Sunday, 23 September 2018

Old Things, Past Loves


Old Things, Past Loves ©
By 
Michael Casey

I was thinking about a title for today’s talk but Rupert Murdoch didn’t phone, but he’ll have more time now, so maybe he will. He does Radio as well you know, and as Terry Wogan used to say, I have the perfect face for radio, if only Rupert stops cursing and gives me a chance, the Sky is my limit.

I was going to write about Tidying Up but I checked my list and I did that a year ago. So I’m talking about a 1st cousin to that instead. As I look about  the room my eye rests and a memory comes back. In front of me is my Movelat pain killer gel, I wish I never laid eyes on it, so many memories come flooding back as I look at my big tube of Movelat. Sticky memories of pain, not love. Cursing the pain and cursing for it to be brought to me, as I scream in pain. No exaggeration folks, it really is that bad at time.

I look further around the room and wonder where the smell is coming from, it’s my daughter’s school shoes, yes, girls’ feet do stink. So I gather up all their shoes and sling them into the kitchen, we can say it’s the wife’s cooking that is to blame. What’s the other smell, then I see Totoro our cat scratching by the door, she has farted, see all my girls  stink. I tell them I don’t smell, I am the clean one, they reply my Ck One is not to their liking. Should I just dab Jeyes Fluid drain cleaner behind my ears?

I have an old cardboard box on the shelf beside me, I’ve saved it just in case I have to return something, normally it’d go in the recycle bin, but I’ve saved it for now. I used to save my Clarks shoe boxes too, but they did come in handy when Totoro was a kitten. Totoro used to hide under the sink unit, and we were afraid she would pooh there too. So Clarks came to the rescue, we blocked off the area under the sink, and our noses were saved.

I have 3 pots of Shamrock besides me too, so I may have to relocate them soon. I also have it growing outside along the garden wall, and no matter how often our Oriental gardener, the wife that is, hacks and mows it down, it always comes back, deep roots, rather like Family.

I have a lot of paintings too on my wall, I always dreamt of paintings, after my mother gave me a print on cardboard which she had bought for 10p at a jumble sale. I still have it on my bedroom wall, 50 years later. However I did over the years replace prints with paintings, the dustmen used to call my house the Art Gallery, in the days when dustmen used to come up the entry to collect your dustbin. Now I only have real paintings, I haven’t bought any new ones in 20 years, being married and having a wife and kids means you can’t afford to spend a penny on yourself. If I want to gaze on beauty I can always look in the mirror. What, you are all so cruel, laughing at the eye of the beholder.

Speaking of mirrors, we’ll be abandoning most mirrors too, a mirror is a nice thing to have, it brightens up a room, you can also take selfies. Though I only ever have stupid photos of myself, I am honest about my looks, I do weigh more than the British Heavyweight champion who won last night, I’m very compact. So as I was saying a nice mirror is useful, you can check your hair and eyebrows before you leave the house, you don’t want to frighten anybody with your looks, though if you are a heavyweight  boxer you DO want to put the fear of God into an opponent,  maybe the Champ doesn’t use a mirror at all.

Moving on to the kitchen we have cups galore, my small daughter collects them, so we have 20 mugs and cups in the cupboard. It’s almost as if they breed in there, so there will be a cull, or maybe we’ll just abandon them. Cup abandoned with mismatched saucer, a bit like marriage really, chipped and battered, pattern worn away, but still useful?

When you get to pack your clothes that will be a revelation, the state of your underpants. How droopy are your drawers, how washed out are the colours, how many holes in your pants, is the pipping at the edged coming off. But that’s just my neigbours, or is that what my neigbours say about me? You would have to be a bird on the washing line to know the truth, or a pigeon pooping on my washing as they perch from tree to tree. How holy or is it holey are my pants. You’ll never know, not unless you seduce me, just to see the state of my pants. Are you laughing now? Or just violently sick?

