stuck trying to nail groups of recruit tossers into shape rather than doing something more exciting. I had already popped up on Baldwin's viewfinder within the first few weeks at Thrushingfold:
'you're a fucking idiot'...'who told you to move?'...'what kind of a surname is Moraine anyway?'
..this was all part of the mind games that recruits have to play of course - the staff would have all been through the same thing themselves when they were recruits- though I thought he probably gone to far when he stuffed an old rag in my mouth when I yawned slightly whilst doing a river crossing during an exercise.

Once he made us all parade outside in the rain in order of ugliness. I'd had myself down as being passable, not quite up with some of the smoothest guys in the troop, but way ahead of some of the mingers in the pre-occurrence period of my life. I was therefore a bit distraught when Baldwin, who was not the best looking guy in the world himself, even by NCO standards, relegated me right to second from bottom, only ahead of a guy who looked like Salvador Dali and the guy that did the Lewis Carroll illustrations had been fighting over him.

Baldwin and all the staff went to a different town, Banbury, for their kicks. So we'd all leave the barrack gates and turn left, they'd turn right.
'Have a good night out girls'...'have a milkshake for me'
were the kind of brickbats we'd have hurled in our direction as they were leaving. They were a real sight too, with their Ben Sherman shirts, gold chains and stinking of bad cologne. We really had to struggle to conceal our amusement when a story was leaked that Baldwin,had been poked in the eye by a woman he was trying to pull in some nightclub. The evidence was there for all to see, one of those really nasty psychedelic 'black' eyes that scare small children. So when a few days later he announced that 'I've got my eye on you, Moraine' it was just too much to bear; we all had to stifle it any way we could, chewing on spent cartridge cases if necessary, until we were safely back in our rooms and we dissolved into hysterics.

Normally those Friday nights out would be good fun; eventful. There was a choice of two nightclubs, Liaisons, which had a happy two hours every Friday, and the Crocodile Bar, which was a bit classier. Not only were there no jeans or doc martens but they also had a separate place where the locals could leave their sheep, cows and other livestock rather than taking them into the club with them. That said, looking about at some of the women in there it appeared that policy hadn't been perfectly adhered to.

I met Natalie in the Crocodile Bar. Natalie was small, blonde and pretty. She was in the corner with a couple of friends, and one of the guys from the Calthrops, Phil 'eyebrows' Beaumont was trying to chat her up. Phil was in my section at Fedioukine. He was a good-looking bastard, even with the cam-cream on, good at all sports and always a hit with the women. This time the treatment didn't seem to be working on Natalie though, which impressed me, so I had to go up and try to chat her up. We got on well, and just as time was approaching for cinderella to leave the ball I got her phone number and we agreed to meet up next Friday. The day soon came and we met at Natalie's local, and soon after that started going steady. She was still living at home, working as a hairdresser. Her old man didn't approve of her going out with a squaddy - 'it's not a settled life' he reasoned.

Fieldcraft was the real bread and butter aspect of foot soldiering. We learnt to 'husband' our ration packs, a particularly poor assembly of dried food or dubious nutritional value. It was rumoured that the geraniums in the adjutant's office were better fed than us. These were only just rendered edible with the additions of curry powder, tabasco sauce, mustard etc that we took with us. Packs contained further sundries such as tinned, dried cheese, usually past its use-by date by the matter of a few decades, really piss-poor quality chocolate, a selection of powdered drinks which could be made either hot or cold (at least if you made them scalding hot it diguised the 'taste' and fooled your stomach into thinking it was getting a proper cup of hot tea or coffee) and, rather bizzarely, chewing gum. There were four varieties of rat pack, denoted as 'menu A', 'menu B' etc. Menu! What a joke! If you ever eat in a restaurant which is serving meat and potato dumplings with caramelised pears for dessert, walk out very quickly or at least ask for some tabasco sauce.

I never used to enjoy drill. I hated the pin-point precision of it; the fact that we had to do it at all. Calthrops have a particularly distinctive way of marching, which makes it difficult when parading with other units. Whereas the Royal Marines march with a relatively slow and easy gait, and Green Jackets march with a much quicker, almost staccato mince, Calthrops drill is characterised by a fairly stealthy, cat-like march, going back to the days when we had to stalk around setting up our traps for horses and men. The boast was that the entire regiment could form up and march down the road behind an unsuspecting individual, and he'd never know we were there until it was too late.

Our drill leader (DL) was straight out of the nineteenth century. You could easily imagine him giving the 'independence fire at will' command as the enemy tribe came down the hill. He had those kind of mutton chops which meet on the top lip. I don't think that in the whole time we were in training, anyone ever saw his eyes, his cap was that tightly pulled down over his forehead. He could spot an unuttoned pocket at 500 metres, and the terror which caught us as he surveyed our ranks whilst on god's golden square as he called it was one of th emost demoralizing things we ever experienced. If you caught his attention it was the full treatment for you - eyeball to eyeball (well, I guess you had to imagine his eyes were there somehow), under an enfilade of spittle particles as he inquired as to the extent you 'called' these boots 'clean'.

