Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 20

(Please read with a gentle Irish lilt!)

Day One
Dear Nuala,

Thank you very much for your lovely present of a partridge in a pear-tree. We’re getting the hang of feeding the partridge now, although it was difficult at first to win its confidence. It bit the mother rather badly on the hand but they’re good friends now and we’re keeping the pear-tree indoors in a bucket. Thank you again.
Yours affectionately,
Gobnait O’Lúnasa

Day Two
Dear Nuala,

I cannot tell you how surprised we were to hear from you so soon again and to receive your lovely present of two turtle doves. You really are too kind. At first the partridge was very jealous and suspicious of the doves and they had a terrible row the night the doves arrived. We had to send for the vet but the birds are okay again and the stitches are due to some out in a week or two. The vet’s bill was £8 but the mother is over her annoyance now and the doves and the partridge are watching the telly from the pear-tree as I write.
Yours ever,
Gobnait

Day Three
Dear Nuala,

We must be foremost in your thoughts. I had only posted my letter when the three French hens arrived. There was another sort-out between the hens and the doves, who sided with the partridge, and the vet had to be sent for again. The mother was raging because the bill was £16 this time but she has almost cooled down. However, the fact that the birds’ droppings keep falling down on her hair whilen she’s watching the telly, doesn’t help matters. Thanking you for your kindness.
I remain,
Your Gobnait

Day Four
Dear Nuala,

You mustn’t have received my last letter when you were sending us the four calling birds. There was pandemonium in the pear-tree again last night and the vet’s bill was £32. The mother is on sedation as I write. I know you meant no harm and remain your close friend.
Gobnauit

Day Five
Nuala,

Your generosity knows no bounds. Five gold rings ! When the parcel arrived I was scared stiff that it might be more birds, because the smell in the living-room is atrocious. However, I don’t want to seem ungrateful for the beautiful rings.
Your affectionate friend,
Gobnait

Day Six
Nuala,

What are you trying to do to us ? It isn’t that we don’t appreciate your generosity but the six geese have not alone nearly murdered the calling birds but they laid their eggs on top of the vet’s head from the pear-tree and his bill was £68 in cash ! My mother is munching 60 grains of Valium a day and talking to herself in a most alarming way. You must keep your feelings for me in check.
Gobnait

Day Seven
Nuala,

W e are not amused by your little joke. Seven swans-a-swimming is a most romantic idea but not in the bath of a private house. We cannot use the bathroom now because they’ve gone completely savage and rush the door every time we try to enter. If things go on this way, the mother and I will smell as bad as the living-room carpet. Please lay off. It is not fair.
Gobnait

Day Eight
Nuala,

Who the hell do you think gave you the right to send eight, hefty maids-a-milking here, to eat us out of house and home ? Their cattle are all over the front lawn and have trampled the hell out of the mother’s rose-beds. The swans invaded the living-room in a sneak attack and the ensuing battle between them and the calling birds, turtle doves, French hens and partridge make the Battle of the Somme seem like Wanderly Wagon. The mother is on a bottle of whiskey a day, as well as the sixty grains of Valium. I’m very annoyed with you.
Gobnait

Day Nine
Listen you louser !

There’s enough pandemonium in this place night and day without nine drummers drumming, while the eight flaming maids-a-milking are beating my poor, old alcoholic mother out of her own kitchen and gobbling everything in sight. I’m warning you, you’re making an enemy of me.
Gobnait

Day Ten
Listen manure-face,

I hope you’ll be haunted by the strains of ten pipers piping which you sent to torment us last night. They were aided in their evil work by those maniac drummers and it wasn’t a pleasant sight to look out the window and see eight hefty maids-a-milking pogo-ing around with the ensuing punk-rock uproar. My mother has just finished her third bottle of whiskey, on top of a hundred and twenty four grains of Valium. You’ll get yours !
Gobnait O’Lúnasa

Day Eleven
You have scandalised my mother, you dirty Jezebel,

It was bad enough to have eight maids-a-milking dancing to punk music on the front lawn but they’ve now been joined by your friends ~ the eleven Lords-a-leaping and the antics of the whole lot of them would leave the most decadent days of the Roman Empire looking like “Outlook”. I’ll get you yet, you ould bag !

Day Twelve
Listen slurry head,

You have ruined our lives. The twelve maidens dancing turned up last night and beat the living daylights out of the eight maids-a-milking, ‘cos they found them carrying on with the eleven Lords-a-leaping. Meanwhile, the swans got out of the living-room, where they’d been hiding since the big battle, and savaged hell out of the Lords and all the Maids. There were eight ambulances here last night, and the local Civil Defence as well. The mother is in a home for the bewildered and I’m sitting here, up to my neck in birds’ droppings, empty whiskey and Valium bottles, birds’ blood and feathers, while the flaming cows eat the leaves off the pear-tree.
I’m a broken man.
Gobnait O’Lúnasa

(c) Frank Kelly (aka Father Jack) 1983 - and one of my Alltime Favourite Christmas 'songs'.

cq

Monday, December 19, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 19

With less than a week to go before Christmas and two weeks before New Years, I want to use this portion of my advent to thank the Emergency Services in advance. No one likes being at work during Christmas, least of those who are anticipating their work to be difficult, mucky or downright dangerous.

I thank the Police for being there even during the quiet hours of Christmas ready to help anyone who needs it.

I thank the Fire Brigade for standing by during our time of holiday overzealousness and putting their lives on the line to help anyone who needs it.


And I thank the ambulance and paramedics for saving lives and being there, should the worse happen, for anyone who needs it.