I better finish now, it’s time to bring in all my washing before the rain comes, but as I haven’t got any clean clothes I’ll just streak into the garden and stand there naked picking my clothes off the line and getting dressed. It will be a treat for the squirrels and my neighbours, and if they don’t like what they see then NUTS to them.   










Saturday, 22 September 2018

Love Twins

Love Twins ©
By
Michael Casey

Well the pain monster was really bad for a bit, but at least I did not need a nap today. I saw Hell Boy II on tv again tonight as well, so that in part gave me an idea to talk about. I also put our piano up for sale, it’s been gathering dust and after so many years not being used you have to face reality and make room in the house. Half the family wanted to keep it, and the other half wanted it to go. So as the ignored dad I said let’s pass the piano on to somebody who would love and use it, or at least dust it.

It was an idea of the wife’s for the girls to have lessons and play, both passed Grade One. They have also passed exams in choral singing, the church they go to is very good, so a big thank you to Godfather David, you didn’t know the Mafia had a chapter at the local church. Only joking, I better be careful or Betty will slap me, she was their piano teacher, she’s 90 now I believe.

So this is an example of past lives, love twinning piano playing daughters together. In Hell Boy II it showed how a brother and sister were linked and emotionally connected. Me and my youngest sister are connected like that too. I will phone here before she rings me, and vice versa, she rings me as I think of her. I imagine it happens in other families too. It is a connection, it is love.

So why does this happen? Is it nature or is it genes, a way of defending the tribe, the clan, and with all my Irish cousins I am part of a Kerry clan? I think it is because Love does know no boundaries, you’ll know when a parent has died on the other side of the world. Or you will fall to your knees as pray, let it be me, let them be safe. In my Malta story which I re-posted recently, Esther, and I think I’ve finally spelt it correctly now, Esther says let it be me, save everybody else.

Love twins us with those we love, a girlfriend, a boyfriend, a dog. The love between us is like a rubber band holding us together, it can stretch and stretch but we are joined. We are brought back together, to our love twin, sometimes elastic band snaps, and that is why it hurts so much.

You all know examples of people twinned, workers down a pit, or in a football team are all twins. Folks in the army love each other, doesn’t mean they speak nicely to each other, or buy each other presents. Jake would break Mike’s jaw if such a thing happened, and no it does not happen, maybe in special services as they have a strange sense of humour, when you might die suddenly it does mean you do develop black humour.

However if the President asks why you rescued all your buddies despite all the incoming fire, you’ll say, I’ve met their mothers and their mothers would kill me if I didn’t save them all. Besides I’m dating all their sisters simultaneously, and to save my sex life I just had to save all their lives, all 18 of them. Now that would impress the President, but I couldn’t possibly know the truth of it.








Friday, 21 September 2018

Food for Thought, think as you watch tv

Food For Thought
Think AS You Watch TV
By Michael Casey ©
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As we sit in our armchairs watching the news , do we care what is going on over there , insome place hot , too hot to think about , or too cold to bear , ice and snow everywhere . Are we just waiting for the sports report , are we waiting to see was the battle hard or a walkover, did our favorite player score a home run , or 10 touchdowns , were the crowd , the audience behind him , did we win 100dollars from the bet we had on the side . In the
interviews after the war was won , were we just watching to see the design on the teams
shirt , is that a new logo , is that the same logo spruced up . Or is it a new logo entirely ,
does it make any difference in how the team played , or just another million dollars in the owners pocket , paid by us the audience , the fans , just so we can all look so identical . The reporters are screaming loudly , half excited and half in fear , they want to watch , they want to cover their eyes , but they are there so they must report . Are they in some arid desert , or in some cold cold place , pain and fear and hope etched on their face , are they in some war zone , or at the stadium , if all we heard were just their words , could we tell the difference , do we care , so long as we can switch it all off with our remote control .

Just a little food for thought , you can read my Betting On Disaster later


My Favourite Things By Theresa May

My Favourite Things By Theresa May
by
Michael Casey (really)

Well those bastards shafted me, all 27 of them, where were you Cameron, in your garden shed playing dead. Writer's Block more like Boris's *****, I stand alone on the bridge of state, oh how I wish it was easy Watergate, but instead I'm always late. Late for this and late for that like some Canute of History, and will anybody care.