I managed to avoid his attention most of the time, with one exception. I was next to Kev, we were about the same height, and we'd had a bet on how much the DL would use his pet word, 'yesteryear'. He'd always say this as he liked to reminisce about the glory days of the regiment when they were second to none in the world of military drill. We thought it was hilarious. He'd been on yesteryear overdrive that morning and as we got into treble figures I could sense Kev cracking up, and I caught it and started giggling. I was on line for getting the very essence screamed out of me but someone took the fire for me at the last instant. This was one of the real biffs in our troop, who was already under srutiny for loafing, not being popular, being thick, slightly overweight and having a silly name (Pute, for God's sake!) actually arrived at Fedioukine with some candles instead of a torch. The guys in his bunk were just getting their heads down when they saw wee willie winkie coming towards them, the flickering flame guiding his way as he went for a slash.
The ultimate in Pute’s fuck ups saved me from the DLs wrath though. He’d turned to with his trousers ironed nicely enough, but unfortunately the daft bastard had ironed them inside out – so the crease was actually inverted. You could see the'no information what to do here' error message in mind of the DL, who then had to grab a whole load of staff to come and see as well, to check it wasn’t all a dream and to add to Pute’s misery. It was the last straw with Pute in fact. He'd taken a lot of flack from the Staff, some of whom had taken such a delight in picking on him that it was almost starting to look like bullying- for instance making him run naked past the WRAC barracks just down the road, all the girls laughing at him.
He was a friendly enough guy, but perhaps tried a bit too hard to be your mate. So noone really wanted to get close to him. After this latest episode, long after we'd spent what remained of the night cleaning the mud and shit off our matresses and other kit, only to have to fall in without getting any more sleep, we formulated a plan of action. Ideas mooted included locking him in a cupboard for the night, or simply shooting him whilst doing a live firing exercise. My idea of resurrecting the chicken run was well received but then Phil the eyebrows came up with a marvellous plan. Why not sneak into his bunkroom at night - hey, where did he get this inspiration from? - with a petition from the whole of the troop, in which each person anonymously stated what they thought of him. It was bold, it was brave, it was cruel, but it was necessary. It took a couple of days to procure the necessaries, some of which were illicit - a pen, some paper, some blue tack; we gathered round in Phil's bunk at 02.00 hours, it was really exciting, and had the aura of a midnight feast (but a couple of hours later). Of course the other guys in Pute's bunk had to be particularly careful in sneaking out, whilst he snored like a great hippo. Everyone filed in and wrote down their message in turn, some of them were just brilliant:
'Pute is a noo nee noo nar'… 'Pute go home'… and 'Pute smells of wee'..then came my turn. Shit, I couldn't think of anything. I've never been much of a wordsmith as you've probably noticed. I'm hopeless when people pass round a birthday or leaving card round, particularly if they're one of those, really very funny cards you get in shops with a humorous message about getting drunk, a reference to your age, or some penguins or other animals doing something involving sexual innuendo. I usually clam up when put on the spot like that, and just write something really lame whilst other, often quite reticent folks rise to the occasion and pen something worthy of Dorothy Parker, just off the top of their heads.
'Come on Moraine, there's no time' - ok ok, I'd just put the first thing that came into my head and be done with it...
'Why don't you 'Pute' a gun to your head and pull the trigger?' I scribbled down, feeling a bit guilty that he might actually heed the advice. With the petition complete, we all crept into Pute's bunk for the final act of posting the message. He was really gonna suffer when he read it, and it'd make him think twice about being last on the assault course again. As we were leaving the room, he seemed to stir - had we woken him? A low groan emanated from the direction of his bunk and we all froze in the same way actors on an American TV show used to do at the end of an episode. Suddenly he sat bolt upright - we must have disturbed him - and reached forward and pulled the note from the end of his bunk where we'd left it. Reading it slowly, and with difficulty in the half-light of dusk, he started to sob, first barely perceptibly, then building up to a crescendo of wailing and howling - bugger, I didn't think we were going to cause that much of a reaction. We all legged it from the room sharpish, slamming the door behind us. We could hear his crying halfway down the corridor, and dare I say it, even felt a tinge of remorse (a quality I was going to have to work on eliminating as my career progressed).

According to his bunkmates he sobbed uncontrollably for a whole hour, and from then on he was on a decided downward spiral. He no longer tried to be your mate in the dinner queue or cracked lame gags which fell flat. He didn't even seem to cock up any more, but just spent his time brooding to himself, not talking to anyone. It was really worrying, I almost wanted the old Pute back. As we were drawing near to passing out, the end of recruit training, he finally flipped. He'd lain in wait in the quartermaster's stores, where he knew Baldwin was going to go to return some blank firing attachments we'd been using that day. And he'd be on his own. Noone knows exactly what happened next, but it appears that Baldwin had flung the door of the stores open to be confronted with Pute, or what looked like Pute. He hadn't had a shower after the day's activity, a few day's growth of stubble was starting to show. Worse than that, he'd desecrated the regimental badge on his beret, folding it into four sections to make it look more like a Guide's badge and had pulled his beret down right over his eyes a la Benny Hill. Worst of all, he'd taken that month's copy of 'Army Weekly', Baldwin's favourite publication, and gone through all the pages with pictures of NCOs on them, and tippexed out the moustaches and tatoos, making them look far less scary, almost human. Baldwin never recovered from the attack. He was pensioned off on the grounds of ill health soon afterwards. Needless to say Pute was removed too. We never heard what happened to him. It wasn't a happy way to round off our training but, hell, the Army's a tough place, and some people just don't have what it takes. Fortunately for me I was loving every minute of it, and no more Baldwin to dog my career, either.

TBC

Previous installment here.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Thought For the Day No. 5 - With the Rabbi Anders Weiss

Latest addition to the growing roster of occasional contributors to the Puumaja crew: the Rabbi Anders Weiss, resident psychologist, spiritual guide and arbiter of good taste. This is an affectionate nod towards BBC radio 4's "thought for the day" which was broadcast every weekday morning, oftentimes with the delightfully named Rabbi Lionel Blue at the helm. Don't know if it still is, although I never got to hear it really anyway as it was the signal that I had to go and catch the bus to school...

 "When someone says you live in lies and they live in the truth - this is the cruellest statement a person can make. Yet people who speak about religion often use these words"
Lev Tolstoy


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