Monday 18 June 2012

What a crazy world.


Where do you begin to sort out logic from total unmitigated, unacceptable rubbish?
Take the doctors. 50 years ago, they were hard-worked, under-paid but so, so caring. You phoned the doctor and he came in the night. He saved my life at 3 in the morning, when I had peritonitis.
Now they are thinking of going on strike!
We finally got a hospital in Somerset. Glastonbury. We waited twenty years for something that improved the lot of mankind by nothing. We still have to drive 30 miles to A & E in Yeovil if there’s anything wrong because all the money was spent on an elaborate building where old-people could be given long-term care and they can’t afford to staff it with doctors who can do more than put a plaster on.
And, how come in this modern, technological, all-singing, all-dancing age you can’t get to see a doctor? You have to plan your illness. Look at the calendar and decide you will be ill in two weeks’ time when the doctor can see you.
Even an emergency. ‘I’m so sorry but the doctor’s emergencies are all taken and so are his phone-calls. Please try later!

It’s crazy – it’s ridiculous and it shouldn’t happen. In 1901 – perhaps but not in 2012.

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Monday 11 June 2012

A spot of Trouble in my Waterworks



So there I was sitting on the floor with my head under the sink.
The question: what am I doing there? is the wrong question. The answer is plainly obvious, since I am surrounded by the bowels of plumbing: two outlet pipes and a u-bend.
The question: what on earth am I doing there at eleven o'clock at night? is also the wrong question. And, had it been asked at the time, I would have said, it was also somewhat irritating. It is quite obvious what I am doing: I am cleaning the drain.
But the question: do you know how to fit these pieces back together again?
That question - maybe hurtful in its tendency to cast aspersions on my mechanical ability - is entirely relevant to the problem in hand. Bulls eye!
You could continue and ask kindly: But shouldn't you be in bed?  Or: Won't you get cramp sitting on the floor like that?
But however relevant such questions might be when you are in a tight spot (as I was, crouched on my side with my head jammed inside the cupboard under the sink), such perception, however kindly meant, does nothing to resolve the jigsaw puzzle in my lap.
 And however much I lecture myself that I have done this before (several times) and have profited by having clean smelling drains for yet another six months, the pieces fail to jell: for I simply cannot remember!
Was the u-bend under this drain or indeed under that? Have I lost a piece?
I rush outside and examine the spot on the ground, where I had tipped the disgustingly gruesome water. But there are no misplaced pieces of pipe.
So if it is all here in my lap, why does this pipe have three outlets? I'm positive it had only two before I washed it. I scrutinise the pieces. Honest, there really are only two bits of pipe into which it can fit. So how come I also have three washers left over?
And: where the hell did I hang my rubber gloves?
Visualisation of the drainage system produces cramp, my toes curling like up like stale slices of bread, causing me to screech in agony and hang on to my toes, until the spasm has passed. Sadly it fails to produce an image of the piece of pipe on which my rubber gloves had, in fact, hung for the past five years.
 I glance at my watch. One o'clock! I look outside at the peaceful square, neighbours on all sides sleeping soundly, the square cocooned in a haven of blissful sleep.
Nothing for it but to give in. And yet …
'Tomorrow,' I said aloud, 'the moment I awake I will call the plumber and that will cost me at least a hundred pounds.'
It is amazing how the threat of unwanted expenditure clarifies an aging mind. Instantly the pieces made sense, the long white tubes clipping neatly together to form two drains, one horizontal bar (on which my rubber gloves hang), and a u-bend, each piece clean and sweet-smelling and designed to carry, without leaking, waste water into the municipal drain. 
One last job to be done: I stick my head back under the sink, working my way along each pipe inch by inch, trying to memorise where each piece lives in relation to the next.
'Well' I said, glancing at my watch and a silently sleeping square. 'At least I've saved myself a ton of money.'

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