But at least my husband loves me, and that is worth more to me than all those conspiring conspirators. I think I'll go and buy some more shoes, Clarks has a sale, and that Michael Casey was their uncool dad of the year in 2015, and he always wears Clarks. So I'll cheer myself up with a half hour of surfing their shoe website. Though waterboarding those back benchers might be more productive and fun, if I might have an unChristian thought.

John Major as right, they are all bastards. Oh, look the Clarks sale is so good, I'll have 2 pairs of those. If only they sold those James Bond shoes with poisoned tipped knives, Jacques and those EU bastards would soon jump with a kick up their collective backside. I'll have 2 pairs of those other ones too, I have to look good at the Party Conference, though not too shiny though or the tv cameras will upskirt me from the reflection in my shoes. At least Laura is nice to me, well once she's done that piece to  camera. Afterwards we have a good girlie talk  together, I had 27 EU bastards, but she has to face the Labour Conference, so who has the harder life. I think that's why we Bond so much, Basildon Bond the tea that is. Though if Edris was a baddie in a Bond film, now that would raise both our blood pressures. I'd certainly give the Elbow to any Edris haters.

I had a phone call from Julie Andrews, she said she's have said supercalifragelistic expealidoscious or whatever, and that would have sorted out those 27 EU monsters. The Sound of Music, the sound of a lynch mob more like it. She also sent me some chocolate, I said I'd give it to my security crew, I am diabetic after all, but it is the thought that counts. I love Julie, Mary Poppins is my favorite film after all. How she made the toys march back and forth, I just wish I could have done that to the EU 27.

I suppose I could write a cook book once the bastards knife me at the conference, Rees Mogg is not in favour of the nanny state, but is in favour of nannies. He wants to turn me into a Mummy, wrap me up and put me in a tomb to be forgotten for 2000 years. Old Cameron whistled while he worked his way back into No.10 then he disappeared into the oblivion of Writers Block, I should not chuckle, it's very unChristian,  but so very enjoyable. Leave a women to clean up a man's mess. Everybody would vote Remain now, we're up the creek without a paddle, but a Prime Minister has to carry on, without any Sid James laughing in the wings.

Well I better email Donald and tell him how much I love his hair, he did at least take my recommendation for the new shampoo. I did not tell him that it was radioactive as well, he'd think that was something to do with radio. It could scramble his brains, but would anybody notice.

Ah well I better empty out the swear box the vicar left, I've manage to feed 5000 with all the swearing I've done, at least the EU can be proud of that.











glad you all stopped by

glad you all stopped by

readers from all over the place, even South Korea again on my wordpress site

and 6 or more countries today alone on this site, including Russia. Do you think Putin and

Trump swap notes on my posts, have you read this one, have you read that one.

so thanks to you all, and to them if it is them.

lots of  pain today, frankly far too much

Let's see how the pain is tomorrow

That's why if I win the lottery I'll donate to Birmingham Medical School to fund research into

PAIN.

So send 6 numbers to me...

Hope you all liked the new photos my small daughter took.

I'll be going to bed soon, waking every 2 hours, as I do for a few years now. Not enough REM

sleep. But at least I have loads of imagination and memories which I use to fill all the pages you

read. 1,370,000 Words now, about 4090 page. If Daytime TV was better you would all be spared

this. And yes Pray for my Health, or just recommend a good Undertaker, whichever you prefer.

Perhaps a Boris, Lech and Gregorgi story is overdue....