These are my local authority crests - keeping it real!

Thank you, boys and girls, for watching over us this holiday season.

And thank you also to the phone companies for keeping us in touch, the energy companies for keeping us warm and the myriad other service providers who help make our Christmasses safe, comfortable and enjoyable.

cq

Sunday, December 18, 2005

How evil are you?


How evil are you?

Nicked off Retarded Rugrat [waves] - hi dawnie! see, pimping!

Angelic! [snigger]
cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 18


oh dear - why do I get the feeling this Christmas is going to be a disaster????

Edit: as Charlie wouldn't leave it alone, the Much Beloved has taken the tree down and packed it away. Feels like Christmas is cancelled.....

cq

Saturday, December 17, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 17

Christmas Elf Name

My Christmas Elf Name is
Get your Christmas Elf Name at JokesUnlimited.com

Saw this fun thing on Diva Kitty's blog and couldn't resist seeing what I came out as....

I kinda like 'Bouncy Angel-Pants' :-)

Edit: The MB is Tootsie Tum-Tums.....hmm - don't think I'll tell him that! :-)

cq

Are You MAD??

It's 4am and I'm blogging.....quietly as MB is asleep in the room next door....

Hence the question in the title.

Nope, I am not mad - yet! Ugly Monster has been in full-time residence for over a week now. For the uninitiated, Ugly Monster is the name I gave my chronic depression in order to make it more manageable. But sometimes UM really does take over, despite my best efforts.

It whispers in my ear telling me I'm crap and useless.
It makes me forget my meds (haven't taken them for weeks now!)
It makes me temperamental and unpredictable.
It makes me want to kill myself.
It puts me through cycles of insomnia and hypersomnia.

OK, so I'm managing to fight off point 4 - well, I'm still here, aren't I? Although there were a couple of enticing lorries on the motorway the other day.

So here I am, 4am and blogging. I was ill yesterday so napped a LOT, and am paying for it now.

I get really tired of my depression, you know. It's been 7 years now and it's almost as bad now as it was then. Depression is cyclic, you always follow cycles. You have depression, you feel guilty about being unhappy, which makes you more depressed, which makes you more guilty, which makes you more depressed - and so on ad infinitum.

My depression was triggered by surgery following a long illness, which meant I couldn't have children - although I always had a depressive nature. Well, there you have another problem - I yearn for my own child. But it's too late now.
Don't think I am unreasonable about this desire. I don't like the thought of surrogacy and I am too old to adopt in the UK - but I would love to have my child look up at me and say 'I love you, Mum'.

I'll just have to enjoy my Aginothlings looking up at me and saying 'I love you, [cq]', and the knowledge that my darling god-daughter Boo, thousands of miles away, would do the same, given the chance! :-)

And, of course, being craziequeen, I have my Crazies on side to support me, protect me and make me laugh.

Thank you, Crazies :-)

And now, I have my blogbuddies. From as far apart as Oz, Spain and the US, I have lots of people talking to me and infusing me with their zest for life.

Thank you, Blogbuddies :-)

Edit - just a quick note to those worried about the 'not taking the meds' comment. It is not intentional and I am not 'tweaking' my meds. I honestly can forget to take them for days or weeks at a time, for the very simple reason that those very meds have had an effect on my memory. In fact, I can look at them and think 'I must take them', turn around and completely forget instantly. But then I do the same thing with everything else! :-)
I'm also not supposed to take them with flu/cold remedies - and I have been plagued with colds over the last month.
Feel free to nag me to take my meds - but don't have a go at me for not taking them.
Usually I am very good at taking them (well, I have been on them for 7 years - practice, practice, practice!), so good in fact, that my doc has me self-managing. But sometimes....I just.....fall off the wheel - you know?

cq

Friday, December 16, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 16


Well, I did it. Subject to (self-perceived) nagging from my younger more energetic feline, I registered Charlie and Pandora on Diva Kitty's Mom's Secret Paw this year.

I know, I know - they're only cats - but that's not the point.

The people who run these blogs, be they owners or carers or whatever, reach somewhere in me that I hadn't experienced before. They made me look outside myself and view life from a feline perspective.
The added bonus of feline blogging is it is an opportunity to stop being me for a while, and to be a crazy kitten dude, or a feisty old bagcat :-)
Being me sucks most of the time - being them is rather cool, especially being Charlie! He's morphing into a little surfdude :-)

So, laugh if you will, but I am content that I have just despatched Charlie and Pandy's Secret Paw to a nice little kittycat in the US.

And someday in the next couple of weeks, a little parcel will arrive addressed to Charlie and Pandora Pusscat :-)

cq

Thursday, December 15, 2005

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 14

This great man had to appear in my Christmas Advent somewhere. To those who don't recognise the yellow skin, the golfball eyes and the clenched teeth, this is Homer J Simpson, husband of Marge and father of Bart, Lisa and little Maggie. Son of Abraham J Simpson and neighbourino of Ned Flanders and a legend in his own lunchtime! :-)

For the past 15 years millions of people around the world have been laughing along with the Simpsons, and annually creator Matt Groening has produced Hallowe'en and Christmas Specials starring our favourite yellow family.

My all time favourite episode is Bart's Soul, where a young cynical Bart sells his soul to his friend Milhouse for $5 and finds life isn't the same without a soul.

The picture for today has come from one of my other favourite episodes 'Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire'. Homer doesn't get his bonus and Marge has to spend their savings to get Bart's tattoo removed. So Homer gets a part-time job as Santa - and then blows his measly pay at the dogtrack (meaning well, of course!). He and Bart come across a dogowner disowning his dog and they take it home. One priceless family Christmas present named Santa's Little Helper - and the rest, as they say, is history!

