Incidentally, when I got to Birmingham coach station later on Tuesday morning, I was bursting for a piss. I found the toilets but there was a 30p levy for using them...and I'd given all my change to Pebbles before getting on the bus. I then had to wait 40 minutes on the brink of pissing my kecks until I got on my connecting coach, whereupon I made a bee line for the stinking chemical bog at the back and unleashed a torrent of piss more akin to a fire fighter's hose jet than a human widdle. Just so you know.
Thursday, 29 November 2012
Pebbles
While I was waiting for a bus on Tuesday morning, I spotted a guy in the station doing chalk drawings of various cartoon characters on the pavement. I rummaged around in my pocket for my last remaining change and threw it in his hat as a token of good will, and then asked if I could take some photos of him at work. He obliged and I got chatting to him. His name was Pebbles, and he'd been homeless for 10 years but managed to get by on the money he collected whilst doing his pavement chalk drawings. His nickname, so he told me, came about after he started creating drawings on the beaches of the south east with pebbles and other flotsam that had washed ashore. He was a really nice bloke and is a totally self-taught artist (his words were "I can't play the guitar so I bought some chalk and taught myself to draw"), so I thought I'd post a few images of his little display from Tuesday morning.
Incidentally, when I got to Birmingham coach station later on Tuesday morning, I was bursting for a piss. I found the toilets but there was a 30p levy for using them...and I'd given all my change to Pebbles before getting on the bus. I then had to wait 40 minutes on the brink of pissing my kecks until I got on my connecting coach, whereupon I made a bee line for the stinking chemical bog at the back and unleashed a torrent of piss more akin to a fire fighter's hose jet than a human widdle. Just so you know.
Incidentally, when I got to Birmingham coach station later on Tuesday morning, I was bursting for a piss. I found the toilets but there was a 30p levy for using them...and I'd given all my change to Pebbles before getting on the bus. I then had to wait 40 minutes on the brink of pissing my kecks until I got on my connecting coach, whereupon I made a bee line for the stinking chemical bog at the back and unleashed a torrent of piss more akin to a fire fighter's hose jet than a human widdle. Just so you know.
Monday, 26 November 2012
Fun With Ye Olde Photoshoppe
I've been fucking around with Photoshop. It's quite an old version (Photoshop 6.0) that I nicked from my sister a few years ago, but it does the job. Have a gander at some of the edits I've made to a few of my recent photos:
So yeah. Hardly award-winning shots or edits, but I'm learning new shit. Christ - I've had serious man-flu since Saturday morning and the amount of snot that's been dripping from my nose has to bee seen to be believed. It looks like the River Exe has burst it's banks on my face...and it hasn't stopped for 3 days - where the fuck is all the moisture coming from? By rights, I should look like a fucking prune right now with all the fluid that's exiting my body through my schnoz. Going for a run along Bournemouth beach in 70mph wind and lashing rain probably didn't help, but meh. I've been taking shit loads of medicine (at proper intervals, naturally), but nothing seems to be able to get rid of this damn headache, sore throat or streaming nose. I hate colds. I'm dripping snot on the keyboard now so I'm going to stop typing. Urgh.
This is the original |
Changed to black and white and added noise |
Mucked around with the colour saturation and hue |
With extra lens flare added |
Sunday, 25 November 2012
Images of Bournemouth
Went to see Frankie Boyle at Bournemouth BIC on Friday night. He was as acerbic and offensive as usual - which is why I like his comedy so much. I'll do a full blog post about the weekend over the next few days but in the meantime, here are a few pictures I took with my new camera:
I'm starting to get the hang of the HS30 EXR now I've had a few chances to get out and play with the maual settings, but I'm probably going to invest in a digital photography guidebook and maybe even a short course in the subject. Might put a full review of the camera up here too in the next few days.
I'm starting to get the hang of the HS30 EXR now I've had a few chances to get out and play with the maual settings, but I'm probably going to invest in a digital photography guidebook and maybe even a short course in the subject. Might put a full review of the camera up here too in the next few days.
