Gay Nazi Sex Vicar in Schoolgirl Knickers Vice Disco Lawnmower Shock!

North and South

  Sat 12th April 2025

About a month ago, my friend Helen, who had lived in Norway for many years, succumbed to the pancreatic cancer with which she was diagnosed last year. I went to Lancaster to see Kitty and Wendy, who knew her before I did, to raise a glass or two in Helen's memory.

Memory: they recalled adventures we'd had together in much greater detail than I could remember, or could remember at all. I was shown a photograph of me and Helen in a strangely contorted drunken pose in a London hotel room, the circumstances of which I recall nothing.

Wendy surprised me by referring to the years when she imposed belittling conditions on meeting me. It had to be done secretly, and I had to leave her house before her estranged boyfriend, who lived with his parents, arrived to do something connected with the childcare. I was made to leave by the back door, in case he turned up early and saw me. Quite why I was subject to such draconian invisibility is still a mystery to me.

"I should have stood up for you a bit more," she said. I said nothing, but was thinking "you fucking well should have! Making me skirt round another man's insecurity? Thanks!" It was a relief, years later, to have her recognise how unfair that was on me.


From Lancaster, I went an hour or so on the train to where Trina lives. We went out dancing at an annual soul and house music do which has finally re-emerged after The Interruption. After the first, rather irritating rounds of being herded together for other people's social media, it developed into a good night. Quite flirty. By doing nothing at all, just dancing, I attracted the attention of a good-looking woman in a purple thigh-length dress, who inched closer tune by tune, at least during the times Trina wasn't on the dancefloor.


But the real attraction was Trina. I have two central difficulties with her. One is, I find her attractive, both in an everyday way, but also in a way that can slide into a physical attraction given the right amount to drink circumstances. Second, she's witty, without any of the strained, intellectual taint that often comes with people who are good with words. She makes me laugh, and we all know what that can lead to.

So how do I handle this, given that I've a girlfriend down here? I lie. I told Trina that Mel and I have drifted into friendship, that it's been mutually accepted and that we're being sensible adults about it.

Although there are signs that that state of affairs might be the case in the future, and it's true that I've lost interest in our sporadic sex, we still carry on like boyfriend and girlfriend. It's a selfish way of managing two women, but recognising that I'm doing something morally wrong is rarely enough to make me stop doing it.


Work grinds relentlessly on, like a white noise you can't switch off. I'm in the middle of eight days straight now. It's been five weeks now since I applied to go down to two days a week. On Thursday I was promised a meeting to discuss it "shortly." What's there to discuss? Either they agree to it or they don't.

2 comments »

I am disturbed by a ventilation unit

  Sat 5th April 2025

Me and Mel went for a holiday in Funchal, where me and Kirsty went as English teachers thirty years ago. The air was just as warm and balmy as I remember it, but there were far more tourists than then, most of whom, like us, were contributing to making long-term rentals difficult to obtain for the locals.

One of our chosen bars had this jack the lad waiter, whose performance on the street in trying to get people into his place was an entertainment. One afternoon, a group of young women in bridesmaid's hair and clothes walked past. "Oh la la, I've gone to heaven," he said, with sweeping, appreciative gestures of his arms and eyes. I also liked him because he congratulated me on my Portuguese when I asked him for a spoon so that Mel could fish out the fruit from her sangria. "Fala muito bem Português," he said, and I felt all radiant and manly in front of Mel.

We took a bus tour over the mountains, to a village on the north coast where there are some extant examples of the traditional A-shaped houses that were once common on Madeira. At Pico do Arreiro, 1800m up, there's a souvenir shop and a toilet policed by a black man who has the unenviable job of standing outside one of the coldest and windiest toilets on the island to collect a Euro from anyone who needed them. We had the best seats in the minibus, at the front. The driver delivered the tour in German and English in a calming, slow voice.

Our flat had this loud whirring, humming noise which started at 10am and didn't go off until 11pm. I texted the landlord about it. He said it was the ventilation shaft from the restaurant next door. "There's nothing I can do." Apart from not tell anyone about it in advance, I suppose.

