Friday, September 30, 2005

Weekend's Over Before It's Begun


Today has been my one day off for the week and although it’s not yet over I feel safe in saying that it’s been pretty good so far.

I had a number of tasks to fulfil and although they have not all been completed I’m resting fairly comfortably on my laurels. What are laurels I wonder?

I finished a spoof newspaper I’ve been working on, I re-read a short story I’ve been writing (my, my, aren’t I the prolific one) and I went down the street to buy a bottle of wine and some beer with which to celebrate Friday, for tomorrow I will be perspiring at dawn.

I’m looking for a digital camera which will hopefully allow me to enrich this rather dull writing with some inspirational and no doubt hilarious photographs detailing elements of island life. Or not.

In lieu of fabled pictures here’s one my friend Peter took of Anthony Gormley’s stuff in Crosby, UK.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

It's Not Easy

I'd like to write a blog about something other than a certain milk-product orientated food processing environment but I find my life becoming increasing drawn to thinking of little else.

This is bad.

Not because I'm obsessed with work but because I do it six days a week, I have to rise at 5.00am, rarely finish before 3.00pm and find that the consequent fatigue plagues the few small hours I have at home.

It has also put paid to the growing pleasure I was having from writing stuff. I'm sure I'm not alone in wanting to sit at home all day in order that I can pursue an artistic endeavour but the ubiquity of such dreams make them none the less desirable.

Still, I did get paid yesterday and that was nice. I was unable to make head nor tail of the wages slip so after a year have decided to bow to the inevitable, face the fact that I'll be there for another week and ask someone to decipher it. Every other time I've worked there I've furrowed my brow and made myself angry at the thought of them ripping me off but always reached the same assumption that it didn't matter as I wouldn't be there for another week.

And here I am.

Funnily enough teaching is beginning to regain some of it's appeal after a fallow period (coinciding with flying back the UK for an interview, failing it and spending the next few weeks pursuing aforementioned artistic idyll).

But, more important than all of this is that my mood is still positive. Normally after seven days at work I'd be very, very depressed, angry, billious, annoyingly self-pitying and a whole other range of unappealing features would also be on display. But I'm not displaying them.

Does this mean that they are soon to manifest themselves with great vengeance or that I've reached a level of maturity that precludes me from such infantile knee jerk reactions.

We'll see (but I know where my money lies).

Monday, September 26, 2005

Still holding on in there

Did I mention that I'm trying to adopt a positive outlook?

I think it works to a degree although it may be an effective ploy for as long as my return to work remains something of a novelty. I've been back cheesing for only four days and although I've stopped some way short of referring to my colleagues in a negative and offensive manner (You're all a bunch of fucking cunts"), I have felt a familiar bile and anger inhabiting my body.

I'm doing six days a week at present at present but that's just plain daft so I'll be cutting back as of next week to a more manageable five or even four days.

I'm also doing a couple of hours at the school, working with a boy who wants to improve his reading skills. Hopefully we'll get on and it won't seem like too much of a chore although at present I'm heading straight there from the cheesy which will probably take a lot of the fun out of it.

Needless to say all attempts at writing have ground to a halt which is another good reason for cutting back on my working week. There's only about a week to go until the short story competition closes and I'm fairly confident that I'll have neither the time or the inclination to carry out the required polishing, not to mention finishing it and thinking of a plot.

Did I mention the amusing local spoof newspaper that I've done? Quite pleased with that but again the momentum has dissipated somewhat. Must get my inspiration back. Less perspiration and more of the other.

If this is the best I can do no wonder I'm uninspired.

Friday, September 23, 2005

As Long As Cheese Needs Me...

I know where I must be (etc).

Anyway, can't stop long but I've just completed my second day back at the cheesy and am quite pleased with the lack of a negative reaction, either physical from my back or mental from my brain.

This bodes well and I'm thinking of subscribing to the PMA (positive mental attitude) school of thought. The school I subscribe to stems from a Lucozade advertisement but I believe it was an exceptional and enlightening example of advertising at it's best (I'm joking).

Add to that the fact that I'm currently enjoying my first beer of the whole week and it's Friday night and you may have a better idea of how temporary this PMA may be. However I am going to work tomorrow.