Thursday, 22 November 2012
Wiidiculous
The last Nintendo console I actually bought
with real money (and not the glowing green rupees I pay for my grocery shopping with) was the Gamecube, and it was a fine machine that served its
purpose well. After that I went towards the Xbox and 360 and have never looked
back. The Wii never appealed to me simply because of the casual gamer image it
assumed, and the odd ‘lifestyle’ adverts full of smiling, sockless idiots playing
Wii Sports in neutrally coloured IKEA living rooms turned me completely off: was
that the audience Nintendo were suddenly trying to attract after years of ‘proper’
gaming? It just alienated me is all, and my desire to own a Wii died before it
even had a chance to draw a single breath. And in hindsight, I’m glad I didn’t
fork out for a Wii because there’s so little of any real value there for the
serious, adult gamer. Sure, there are the Zelda games and a few decent Mario offerings
but where are the Mass Effects and the Halos? The serious football games and
driving simulators? I want to be blowing shit up in full HD, not waving a
fucking Wiimote around trying to knock hats off statues of clowns. Jesus.
And
now we have the Wii U. What the fuck were they thinking? Releasing a console
with an iPad for a controller? The design of the Wii U is retarded on so many
levels I barely have enough words to describe how annoyed I am at the thing’s
very existence. Great – you can keep playing if somebody wants to watch TV. Er,
Nintendo? It isn’t 1979 anymore - most people have more than one TV these days.
And if that’s what Nintendo are pushing
as the killer feature, I have a horrible feeling that the Wii U will bomb with disastrous
results. But wait – there’s more: the
Wii U uses a proprietary Blu-ray format for its games, but can’t play Blu-ray
movies or DVDs. The Wii U controller pad monstrosity has a battery life of
about 3 hours before it needs to be recharged. Buying a second pad will require
you taking out a bank loan, and the pro controller (the one that looks like a
normal control pad) isn’t compatible with every game. The console needs a
software update out of the box to enable a lot of the extra features (like
backwards compatibility), so if you haven’t got broadband at home...you’re
fucked. These are just a few of the screw-ups I’ve been able to glean from new user reviews, and
there seem to be more weird little problems everywhere you look...but the main
one for me is that it just feels like a stop gap. A stop gap before the next
consoles from Microsoft and Sony appear and basically redraw the console war
battle lines.
Where will Nintendo be then? I’ll wager they’ll be in exactly the
same place Sega found they were in when the PS2 appeared, only without a
console even half as good as the Dreamcast was compared to its rival. The Wii U
does at least have HD graphics, but the two models available have pitifully
small storage options (8GB and 32GB) and the technical specifications are
likely to be dwarfed by the next generation Xbox and PlayStation. I don’t care that
you can add external storage – the Wii U should have come with at least a 60GB
hard drive and in one technical configuration. Different colours are fine, but
the different versions thing is just insulting and confusing for people who
aren’t really gamers (like parents buying Christmas presents, for example).
Nintendo have really fucked up here, and I don’t think I’ll be proven wrong.
The Wii U already boasts inferior visuals to most 360 games, and that’s
worrying: all of the pre-release shots of ZombiU (the only game that really
interested me) seem to have been mock-ups judging by footage I’ve seen in most of
the video reviews flying around Youtube, and the other games that are ports of
existing 360 and PS3 titles...well, opinions are mixed but who exactly are they
trying to appeal to? PS3 and 360 owners who already played Mass Effect 3 and
Arkham City a year ago? Quite. I want to make it clear that I’m not a Nintendo
basher – I’ve owned every Nintendo console up until the Wii, but this new
direction the company has taken infuriates me more than it probably should. Please
Nintendo, drop the boring motion control shit, the odd controllers and the ‘we
don’t care about technical specs...we care about fun’ holier-than-thou preachy bullshit.
Just go back to making kick-ass, boundary-pushing games that run on a
conventional, graphical ball-buster of a console. Or to put it more simply, go
back to making N64s. Urgh. Just thinking about how much of a cock-up the Wii U
is makes me want to punch something – why Nintendo? Why? It could have been so
different. OK – you wanted to try something new with the original Wii and it
paid off. Good work, but trying to draw it out and appeal to the same audience
with a new hardware release that shares a name with the predecessor will only
end badly.
