October …ing
I wasn‘t going to write an October …ing post because I have not much to write that I haven‘t already shared. But here I am, doing it anyway. Returning to my desk after a week of doing only what I wanted to do reminded me just how much I work, too much. I rarely switch off completely and I often wake up in the night, remembering one thing or another that I didn‘t manage to tick-off my list. I now have a larger group of people taking on a proportion of my coordinating and teaching roles but it takes more time at the moment helping them to find their own feet and get used to online education than doing it myself. While a temporary problem, it is tiring.
With the wingeing out of the way, let‘s move on to October.
:: Listening (books) to Aurora by Kim Stanley Robinson. A generation ship kind of science fiction saga with some fairly annoying characters and a good natured AI. For book group, I am listening to Frankie by Graham Norton. I do like it a lot so far. I also listened to Cold Open by Andrew Raymond, somewhat underwhelming. I have started listening to Blind Eye by Stuart MacBride. I can‘t decide if I like this crime series set in Aberdeen. Too much swearing, too many plonkers and a raft of bully police superiors. Alas, entertaining enough.
:: Listening (podcasts) to Women‘s Hour on BBC Radio 4. I usually listen to this on my daily walk. I am also listening to a German Science podcast, Spektrum. Most evenings before going to sleep I tune into Off Air. I usually fall asleep halfway through. Another favourite is More or less on BBC Radio 4 and the new series of Inside Health, also BBC Radio 4. I don‘t listen to my own podcast but maybe should.
:: Watching (often with a cat on my chest) a French crime drama, after finishing the Finish crime dramas I binged on in September. It is called The Promise and you can view it on the BBC iPlayer. Sadly, the sub-titles can‘t be turned off and I find myself distracted by the not always accurate translation. The spoken language is a lot more vibrant and rich. For the Nordic dramas I watched it was possible to turn the subtitles off but sadly, I don‘t speak any Finnish, Norwegian or Danish.
:: Still waiting for my biopsy results.
:: Cursing my Microsoft Surface Pro laptop which I have for one work task only. Considering how little I use it, it is in terrible shape. It takes two days to charge enough to start it up, doesn‘t work on mains power and refuses to function in laptop mode for the 20 minutes battery charge I get. Tablet mode is not very useful for storylining lectures… I asked for a replacement and received a twice rejected brick of a laptop that I can’t use because the software needed for editing is not installed and I have no admin rights to set it up. It might come in handy to knock-out an intruder. I am now using Annie‘s laptop.
:: Saying goodbye to our trusted dogwalker, Tim, who is emigrating to Spain. He has been walking Jack twice a week for almost 10 years. I feel quite sad and Tim seemed a bit emotional at the final drop-off but Jack has made friends with the person who is taking over Tim‘s business. We don‘t really need a dogwalker since someone is always at home but it gives Jack variety and dog company, which enriches his life. Well, we hope it enriches his life.
:: Adapting to the dark.
:: Enjoying my being a mentor for a 14 year old young person. It is early days, but I think he is happy to have me as a mentor, even though I know next to nothing about football. Looking out for our young people is so important, youth services are not great here. Both my teens have mentors, too. I am mentoring in a different school to avoid conflict of interest.
:: Encouraging teens to consider the future beyond the next 30 minutes. It is as well received as hypothetical suggestions to roll in a pile of manure.
:: Booking my next work trip, to London in November. The only hotel rooms in Central London that didn‘t breach company price policy were windowless basement hovels with shared bathrooms. I breached the policy by booking a standard room in a budget hotel. I think it was approved.
:: Cooking food to use up ingredients. For example, pork and prune burgers with a green salad. I‘d happily never eat pork but Annie had planned to cook these when she visited but didn‘t get around it. I also made spaghetti Carbonara (a first) for the teens and I am told it was as good as Richard‘s. I don‘t eat Carbonara myself, the warm eggy sauce makes me gag.
:: Feeling grateful for a husband who cooks most days and very often food that I like.
:: Sorting through and cleaning out our two kitchen pull out larders. This was long overdue. Everything was a bit jumbled up since the time James and Alistair were tasked with the same job. I found a small jar of mushroom powder and a tin of mock tuna. I have never seen those before. The mushroom powder was two years out of date.
So, all things considering, a good month. Thanks for visiting 😊
I feel exhausted just reading your Octobering. A busy life. Love the cream soda quilt. So beautiful. B x
ReplyDeleteFirst photo: shoes were blue but not suede. What would Elvis think? https://youtu.be/HeXnFx7aPOE?si=BksuFu4tL5b-6oXN
ReplyDeleteAh yes, you've had your time change already. Ours comes this weekend.
Where did October go and so quickly? We will be changing clocks this weekend so darkness will come earlier, but nice to wake up to more light, so a trade-off. I tried to find the Graham Norton book mentioned in your post, Christina, but as usual our library did not carry it. That usually happens when I try to look-up titles mentioned by other bloggers. Glad you did not settle for a basement room for the next work trip.
ReplyDeleteOctober does seem to have zipped by very quickly. Months seem to have a habit of doing that I have noticed.
ReplyDeleteI hope the biopsy results come back quickly with the results you want. The waiting game can't be very helpful. Thinking of you.
Glad the mentoring with your 14 year old has started well and I wish you both every success in this life journey.
The animal print jacket looks great ! Congratulations for the work you do with the teenagers, both inside and outside the home. Here in my little remote corner of Brittany I find it hard to adapt to the early dark.
ReplyDeleteMaguy
That quilt is AMAZING! You have a podcast? How do I listen?
ReplyDeleteThank you. Yes, I am co-host on This Week in Parasitism. A bit of a niche interest, I admit but fun to do and hopefully, listen to.
DeleteGosh you've been busy on all fronts and I've finally managed to catch up with your latest news. I hope your awaited results are good news. Thinking of you xx
ReplyDeleteI love More or Less, I too listen to that podcast. I also listen to another one that Tim Hartford does called Cautionary Tales it's not a BBC podcast but still really good.
ReplyDeleteI love watching crime dramas in other languages, we don't have a licence so I don't watch them on the BBC but on ALL4 the Channel4 catch up channel, Walter Presents is there 'series' of foreign language programmes I have no idea if you can turn off the subtitles as most of the ones I watch I don't know the language well enough to do that, when I do I just ignore them.
I know your wrote about your mentoring for, who are you doing that through? I know a young person who could really benefit from a mentor and would love to point them in the direction of where they could access that.
I do hope you get your results soon.