It’s been about a year since I last updated this thing, so I
thought I’d have a go and attempting to fill the void with a bit of writing.
That no one will read. Anyway, it’s now July 2012. It’s raining outside, and
has been for the past two months almost incessantly. I really don’t think the sun
is going to be shining any time soon either and this just about sums up the
national mood here in England. Everywhere you go, all you see are miserable or
angry faces. People snarling from behind steering wheels in gridlocked traffic or
moaning in hairdressers about how hard done by they are. Usually before paying
for their blow dry with their state-funded benefit money. Makes me pretty sick
to be honest.
I suppose the faux joy of both the Jubilee weekend (i.e. a massive piss-up) and the brief run of England in the Euros has now faded, and the grey clouds of normality have once again gathered.
Interlude.
So what’s been happening since August 2011? Well, the
biggest thing is that I’m no longer in the Royal Navy! I’m a free civilian who
can do what he likes, grow a beard, dye his hair (not that I have), have his
own political views and read the newspaper he wants without being subject to
abuse (yes, still The ‘i’). I applied for voluntary redundancy last year, and I
got it because very few of my contemporaries wanted it. The fear of leaving the
secure bosom of the MOD’s payroll department obviously outweighed the basic
human right of free will for most of them. Not that I didn’t leave without
having my pocket lined by said government department, but that’s another story
(and one that will be instrumental in the development of my future plans, which
incidentally tie in to what I was saying in the introduction to this diatribe).
While I was in the process of regaining my freedom and dignity, I applied for
several jobs and whenever news of my failure to secure one of these positions
got back to my ‘workmates,’ the ensuing delight that they took in taking the
piss bordered on the shocking. “There’s nothing out there mate,” was the usual
advice, often followed by laughter and mocking. Unfortunately for those
pathetic amoebas, I did secure employment in a field that is of great interest
to me, and also allowed me to leave that godforsaken airbase and general
locality behind. I now find myself in a working environment that is occupied by
people who can string together a sentence and formulate a topic of conversation
that doesn’t solely focus on tits or football or a combination of the two in paper
form: aka The Sun newspaper. Furthermore, the workload is actually interesting
(heritage sector), so I find myself discovering historical oddities and curious
tales all the time. Right up my street, I tell thee. So that’s the state of
play with regard to my working life.
To be fair, I still see a few of my actual friends from the
navy on a regular basis and they constantly remind me what I’m missing by
getting out when I did: fuck all.
I did take a fairly heft pay cut when I decided to get out of the military, and one of the side effects of this was the
decision to ditch my car. The Proton, whilst a great car, just had to go –
especially with the cost of petrol seemingly increasing almost daily. As a side
note, I recall that at sometime in February, I was running a certain route
about four times a week. This route took me past a petrol station, and every
time I went past the price of a litre of fuel had gone up by 1p. Every single
time! Shocking. So I flogged the motor to my dad and took the plunge: I
embarked on a mission to get my full motorbike license.
Next post: my
adventures on two wheels. Hopefully it won’t take me a year to write it.
3 comments:
Glad to hear things are going well. That's excellent really. Also have to admit that the year I spent in the Greek army was generally horrible.
It's great to see you writing again! I stumbled upon your blog a little over a year ago and have been entertained since (albeit at your expense)! I'm across the pond (middle of nowhere USA) so reading about life in the UK is intriguing. Keep writing!
Wow - some comments! Thanks guys. Gnome - cheers, it's great to be back in the land of the living! RealChicGeek - thanks for reading my rubbish, I'll be sure to keep you up to date with the peculiarities of life in rainy old England!
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