Confusion, poor sales and consumer alienation are probably the only
things that will make Nintendo sit up and realise that actual gamers want a
convention console from them. I really hope their next offering comes quickly,
and there isn't a motion sensor or a tablet PC in sight.
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
Aperture Crazy
Was messing around with the HS30 at work this lunchtime. One of the guys I work with knows a little about photography and he gave me a 5-minute crash course in depth of field and aperture settings. The result of this uber-productive coffee break? Here:
Some are better than others, but I think you'll agree that the depth of field is pretty good in most of them. Also, I make no apologies for the really boring subject matter. It's an office...what dost thou expect?!
Check out the 'Photos' tab at the top for some examples of the HS30's night modes in action.
Some are better than others, but I think you'll agree that the depth of field is pretty good in most of them. Also, I make no apologies for the really boring subject matter. It's an office...what dost thou expect?!
Check out the 'Photos' tab at the top for some examples of the HS30's night modes in action.
Punctures
Last
Thursday evening when I was riding my bike around in the dark looking for
something to do (I didn’t find anything, incidentally), I discovered that my
back tire was a little soft. It still had enough air in to allow me to pedal
and it didn’t completely deflate so I figured that in the months that I’ve
owned the bike, air had just naturally escaped leaving the inner tube a little
saggy. Upon returning home, I chained the bike up and forgot about the soft
tire, telling myself I’d deal with it at some unfixed time in the future when I
could be arsed looking for my bike pump.
Come Monday morning, the tire was completely flat and so it was deduced that I had indeed, contrary to earlier opinion, managed to get myself a puncture. I whipped out the repair kit on Monday evening after work and proceeded to set about patching my inner tube. What followed was the most drawn-out and labourious puncture repair saga I think I have ever endured.
First, upon removing the inner tube and pumping it up to find the hole, I was amazed to discover that there wasn’t one. I was doing all of this in the dimly-lit car park outside the block where I’m living so I didn’t have a bowl of water with which to locate any tell-tale air bubbles escaping from the tube – I was just holding the thing up to my ear to see if I could hear air escaping. There didn’t appear to be anything wrong with the tube so I happily resigned that maybe the air had escaped through the valve, and just started putting it back into the tire ready for the wheel to be reattached to the bike. Reattaching the wheel turned out to be a task in itself seeing as the rest of the bike was still chained to a fence post (all in the name of convenience, you understand. In practice, it turned out to be anything but convenient), but I eventually got it on, tightened the quick-release nuts and then started to re-inflate. As soon as I plunged the pump handle down I heard hissing. I tried to tell myself it wasn’t coming from the wheel, but it blatantly was, so incredulously I once again removed the wheel, once again at great difficulty due to the bike being chained to a fence. I really do seem to enjoy making things more difficult than they need to be.
Anyway, upon removing the inner tube from the tire, I pumped it up again and this time managed to find where the air was escaping from – a tiny pinprick of a hole on the outer side of the tube opposite the valve. I sanded the area, applied the rubber solution and stuck a patch on. I waited about 10 minutes in that cold, dark car park and then went about reinserting the tube into the tire and going through the hole rigmarole of reattaching the wheel (while the bike was still attached to the fence). I began to pump. Hissing. Again. Un-fucking-believable. So yet again I went through the whole process of taking the wheel off, removing the tube looking and listening for air escaping. It was coming from the same place I’d just stuck the patch...how was that possible? The patch was still there, bonded to the tube with rubber solution, yet the air was still pissing out. I figured that maybe I hadn’t stuck the patch down with enough glue, so with great difficulty I ripped the patch off and set about sticking another, bigger patch onto the area. After another 5 minutes of fumbling around in the half-light, cursing like Mutley and resisting the urge to throw the fucking wheel over a nearby shed, I got the wheel on. I went to make a quick phone call and came back, giving the glue time to cure and then I carefully started to pump the tire up. One pump, two pumps...no hissing. So far so good. Three pumps, four pumps...HISSING! AAARGH! At that point I just gave up and left the damned thing to rot. And there it would have stayed until it were naught but a few rusty sprigs of metal, if I hadn’t had to rely on it to get me to work and back.
