Monday 24 June 2013

Liverpool vs Leicester

It's not obvious from any angle but I'm a bit of a closet art lover.  Mainly I'm enthralled by the Italian Renaissance artists who are spectacularly hung in the Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery.  The back-stories fascinate me; such as Michaelangelo and his dog-skin trousers or Piero di Cosimo who borrowed models from the local morgue.  But then I love a bit of modernism too, so you can imagine my unfettered delight when Job 2.1 announced a spring outing to Liverpool.  My thoughts immediately gravitated to the former City of Culture, the Beatles, Albert Dock and a chance to checkout the Marc Chagall exhibit at Tate Liverpool.

Secured in the epicentre of England, you can stick a pin in any map and find our nest, landlocked and far away from the coast on all four points of the compass.  So after exiting the charabanc into a sixty mph south-westerly roaring off the Irish Sea, my feathers were all over the place and I sought sanctuary in the Maritime Museum to batten down my undergarments.  Frankly, it was flippin' freezing but after a warming coffee and some moist banana cake, I was revived enough to make a run for the gallery.

Now, modern art has its followers.  And I find Tate Modern in London equally soothing and savage depending on my mood; I've even seen Tracey Emin's 'My Bed.'  It's a bed, get over it. But nothing prepared me for two live macaws in a cage who apparently get swopped every two months so they don't get distressed. Or for a breeze block filled with hard core.



You didn't believe me, did you?  And Chagall?  I didn't bother parting with £11.00 in the end because his paintings seem to consist of romanticised, fuzzy goats. But if I had to chose a favourite exhibit, it's called 'Blood of a Poet' featuring a wooden box filled with 100 glass slides, each smeared with a drop of poet's blood; and specimen list.
http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/antin-blood-of-a-poet-box-l02859
 Curious, I asked the guide,
"Is the blood real?"
"Yeah. All from poets."  Result! Did the artist despise poets as much as I do? I needed more intel.
"Why poets?" Why not?
"She knew a lot of them in the mid-sixties and coaxed a drop of blood out every one she met.  It's an ironic statement, a bit like getting blood out of a stone."  Isn't it just?
"Ironically, our Path Lab's like that.  They aren't happy until they've got a large phial and a whole raft of tests to perform.  They're expensive too."  But they don't check for poetic credentials and certainly don't exhibit; that would be plain wrong.  Eventually when I stumbled into a darkened room showing a film of a barking dog I knew I'd exhausted my artistic bent.  It was time to take the Ferry 'cross the Mersey.

Except the Mersey looked like Cape Horn and was too choppy for a roosting bird like me.  Having suffered grave mal de mer on the Fuerteventura-Lanzarote ferry, I decided to give it a miss and head for the shops.  What an education?  Now I'm not a total stranger to Liverpool in general.  My ex lives in Aigburth, I've spent time at the dairy on Long Lane opposite the Jacobs cracker factory and in my cabin crew days, we used to fly out of Speke. And it's on Lord Street that I experienced the most amazing response to a first-aid situation, in Boots, on a busy Saturday when a girl passed out by the No7 counter.  My gay chum, Didier, did what any first responder would do; he raised the young lady's legs to a ninety degree angle thus allowing blood to flow back into her head.  I was fussing around, patting her hand when a blunt instrument swooped out of nowhere.  The girl's mother, seeing a man holding her daughter's ankles in a compromising way, swung a handbag at Didier's head screaming "Pervert" at the top of her lungs.  Poor bloke, he was never the same again, even after his ears stopped bleeding.

And Liverpool will never be the city of the Beatles again because the Cavern Quarter looks more like Temple Bar in Dublin; so loud you can't swallow your drink. Yes, the shops are great but they're the same as in any large city, except for the Harvey Nichols pampering room.  Downstairs, there's all the fabulous brands of my dreams and they sell Tom Ford perfumes too; Frangipani's favourite.  There I was spritzing and sniffing at the Jo Malone counter when two large glasses of bubbly appeared for customers having a hand massage; a yawning gulf away from the Body Shop's squash and biscuit refreshments.  Filled with envy, I so wanted to go upstairs and get "done up" for a night out - mani and pedi, fake tanned from scalp to toe, and a full head of heated rollers in a hairnet to go back to Leicester in.

We rolled away from the docks after a long day filled with Polish rock music, street theatre and a delicious lunch in a real Spanish tapas bar, all buoyed up with hope and energy.  Everything there seemed bigger, brighter and inflated by enthusiasm.  Yet I had to smile at the contrast between the two great cities [nowhere have I mentioned football yet!] On the streets of Liverpool, it's a common sight to see a young woman arms filled with designer bags and in her rollers bursting with the possibilities of a great night out and no-one calls her a 'chav'.  In Leicester, velcros look plain wrong accessorising any kind of ethnic clothing and, as always, my beak went down just a little as we exited the M1 at Junction 21.

Tip of the Blog:  My neck of the woods has just been shortlisted for the next City of Culture award and
I'm filled with sense of dread concerning my council tax contributions.  Yes, we have galleries, museums and an ancient historic past dating back to Roman times.  We also have the bones of Richard III and his statue overlooking the Castle Gardens.  I've even done 'the tour' with a group of Japanese visitors and know the very spot he was supposed to have been dispatched but is this enough?  Especially as no-one from the Lord Mayor's office has had the courage to ask the '24-hour Diamond White Drinking Circle' to vacate the benches under the great king's monument.  Liverpool vs Leicester?  You won't get very good odds at Ladbroke's.