Ooh, ooh the cars fixed too so I don't have to hitch in the dark and the cold and the rain as I did at 5.30 this morning or walk 6 kilometers towards home as I did this afternoon.

Crikey, life is just dandy! (This will be much funnier after I've written some depressing and desolate pieces next week.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Once More Unto The Breach

The cold hand of the cheese factory begins once again to exert its vice-like grip around my throat, choking my mood, placing lead in my heart and dampening some of the new found though infrequently spoken of enthusiasm for life.

Still, the laptop sounds like it's going to stop working, I'd like an MP3 player and a digital camera and I've less than two dollars in my bank account. Something's got to give as I believe they say.

I'll drop the car in to the garage today as it will only start on the move. This is fine getting to work as I live on top of a hill but the return journey is a little more problematic as I can't think of a suitable hill by the cheese factory, located as it is in the pit of despair.

I can afford to feel slightly up-beat about the prospect today (despite my dramatic opening statement) because it's always much worse than I fear. Today I feel like I'll be able to cope and will probably find it much more pleasant an experience now that my enthusiasm for writing has been rekindled.

My next entry however will no doubt be filled with prophesies of doom, a hatred for my life on the island and a general desire to be anywhere else in the world.

So, enjoy it while it lasts I say.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

The Magic Numbers

Can't stop listening to them, they're great.

Do yourself a favour.

Monday, September 19, 2005

Blue Murder

I've scrapped my last attempt at a short story (which has been a feature of my writing for the past decade or so) and have started a new one. It's either to be titled as above or as Blue Blood for reasons which will become apparent (but not in the bit below).

I find it's far more useful to labour over a title rather than to actually write, which can be a terribly tiresome experience and demands sitting down wheras title-thinking can be done in front of the TV, in bed asleep or even down the pub (if there was a pub I wanted to spend time in within 250 miles of my house).

So anyway...

It is a widely known, though scandalously under-reported fact that cheese is without question, the most amusing food.

As with all widely known facts there are dissenters, those who would drag the king of comedy food from his cheesy throne and foist a pretender upon us. They shall not prosper.

The more moderate agitator for less amusing edibles can be found advocating their merits on practically every bar stool in the free world. (While certain totalitarian or fundamentalist regimes may be a little less accommodating on such matters as human rights and free speech they invariably brook no argument when it comes to asserting which dairy product sits atop the laughter ladder which can be considered something of a saving grace).

The French for example, despite their close bond with cheese, are forever to be found singing the praises of fish on the aforementioned bar stools. While any fool can see the comic potential of a fish only one point need be made to stem the singing and return the bar to a more convivial atmosphere. Surrealism is comic but it does not follow that comedy is necessarily surreal. Fish may lead the way in way in surrealist comedy for reasons too complex to detail here but cheese has it surreal merits and does not confine itself to such restrictive limitations. Who among us has not chortled at a cheesy double entendre, knob cheese for example?

Let us not dwell on such mighty squabbles, they must be left to a higher power to be dealt with in the fullness of time. Suffice it to say, reasonable readers will need no convincing and the other lot have probably spat upon these pages and left us somewhere around the third paragraph. Good riddance for this story is not for the likes of them.

Having established the mirthful merits of cheese it is now time to detail the darker side of the same coin. What is lesser known but which should perhaps be expected is the deadly toll taken by our seemingly benign bries and blues.

There are without doubt greater dangers than nibbling a wedge of ones favourite fat filled fromage, smoking and drinking spring to mind but there are few allegedly harmless foods which are eaten at such great cost to human life.

The Japanese at this point will politely interject and offer the blow fish for comparison. Those of you unfamiliar with the strange eating habits of our Oriental cousins may not be cognisant of this alleged delicacy. An expert chef is required to prepare the fish, elements of which are among the most poisonous substances known to man. Quite why anyone would take such risks in order to eat a piece of cold, raw fish may be anathema to some but rest assured they do. Something in the region of 270 people die every year in pursuit of this delicacy, a figure our less cold blooded camembert would never dream of achieveing.

However, let’s compare apples with apples. The Blow fish is poisonous, one can only assume that some of the pleasure derived from its eating is to be found in cocking a snook at the fates, chewing in the face of danger and trusting a great chef with your life.

