There's nothing worse than forgetting to eat your apple.
A blog devoted to the use of "there's nothing worse than...." when, of course, there are a million worse things in the world. Also, there are one million people that are not aware that there is nothing worse than......
Monday, March 25, 2013
...forgetting to eat your apple.
There's nothing worse than forgetting to eat your apple.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
... wandering in the temple of immensity
Uncommon idioms are always lurking in the shadows and waiting to trip us up. A student on a course I was teaching last week asked me about the idiom "hunting the dog". I hadn't heard it before and it was impossible to make anything more than a feeble guess at the meaning. The idiom "not pulling a full load" used to trouble me, as did "holding your/my/his/her/our/their own". Anyway, it seems to me about time I started to make up my own idioms and try to get them introduced into regular use. From the vocabulary of playing cards "flush the aces" sounds goods. Marketing manager to sales manager. "I don't know what you think, but I think we need to flush the aces on this one." "Reverse the suits" is a bit weaker, but has inherent residual qualities. From sport, "up for a googly", "in sight of the boundary", "securing the blocks" and "swimming with one ear out of the water" are usable In politics, "voting with his left leg" and "preemptive presidential precision" could take seed. Anyway, perhaps it is a waste of space, and I am just treading water whilst wandering in the temple of immensity, awaiting arrival of the flame of destiny or the march of the frozen wastelands.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
... the only person unable to get into a commuter train.
There's nothing worse than being the only person unable to get into a commuter train.
The way into the main city From terminal 1 at Narita International Airport is by one of those really snazzy high speed railways. You go down three levels by escalator, and up again two. To take the train you naturally assume that you need to purchase a ticket. Except in uber efficient Tokyo they've long since abandoned actual train tickets and phased over to universal smart cards, which are used everywhere from the train network to 7-11's. After purchasing your Sunjiko smart card from a fortress-like enclosure, you spend a few long seconds figuring out how to wave it across a sensor on your way to the high speed train platform. Then, when the train arrives, you are confronted with the problem of how to make the door open so you can get on the train. Seasoned Tokyo commuters line up behind you silently and politely seething until you've finally worked it out - you have to locate a cleverly disguised button and gently press it.
The way into the main city From terminal 1 at Narita International Airport is by one of those really snazzy high speed railways. You go down three levels by escalator, and up again two. To take the train you naturally assume that you need to purchase a ticket. Except in uber efficient Tokyo they've long since abandoned actual train tickets and phased over to universal smart cards, which are used everywhere from the train network to 7-11's. After purchasing your Sunjiko smart card from a fortress-like enclosure, you spend a few long seconds figuring out how to wave it across a sensor on your way to the high speed train platform. Then, when the train arrives, you are confronted with the problem of how to make the door open so you can get on the train. Seasoned Tokyo commuters line up behind you silently and politely seething until you've finally worked it out - you have to locate a cleverly disguised button and gently press it.
Contributed by Mickey Gidwani
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
....not having access to YouTube
Why is there's nothing worse than not having access to YouTube?
Is YouTube the most incredible phenomenon of the 21st Century? Some politicians want to control it, after all, why would they want the world to see an event actually as it happened, and filmed by a person actually involved? Why can't everyone understand that in the 21st-century people can analyze situations themselves and come to their own conclusions? Why did we allow the political awareness of the 60's and early 70's to die?
Why is there no picture in this blog entry? Why am I constantly using rhetorical questions?
Monday, February 4, 2013
....a dog that won't go for a walk
There's nothing worse than a dog that won't go for a walk.
We have a King Charles Cavalier spaniel, called Charlie. He snores very loudly when he sleeps. This is manageable although troublesome, however the "I'm not that sort of dog that you can take for a long walk" attitude is not so easy to cope with. The dog we had previously, Sockie, before she became ill, could definitely be classified as a good walker. She knew Sharjah streets better than we did. Before Sockie, Duchess liked nothing more than a long but gentle stroll around the Green Valley housing compound in Dammam, often on her own. Charlie likes to go out, but regards 50 metres as being his limit, and will then stand still or turn back home. We have various ideas about how to develop him into a marathon walker, but are unlikely to implement then. We go for a walk, he stays at home, this is the new order.
.....incorrect use of a defining clause
Mr Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London recently said in a speech announcing a project to help underachievers in government-funded schools
“There is nothing worse than seeing pupils full of potential slowly drifting into apathy."