Thursday, 20 September 2018

From Daily Telegraph UK

Duchess of Sussex's mother hails 'power of women' as she is surprise guest at Grenfell book launch

The Duchess of Sussex's mother has paid tribute to the "power of women" as she made a surprise appearance at the launch of a Grenfell kitchen book launch.
The Duchess, who hosted a lunch for the women of the Hubb Community Kitchen and their families, said she had felt “immediately embraced” by the women of the kitchen who made her feel welcome on a personal level.
Joined by her mother Doria Ragland, who is visiting from Los Angeles, she helped make chapatis and turned koftas on a grill as she launched the Together cookbook in a tent at Kensington Palace.
Standing with a small group of Hubb kitchen cooks, Ms Ragland gave an insight into where her daughter's own beliefs have come from. “The power of women,” she said. “We make things happens. We're curious, we say yes, we show up. I'm inspired.”
In a speech to guests, Ms Markle said the project had been a “tremendous labour of love”.
“I had just recently moved to London and I felt so immediately embraced by the women of the kitchen. Your warmth and your kindness, and also to be in this city and see in this one small room how multicultural it was.
“I felt, on a personal level, so proud to live in a city that can have so much diversity. That there are 12 countries represented in this one small room, is pretty outstanding.”
The Duchess of Sussex
The Duchess of Sussex helped make chapatis and turned koftas on a grill as she launched a cookbook in a tent at Kensington Palace Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
Ms Ragland was the surprise guest at the lunch time event on Perk’s Field, outside the Palace.
Sitting in the front seat of a Landrover Discovery with her daughter and son-in-law in the back, she stepped out the greeting waiting guests including Hubb coordinator Zahira Ghaswala, with the words: “Hi, I’m Meg’s mom.”
Baroness Gail Rebuck, chair of publisher Penguin Random House, told Ms Ragland she must feel “very proud” of the Duchess and her work on the cookbook.
“Head over heels,” she replied.
The Duchess embraced her friends at the kitchen warmly with three kisses, visibly excited at the success of the book this week and the day of the launch.
The trio, who at one point stood with their arms around one another in a line, made their way around four food stations, with the Duchess getting stuck in to help cook while her mother and husband watched on proudly.
At the first stop, Ahlam Saeid showed off an enormous bowl of green rice.
“Oh I love that,” said Doria. “That was the first thing I asked about” [after learning of the cook book].
“Everyone’s just hungry”, said the Duchess, laughing, as she added fresh mint and olive oil to the dish.
The Duchess of Sussex talks to women taking part in the project
The Duchess of Sussex talks to women taking part in the project Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
As they made their way through tables of salad, chapatis and kofta kebabs, Doria quizzed the cooks about the ingredients, listening carefully to the herbs and spices they described.
One of the cooks promised to set food aside for the Royal couple, with the Duchess telling her: “Oh thank you, I’ll take that home and have it for dinner.”
She appeared to be an old hand in the kitchen, flipping chapatis confidently and turning koftas on the grill.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are accompanied by Doria Ragland in a tent at Kensington Palace
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are accompanied by Doria Ragland in a tent at Kensington Palace Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
The Duke was careful to follow several steps behind, making small talk with guests and watching proudly as his wife took centre stage.
After guests were seated to tuck in to enormous plates of food, their hosts took a moment to look around the kitchen, based in the field’s club house fo one day only, before the Duchess made a short speech.
After lunch, the Duke, Duchess and Ms Ragland posed for a group photo with the ladies of the kitchen and their children before staying to chat.
Ms Ragland embraced each of the women with a warm hug, telling them: “It's amazing. I'm just as excited as you are."
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex with Doria Ragland in the Kensington Palace tent
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex with Doria Ragland in the Kensington Palace tent Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
Speaking of the Duchess’ experience at the kitchen, she said: “She felt very much at home. I'm so glad I can put the face with the recipes. I'm going to tell everyone, I met her [each of the cooks]! I'm going to make everything, I'm serious.”
In a speech to assembled guests, the Duchess thanked publishers, the community centre and staff at the Royal household for their help in making the book possible.
“On a personal note I’m especially grateful because this is my first project so I appreciate your support for vision that I had for this and seeing it come to fruition,” she said.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Doria Ragland pose for a group picture during the cookbook launch
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Doria Ragland pose for a group picture during the cookbook launch Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
“And everyone behind the scenes: it truly took a village to see this through. Everyone embraced this so deeply because it’s been a passion project for all of us and for very good reason.
“The power of food is more than just the meal itself, it is the story behind it. And when you get to know the story of the recipe, you get to know the person behind it. And that’s what we’re talking about in terms of coming together to really engage and talk.
“To be able to celebrate what connects us rather than what divides us, I believe, is the ethos of Together.”
Earlier this week, the Duchess disclosed she had been making secret visits to the kitchen, beginning in January, before suggesting its talented cooks produce a recipe book to help raise funds.
She has now invited the women into Kensington Palace for a launch party, with the Duke on hand to help serve and taste the food.
The Duchess of Sussex in animated conversation at the cookbook launch
The Duchess of Sussex in animated conversation at the cookbook launch Credit: BEN STANSALL /AFP
On the menu will be home-made dishes from the book, including coconut chicken curry, aubergine masala and a range of chapatis and sharing dips, as well as caramelised plum upside-down cake, and spiced mint tea.
The Duchess joined the women as they cooked the dishes and assisted with the preparations, before the group and their hosts sat to enjoy the freshly made food.
Guests include women from the Al Manaar Muslim Cultural Heritage Centre and their families, members of the community around Grenfell Tower, and representatives from Ebury Press and The Royal Foundation.