I could use the Goose to commute daily if I so wished but that would be plain lazy, and the combination of continuously atrocious weather and the poor condition of most of the local roads (not to mention the ridiculous number of traffic lights) make riding around this town a pretty treacherous and arduous task. My quest to repair the existing inner tube had resulted in failure so I admitted defeat (ungraciously, you understand) and resigned to just buying a new one. That’s where the story becomes slightly more surreal – I went to four different places during my lunch hour yesterday to get an inner tube. None of them sold the right one for my bike. I would have expected this if I owned a penny farthing or some other arcane or unusual artefact from the history of cycling...but I don’t. It’s just a cheapo hybrid with standard wheels, yet none of the stores that I visited had the right size of inner tube.
The last place I went to before I gave up did have some that were almost the right size and the salesman assured me that it would fit my wheel, so I bought it...but not before also having to also buy a puncture repair kit too because they wouldn’t take card payments of under £5 (that shit winds me up too...but that’s another post). So I left with my new inner tube and my new repair kit, happy in the knowledge that the next time I popped that fucking wheel off my bike, it would be going back on with a leak-free tube installed. So last night I went for it. I got the wheel off, ripped out the old tube, tried to insert the new one...and realised that the valve tube was too wide for the hole in the wheel rim. I stifled an anguished cry of anger and pain - the new tube had a Schrader valve instead of the one where you have to unscrew the little top bit and press it down, meaning the shaft was wider...and meaning that I couldn’t use the tube.
Determined, I took the old tube back up to the flat and inspected it. I dug deep into my reserves of logical, methodical calmness. I removed the old patch from the day before. I filled the sink, pumped up the tube and then plunged it into the water, and lo -two columns of bubbles rose it’s the battle-scarred surface. Two. One on either side – that’s why the hole hadn’t been sealed; whatever had caused the puncture had pierced both sides of the tube and I’d been ignorantly trying to patch only one. That little mystery solved, I fixed two patches and waited for them to dry. Once dry, I pumped the tube up a second time and checked it in the water again, only to find yet another hole on the other side, adjacent to the two I’d just covered! Upon patching this one too, the tube stayed solid. Jubilantly, triumphantly, I put the tube back into the tire and wrestled the wheel back onto the bike (it was still chained to the fence) and then took it out for a little ride just to test the integrity of the repair. It held – by God it held!
So I decided to have a ride down to the fairly well-lit docks area of Gloucester to take some night shots with my new camera. I chained the bike up and went off to snap away...and on returning to the bike discovered that some retarded member of the indigenous mono-brain celled population (also the kind of individual I like to refer to as a cunt) had stolen my lights.
**Update**
While I was looking for an inner tube yesterday lunchtime, I tweeted about how disgusted I was at not being able to find what I was looking for:
"Reasons I hate Gloucester number 27 - even the most ubiquitous of items are impossible to get hold of. Example: a bicycle inner tube!"
I don't know how or why, but the local newspaper (The Citizen) seems to have dredged it from the depths of obscurity with some kind of search algorithm that recognises the word 'Gloucester' and printed the thing on the letters page of today's edition:
Fame/Infamy await. I'm guessing there'll be pitchforks and flaming torches waiting for me when I get home tonight. Excellent.
Come Monday morning, the tire was completely flat and so it was deduced that I had indeed, contrary to earlier opinion, managed to get myself a puncture. I whipped out the repair kit on Monday evening after work and proceeded to set about patching my inner tube. What followed was the most drawn-out and labourious puncture repair saga I think I have ever endured.