We can understand from this that it is acceptable for the pupils that are not full of potential to drift into apathy. I don't think he meant this. I think he was just guilty of sloppy grammar. If he wanted to portray himself as the saver of potentially pathetic juvenile souls he should have used the non-defining clause “There is nothing worse than seeing pupils, who are all full of potential, slowly drifting into apathy." (ps - I don't actually know what drifting into apathy means, but it sounds like something you don't want to happen to young people). Using a non-defining clause in a sentence when speaking is a bit tricky, but the British politician can generally pull it off. However, with right-wing politicians, even when they use simple and compound sentences, it's not always clear what they mean when they talk about publicly-funded education. Most of them, like Boris Johnson, went to private schools, so only have second-hand information about the state system, fed to them by assistants who themselves went to private school. Still, Boris Johnson is regarded as a jolly decent fellow so lets hope that he can get all those slackers to shape up and learn how to conjugate their verbs.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
......finding out that it's you that doesn't get the point.
I went to see the Gold Pavilion Temple in Kyoto and was surprised how well it had weathered the passage of time since it was first built in the fourteenth century. I was then told it hadn't weathered well at all, and had been burned to the ground twice, quite recently.
"So this isn't the original building?" I asked my Japanese guide.
"Yes, of course it is," he insisted.
"But it's been burned down?"
"Yes."
"Twice."
"Many times."
"And rebuilt."
"But of course. It was burned down. The latest technology was used to ensure it wouldn't burn down again."
"So how can it be the same building?"
"It is always the same building."
I had to admit to myself that this was in fact a perfectly rational point of view, it merely started from an unexpected premise. The idea of the building, the intention of it, its design, are all immutable and are the essence of the building. The intention of the original builders is what survives. The wood of which the design is constructed decays and is replaced when necessary. To be overly concerned with original materials, which are merely sentimental souvenirs of the past, is to fail to see the living building itself. It wasn't an entirely comfortable viewpoint for me because it fought against my basic Western assumptions, but I did finally see the point. However, there's nothing worse than finding out that it's you that doesn't get the point.
"So this isn't the original building?" I asked my Japanese guide.
"Yes, of course it is," he insisted.
"But it's been burned down?"
"Yes."
"Twice."
"Many times."
"And rebuilt."
"Of course. It is an important and historic building."
"With completely new materials.""But of course. It was burned down. The latest technology was used to ensure it wouldn't burn down again."
"So how can it be the same building?"
"It is always the same building."
I had to admit to myself that this was in fact a perfectly rational point of view, it merely started from an unexpected premise. The idea of the building, the intention of it, its design, are all immutable and are the essence of the building. The intention of the original builders is what survives. The wood of which the design is constructed decays and is replaced when necessary. To be overly concerned with original materials, which are merely sentimental souvenirs of the past, is to fail to see the living building itself. It wasn't an entirely comfortable viewpoint for me because it fought against my basic Western assumptions, but I did finally see the point. However, there's nothing worse than finding out that it's you that doesn't get the point.
Bloggers Note. This entry was written by Mickey Gidwani.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
... a leather waistcoat.
There is nothing worse than a leather waistcoat.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
...having a BBQ on the beach
My
wife
and
I live
in
a
very
pleasant
location
within
Sharjah.
Sharjah
is
not
the
destination
of
choice
for
many
people,
even
those
that
live
here,
but
it
does
have
some
nicer
areas,
one
of
them
being
where
we
rent
our
apartment.
We
live
on
Khalid
Lagoon,
with
Al
Khan
lagoon
on
the
other
side,
and,
compared
to
the
rest
of
Sharjah,
not
so
much
traffic
and
human
kind.
In
fact,
there
is
a
lot
of
sand and a large grassy area.
However,
this
relative
peace
and
quiet
means
that
people
with
only
one
discernible
aim
in
mind,
to
burn
fresh
meat
to
a
cinder,
come
to
the
beaches
in
big
numbers
in
the
evening
and
the
weekend.
Obviously
there
are
many
signs
on
the
beach
saying
that
barbecuing
is
prohibited,
but
this
is
one
of
those
local
regulations
that
is
never
enforced.
We
like
to
walk
there,
but
it
is
impossible
to
do
so
without
a
full
face
gas
mask
and
night
vision
goggles
due
to
the
waves
of
impenetrable
choking
blue-black
smoke
and
the
acrid
smell
that clings to the
atmosphere.
I
am
amazed
that
barbecuers
can
even
sit
amongst
it,
let
alone
eat.
When
we
do
venture
in
that
direction
we
are
inevitably
driven
back
into
our
apartment,
which
thankfully
is
35
floors
up.
The
smoke
doesn't
reach
that
height,
yet.