Update - Bart's tattoo is the unfinished word 'Moth' - He says it was going to say Mother. And that episode includes the following hilarious routine:

Lisa: [touches Bart's injured arm]
Bart: Ow! Quit it.
Lisa: [touches Bart's injured arm]
Bart: Ow! Quit it.
Lisa: [touches Bart's injured arm]
Bart: Ow! Quit it.
Maggie: [touches Bart's injured arm]
Bart: Ow! Quit it.
Homer: [comes in] Hey, what's with this? [touches Bart's injured arm]
Bart: Ow! Quit it.

:-)

cq

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 13


Mama - when you gonna write these pretty cards? Can I help........?


cq

Crazie Christmas Conversation Piece Q&A

OOL: How old are you?
As old as my tongue and older than my teeth! 41 – but don’t tell eric mutta, he thinks I’m 21!


Silentmum: When are you going to visit?
Soon, darling. MB agrees I should come to visit, and kitty wants to come too!


Fluke: Where did you find that feathery blast helmet?
It was a gift from
Teh Blogfather – do you like it, Fluke?

Oreo: What do you look like?
Like a rather crazie cat mama! 5’8", shoulder length brown hair, brown eyes, overweight, getting on in years........(but A Jnr says I am 'cuddly' - so can't be all bad!) – really boring, actually…..


Mrs A: Is your hubby really real?
As real as stacks of beer and a kitcar in the garage, meat in the freezer and golfclubs/balls/tees everywhere illustrates! Which also shows why we don’t move in the same social circles!


Karen: How is the weather over there in the UK?
The night this was asked it was freezing fog, tonight it is dry and cold. None of the promised snowstorms yet.


Karen: Do you have any special Christmas traditions that you'll be celebrating?
My Crazie Christmas Party is a tradition started by me. MB goes to visit his parents and I fling open the doors to all my delightfully mad friends.


Jean-Luc: What will you be doing over Christmas?
With a bad history with Christmas, I have my Christmas carefully structured now. Christmas Day and Boxing Day will be spent with MB, just the two of us. Bit of crappy telly, DVDs, bit of blogging (no doubt!), some nice food, bit of drink, but mostly togetherness.


Mrs A: What is your fave Christmas Meal?
I don’t ever remember liking turkey. As a 20yr veteran of the veggie fringe, my fave Christmas meal would be all the trimmings and a nice tasty substitute for turkey. Alternatively, it would be any (vegetarian!) meal someone else would cook for me!

Mrs A: If you could have any (material) pressie, what would it be?
You know me too well – you know I usually come up with all that Peace and Love crap :-) ‘Material’…hmm – a return ticket to Calgary, Alberta…..or a VERY large box of Ferrero Rocher………[dribble]

aka_monty: Besides blogging, what are your favourite things to do in your spare time?
I’m a frustrated Thespian, so I love film and television. I used to like theatre and plays, but don’t go so much now :-( I adore reading, and usually have two or so books on the go at one time. At the moment, I am reading ‘High Lord’ by Trudi Canavan, ‘Pride and Prejudice’ by Jane Austen and ‘Double Eagle’ by James Twining.

cyberkitten: What’s the strangest thing you’ve found when cleaning your house?
Kitty, just shows you know I like cleaning! Um, having a more than competent killer in Pandy for the last 16 years, I would probably say her ‘gifts’, occasionally left to die under the sofa :-S

Aginoth: What’s your favourite and least favourite buildings?
Favourite would be my house :-D Least favourite building would be my esteemed place of work!

Maggie: How often do you visit Michele?
Not that often actually. I usually hang around for the Meet and Greet over the weekend fitted in around housework, and occasionally check out her weekday stuff.

OOL: Do you have any pets and if so, what are their names and to which part of the animal kingdom do they belong?
We have three pets. Charlie is a ginger cat of 6 months old. Pandora is a 16yr old cat. Fred is our Pet Rock! hmm wonder if we could fit a dolphin pond in our back garden??
I dream of having enough money to buy a house in the country and surround myself with animals.....

OOL: What is your favorite film of all time?
Most visitors will probably know it is Pirates of the Caribbean, although Narnia has run it a close second! I have another favourite though, an independent film about living with AIDS starring Eric Stoltz and Randy Quaid. So, if you know either of them OOL – tell ‘em I love ‘Roomates’.

carolyn: How many cats do you have?
As I said, currently two. But we still mourn Ambrose, who was killed on the road Christmas time four years ago. We also lost little Echo in the same way this April. Which is why my cats don’t go out any more!

Valerie: What is your earliest memory?
Cool question! I have very few childhood memories, but one or two stick out. Eating fish and chips on some outdoor steps (my mum said I was about three then! We were so poor fish and chips were a luxury!) and I have a memory of sitting on the bar in a pub while my real dad had a beer and smoked his pipe.