First, upon removing the inner tube and pumping it up to find the hole, I was amazed to discover that there wasn’t one. I was doing all of this in the dimly-lit car park outside the block where I’m living so I didn’t have a bowl of water with which to locate any tell-tale air bubbles escaping from the tube – I was just holding the thing up to my ear to see if I could hear air escaping. There didn’t appear to be anything wrong with the tube so I happily resigned that maybe the air had escaped through the valve, and just started putting it back into the tire ready for the wheel to be reattached to the bike. Reattaching the wheel turned out to be a task in itself seeing as the rest of the bike was still chained to a fence post (all in the name of convenience, you understand. In practice, it turned out to be anything but convenient), but I eventually got it on, tightened the quick-release nuts and then started to re-inflate. As soon as I plunged the pump handle down I heard hissing. I tried to tell myself it wasn’t coming from the wheel, but it blatantly was, so incredulously I once again removed the wheel, once again at great difficulty due to the bike being chained to a fence. I really do seem to enjoy making things more difficult than they need to be.
Anyway, upon removing the inner tube from the tire, I pumped it up again and this time managed to find where the air was escaping from – a tiny pinprick of a hole on the outer side of the tube opposite the valve. I sanded the area, applied the rubber solution and stuck a patch on. I waited about 10 minutes in that cold, dark car park and then went about reinserting the tube into the tire and going through the hole rigmarole of reattaching the wheel (while the bike was still attached to the fence). I began to pump. Hissing. Again. Un-fucking-believable. So yet again I went through the whole process of taking the wheel off, removing the tube looking and listening for air escaping. It was coming from the same place I’d just stuck the patch...how was that possible? The patch was still there, bonded to the tube with rubber solution, yet the air was still pissing out. I figured that maybe I hadn’t stuck the patch down with enough glue, so with great difficulty I ripped the patch off and set about sticking another, bigger patch onto the area. After another 5 minutes of fumbling around in the half-light, cursing like Mutley and resisting the urge to throw the fucking wheel over a nearby shed, I got the wheel on. I went to make a quick phone call and came back, giving the glue time to cure and then I carefully started to pump the tire up. One pump, two pumps...no hissing. So far so good. Three pumps, four pumps...HISSING! AAARGH! At that point I just gave up and left the damned thing to rot. And there it would have stayed until it were naught but a few rusty sprigs of metal, if I hadn’t had to rely on it to get me to work and back.
I could use the Goose to commute daily if I so wished but that would be plain lazy, and the combination of continuously atrocious weather and the poor condition of most of the local roads (not to mention the ridiculous number of traffic lights) make riding around this town a pretty treacherous and arduous task. My quest to repair the existing inner tube had resulted in failure so I admitted defeat (ungraciously, you understand) and resigned to just buying a new one. That’s where the story becomes slightly more surreal – I went to four different places during my lunch hour yesterday to get an inner tube. None of them sold the right one for my bike. I would have expected this if I owned a penny farthing or some other arcane or unusual artefact from the history of cycling...but I don’t. It’s just a cheapo hybrid with standard wheels, yet none of the stores that I visited had the right size of inner tube.
The last place I went to before I gave up did have some that were almost the right size and the salesman assured me that it would fit my wheel, so I bought it...but not before also having to also buy a puncture repair kit too because they wouldn’t take card payments of under £5 (that shit winds me up too...but that’s another post). So I left with my new inner tube and my new repair kit, happy in the knowledge that the next time I popped that fucking wheel off my bike, it would be going back on with a leak-free tube installed. So last night I went for it. I got the wheel off, ripped out the old tube, tried to insert the new one...and realised that the valve tube was too wide for the hole in the wheel rim. I stifled an anguished cry of anger and pain - the new tube had a Schrader valve instead of the one where you have to unscrew the little top bit and press it down, meaning the shaft was wider...and meaning that I couldn’t use the tube.
Determined, I took the old tube back up to the flat and inspected it. I dug deep into my reserves of logical, methodical calmness. I removed the old patch from the day before. I filled the sink, pumped up the tube and then plunged it into the water, and lo -two columns of bubbles rose it’s the battle-scarred surface. Two. One on either side – that’s why the hole hadn’t been sealed; whatever had caused the puncture had pierced both sides of the tube and I’d been ignorantly trying to patch only one. That little mystery solved, I fixed two patches and waited for them to dry. Once dry, I pumped the tube up a second time and checked it in the water again, only to find yet another hole on the other side, adjacent to the two I’d just covered! Upon patching this one too, the tube stayed solid. Jubilantly, triumphantly, I put the tube back into the tire and wrestled the wheel back onto the bike (it was still chained to the fence) and then took it out for a little ride just to test the integrity of the repair. It held – by God it held!
