Saturday 13 November 2010

The Competitive Nature of Everything

On Friday afternoons when I came home from school my mum would always insist that I did my homework as soon as I got in the door, that way I’d have the rest of the weekend to myself. She had a point. My suggestion of not doing the homework at all would achieve the same thing, however this point of view rarely prevailed. If I had to do it then I suppose it was best to get it done and out of the way. I can only assume that my parents had similar feelings towards childbirth. Have two children, 1 year and 8 months apart, watch them grow up, fly the nest, then relax and enjoy early retirement; who knows maybe one of them will be incredibly successful and fund a lavish early retirement??

Unlikely. It's £523 a week for the care-home in Dingwall - I thought I better phone early in case there’s a waiting list.

There are disadvantages in starting a family early in life - from the perspective of the child that is - you see as the child it could be years before you're able to get your hands on the fruit of your parents labour-a-nice-wee-inheritance-package. And with this generation the first expected to die earlier than their parents, it might never happen :-(

If my mother could have foreseen the untold misery my brother and I would cause her, with our constant fighting and demand for attention, she surely would have thought twice about a second child. She took a risk my mother; she gambled for a girl. She had conceived a devil child and witnessed through my brother how much of a f**king nightmare boys could be. She wanted a wee girl, and I know this because for the past 23 years she’s never forgiven me for being a boy (even if I am as camp as a tent).

The truth is - like Prince Harry - I am adopted. The woman I though of, and many of you know as, my mother, is not my biological mother. I don’t know my real mum’s name, she is known to me simply as, ‘the woman in the caravan’.

Many years ago my ‘mother’ was taking a leisurely stroll through a caravan park when she - still had the use of her legs - stumbled upon me as an infant sleeping underneath a caravan. I was made to sleep with the dogs because there was no room inside on account of my 12 brothers and sisters. My real mum hated me, and my real dad had just been laid off from his job as a janitor, so my mum, pained by compassion, offered to buy me and free me from my terrible existance.

This gypsy nativity story that has been told to me since the age of, well since I can remember.........



I believed in Santa, and that robins were his messengers, that Santa could get into our house despite the fact we lived in a bungalow and didn't have a chimney, that he could carry all those presents in a sleigh with flying reindeer - even the year when our main present was a pool table - I believed everything about Santa - I believed in the tooth fairy, I was convinced WWF wrestling was real, I believed my brother when he told me the Loch Ness monster ate the Easter Bunny, and my dad every April Fool’s day when he said Eoin Jess signed for Rangers, so why wouldn't I believe my mum when she threatened to send me to a horrible woman and an unemployed janitor who lived in a caravan park.....??


It’s not easy tracking down your biological parents when they are travelling folk. Like native Americans following the buffalo herds; my family has tended to migrate with the janitor work.

*A little side-note is needed here, for liable purposes. It is not the intention of this blog entry to offend anyone in the travelling community. Many of my brother’s girlfriends were gypsies.*

With my (step) brother and I being so close in age there was always a lot of fighting, arguing and competitiveness. So much so we would compile and update lists of activities that we could beat, or were better than, the other person at. It was important these lists were agreed on and evenly balanced. A sub-list would then be compiled of activities where we considered each other to be of equal ability; it was in these activities we would compete to decide who was the best.

The following is a list of activities where I am better/can beat my brother at:

  • Taekwondo (a Korean martial art/excuse for my brother and I to beat the shit out of each other)
  • Sprinting
  • Jumping
  • Spelling
  • Cooking
  • Tennis
  • Long Distance Running

The following is a list of activities my brother is better/can beat me at:

  • Football
  • Badminton
  • Bench-Press
  • Throwing
  • Maths
  • Darts
  • Parking

The following is a sub-list of activities we consider ourselves to be evenly matched:
  • Golf
  • Pool/Snooker
  • Swimming

These lists often threw up points of contention, for example, anyone who has witnessed my brother playing football would question how it is possible for anyone to play as badly. This unfortunately is a sad reflection of my own footballing prowess - I'm not very good.

Competitiveness tended to reach a head during Wimbledon when my brother and I would dust off our rackets - purchased by mum from a car boot sale and used through the rest of the year to pelt stones with – head onto the street and have a game of tennis. Matches rarely lasted more than a minute......




With the benefit of hindsight it was probably inevitable that playing tennis on the street with no net and using drains as court markings was always going to cause controversy. However in truth it didn’t matter what activity we were playing, the outcome was usually the same.........










My brother and I are most likely a good example of why there is something wrong with a little competition. However at this stage of your lives I am sure most of you have realised life is just one-big-competition.  I’m just not sure who’s list it’s on.


PS. Eoin Jess was an Aberdeen player who played for the club back when they were still decent - he then had a second spell when they were shite - he was worshiped by the Downie children. His signing for Rangers would have meant a level of unpopularity on a Nick Clegg level.