OOL: How long have you lived where you do now?
Here in historic Thornbury? 7½ years. Before this we lived in Oxfordshire, a bit north of Oxford! :-)

OOL: If you could live anywhere in the world--money being no object--where would it be?
Here! :-) I have MB next to me and my very much-appreciated Crazies on the doorstep. Or I would like to be five minutes away from my god-daughter Boo again – 5,000 miles is too far!

jennypenny: Do you have a stocking?
Sadly, no. I didn’t have one as a child either, unless I badgered and my mum capitulated. Which means, of course, that I have always encouraged my parents to do their children stockings…..they are also a great way of blackmailing children to behave :-)

jennypenny: Real tree or fake tree? (part B to that question is multi coloured lights or clear ones?)
Usually a real tree, but Charlie is proving to be such a thug that we are surrendering ourselves to the fake tree this year! And multi-coloured lights. I like turning off the room lights and sitting in the glow of myriad pretty colours from the tree.

eric mutta: I've given you several nicknames and always called you CQ, but what is your real name?
Craziequeen, of course! :-) I have been called the craziequeen for years now, and it proved handy when thinking of a blogname..... Actually, my real name has been debated and unfrocked farther down my blog – you’ll just have to look. But eric, you can call me ‘darling’ [wink]

eric mutta: I've always thought it sweet how you post in multiple colours. What is your favourite colour?
Thank you! I thought it cheered up a potentially VERY boring blog! My favourite colour is purple, and any variant of that. Which is good as Blogthings said my blog should be purple!

Aginoth: When are we going to get the answers?
[pokes out tongue at little ‘bruv’]


cq

Monday, December 12, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 12


A sympathetic picture for a veggie blogger....


cq

Update on Norman Kember

Diplomats seek clues on hostages Diplomats in Iraq are trying to discover the fate of British hostage Norman Kember and his three colleagues.
A group called Swords of Truth claimed to be holding the trio, who were abducted in Baghdad last month.
They accused the men of spying and vowed to kill them unless their demands were met. But Saturday's deadline passed with no information emerging.
The British government said it was doing all it could to ensure the captives' were released unharmed.
Repeated pleas for mercy were made by from senior Muslim leaders.
Mr Kember, 74, from Pinner, north London, American Tom Fox, 54, and Canadians James Loney, 41, and Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32, had travelled to Iraq as a "gesture of solidarity" with Canada-based international peace group Christian Peacemaker Teams.
The group denied the men were spies.
'Miracle' needed
Friends and family of Mr Kember have endured an agonising wait for news.
Chris Cole, director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, of which the pensioner is a trustee, said: "We are looking for a miracle at this stage."
Bruce Kent, a friend of Mr Kember for 15 years, said: "I haven't given up hope at all.
"They may be working on some way of getting off the hook without losing face.
"It's quite possible they may be preparing a video to say why they are releasing them."
Mr Kent said he would be attending a vigil for Mr Kember on Monday night from 6pm outside St Martin's in the Fields Church, Trafalgar Square, London.
Many Christians and Muslims are expected to attend.
'Desperate situation'
Iraqi interior minister Bayan Jabr said he had "no new information" on the hostages.
He said: "From the beginning I advised foreigners not to not to move freely and we are always ready to protect them.
"They are all people who came to serve us."
British Defence Secretary John Reid said the government had no new information about Mr Kember.
"We are doing, through the Foreign Office, through (Foreign Secretary) Jack Straw, everything possible to try and make sure his life is saved and that of his colleagues is protected," he said.
Intelligence gathering
Muslim leaders in Britain and abroad - as well as terror suspects held in the UK - have repeatedly called for the release of Mr Kember, who was seen on video shackled and blindfolded.
They also pleaded for the other three hostages to be freed.
Anas Altikriti, the former president of the Muslim Association of Britain, has been involved in negotiations in Iraq, without a breakthrough.
The BBC's Caroline Hawley in Baghdad said it appeared it had not been possible to establish direct contact with the kidnappers, despite an Iraqi government effort to gather intelligence on them.
BBC World Affairs Editor John Simpson, who is also in Baghdad, said it can take days before it is known what has happened to hostages after deadlines have passed.
Referring to the murders of previous UK hostages in Iraq - which include Ken Bigley and Margaret Hassan - he said: "It's difficult to be too hopeful about the future but, of course, there's always the possibility that this time will be different."
Story from BBC
NEWS:http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/uk/4520108.stm
Published: 2005/12/12 03:11:45 GMT© BBC MMV

Sunday, December 11, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 11

The Christmas Conversation Piece

This is the interactive section of my unique Crazie Christmas Advent. You get to ask me anything you like - two questions at a time, but you can visit again and again (like Michele, I like visitors!)

It needn't even be about Christmas - this is the time to ask the Crazie One that question that has been bugging you for a while.

All questions will be answered.

Here are some received through my 17 sentences post to kick it off:

OOL: How old are you?

silentmum: when are you going to visit?

Fluke: where'd you find that feathery blast helmet, anyhoo?

Oreo: what do you look like?

Mrs Aginoth: is your hubby really real?

so - it's over to you :-)

cq

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Narnia Update

OMIGOD, OMIGOD, OMIGOD, OMIGOD..........

OMIGOD - GOOD.......so good it was BRILL :-)


OK, time to flesh this out a bit..... :-)
I first read the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe at about 6 years old. It has remained my favourite childhood book for the last 35 years! :-)
As I previously said, I always wanted to be Lucy, but overall the four children matched my family. The eldest son, strong and reliable; the elder sister, watchful and careful of the little ones; the younger son, bitter and vengeful; the younger sister (that would be me!), misunderstood and mostly ignored.
The book covers the relationships much more than the film does, and you really learn to hate Edmund in the beginning!
OK, off to Narnia. Mr Tumnus was fantastic! Dunno who he was, but he was fabulous - just as I had pictured him. The beavers were excellent, little furry homebodies, Mrs Beaver packing for the trip (it's in the book, people!).
The White Witch - awesome. Tilda Swinton (the only face I really recognised) was superb, following on her performance as Archangel Gabriel in Constantine (the only good thing in THAT film!). She was a mix of Gabriel and the Borg Queen - eerily scary. And they got the hot cocoa and turkish delight in there too!
And the most controversial character - Aslan. Aslan is supposed to be a parody of God or Jesus. I just thought he was this cool talking Lion who led the revolt against the Witch - but then hey! I was a kid! Aslan was out of this world. He was earthy and ethereal at the same time. He was everything I dreamed of.