... making the wrong choice when using singular or plural
Whether or not to make a noun singular or plural is definitely problematic in the English language. In my previous post, in deference to the Four Tops and for the sake of historical accuracy, the plural of shadow has been used. However, love, as an idea, cannot be counted, so how is it possible for love to have more than one shadow? Similarly, with death. Some people think that we spend our life walking through the valley of the shadow of death. Note that this is only one shadow and we don't know if it is big or small. Are the roads ahead difficult, or is the road ahead difficult? I am thinking again about love, which can, and frequently does, cast a shadow over everyday existence. One shadow might be bearable, but when it casts many shadows then you are indeed in a very dark place.
... standing in the shadows of love
You will be preparing yourself for the heartaches to come. They might come today or tomorrow. You will want to run away but you know the heartaches will follow you. You need love because without love it is the beginning of the end. You have no reasons for living. All the love you have given has been thrown away. You were there when you were needed, you treated the other person well, but now you find yourself rejected and alone. You are, in fact, destined to be all alone for the rest of your life, with misery your only company. What caused all of this? You really don't know why you have been treated in this way. You are trying not to cry out loud because crying isn't going to help any more. The one thing you are sure about is that from today, or perhaps tomorrow, you've got nothing but loneliness and misery for the rest of your life.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
.. a fading memory
There's nothing worse than a fading memory.
I kept hearing a snippet of music on the radio in an advert. I knew I had listened to the complete track in my youth many times. I just couldn't remember where the snippet came from. Google is great, but one thing it doesn't do is allow you to submit a few notes of music and find the track that it came from, I don't think. Suddenly, as if I had been through one of those back-to-your-childhood hypnotherapy sessions, I remembered it. Well actually I remembered Jeff Love, the band leader. It wasn't him, but then Google somehow got me to Jeff Wayne, via Jeff Beck and then Jeff Lynne. The issue now for me is to decide whether this is a an old memory rediscovered and soon to be discarded or a new memory just put into my brain cells. If it is old, which is possible, then I need to record it somewhere so that it doesn't become a cob-webbed relic in some unused area of my brain. The complete track is The Eve of the War, from War of the Worlds, by Jeff Wayne, including the wonderful narration by Richard Burton.
It seems, in the past few months, that War of the Worlds has become a media and entertainment industry talking point again, perhaps due to the anticipated catastrophe in December that didn't happen. Living in Sharjah, these things often pass by unnoticed, which might have benefits - there's no danger of remembering and forgetting it.
Technology note: The link to War of the Worlds by Jeff Wayne doesn't work on Ipad or Iphone. I thought I could fix it, but it has to use a flash player, so no go.
I kept hearing a snippet of music on the radio in an advert. I knew I had listened to the complete track in my youth many times. I just couldn't remember where the snippet came from. Google is great, but one thing it doesn't do is allow you to submit a few notes of music and find the track that it came from, I don't think. Suddenly, as if I had been through one of those back-to-your-childhood hypnotherapy sessions, I remembered it. Well actually I remembered Jeff Love, the band leader. It wasn't him, but then Google somehow got me to Jeff Wayne, via Jeff Beck and then Jeff Lynne. The issue now for me is to decide whether this is a an old memory rediscovered and soon to be discarded or a new memory just put into my brain cells. If it is old, which is possible, then I need to record it somewhere so that it doesn't become a cob-webbed relic in some unused area of my brain. The complete track is The Eve of the War, from War of the Worlds, by Jeff Wayne, including the wonderful narration by Richard Burton.
Found at bee mp3 search engine
|
It seems, in the past few months, that War of the Worlds has become a media and entertainment industry talking point again, perhaps due to the anticipated catastrophe in December that didn't happen. Living in Sharjah, these things often pass by unnoticed, which might have benefits - there's no danger of remembering and forgetting it.
Technology note: The link to War of the Worlds by Jeff Wayne doesn't work on Ipad or Iphone. I thought I could fix it, but it has to use a flash player, so no go.
Saturday, January 5, 2013
... being in the wrong idiom.
The other day I was more than a little
disoriented. I could have been in the soup or perhaps I was in hot
water. My wife suggested that I might be up the creek without
a paddle, whereas my friend was sure I was in a spot of bother, although I didn't agree with him. When
I checked on Bing maps it suggested I was up ship (polite p=t)
street. I was pretty sure that I wasn't riding a horse with no name
or had my head in the clouds. I don't think, either, that I was on
my last legs and was definitely nowhere near the last knockings and
was not out for the count. Perhaps I was just under the weather. Was
I close to something - perhaps the edge, the bone, the wire or even
the call? No definitely not. I was in something. If this feeling
comes back I might find myself jumping ship and heading towards the
murky depths.
..finding a thrupenny bit in your Christmas pudding
There's nothing worse than finding a
thrupenny bit in your Christmas pudding.