Cheese however is eaten for more humble reasons, to part and moisten two slices of bread in the common sandwich, to be insouciantly sprinkled atop an otherwise bland dish

in order to add a stringy tang of flavour. The reasons are manifold but among them is not a desire to teeter on the edge of life, dabbling ones toes in the sea of reason, this is not the behaviour of your average cheese eater.

Cheese may be eaten as a more soothing pursuit but it still remains a deadly foe to those who scorn its strength. In 1987 alone, 343 people in France lost their lives in the name of cheese. This is by no means uncommon, many thousands have perished through the ages, we shall not forget them.

So we can say without fear of reasoned contradiction that cheese is both funny and deadly. The story which I am attempting to impart (before being unnecessarily sidetracked with needless corroboration of hitherto well known facts) concerns a cheese factory and I don’t think I’ll be giving too much away by letting you know that the comedic qualities of cheese feature rather less than the deadly nature of our milky friend.

___________

I imagine there are youngsters who dream of working in the cheese production industry, who long for the first opportunity to don a hairnet and sink their arms into a vat of warm curd. I, regrettably, do not count myself among their number which would go some way to explaining my rather disconsolate manner on reporting for work at the world renowned and highly esteemed King Island Cheese Factory.

To begin with, the hour was unsociable. 6.00am is a time for sleeping rather than a time for donning white cotton clothes, the aforementioned hairnet, a pair of rubber gloves and steel toe-capped white Wellingtons (referred to by the locals with an unusual and surprising logic as gumboots).

Not only that but one is also expected to perform manual labour at this hour of the morning. It’s still dark for goodness sake! I am a man of the world, I’m nearing the end of my fourth decade and have been compelled to work for most of the previous two so am not entirely unaccustomed to rising at such an hour. We’re one required at the office or on the building site at such an hour one would expect to spend some considerable time both preparing and imbibing a refreshing and enlivening hot beverage, tea or coffee spring to mind as tow obvious choices. In days of yore one may even take the opportunity of enjoying a fraternal cigarette with ones colleagues but no such civilities are on offer when cheese needs de-hooping.

At this juncture I must pause and explain that the limits of this story prevent me from imparting all the specialist knowledge required by a process worker in a cheese factory. I will do my best to explain what one may refer to as jargon but the uninitiated reader may feel somewhat bemused and a trifle alienated, fear not friend, no one is born with the gift of cheesemaking, it is learnt and one must begin this quest somewhere. Plough on, for you will be rewarded in cheese heaven, sat beside your cheesy god.

I will, if time allows, endeavour to share a little of the wisdom I have acquired during my relatively brief but none the less spectacular cheese career.

As I was saying de-hooping, the first task of the day refers to the process of removing the previous days cheese from the hoops or moulds in which they have spent the previous night, largely at rest save for a periodic turn but that’s another story. For the sake of brevity I would like you to imagine the cheese in question to be the type one finds in the better supermarkets, circular, wrapped in foil, round and weighing somewhere in the region of 200 grammes, commonly named brie or even camembert. Cheese of other weights, shapes and flavours are made within these sacred walls but were I to reveal the mysteries of all of them I would get nowhere with the telling of my story which, if you recall, concerns the darker side of our milky friend.

So yes, this brie or possibly camembert is housed in a large plastic tray into which it flowed some 18 hours previously. These trays or hoops, would conventionally be referred to as moulds in any other industry but the term is already somewhat over used in this particular industry so to avoid confusion we professionals steer well clear of it. Each tray holds 20 cheeses and is stacked to form a block 17 high which sits atop a set of wheels for ease of transportation.

Goodness, that’s over 1000 words already, I appear to be getting nowhere, the cheese is not yet de-hooped and not a whiff of evil doing.

These trays are individually removed from the stack before being artfully turned and slammed onto a wire rack, akin to a large cake rack. This dear reader is the manual labour of which I spoke some time ago, this procedure is repeated until some two hours have passed at which time one is invited to join ones colleagues for fiveteen minutes of rest and relaxation in what the locals rather misleadingly refer to as a crib room. I feel it would be churlish of me to point out that at no juncture was there any sign of cribbage, bridge or even rummy being played in these rather cramped quarters, the Herald Sun quiz provided the only cut and thrust of competitive gamesmanship on offer and that was a rare joy.