Oh, and one other thing? The film had many small scenes which were taken straight from the illustrative plates in my children's version all those years ago. The children in their fur coats, Edmund talking to Aslan and the Stone Table.

Can't wait for Prince Caspian......

cq

Houston, we have a problem...

Jeez, just had a freaky moment when I couldn't find LMD Aginoth's Xmas pressie. I knew I'd hid it from a certain ginger feline - but could I remember where? Luckily I found it by going through every drawer in the house....

Now - all I need to do is find that little bag of gifts I cunningly stored earlier this year.....

Amazon has come through (everyone say; yay amazon!) - everyone's gifts are now in this house.......somewhere........

[looks around rather desperately.....]

btw - LMB wanted pink and fluffy? - she's got seriously pink and fluffy!

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 10


Today's advent is Narnia, the Movie.

Today is our Narnia trip to celebrate rca's birthday. It's going to be a blogging affair, what with Aginoth, Mrs Aginoth (plus Aginothlings!), cyberkitten and sleepypete, plus a friendly lurker amongst others - we're gonna have a lot to talk about!

I have been looking forward to this film since I saw the first trailer. Andrew Adamson (the genius behind Shrek) is a masterful director of CGI and young enough to see the fun in things. I have heard wonderful things about the children (always a worry; child actors!) and the cast list reads like a Who's Who of TV and Film.
The books have been a lifetime favourite of mine - in fact, last year the crazies bought me the entire series, plus a documentary book about Narnia the place. I always wanted to be Lucy :-)

I hope rca has a lovely day. I hope it's wonderful. I hope Narnia is *so* wonderful that they do the rest of the series :-)

Call in later for a review :-)

cq

Friday, December 09, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 9


The Office Christmas Party

What better way to illustrate the office Christmas Party than a picture of a beaming Pumpkin after a couple of Reefs :-) (er - the drink not the...um........puff!)

I had planned great things for this advent post, the Office Christmas Party should always be a blur of alcohol, lewd behaviour and gropes behind (or even IN) the stationery cupboard.

Sad for you, My Dear Readers, but our Christmas Parties are very staid these years.....well, if you don't count the raucous singing at the table, me elbowing the waiter in the family jewels, and the wine flowing....

For my meal I had
caramelised onion and rosemary soup
risotto with sun-blushed tomatoes and parmesan
chocolate St Emilion

But I had it on good authority that the duck was superb! I took their word for it.

We went to
The Glassboat, a floating restaurant in Bristol. We had the lower desk to ourselves (well, there was 30+ of us!) and it was very nice. Everyone complimented the food, and we raised an on-the-spot large tip for the hard-working waiting staff.
Some more free-spirited souls regaled us with a medley of various 60's songs a cappella (well, they are getting on a bit!) while we sipped our coffee and squabbled over chocolate mints.

Then we adjourned to
The Old Duke. It wasn't live music night and the pub was very crowded by the time we had all squeezed in The poor lone local sitting gripping his pint glass at the bar looked a bit concerned at the massive intrusion! Which is where, sadly, my afternoon ground to a halt. Agoraphobia (a mild symptom of my depression) kicked in and I recognised the familiar signs of 'I have to go home now!'. It has happened at the supermarket and even at cyberkitten's house. The homing instinct takes over.

So I called My Pumpkin over and whispered 'I'm not well, so I'm just going to slip off home quietly, I don't want to spoil the party'. She agreed reluctantly and I sneaked out the door ........... just as half the office turned around.
People crying my name called to me and two of the young office girlies and an old friend of mine spilled onto the pavement in my wake. 'Don't go! Stay and have another drink!' they pleaded desperately [I put it down to the booze!! :-)] Well, they were very tempting, but my panic attack was steadily worsening, and I had to go.

I got home safely, and the panic subsided as soon as I walked into my haven, my own palace.

Today the hard-core party-goers arrived at the office, looking rather pale and delicate. I can only presume that the party continued on in my absence and they had a wonderful time :-)

And the picture of My Pumpkin? well;
I love her to bits, she is my colleague, my friend and my trusted confidante;
she was one of the organisers of this year's Christmas Party;
her open beaming smile sums up happiness for me;
she gave me permission :-)

Hope all your Christmas Parties are such a success with such wonderful people.

cq

Thursday, December 08, 2005

17 Sentences

Blatantly stolen from Fluke Starbucker here are my seventeen sentences. Copy and paste them into the comments box and complete as you think fit :-) You can use single words or phrases :-)

01] I _____ CQ.
02] Craziequeen is _____.
03] If I were in a room with CQ, I would _____.
04] I think CQ should _____.
05] Craziequeen needs _____.
06] I want to _____ Craziequeen.
07] Someday CQ will ___.
08] CQ reminds me of _____.
09] Without CQ _____.
10] My memories of CQ are _____.
11] Craziequeen can be _____.
12] The worst thing about CQ is _____.
13] The best thing about CQ is _____.
14] I am _____ with Craziequeen.
15] One thing I would like to know about CQ is _____.
16] CQ should go and _____.
17] Craziequeen _____ me.

No tags - but if you like it, I''m sure Fluke wouldn't mind the PR :-)

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 8


Bit of a serious one today.