By day four it was driving me nuts, and I booked us in to a new place for two days' respite before we went back for the last day. When we arrived there, it was a bleak ex-hotel turned into an airbnb without the promised kitchenette. After assuring Mel there are little bars everywhere in Funchal, I realised I'd chosen the single suburb in which are none. We went to the shop and got a bottle of wine. There was no corkscrew in our room, and I snapped the front door key off while using the key as a substitute.

"We haven't had sex once," she said, when we got back. "Do you still fancy me?" I hid behind my drink, laughing it off.

4 comments »

You can tell a woman from her haircut

  Sat 15th March 2025

For over two years now, it has been the custom of every gateline assistant and every train guard I have met in the course of my working day, to allow me through the barriers at my station, and travel free on the train, so that I can go to work.

Arriving back at the station after a day's work, the barrier assistant, as ever, greeted me and allowed me though the gate. I was shocked when a few seconds later, I was apprehended by two revenue protection officers, one of whom trained her body camera and voice recorder on me.

"Excuse me. Did you have a ticket for your journey today?" "No." "Why not?"

I explained that it has always been the custom for the barrier staff to allow me travel on the railway so that I can go to my job on the railway. This didn't impress them, and they proceeded with the police-style warning about anything I may say may be used in evidence, and how it may harm my defence if I remain silent. All this taking place in public, on the concourse of a busy station at 4pm, curious passengers and staff gawping at me.

She asked me several more questions, about how many times this has happened, the purpose of my journey, its origin and destination, and so on. The most startling part of the grilling was when she said "it's looby, isn't it? I remember you from when you worked with us." That was seven years ago.

Eventually I was released with a little card, having given my assurances that I will deal with any forthcoming correspondence promptly. It rattled me, but I felt worse for the barrier staff, who I might have inadvertently got into trouble. I was compelled to visit the pub outside the station in order to recover my composure.

At Mel's that night, I slept in fits and starts, before getting up at 3am to ring in sick.

Three days later I went to face the music. As usual, a "good morning" from the barrier staff, and the gates were opened for me. "Actually, I've had a bit of a ticking off from Maeve," I said. "What about?" "About just going through the barriers. I've got to get tickets now." "Oh," he said.

That was twelve days ago. Since then, the old practices have resumed, except that I have started buying a £1.50 ticket to and from the next station just in case I am challenged again. It was a thoroughly unpleasant experience, and I only wish they'd hurry up and tell me how many lashes I am to receive. It's sad that the railway hosts these young outliers like Maeve, who, ignoring established, if uncodified, custom of seeing us all as fellow colleagues in a common endeavour, relish acting as zealots, interpreting the corporate creed in its most conservative interpretation. These women who have their hair cut in a ski-slope from their ears down to just below the napes of their necks are always trouble.


And then a big silver lining appeared. For reasons I dont quite understand, I've been awarded housing benefit, which will cover all but £4.63 of my rent. About a month ago I speculatively applied for HB and a reduction in my Council Tax, assembling a sheaf of documents -- bank statements, Universal Credit award letters, and my tenancy agreement (they wanted all seventeen pages of it) -- for inspection by the council.

I was astonished when, last week, I received a "Notification of Housing Benefit Award". I scrutinised it again and again over the following days, looking for a way I might have misinterpreted the decision; but even raked with the finest-toothed comb, it contained only the liberating news that I am to pay nothing more than the price of a pint a month to live in this flat.

9 comments »

Damsels

  Sun 23rd February 2025

Whilst Mel was abroad for a week I had a long weekend with Trina. I told Mel I was going to Lancaster to see Kirsty and my youngest. Once you start lying like this, it indicates a sense of guilty, but not of sufficient an intensity to stop me doing what I'm feeling guilty about.

We had a hedonistic weekend of eating and drinking. In a Spanish restaurant, I asked her why there was a sprout in her negroni, thinking that perhaps this was some sort of Ibero-Anglo avant-garde fusion cuisine innovation that had passed me by. It was the olive.