So I decided to have a ride down to the fairly well-lit docks area of Gloucester to take some night shots with my new camera. I chained the bike up and went off to snap away...and on returning to the bike discovered that some retarded member of the indigenous mono-brain celled population (also the kind of individual I like to refer to as a cunt) had stolen my lights.
**Update**
While I was looking for an inner tube yesterday lunchtime, I tweeted about how disgusted I was at not being able to find what I was looking for:
"Reasons I hate Gloucester number 27 - even the most ubiquitous of items are impossible to get hold of. Example: a bicycle inner tube!"
Fame/Infamy await. I'm guessing there'll be pitchforks and flaming torches waiting for me when I get home tonight. Excellent.
Tuesday, 20 November 2012
A Tale of Yore
I mentioned a few posts ago the issue I have with my landlord/housemate’s
toileting habits. Smearing faecal matter all over the toilet seat and bog roll
just isn’t the type of thing somebody in their late 20s should be doing this
side of a mental asylum’s front door. Nevertheless, I got back from my weekend
in Dorset to discover that the bloke had yet again managed to pebble dash the
entire toilet bowl and underside of the seat with slurry. I really don’t know
how to approach this awkward issue with him – I mean, what do I say? “Excuse me
mate, would you mind not leaving your shit all over the place?” See my point?
Hopefully I’ll have moved out before long...but that’s another post (coming
soon, maybe).
I also mentioned in the recent past how I’m really looking
forward to having my own crib, and that isn’t something that’s likely to change
whilst I’m living under the same roof as poo boy. It’s not until you live in a
shared flat or house that you can really appreciate just how fucking annoying
other people can be, and just how inconsiderate too. Case in point – not only
does Hong Kong Pooey (as he shall henceforth be referred to) do the scat thing,
he also has several other endearing properties. Like, for example, doing the
washing up at any time after 10:30pm every night of the week. Not the biggest
sin in Christendom, you may think – until you understand that the kitchen backs
onto my bedroom and so every slammed cupboard door and every clanging pan, pot,
cup and plate comes echoing through the paper-thin plasterboard like a freight
train passing the window. Why at such a late hour? Every night? Why not at,
say, 7.30? or 8? Why is it after 10.30 that the cacophony starts up? I’ve been
on the edge of storming into the kitchen and smashing every plate and cup in
the fucking flat on more than one occasion. Gah! Seriously, it’s not until you’ve
experienced it 5 nights on the trot that your sanity starts to seep out through
your ears.
Another treat is the guy’s penchant for slamming doors. Early AM?
BOOM! Late PM? BOOM! The guy walks around in a self-consuming daze and just
slams doors like Thor slams heads. I’m surprised there are any left on their
hinges in the damned place with the amount of slamming that goes on. And then
there’s me trying to be quiet (whilst trying to avoid touching the
shit-encrusted toilet seat) if I need a piss in the middle of the night like
some kind of bitch. Upon re-reading what I’ve just written, I think I’ll start
laying the slam-down myself next time I need to drain the main vein at 3am. See
how Hong Kong Pooey likes them shit-stained apples.
So as you can probably
tell, not only am I not overly enamoured with this pathetic excuse for a town
(I refuse to call it a city), my current accommodation setup is pretty
undesirable too. This isn’t the first time I’ve lived in such intolerable circumstances.
When I graduated back in 2003, I moved back to my mother’s house in a bid to
save some money. I found it unbearable and when a friend of a friend mentioned
he was looking for some housemates to rent rooms in his newly-acquired rental
property, I jumped at the chance. After about a week, I and another friend (let’s
call him...erm...Frank (?!) moved in and I was all set for it to turn into a
real-life episode of Friends.
