Category: General

  • Music

    I was talking to Nikki about music, or more, she was talking and I was listening being as I was knackered. About how music can evolke a moment, an emotion, an experience that you’ve linked to it in your memories. This can be a good thing, songs can make you happy, or sad, or remember something. The New World Symphony evolkes my dad for me I can’t listen to it without crying.

    I still love it though, it’s one of my favourite pieces of music.

    One of the distressing things about my life, which I thought of when I got this, is that I don’t get to give music the time it deserves. Music is a huge thing for me, I love it, it’s the soundtrack to my life, with my memory being so lousy music and pictures pull great chunks out from places my brain had forgotten they existed in. And at the moment, the current ‘in’ music, well, a lot of it fits in with my tastes. My tastes are pretty broad, and seem to have got broader as time’s gone on. I’m hoping this will be a trend which will continue; like a much cuter version of John Peel (and without the presenting talent) – I just love hearing something new.

    But, because of my uni work and various other things. No, mostly uni work, I just don’t listen to music. Writing my dissertation takes up enough of my brain that if I do have music on (which sometimes I need, sometimes the quiet is overpowering) then I don’t listen to it, it’s just background. If I put music on, like now, then I listen to it on the crappy little ‘Creative Labs’ speakers which I pulled from a skip at Xebec. One of the things I’m really looking forward to, when I finish my course, is listening – properly to some of the music I’ve aquired over the last few years. And going to gigs.

  • I know, I shouldn’t have booked the MOT…

    …when the bike wouldn’t start.

    But honestly, I thought it was the battery. I left the battery on charge after it wouldn’t go this morning; booked the MOT, crossed my fingers and prayed. At 1500, a full hour before the MOT I wheeled Cherry out of the garage onto the paving, I strapped all the bits to the bike – my presumption being if the battery is iffy I don’t really want to try and start her and then stop her (him?). She wouldn’t go. There followed half an hour of fettling, of switching the exhaust to the nice in good condition one that I bought for Claire (I couldn’t find it earlier so I’d fitted the ratty battered old one from Claire) because I was working through things I’d changed and that was the most similar to the one I’d had before. Finally I dragged her down the road in a (vain) attempt to get a rolling start. She just wouldn’t run. I’d like to say that my memory of riding two strokes kicked in. I’d like to say that I knew what was wrong.

    But I didn’t. I just randomly cursed and decided to change the spark plug, the old one it turned out consisting of a good layer of oil and very little sparking capacity and thus with 30 minutes to the MOT she was running. I ran round throwing things into the garage dragged the rest of my gear on and sped off. Well, I say ‘sped’. Sped might be an overstatement.

    This is was for two reasons. The first is that my rebuilt brakes have not exactly ‘settled in’ and my first pull on them gave a retardation effect similar to that of loosely gripping the brake disk with some damp lettuice. A couple of squeezes and there was some braking effect, not a lot, but it was definately getting a bit better. The main reason for the slowness was that everyone in Bristol promtly decided that they needed to be somewhere else, anywhere else, at 3:30 on a Friday afternoon. The traffic was dire. I filtered, somewhat cautiously, I’ve not ridden for months, the sun beating down on me. Lord was it hot. Finally, the ring road cleared a bit… and the skies did the opposite. It started raining. Not terribly hard, but just enough to let me know the universe was laughing at me ;-)

    Of course, this was an optimum opportunity for me, out of practice as I was, to experience the wonder of Chin Hung tyres. I’m a stickler for good quality tyres, but not, apparently, so much of a stickler as to transfer them from my other ‘zed to this one. Actually, that’s mostly because I’ve not been so impressed with the Mag Mopus tyres on the 251. I think the bike’s too heavy for the tyres. Anyway. It rained. Not a lot, enough to make a mockery of my summered (de-wintered) bike gear and summer gloves. Damp, I continued on…

    I made it to Hanham at 1555, my MOT being at 1600. I pulled over and checked the map. I struggled through Hanham, it was solid with traffic. Thankfully the rain’d stopped so I could actually have my visor up, but it was so sunny now that I could feel myself melting in my black bike gear. Finally I pulled into the industrial estate, I hunted round and couldn’t see the garage anywhere. I hopped off again to check the address – and look at my watch. 1615. Shit. I might as well see where the bloody place is anyway. The brakes were still spongy as hell (imagine squeezing on a sponge with a frozen pea right in the middle, that’s what it was like) and I had no real belief that – especially with the new computerised system – they’d be able to do the test.