In the cathedral, we queued up to get in but baulked at the "suggested voluntary donation" of £5 to get in, with a cash desk it would have taken quite a bit of chutzpah to walk past. Why not just say it's £5 to get in?

However, I wasn't put off by the cost of the most expensive beer I've ever purchased: £11.75 for 33cl. But it was for a gueuze, (made only using naturally-occurring airborne yeast) and you rarely see them outside of their Belgian home. Trina said it tasted like lemon juice. We got chatting to these jolly middle-aged men who asked to share our table, who were off to see a band with the unappealing name of The Viagra Boys.


Midnight, and I'm walking home from the station after work. A thirtysomething woman trailing a small suitcase, stops me and asks me the way to the supermarket. "Well, er... it's a bit late, obviously that one down there is closed. There's the 24-hour one up there..." and as I turned to point the way, I saw a tall man on the corner quickly look away, feigning interest in the eaves of a block of flats. Perhaps he was an architectural critic who could only do his research at night, but I doubt it; finally the penny dropped.

"Oh, I see. Are you OK, would you like me to walk with you for a bit?" She said yes and, giving what I hoped would be understood as a "got you sussed pal" look at our student of seventies architecture, I walked with her back towards the station. She said that she was staying in a nearby hotel, but that she wouldn't have the money till half past twelve. I did wonder whether it was now a scam, but we got to the foyer of the hotel, and as I chatted to the Somali security guard ("is she drunk?"), I saw her check in and the receptionist tell her that she could sit in the foyer for a while. I bade her goodnight and wished her a good stay in Bristol.

It's repellent that a woman can't be left alone to walk at night to her hotel. Women as prey. I was glad to have helped her, but angry and very saddened that I had to.


A car tries to slalom its way through one of those half-hearted single lane level crossings near Ludlow. Flips over, blocks the tracks; all trains stopped at Shrewsbury.

I can get home via Birmingham. Taking my repose in the pub in New Street as I wait for the train, this arrestingly attractive South Asian woman walks up to the bar. Late thirties? Black blouse, short-ish straight black skirt, black calf-length boots, and the luxuriant, flowing black hair with which the Pakistanis and Indians are often blessed. The man the other side of me offers to help her take her drinks to her table. A second too late for me. You fucking idiot. Instead of craftily scanning her, why didn't you offer to help?

He comes back. "Are you with that woman?" "No, I just gave her a hand." "She's gorgeous isn't she?" but I don't think he wanted to collude.

I was incapable of letting the matter rest. I went up to them, making it clear that I was only stopping as I was leaving, and said "you look absolutely gorgeous." "She does, doesn't she?" said her friend, and I felt a bit bad about not having considered her friend's feelings.

"Well, thank you!" she said, and that was that. Just for once, I got the timing, the tone and the duration right.

6 comments »

Girls and high winds

  Thu 30th January 2025

On the subtitles on the BBC there was a warning of "girls and strong winds" in northern England. Both featured prominently in my weekend.

Ignoring, to my cost, the advice not to attempt to travel north of York, I went to Newcastle for yet another assessment morning and interview for a job. I'm losing count of them now. The plan was to come back to Bristol on Friday afternoon, then on Saturday it was over to Lewes for a family conflab about improving my grandparents' grave.

The storm hit and my options started narrowing. There were no trains on Friday going to anywhere where I knew someone, so I booked back in to the hotel I'd stayed in on Thursday. It turned out to be an enjoyable, but very expensive, unscheduled stay.

On Thursday afternoon I had was nattering to a couple of railwaymen, one from Liverpool, the other from Manchester. The Manc went to the loo and the Scouser said "I'm starting to think he's one of these right-wing working class people. I'm alright Jack." In the evening I ended up sitting with these two women, once of whom was pleasingly touchy-feely; they both kissed me when it was time to go.