Duchess reveals her secret visits to Grenfell kitchen

The Hubb Community Kitchen, named for the word “love” in Arabic, was founded shortly after the Grenfell disaster, after displaced women sought a place to cook fresh, warm food for their families.
Since then, it has become a home-from-home which, in the words of the Duchess, allowed them to “to laugh, grieve, cry and cook together” as well as tasting “the memory of home, albeit homes some had recently lost”.
At least two of the book's contributors, Hiwot Dagnachew and Munira Mahmud, escaped the Grenfell fire, while others live and work nearby.

Video: Duchess of Sussex cooks with Grenfell community 

The idea for the Hubb cookbook came from the Duchess herself, after she asked coordinator Zahira Ghaswala how often the kitchen was open and was surprised to learn it could only stretch to two days, due to limitations on funding.
"We can do a cookbook," the Duchess replied.
Describing how it takes visitors 15 minutes to enter the Hubb kitchen “joyfully greeted by kisses by each of the incredible women there”, the Duchess said of her visits:  “The kitchen buzzes with women of all ages; women who have lived and seen life; laughing, chatting, sharing a cup of tea and a story, while children play on the floor or are rocked to sleep in their strollers.
The Duchess of Sussex
The Duchess of Sussex cooking with women in the Hubb Community Kitchen Credit: Jenny Zarins /PA
She added: “You should undoubtedly arrive on an empty stomach because upon departure you will have been stuffed to the gills with samosas flecked with cinnamon, chapatis flavoured with carrots and onion, Russian Semolina cake and my very favourite avocado dip that I now make at home.”

Book profits will go towards keeping kitchen open

The book, which is out today, September 20, also sees the Duchess write of her own evocative food memories, praising “the power of a meal to take you to places you’ve never been, or transport you right back to where you came from”.
Before meeting Prince Harry, the Duchess ran a lifestyle blog in which she recorded her favourite recipes, and is known to have volunteered in a soup kitchen as a young woman.
The Hubb Community Kitchen at the Al Manaar Muslim Cultural Heritage Centre
The Duchess of Sussex sits among locals at the Al Manaar Muslim Cultural Heritage Centre Credit: JENNY ZARINS /AFP
Published by Ebury Press, Together: Our Community Cookbook costs £9.99.
The Royal Foundation is administering the transfer of funds from the sale' to the Hubb Community Kitchen and related projects.
A spokesman said profits will help keep the kitchen open for up to seven days a week and to widen its reach to others in the community.

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Humour Writing by the fat silver haired writer in shades from Birmingham England read in 167 countries so far https://www.amazon.co.uk/Micha...