PPS. My mother - despite my best attempts - still has the use of her legs (except when she's pished)


Thursday 4 November 2010

Crossing the Minch Inch-by-Inch

Perhaps it’s natural for somewhere as remote as the isle of Lewis that the journey to it’s shores is an adventure in itself. I lived and worked in Stornoway on the isle of Lewis for 11 months. I met some brilliant people, laid eyes upon some of the most stunning scenery I’ve ever encountered, ran over a sheep, seen a man fight a bin and lose, visited the best ‘worst’ night club ever, ate the finest black pudding known to humankind, offended half the islands free church community with jokes about Aids and Princess Di, tried to order whisky in Gaelic, got my first clubcard, lived through a hurricane, seen a goalkick taken in a head-wind blown out for a corner, and most importantly, made at least 4 friends.

When travelling to Lewis your transport choices are....


  • the Ferry


or

  • the Flight

(this isn't a joke this is the actual plane that takes you there)

The flight is considered by true sons and daughters of Lewis as cheating. The travel choice of the weak, frequented mainly by my flat mate and I and other ‘outsiders,’ ‘Weegies’ and ‘Edinburghers’...‘Edinburghites’...‘Edinburgalians’.... people from Edinburgh. My Afro-Celtic flatmate and I must have looked like the drug smuggling version of Turk and JD, because whenever we took the flight we were always subject to the ‘random’ bag search......




One time I was taking the flight back from Edinburgh and there was a gentleman who thought he was boarding a flight to Prague (how he made this mistake I’ll never know). A member of the airport staff retrieved him and his luggage just as we were going through the, "there’s-only-one-exit" pre-flight safety routine. I would have loved to been witness to this guys reaction if he had actually completed the journey to Stornoway.......


Another time an, erm, ‘heavier’ gentleman, was asked by the airhostess to counter-balance the plane by moving from the back to the front. I had never considered my 12 and a half stone frame could potentially save the lives of my fellow 8 passengers by merely moving seats. Not only that, while I was boarding the plane I noticed some sticky tape on the propellers (there obviously to stop the propellers flying off). I started to get that emotional, cold sweat. I was panicking. The Battle of Britain music played in my head accompanied by imagines of spluttering engines, mid air collisions, snakes on a plane, our boeing 747 ditching into the sea never to be recovered and the black box blaming my fat arsh for swapping seats. I didn’t want to fly on the god-forsaken, piece of shit excuse of an aeroplane. I wanted off.....

Why oh why did she have to wait until after we’d taken off before she asked me to move seats.....????

I decided to take the ferry next time. Surely no one will expect me to change seats to counter balance the vessel? The ferry.  The choice of real, authentic, (in-bred), island folk. I wouldn’t be nearly as nervous. The only thing that could threaten the ferry safely crossing the Minch would be a bad northeasterly or a North-Korean sub. I'd prefer my chances in either of those situations than risk plummeting to my death in a glorified washing machine

Relative to the outrageous cost of flying, (flybe could start a cross-Atlantic service for the price they charge for a flight to Stornoway) the ferry at £15 return, would appear to be a bit of a bargain. However, when you consider that half the time the ruddy thing is cancelled and the other half you’d trade places for a smooth voyage on the titanic, or an uneventful crossing on the Mary-Rose, you quickly realise your £15 hasn’t got you very far, worse than that in fact, it’s only got you to Ullapool.

The worst crossing I ever encountered was before I moved to Lewis. I was 17 and our school team was playing against the high school in Stornoway. It was a big game.  The Stornoway team had made it to the final of the Scottish Schools cup the previous year, but we still fancied our chances. We departed from Ullapool the evening before the game and arrived at, what-felt-like, some time the following week. It was awful. That night the crossing had more ups and downs than an escape podule in a Chilean mine. I spent the whole journey looking like Pete Docherty on a particularly bad come down. When not huddled in the foetal position trying to off-set the inevitable bouts of vomiting I was out puking over the side ‘feeding the seaguls’. When we got there we slept on crash mats in the school hall and played the game at silly o’clock the following morning. Circumstances had conspired against us and led to a particularly bad (I should really say typical) performance from myself in the sticks. We lost 8 or 9 nil, it could have been (was) 10 I’ve chosen not to remember.

As the defeated, sea sick travellers set about their journey home our captain couldn’t believe we played so badly, and felt the standard of the opposition didn’t warrant their place in the final......




Lewis and the town of Stornoway warrants your attention and is somewhere you should, no need, to visit. Forget improving rail services, forget dualling the A9 and forget building a new forth-road bridge, lets get started on a bridge to Stornoway. That way we can leave the ferry and the flights to the people mad enough to take them; those that are mad enough to live in Lewis in the first place...!!

(PS. The 'Minch' is the stretch of water that seperates Lewis from the Scottish mainland)