The trains started creaking back into action later the following day. I went for a pub breakfast and was delighted to be joined at the adjacent table by this gorgeous group of Geordie lasses dolled up for Burns Night, cleavage and legs all over the place, starting the day with Prosecco at 9.30am.

I managed to get a seat on a very crowded train. There was a man opposite, earbuds plugged in, reading a book subtitled "why you are depressed and how to find hope." Poor lad. The middle classes are so fucked up.

I shared my table with some three young blokes on their way to support Burton Albion at Derby. There was also a young girl and her gran on their way to see a musical in London. There's so much to enjoy about other people if you open yourself to it.


I arrived in Lewes. I'd reserved a table in a pub for the eight of us. I got there to be told that my mum and auntie weren't happy because they said they couldn't hear each other "and it's pizza." The pub had turned off the music in our room and had made sure that my mum and auntie had the seats by the fire. But no, after my brother driving a round trip of six hundred miles to collect my mum, and me being on a train for over six hours, they wanted to go to my auntie's house in Brighton instead.

I had two hours before my train back to Bristol, and had chosen the pub partly because it was a couple of minutes walk from the station. By the time we'd faffed about with arranging to go to a Brighton suburb, I'd have had to set off home again. I thought it was unreasonable of my mum and auntie to start altering the plans after such efforts, especially on the part of my brother. I went to see the landlord to apologise for cancelling the reservation.

I said I couldn't (well, wouldn't) accompany them, made my farewells, then sat feeling very irritated and wound up in a different pub before catching the train home. I got home at half past midnight, feeling the weekend had soured at its end.

I feel very bad about upsetting my mother, and have left a message on her phone this morning, but I also think it was a little selfish of them. If they weren't happy with meeting in the pub the least they could have done was to inform me beforehand. Or they could have just put up with it for an hour-and-a-half.


Yesterday I found out that I had been unsuccessful at the interview. I've asked for any feedback, but they usually simply ignore the email. A couple of hours later, I was informed that I'd also failed the interview back in December for the job in Liverpool.

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looby, n.; pl. loobies. A lout; an awkward, stupid, clownish person


M / 60 / Bristol, "the most beautiful, interesting and distinguished city in England" -- John Betjeman [1961, source eludes me].

"Looby is a left-wing intellectual who is obsessed with a) women's clothes and b) tits." -- Joy of Bex.

WLTM literate woman, 40-65. Must have nice tits, a PhD, and an mdma factory in the shed, although the first on its own will do in the short term.


There are plenty of bastards who drink moderately. Of course, I don't consider them to be people. They are not our comrades.
Sergei Korovin, quoted in Pavel Krusanov, The Blue Book of the Alcoholic

I am here to change my life. I am here to force myself to change my life.
Chinese man I met during Freshers Week at Lancaster University, 2008

The more democratised art becomes, the more we recognise in it our own mediocrity.
James Meek

Tell me, why is it that even when we are enjoying music, for instance, or a beautiful evening, or a conversation in agreeable company, it all seems no more than a hint of some infinite felicity existing apart somewhere, rather than actual happiness – such, I mean, as we ourselves can really possess?
Turgenev, Fathers and Sons

I hate the iPod; I hate the idea that music is such a personal thing that you can just stick some earplugs in your ears and have an experience with music. Music is a social phenomenon.
Jeremy Wagner

La vie poetique has its pleasures, and readings--ideally a long way from home--are one of them. I can pretend to be George Szirtes.
George Szirtes

Using words well is a social virtue. Use 'fortuitous' once more to mean 'fortunate' and you move an English word another step towards the dustbin. If your mistake took hold, no-one who valued clarity would be able to use the word again.
John Whale

One good thing about being a Marxist is that you don't have to pretend to like work.
Terry Eagleton, What Is A Novel?, Lancaster University, 1 Feb 2010

The working man is a fucking loser.
Mick, The Golden Lion, Lancaster, 21 Mar 2011

The Comfort of Strangers

23.1.16: Big clearout of the defunct and dormant and dull
16.1.19: Further pruning

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