Saturday, September 10, 2005

Let's Kill Bruce

I need to write a short story ('need' is probably overstating it somewhat) and started on this one earlier. It's inspired by a rather perturbing conversation I had over dinner with a friend on Monday.

She was his favourite or so she thought. He still fucked her like the others but somehow he seemed to torture her less. Of course it could just be that she made less noise or that she withstood the pain better than anyone else or maybe this same resilience appealed to him. She was neither the eldest nor the youngest. The prettiest, the cleverest and the funniest were to be found elsewhere among the throng which is not to say that she was without such attributes, far from it, but they were found more abundantly elsewhere among the seven

The truth was she didn’t really know why, didn’t want to know. What little analysis she gave it after all these years, unsurprisingly, offered her no crumb of comfort. The thought that for some reason she was the favourite child…

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Beslan

I watched a Cutting Edge documentary last night about this tragic and half forgotten event.

It amazes me how quickly the media move on from such tragedies to the next one and the next. Each one ramped up and sold as monumental only to be superseded by the next one in the constant need to sell advertising or maybe to distract us from other, more sinister man-made activities.

How long until Katrina is swamped by the next terrorist event or natural disaster?

The reporter in the documentary stated that the terrorist acts are like a play with the intention of grabbing the attention of Moscow or the world. This is especially true of the Chechen terrorists who appear to have mastered the long drawn out TV saga as seen in School Number 1, the theatre siege and an earlier hospital siege. Perhaps this is also true of the way other terrorist events, natural disasters and personal tragedies are played out in the media.

Missing children stories in particular are well suited to rolling news as we can tune in every night and hear whether there have been developments, which characters have come to the fore, has the plot twisted and how far are we from an ending (either happy or more commonly sad).

Anyway, what I wanted to note was that the minister from Moscow went to the site of the siege on the third or fourth day armed with a suitcase containing the names of 700 celebrities who had offered to change places with the children. Thinking about how that may have worked and turned out makes the mind boggle.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Female Clitorectomy

I was all set to write about last night's, long awaited theatre restaurant but it may have to wait for another day as something rather more pressing has come up.

I was trying to come up with a suitably erudite but practical gmail address (needless to say I failed) when I was struck with the idea of looking back through all my previous searches by inputting each letter of the alphabet into a search box.

This was all going quite well, I could recall a lot of old odd searches (alpaca, anchovy, beetroot, Drop Kick Me Jesus Through The Goalposts Of Life - the usual sort of thing) and also saw a few I didn't recognise which I attributed to either forgetting about them or them being searches carried out by my partner.

This began to cause me a little concern when I came across the name of her ex-boyfriend but then I remembered doing something very similar with a number of ex's and a number of people I wish were ex's. We've all been there, a wistful moment in front of the PC, waiting for something to download, feeling lonely, nothing to worry about basically.

But then I can across the following, all in the order presented below -

Falling In Love
Female Clitorectomy
Fertility Testing In Melbourne

Now, as mentioned above, I get bored at the PC like everyone else, want to see what's out there but I seriously doubt being bored enough to enter, "female clitorectomy", as a search. It's not the first thing to spring to my lips even when in search of a (very occasional) cheap thrill.

This leads me to several unwelcome conclusions with regard to both my partner and the conspiracy of the fates. I'm more than a little reluctant to draw any public conclusions with regard to what this says about my partner's state of mind or possibly the parlous state of our relationship. I think the searches speak for themselves.

However, to be arranged in that order is nothing short of remarkable, I can imagine it being issued as some sort of creative writing exercise. Of course she didn't necessarily enter the searches in this order (lets hope not, and while we're at it lets also hope that they were not all on the same day, as part of some strange thought process) but to have them presented thus strikes me as something more than happenstance.

I'll share more thoughts on the theatre restaurant next time, possibly the dust will have settled by then.

About Me

Despite compelling evidence to the contrary this was never meant to be about either beef or cheese, subjects in which I have little more than a passing interest. It is true however that the fates have recently conspired to find me work at a cheese factory but this is little more than a cruel, coincidental joke told at my expense.