The picture above is a man named Norman Kember. Your usual chap next door, married and living a quiet life in Pinner, North London. Under any other circumstances, no one outside his immediate circle would even know his name.

Following his belief in peace, Mr Kember went to Iraq to help the Iraqi people, travelling as a "gesture of solidarity" with Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT), a Canada-based international peace group. Such a strong belief should not be belittled, although some might say it is misguided. Suffice it to say, Mr Kember is a good man who wanted to help.

He is now a hostage, captured by rebels in Iraq and is facing his own execution.

The deadline has been extended to this Saturday, and one can only hope and pray that extension means that the kidnappers really don't want to execute this innocent man and his three fellow hostages. But they are demanding all the prisoners released from US and Iraq detention in return for these four lives, so this is stalemate.

God give Mrs Kember strength and succour in this terrible time. And may the hostage-takers see the madness and release these four innocent men, so they can return to their families.

The men are:

Briton Norman Kember, 74

American Tom Fox, 54,

Canadians James Loney, 41

Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32

cq

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 7


The Yule Cat

The oldest written sources on the Yule Cat are from the Nineteenth Century. These refer to the fact that those who do not get a new item of clothing for Yule are destined to become offerings for the Yule Cat. It may sound strange that the deprived ones will also become the sacrifices, but this tradition is based on the fact that every effort was made to finish all work with the Autumn wool before Yule. The reward for those who took part in the work was a new piece of clothing. Those who were lazy received nothing. Thus the Yule Cat was used as an incentive to get people to work harder.

A woman describes a scene from her youth in the last century thus: "We were lazy doing this chore. Then we were reminded of the Yule Cat. We thought that was some terrible beast and the last thing we wanted was to be one of his offers".

One of Iceland's most beloved poets in this century, Jóhannes úr Kötlum, wrote a lay about the Yule Cat. It follows in the translation of Vignir Jónsson, who says: "You'll have to forgive me but I didn't make it rhyme - I'm not much of a poet."

You all know the Yule Cat
And that Cat was huge indeed.
People didn't know where he came from
Or where he went.

He opened his glaring eyes wide,
The two of them glowing bright.
It took a really brave man
To look straight into them.

His whiskers, sharp as bristles,
His back arched up high.
And the claws of his hairy paws
Were a terrible sight.

He gave a wave of his strong tail,
He jumped and he clawed and he hissed.
Sometimes up in the valley,
Sometimes down by the shore.

He roamed at large, hungry and evil
In the freezing Yule snow.
In every home
People shuddered at his name.

If one heard a pitiful "meow"
Something evil would happen soon.
Everybody knew he hunted men
But didn't care for mice.

He picked on the very poor
That no new garments got
For Yule - who toiled
And lived in dire need.

From them he took in one fell swoop
Their whole Yule dinner
Always eating it himself
If he possibly could.

Hence it was that the women
At their spinning wheels sat
Spinning a colorful thread
For a frock or a little sock.

Because you mustn't let the Cat
Get hold of the little children.
They had to get something new to wear
From the grownups each year.

And when the lights came on, on
Yule Eve And the Cat peered in,
The little children stood rosy and proud
All dressed up in their new clothes.

Some had gotten an apron A
nd some had gotten shoes
Or something that was needed
- That was all it took.

For all who got something new to wear
Stayed out of that pussy-cat's grasp
He then gave an awful hiss
But went on his way.

Whether he still exists I do not know.
But his visit would be in vain
If next time everybody
Got something new to wear.

Now you might be thinking of helping
Where help is needed most.
Perhaps you'll find some children
That have nothing at all.

Perhaps searching for those
That live in a lightless world
Will give you a happy day
And a Merry, Merry Yule.

Yule in Iceland

cool! :-)

cq

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 6

Inspiration for today's advent - the first wrapped pressies of the year.......


Whatcha doing, Mama?

Why are you taking a photo and it's not of me, Mama?

What's these parcels, Mama?

Ooh! Glitter........!!

Ooh! String........!!

Mama, I wanna play with these now!

[sigh]

It's gonna be a looooooooooong Christmas........ :-)

cq

Monday, December 05, 2005

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 5

This is my inner child.

Everyone, say hello to my inner child :-)

I like to keep in touch with my inner child, as regular readers will have gathered. It's tough being a grown up, you know! I have teddy bears, I read books from my youth, I like playing with lego, building bricks and fuzzy felts! I like looking at things in wonder. I am stupidly pleased at the littlest thing. I was thrilled to get some chocolates for babysitting!

Some call me naive - but they are the naive ones. Listening to one's inner child can be so liberating.

At Christmas time, my inner child does double shifts, poor thing. When I am tempted to feel all grumpy about the whole thing (and I have a very bad history with Christmas), she is the one that is shrieking excitedly 'But think about the pretty lights! What about the cheerful music? And the chance to see your friends and swap gifts? Think about the shine in kids' eyes when they see Father Christmas?'

When Ugly Monster is whispering venom in my ear, my inner child is the one bouncing around yelling 'Look at that sunset! How do they make rainbows so pretty? Isn't the rain soft on your face? Feel how silky that pussycat is! People love you!'

I would be lost without my inner child, and she is one of the reasons why I keep going.

So this Christmas, my advice would be to pause and listen to your inner child - and be liberated! :-)

cq

Sunday, December 04, 2005

mmmm...

*chomp*

*munch*

can't talk........

*chew*

*nibble*

eating.....

*slobber*

*crunch*

eating my pay :-)

*wipes delicately at chocolate covered mouth*

mm - chocolate......