    Finally, after hunting round for about 5 minutes I realised they were on the other side, at the back, inside the large multi-unit workshop. I stopped, killed the engine, stripped off a bit (i.e. my helmet, I didn’t suddenly perform an impromptu striptease using the bike as a prop (or indeed some form of kinky accessory), and wheeled the bike in…

    …and the guy turned to me and said “MOT”?

    “Yep,” I said, “am I too late”?

    “Nope, you’re fine… D’you want a cup of tea?”

    I have never sucked down tea quite as greatfully as that cuppa. I had half a bottle of water too, I was so hot and tired. We chatted while he did the test. He suggested that I might want to get some red dye or somesuch to make the rear light more red (waves at Nikki (:-P)) but that it was okay this year at least. He prodded round the bike; I’ve not seen a bike test before and it’s oddly archaic.

    Eventually he came to the brake test. He rolled the bike onto the rollers and his wife operated the machine. From no-where the bike’s brakes worked. The front wheel locked and the bike rolled forward… off the rollers.

    The back brake though was shite on the way there. I’d tried to adjust it when I got there but the adjuster’s stuck. It’s still covered in quarry dust – and when that went on the roller, he had to press really hard…. to make it pass.

    We chatted awhile while he checked the headlamp alignment (something I’d not bothered with); he even got me to sit on the bike while he did it… Finally he declared that there was nothing really wrong, and that the bike had passed. Cherry. MOT’d. Running.

    As he did the paper(computer)work we chatted, and I joked about the tradition of it raining every time I got a bike on the road – and that it’d rained on me on the way there… as I entered my PIN in the machine there was a deep rumble and a flash of lighting. No, I’m not joking. There was a full on thunderstorm which broke out as I completed payment for my MOT. Piss = Taken.

    I headed out into the rain, the summer gear I had on now demonstraing it’s complete lack of waterprooficity, and rode through the appauling traffic. Now, I don’t know what you think, but as far as I’m concerned; rain should not hurt when it hits you. But it did. It felt like little spears attempting to dig into my skin. When I say, incidentally, rain, I don’t want you to think summer shower. This was torrential rain. This was an inch of standing water on the road. This was me fording streams.

    Finally, I got home. There was 2 inches of standing water on the gravel in the garden. There was a good 2 inches up against the wall of the house. Thunder / lightining. Incidentally, where’s a really bad place to be in a thunderstorm? On a bike.

    I squidged, dripping, into the garage and halfheartedly put away the tools which I’d thrown in there. And then remembered my uniform… ‘drying’ on the line. I continued to drip my way round the garage (wet, but not in a good way) and then wheeled Cherry in. I took my bag off the back of the bike. My mobile phone was sat end down in about an inch of water. Fortunately the MOT certificate was in a plastic sleeve (not just a pretty face, see), the phone however was less happy. I switched it off as I took it in the house, it switched itself back on. I took the battery out. I went outside, it continued to rain, I debated taking off my bike helmet, but instead decided to concentrate on making my uniform for tomorrow dry, so I pulled it all, stuck it inside, and I know no-one will believe me, but as I shut the door on the washing machine and switched it to spin, the rain stopped. I walked outside, yanked my helmet off and informed the universe that it was very funny, just this once, before coming inside and setting up a ‘drying room’ in my lounge using fanheaters so as to have bike gear for tomorrow.

    I still rock though. Even if I am somewhat damp.

  • A few hours my shiny metal ass.

    Did I say it’d take a few hours to get that bike on the road? I recall saying so.

    Yesterday I worked on it for the 4 hours of morning I had and got the brakes rebuilt. Not fitted, but rebuilt. Last night, after my 8 hours of shift work and 2 hours of commuting I got home at 1030, changed and headed out to the garage to continue working on my bike for an hour and a half. I got the brakes together, with brake fluid in, and working if ineffective. This morning I’ve spent a further 2 hours on the bike and got the brakes spongy but maybe acceptable. I need to stop, on the way to the MOT, and get a new sidelight bulb.

    I had to swap the exhaust from Claire on, because I noticed a hole in the one that was on the bike (oops, I thought it wasn’t quite *that* rusty. I may scrounge to Nikki to see if we can’t weld that back up). I’ve got an MOT booked for 1600, I only hope the bloody thing starts, I tried and discovered that the battery (not exactly the most cared for battery in the world) was giving an astounding 9 Volts… when not under load. I didn’t bother to see what the laughably pathetic load-voltage was.