After about a month, however, I realised that
living in a house with two blokes who don’t really get on was less like an
episode of Friends and more like an episode of Bottom. Plus, I also discovered
that the ‘landlord’ (he wasn’t, although he claimed to be because his name was
on the tenancy agreement) was a complete weirdo who constantly complained about
‘cross contaminating’ the dish cloths and refused to have any dairy products
near his shelf in the fridge. Also, he had the ability to drink two
pints of Guinness and then projectile vomit all over the carpet. After a
further couple of months, Frank had decided he’d had enough and left to live with
his girlfriend. That really bummed me out because I was left living alone with ‘landlord,’
who we shall now refer to as Mr Strange. We continued as a party of two for a
couple of weeks and I rarely saw the bloke unless he was in the kitchen
complaining about the dish cloths or cooking up his non-dairy rice-pudding with
prawns slop. And then McRae happened. McRae was a random bloke that Mr Strange
had recruited from his office as a third housemate, partly (I’d wager) as a way
of obtaining an ally in the house (did I mention things had gone a bit sour
between us?!), and partly as a way of once again splitting the rent three ways.
When I first met McRae, It was on a Sunday night after I’d got back from visiting
my dad in outer Lancashire. He was sat in the living room loudly bleating some clichéd
political view whilst clutching a can of lager. Mr Strange sat there nodding
and laughing falsely – it was like David Brent fawning after Finchy in an episode
of the Office. So in I went, introduced myself, made small talk, had a few
beers with the pair of them...and left thinking that maybe the guy was alright
and that I shouldn’t be so quick to make assumptions based merely on
association. These impressions quickly faded after it transpired that McRae was
the smelliest, scruffiest man alive.
He slept on top of a bare mattress in a
sleeping bag and lived exclusively on takeaways. But he invariably didn’t
finish said fast food and just left the wrappers and food remains all over his
bedroom floor or on the kitchen worktop. He never washed his clothes (at least
as far as I could tell) and as with the takeaway cartons and kebab foil, just
left stinking socks and underpants lying all over the place. I recall one
incident when I was walking up the stairs; a gust of wind must have blown in
through his open bedroom window, collected the stench from within and then
forced its way through the gap under the door. It hit me full in the face as I
walked up the stairs and it nearly knocked me back down them again: sweat, shit,
feet, rot and decay, all combined in one demonic sucker punch to the nasal cavity.
It later transpired that he’d also run up a fucking huge phone bill talking to some toothless ‘girlfriend’ on her mobile (this was 2003 remember). The phone line was in my name so the bill came out of my account...and McRae valiantly offered to repay me £5 a month until the debt was honoured. I told him to get fucked and angrily demanded the sum of the bill...which he then suddenly happened to have. I moved out not long after, and not long after that I joined the navy. Upon which I endured a further 6 years of smelling other people’s unwashed bodies and putting up with their abhorrent ‘ways.’ After that came the ‘house of the bathroom-floor period blood,’ as described in another recent post...and now we’re bang up to date. So it’s either been shit on the toilet seat, period blood on the bathroom floor or stinking, unwashed socks and takeaway cartons blocking the hallways. Yes, my experiences in shared accommodation have been ‘interesting’ to say the least.
It later transpired that he’d also run up a fucking huge phone bill talking to some toothless ‘girlfriend’ on her mobile (this was 2003 remember). The phone line was in my name so the bill came out of my account...and McRae valiantly offered to repay me £5 a month until the debt was honoured. I told him to get fucked and angrily demanded the sum of the bill...which he then suddenly happened to have. I moved out not long after, and not long after that I joined the navy. Upon which I endured a further 6 years of smelling other people’s unwashed bodies and putting up with their abhorrent ‘ways.’ After that came the ‘house of the bathroom-floor period blood,’ as described in another recent post...and now we’re bang up to date. So it’s either been shit on the toilet seat, period blood on the bathroom floor or stinking, unwashed socks and takeaway cartons blocking the hallways. Yes, my experiences in shared accommodation have been ‘interesting’ to say the least.
This will be the
last.
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