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 4


God grant me the serenity

to accept the things I cannot change;

courage to change the things I can;

and wisdom to know the difference.

--Reinhold Niebuhr

A prayer that should be posted in every kitchen this Yuletide :-)
cq

Saturday, December 03, 2005

Teh Gangsta Nanny...

is in da HOUSE!

I duly arrived at the Aginoth mansion in plenty of time for Aginoth and Mrs A to turn into human beings in time for their long-awaited film.
LMD lived up to her reputation again, beginning to scream as I walked in the door. I might as well have 'Spawn of the Devil' tattooed on my forehead. Mrs A burst into spontaneous laughter - apparently it 'looked really funny!'
Luckily LMB and A Jnr still think I'm the Bees Knees and we had cuddle and tickle time while LMD continued to wail.
LMB decided I would take her to bed, and A Jnr wanted to show off his teeth brushing skills to his beloved CQ. So, leaving Mum and Dad to cope with the still bawling LMD, I sorted LMB and A Jnr, tucking in and story reading.

There was much girly giggling when I turned the page in LMB's book to a very healthy looking hippo and said gleefully 'oh, look - it' [cq]!'. And A Jnr hid under the covers as we read about the fearsome Fangmangle in his Horrid Henry book.

A and Mrs A were all ready to go, Mrs A hiding outside and A attempting to console distraught baby. I swept her up, with her back to the door and under cover of her yells said 'go!'. They went! Trusting souls.
Well, LMD screamed in indignation for - oh - about five minutes, until she realised dancing to the music on the telly was more fun. And she dropped off in about ten minutes, and she was fast asleep in bed in 30!

So, all is quiet. A and Mrs A are (hopefully) enjoying their film and A has left his laptop on for me!

And I've negotiated a pay rise for the holiday season. Ferrero Rocher is now the currency of childcare. And I get to spend quality time with my precious Aginothlings.

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent 3

I'll start with the picture today...

Your starter for ten? Yep it's a boat. It's a boat called the NorthWestern and it is a crab fishing boat in Alaska. When you munch on your king crab salad, this is one of the boats that catches it for you.

See the big crates on the back? They are crab crates, and can hold hundreds of pounds of crab. The crates themselves weigh in excess of 100lbs. They are handled using a huge crane and are among the most dangerous things I've ever seen! :-O

Now the explanation for this picture on my Advent Calendar.

This household has been glued to the recent series on Discovery Channel called 'Deadliest Catch' and the Northwestern was one of the half a dozen of the crab boat fleet featured in the documentary.

The unusual thing about the Northwestern, and why it caught my eye particularly, is that is it crewed by three brothers from a long fishing tradition. 'Sig Hansen, whose father was one of the original crab fishermen of Dutch Harbor, has been a captain since the age of 22. A fourth-generation Norwegian fisherman, Sig is very superstitious, but always brings back a big catch. He and his brothers not only work on the Northwestern, they own it. Living proof that blood is thicker than water, this three-brother crew has fished together for almost 20 years' (Discovery Channel bios). The Hansens (Sig, Norman and Edgar) and their fellow deckhands go out in the most atrocious weather in the Bering Sea to catch your delicious(!) Alaskan King Crab and Opilia Crab. And they're still talking to each other!! :-)

The more observant of you will know I am a strict vegetarian (which includes shellfish!) but when I saw the controls that are operated during crab season, I felt a little better about watching this show. Only fully grown males are caught, females and juveniles are put back in their watery home. And once you start watching, you are hooked on the men (and yes, some women!) on the Northwestern, Billikin, Retriever, Maverick, Lady Alaska and Vixen.

In fact, according to the Northwestern website they are out there now! The 'Gone Fishin' shingle has been hung out!

I popped in to say hello, and signed their visitors book. They like visitors!

So my advent for the 3rd December is to wish all the crab fishermen of Alaska a safe season, to come home to their families, a profitable catch, and a very Merry Christmas.

cq

Friday, December 02, 2005

Decisions, decisions...

Very high powered talks in the office today. A subject discussed from the highest level to the lowest of the low (ie me!)...

And now a decision has to be made....

What to wear for the Christmas Office Party.

Yep, that familiar time of angst returns. And I have another added aspect of the problem.

You see, I have lost weight. Yep, all that exercise and denial worked and I have lost about a stone and a half so far (about 21lbs).

Good, I hear my blog friends say! :-)

Only problem now is, I can fit into my luscious midnight blue velvet dress.

Good, I hear my blog friends say! :-)

But the subject of my feminine indecision is: Do I wear my beautiful dress while the rest of the office are in casualwear - or I do follow the trend and don black trousers and a nice top?

I have just about decided to put off the final decision until the day. It will be Business as Usual on the morning of the party, so normal officewear will be worn. I will take in both my gorgeous dress and a nice top and make a spur of the moment decision!!

[gulp]

cq

BlogWarming

Some of you may know that Aginoth has moved to a new abode.

For those who haven't been directed there yet, you can find his sparkling new residence here. It's gleaming white!

I know all the regulars will want to drop by with blogwarming wishes.

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 2

Me and cyberkitten were at the Mall (as previously mentioned!) and as we neared the big tree in the middle we heard music. Intrigued, we made our way over to the food hall to see a puppet show going on.
A Rock Nativity - how cool is that! The puppets were fun and colourful, styled on the
Muppets, the story still clear and the music was - well - boppable! Everyone from small children to adults were throroughly enjoying the clever little spectacle.