Raven

Tuesday 4 June 2013

Must Try Harder ...

Twice this week I've been admonished for not sharing May's tales from my neck of the woods but between you and me, it's been a bit of a struggle. I've been waking up at 5.00 am most mornings, cursing the little tweetie birds in the bottom hedge for making so much noise, before falling back into the pillows for an extra couple of hours of restless roosting.  Always an early riser, I'm finding the relentless late shifts at Job 2.1 as a right pain in the tail feathers and I'm seriously looking for a change before I expire.  So finding myself on a day shift for a change yesterday, I didn't expect a visit from the visible* management who asked,
"Why haven't you applied for the Oncology job?"
"I don't want to."  I can't deal with the emotional drain but I'm damned if I'm going to tell anyone that.
"Why not?"
"Honestly, it's not my kind of thing." 
"Why not?"  Here we go again.  Deep breath Ravens.
"The fact that I fail to meet the three main criteria for the role might explain my reluctance to apply for it."  Coupled with the fact that five of the current applicants have been there for 20 years, are keen to move up the fireman's pole and are nowhere near as cunning as I am clinches it for me.  There's even a tray of cupcakes bet on the outcome.  Yet her next statement made me bang my beak on the desk.
"You could learn."
"Not by tomorrow night I couldn't!"
"Well, I think you should show willing if you want a career here.  You really must try harder."  I heard the click of her heels all the way back to the stairwell where the carpet starts again.
"Indeed I must."  But the thought of wasting valuable sunshine hours applying for a job I don't want and am unqualified to do fills me with dread.  So I went back to the mountain of filing left by my apparent job-share partner MoBo who's so Raven, she keeps a pen stuck through her bun.

And I've developed an unhealthy fascination with some of the photos we get back from theatre.  Yesterday I picked up an A4 sized graphic image created by an endoscope and wafted it in Nurse Volvo's direction.
"Wassat?"  We've developed a guessing game akin to Anatomy for Dummies.
"Who's the consultant?"  I divulged his name.
"Orthopaedics then."  She nodded.
"Can you see the bone?"  Yep ... it's a patella.
"Gristle in fluid. Got to be a knee arthroscopy."
"Y'know if you worked a bit harder, you could retrain as a nurse?"
"Thanks but no."  Secretly, I'm working really hard on early retirement to the Caribbean Island where they film Death in Paradise with Ben Miller in a suit.  And after seeing Alex Kingston on Dr Who the other week, I want whatever she's been drinking.

I find it really odd in an age where technology allows us to see inside the human body yet we're still using the same audio typing machines I trained on in college to send letters on paper from one consultant to another.  I suppose it stops information going astray or worse, being hacked, but the process is still time consuming and increasingly complicated.  I've been specialising in Orthopaedic clinics lately; a far cry from the 1970s when I learned the QWERTY keyboard on an Imperial manual typewriter and I've got the claws to prove it.  I had my first taste of medical work in the 1980s when I was skint [yes, again] and temped in the local NHS typing pool.  There were four of us hammering away on electronic machines in a draughty office where a steam-driven IBM word processor sat unused in the corner.  It was the ultimate domain of the office management, a portly woman who also held an invisible job.  We were all equally baffled by her ability to have meetings yet achieve little or nothing. One morning she sidled up to me saying,
"You've been working really hard lately and the consultants are very pleased with your output."
"Really?  Thanks."  Wait for it.
"So I've decided to give you one of my tapes.  It's really urgent so you can use the word processor." The initial excitement was tinged with dread as I hauled myself over to the chair and waited for the lights to dim as I switched it on.  Oh, the tape started well enough. 
"Blah, blah, letter to so-and-so a couple of times, then next please on a separate sheet ...
Two pounds of potatoes
Green Beans
Cornflakes - Kellogg's
Apples
A large bottle of Tizer
Spangles ..."  Spangles?
The dozy woman had recorded her shopping list and expected me to type it up, and when I expressed my displeasure at this utterly menial task she snapped,
"You really must try harder if you ever want a permanent job in my department."  I didn't, so moved swiftly on to typing tenders for Norwegian oil rigs and fell in love with an Italian engineer.  Sadly, I should have tried harder with that one too.

Tip of the Blog:  I've been searching through my school reports hoping to bury the myth that I don't work hard enough, so imagine my disappointment when most of the end-of-term missives read "Raven Must Try Harder."  Yet when I arrived at GCE year, I trumped them all and got a Grade 1 in English Language.  Not English Lit though; I didn't care what Brutus was thinking when he stabbed Julius Caesar in the back.  With hindsight, perhaps I would have tried harder and paid attention during the performance at Stratford, had I known the young actor playing Cassius was called Patrick Stewart.

Tip Two:  *I know we also have invisible management but I've never met them.  They have offices with names on the door but I'm damned if I can work out exactly what role they fulfill.  Must try harder to investigate, then I'll let you know.


Raven

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