Pronunciation note. Thr- oo - penny.
Say the u like the oo in book or look.
Some people might say there's nothing
worse than Christmas pudding, other that there's nothing worse than the complete Christmas dinner. Finding a thrupenny bit in your mouth in the middle of eating that great British delicacy on Christmas day, having already consumed enough
calories for the next five days, can never be regarded as a good thing. So this is
what has happened. Mum has put a thrupenny bit in the pudding during
the mixing stage and cooked the pudding with it inside. Where did she get it from? It hasn't been legal
tender in the UK since 1971. Did she have a collection of old coins
she had kept from childhood? Probably. Did she properly sterilise
the thrupenny bit before putting it in the pudding mix? Probably
not. After being the chosen one who found the coin, it must, of course, be given back to Mum for use again next year. The thrupenny bit in question, I'm sure, had an interesting tale to tell, up
to that point in time. All the pockets and purses it had been in doesn't bear thinking about. The places where it had changed hands
are even more intriguing. Perhaps the young soon-to-be Queen Elizabeth used it
to buy a bag of boiled sweets from her local corner shop. Maybe Bobby
Moore used it to buy three penny-worth of chips after coming out of
Upton Park on a cold Saturday evening having just played a blinder against
Liverpool. However, this year, it ended up being swilled around in someone's mouth, and
next year - same thing. Tradition is a wonderful thing.
Friday, December 21, 2012
.....not having in-carriage announcements
Today I was in a bit of a dream,
standing, as always, in the Dubai Metro Green Line train on the way
from Union Station (Al Etihad) to Stadium Station (Al Stad). In fact, if I had imagined myself to be in a seat I would have been in an actual dream. Where
was I? What day was it? Was it winter or spring? I didn't know, but it didn't matter because there would be a
more than helpful in-carriage announcement bringing me back to reality. I spent the first 30 years of my life
travelling the London Underground when they only had announcements on the platform. Now, I think that there is nothing worse than not having the friendly Metro announcer
telling me in Arabic and English when it's my time to get off.
Monday, December 17, 2012
..red underpants
There's nothing worse than red underpants.
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
..being caught in a traffic jam in Sharjah
There's nothing worse than being caught in a traffic jam in Sharjah. People, in Sharjah, are in their cars. There's no metro or effective bus service. They need to go somewhere. They can't – they are caught in a solid
wall of slow-moving or stationary traffic. No car dare leave more
than a 10 cm gap between itself and the car in front. Three lanes go to four then back to three. Is there a possibility of turning into a side street and taking
another route? Yes, but then the traffic on that route will also
be at a stand still. Will a bit of multiple lane-swapping help?
Many are not good at it, so don't do it, but some, particularly the
smart dark blue BMW's and white Mercedes are – but then they only
manage to move up a few places. Perhaps now is the time to listen to
the news broadcast on the radio. Okay, you've done that, now what?
Listen to a CD, but then you've heard it 50 times before. Make a
phone call – illegal, but all the Landcruisers do it, now what?
Contemplate life, but don't go into a dream and take your eyes off
the fender of the car in front or you will certainly bump into him.
Is there a light at the end of the tunnel? If you are heading towards
Dubai, yes, because there the traffic moves along at an acceptable
pace.
Monday, December 10, 2012
..speaking in cockney rhyming slang.
There's nothing worse than speaking in cockney rhyming slang.
So, I was in a bit of two and eight this morning as I couldn't get into work. The trouble and strife had already left for the smoke in her jam jar and mine was under the weather. I had fallen down the apples and pears last night and hurt my Harper Lee a little, so I wasn't happy about taking Shank's pony to the station to get the train. I decided to get on the dog and bone to the John Moss. When I told him I was really Jack and Jill I had the feeling that he knew I was telling a pork pie, well I couldn't tell him I didn't have a set of wheels. Anyway, with nothing better to do, I decided to have a Jimmy Riddle and go back to Uncle Ned.
So, I was in a bit of two and eight this morning as I couldn't get into work. The trouble and strife had already left for the smoke in her jam jar and mine was under the weather. I had fallen down the apples and pears last night and hurt my Harper Lee a little, so I wasn't happy about taking Shank's pony to the station to get the train. I decided to get on the dog and bone to the John Moss. When I told him I was really Jack and Jill I had the feeling that he knew I was telling a pork pie, well I couldn't tell him I didn't have a set of wheels. Anyway, with nothing better to do, I decided to have a Jimmy Riddle and go back to Uncle Ned.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
.. being caught on the street in the monsoon in Mumbai
There's nothing worse than being caught on the street in the monsoon in Mumbai. Some cities, like London and Hong Kong,
function as normal in heavy rain, but not Mumbai. When the rains
(monsoon) come in India it is, of course, a good thing. The temperature drops.