Well, we watched for a while, our hips jigging to the infectious music, laughing at the puppets, then turned. To see a 7 ft polar bear dancing in amongst the tables, complete with Santa hat on! He was surrounded by youngsters and teenagers, the subject of a million phone cameras.

As previously mentioned (!), I had my camera with me, so I asked the current flock of teenage lovelies if I could take the polar bear's picture. They scooted, and a little boy snuck in for a big furry cuddle. I took the picture while the polar bear gave me a big 'thumbs up' pose.

Now, I'm 41 (sorry, Eric *21*!) and I know what's what. But that polar bear, with the silly smile and the stupid hat made me so 'happy' inside. I regressed to about 6 years old and went to get my cuddle. I sneaked a 'thank you' into the gap between the head and the body, and in return I got a throaty chuckle and warm strokes on my back.

To the man working in the Mall at Cribbs Causeway
on the 1st December, sweating his cohonas off in that polar bear costume at about 6pm - THANK YOU!! Thank you from an tired woman who felt 6 years old again - and thank you for making all the children laugh and smile.

So here is my picture for my advent, December 2. My polar bear!



cq

Thursday, December 01, 2005

Lights.....

Me and cyberkitten went to the Mall tonight to look at pressies for the Aginothlings and to check prices on my list.

I just happened to take along my camera!

This is the lights taken down the Mall from one end. Our Mall curves in the middle, so there's no chance of taking *all* the lights, and Christmas lights don't photograph well.....



I love these 'waterfall lights' - they're so pretty. They come in two lengths; short (to your right) and long ones that dangle through towards the ground floor (to your left). Last year they were complimented with angels, this year it is big gold stars.

And our magnificent Mall Christmas tree - wonderful design, traditional, yet modern....


See the red at the bottom? That is the fountain the tree is suspended over....playing all through rainbow hues - wonderful.

And tomorrow, I will tell you about the polar bear :-)

cq

Crazie Christmas Advent Calendar 1

Following on the advent theme from my old friend (and blog parent!) Aginoth I been thinking (and it hurt!).

So, here is craziequeen's advent calendar:

December 1st

This is the tree I have decided to buy this year. It a little more expensive than the usual Norwegian Fir but being more compact will fit better in our little house.




"The Fraser fir is a uniformly pyramid-shaped tree. The needles are short, lustrous dark green and slightly twisted at their base. Strong branches are turned slightly upward which give the tree a compact appearance and shows the silvery color."

doesn't it sound nice? :-)

cq

Primary Reading Set for Overhaul

The way children are taught to read in primary schools in England needs to be changed, says a government review.
It has backed the method synthetic phonics, which teaches children the sounds of letters and combination of letters before they move onto books.
The review, by an ex-Ofsted director, says this should be the first strategy used by primary schools for all pupils.
Education Secretary Ruth Kelly said she accepted the findings and saw a "real opportunity" to teach the system.
She would make sure the system was taught as early as possible in schools, she told BBC Breakfast.
"There is a real opportunity to teach synthetic phonics systematically, but also other skills so necessary to children learning to love reading and learning to speak and communicate effectively."

Phonics is practised in most schools but in various forms.
The review, the full details of which are being published later, was carried out by a former director of school inspections at Ofsted, Jim Rose.
It is expected to recommend teaching of reading must go hand in hand with developing children's speaking and listening skills.
The review will call for "early systematic, direct teaching of synthetic phonics" to be the first strategy taught to all children learning to read, introduced by the age of five.
It will also focus on the need for some children to have intensive "catch-up support".
Mr Rose is expected to say there is general agreement phonic work is "essential though not sufficient" in learning to read, but that there is also much debate about the best way to do it.
"Despite this positive consensus about the importance of phonic work, there are deeply divided professional views about how phonic work is best taught," he will say.
"The review is therefore centred on judging the best way forward from the standpoint of the learners, that is to say children who are beginner readers and writers."

C-a-t
The final version of the Rose review, expected early next year, will inform the government's redrafting of its literacy strategy, planned for 2007.
In pure synthetic phonics, children learn to read using the sounds of letters rather than the names.
So a letter "D" is said "duh" not "dee". They learn to put the sounds together to make simple words such as "c-a-t".
They also learn blends of certain letter sounds, such as "ch" or "bl".
Only once they have learned all the letter sounds and the blends do they progress to reading books.
The system also helps children to break down unknown words, experts say.
Many schools in England already use phonics, combined with other methods to help children to read, but proponents of synthetic phonics argue it should be followed strictly and not be mixed with other approaches.
In Scotland, schools are already being encouraged to take up synthetic phonics.
The success of a pilot scheme in a school in Clackmannanshire brought widespread attention to the system of teaching.


Patricia Sowter, head teacher of Cuckoo Hall School in Edmonton, north London, has been using a synthetic phonics system called Read Write Inc., developed by Ruth Miskin, for two years.
"It has made a huge difference to standards of reading in particular. We now have a 100% at level four in Sats tests for reading, including children with special needs," she told the BBC News website.
A total of 31% of children at the school have special educational needs, she said.
"Almost half of our children have English as a second language and it helps them because it is a systematic approach to reading, writing and spelling."
Newcomers to the school who do not speak much English are put into "catch-up" programmes and small group work is used to bring children on at their own pace.
The head teacher believes the success of the system is also due to it being followed across the school, by teachers and learning assistants alike.
Story from
BBC

Is it me? It would appear I have always instinctively used 'synthetic phonics' when teaching children to read - I just didn't know it had a snazzy name!
And another question - does anyone actually remember learning to read? I don't, it feels like I've always been able to read....

cq