The air freshens up. Farmers are happy. The reservoirs get filled. The PM's office makes an
eagerly awaited statement about the state of the monsoon. At
Bandstand in Bandra young people have fun in the rain. Families splash about and take pictures of themselves on Worli seafront. So why should
it be so awful being caught out in the heavy rains in Mumbai? Instant
mini-floods and maxi-floods are more than inconvenient, every taxi and auto being
full puts you into a feeling of despair, buses staying in the depot
is disconcerting, flooded railway tracks don't bode well for the
immediate future, getting into a train or bus packed with wet people
is to be avoided, being infected with the dengue virus is as bad as
it sounds, dead rats floating by can spoil your day, falling into a
hidden hole in the road will have consequences. Anyway, in Mumbai,
more than anywhere else in the world, life goes on, so why does
anything need to change.
.. missing the last bus home.
..listening to another Middle East conspiracy theory
There's nothing worse than listening to another Middle East conspiracy theory.
Personally, I like to think that in the Middle East everything, politically, is what it seems, I have no reason to be cynical, but some outside commentators are.
Personally, I like to think that in the Middle East everything, politically, is what it seems, I have no reason to be cynical, but some outside commentators are.
The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 was
encouraged by the US government to.... well, something to do with oil
and control of the Middle East. The US invasion of Iraq was something to
do with WMI, and oil and gas supply from the Middle East. Morsi and the Muslim
Brotherhood won the election due to a US government plot to put an
authoritarian leader in place, because of ….... something to do
with oil and/or control of the Middle East. The continuing tragedy of
Syria was engineered by US oil baron-funded right-wing groups as a
way of destroying the power of Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas, because
of..... something to do with Israel, oil and control of the Middle
East. Better men and women than me subscribe to these views. I do not.
..being late for an interview.
There's nothing worse than being late for an interview.
Yesterday I was travelling in the Dubai Metro from Union Station to GGICO (pronounced jajeeko) Station. The metro is punctual, modern, quiet, clean and civilised, however it's very difficult to get a seat. So I was standing holding the central support rail along with two other people and couldn't help but overhear the conversation between these smart young things.
Yesterday I was travelling in the Dubai Metro from Union Station to GGICO (pronounced jajeeko) Station. The metro is punctual, modern, quiet, clean and civilised, however it's very difficult to get a seat. So I was standing holding the central support rail along with two other people and couldn't help but overhear the conversation between these smart young things.
- Did you get the job?
- No, I was late for the interview -
they only asked me a few questions then told me they would notify me
by email.
It was my inclination, at this point,
to interject with the observation that there's nothing worse than
being late for an interview. I didn't, I think they wouldn't have
liked me joining in - they didn't seem the type. What if this bright
young man had all the attributes required for this job and he didn't
get it because of time-keeping? That would be a tragedy. How late
was he? Ten minutes, an hour? Did he phone in to say he would be
late? Was there a good reason why he was late? Unfortunately, my
questions remained unanswered - the doors opened for GGICO and I left
the train.
..eyebrows that meet in the middle.
There's nothing worse than eyebrows
that meet in the middle. In my youth, in East London, it was a
well-known fact that adolescent boys that had eyebrows that met in
the middle would grow up to be criminals. Mothers would tell you "stay away from the boy in the corner house - his eyebrows meet." As a thirteen year-old,
any sign of the eyebrows being joined by adolescent hair had to be
dealt with using dad's razor, and then it became a twice weekly
lifelong job keeping it away. I suppose tweezers would have been
better, but that was a bit of a girls thing - boys don't
really have the skill set to use a pair of tweezers. If you need
proof of the eyebrows theory for men, just look at old Bill Sykes. Obviously, and this doesn't really need saying, girls with joined eyebrows will never get married.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
..wet socks
There's nothing worse than wet socks. You are in town when suddenly you step into a deep puddle. The water splashes up your leg and funnels down into your socks. What can you do? Taking off your shoes and socks and wringing out your socks in the middle of the pavement is simply not possible. Even if you could hide in an alleyway and do it, you would not be able to dry then sufficiently. If you are out with company, saying that you have to go home to change your socks is on the plus side of pathetic. If you are out alone, the time wasted going home and returning doesn't seem to equate with putting up with wet socks. However, be warned, my grandmother was quite definitive on the health dangers of wearing wet socks - chillblains, athlete's foot, bunions, corns, hard skin, in-growing toenails - at least one would afflict you for the foreseeable future.
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