    I also need to swap the clutch lever over, ‘cos otherwise it might fail on that (I’ve no idea how picky this MOT place is, it’s not my usual one which seems to have become very busy; presumably as all the summer bikers get their bikes MOT’d). Ironically, I got the SORN declaration through today; so hopefully I’ll be able to tax’er this afternoon, the day the DVLA’s letter saying the bike’s off the road arrived :-)

    Work yesterday was pretty good, except that I got the time for someone’s tablet moved, and then promptly forgot to give it. Frack. To be fair, yesterday afternoon was chaos in a tin; the ward round happened so late that it was actually occuring during hand over. I got all my competencies signed off, I now need the front sheet signed by Bridgit who’s my associate mentor, but the one who actually has the Mentor qualification. *And* in ultrasuper-good news, I talked to someone who worked at the hospital I’m applying for work at – apparently it’s generally a really damn spiffy hospital to work at; so I’ll get that application off this weekend, maybe even today. And in ultra-ultra-super cool news, Dee agreed to be my referee *smiley*

    All cross your fingers now, I need this job.

    In weird things, I was listening to Radio5Live (yes, yes, but AM radio choices are sorely limited these days. And I got sick of ‘Classic Gold’) and they played… American Edit. And were inciting people to download Mashups. And commenting on the insanity of one thing being classed as a piece of music ‘cos it’s licenced and the other being evil piracy and destruction of the original author’s work, because it’s not licenced. Sometimes I want to hug the BBC.

    Finally, I’ll leave you with the ‘treat me better’ video that James found (James is, incidentally, your source for online coolness),

  • Tired *again*

    So, today was a good day. At least, I think it was a good day. I worked with Claire, who’s really good at standing back and letting me work; which is really nice. I just feel so much more competent after days like that; it’s really what I needed, I’d started to feel completely useless. I got some advice from her a few times, which is what I wanted. Definately better. Yeah.

    The bike bits arrived today, I’m *way* impressed. Incredibly so. I only ordered them yesterday, and here they were. That’s proper Next Day. I’m debating fitting them tomorrow; if I can get the bike up and done tomorrow; well; that’d rock. However, I suspect I’d be ‘pushing my luck’ to get the bike MOT’d and Taxed tomorrow morning. It doesn’t stop the temptation being there.

    I also got a mail back from my Year head. It comprehensively answers the wrong question. I’m not sure why. *sigh*. See, If I can disregard my lowest mark, then I can just ignore the crap essay and concentrate on the future. Otherwise I’ll have to dig out the resubmission stuff. Meeeeh.

    Anyway, bed.

  • A Survey, it’s rare for me, but it was cute

    Mitochondria
    You scored 70 Industriousness, 22 Centrality, and 19 Causticity!
    You’re a mitochondrion! The mitocondria is a “power plant” of the cell. Nothing could ever get done in the cell without you creating energy. Since both the Citric Acid cycle and Oxidative Phosphorylation happen inside the mitochondria, you are critical to every eukaryotic cell. You are always a hard worker, no matter what you are tasked to. Most of the time, you tend to be working in the background, but that often suits you just fine. You get along with almost everyone, and aren’t these the most important things?
    My test tracked 3 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:

    free online dating free online dating
    You scored higher than 72% on Industriousness
    free online dating free online dating
    You scored higher than 18% on Centrality
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    You scored higher than 54% on Causticity

    Link: The Which Cell Organelle are you? Test written by fading_shadows on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the 32-Type Dating Test
  • Shock and Awe

    I’m amazed how much this failed essay has got to me. I knew it was crap when I handed it in; but I thought it was maybe a marginal pass. Reading the comments though makes me feel that it’s at very best a pass. At the very best. I’m almost 100% certain it’s not.

    And that somehow has got to me. Given that my worst grade doing biochemistry was an awesome 8% (to be fair, that was a chemistry exam, and I managed to beat some of the chemists in it!), it suprises me how much this has got to me. I think it’s because despite the fact I’m aware that most of the actual assessments in this course have nothing to do with actual nursing, nothing to do with the day to day practicalities; or even the real planning and management processes required later on; they’re just a hoop-jumping-test, I do actually care about the course. Or passing the course, and doing well. And up ’til now I’d been doing well. Not brilliantly, like another member of the course, I just don’t really grok what they want in the essays. I think I’ve handed in a genious piece of work and it comes back saying it’s crap. I think I’ve handed in absolute shite and they pat me on the head and say “good girl, that’s excellent”.

    But this time I was right, it was crap, and it’s come back and is haunting me. And I should just get over it, and I will soon, but it’s bothering me. A lot. Really, a lot. More than is reasonable.

  • Failure

    When I did my Biochem degree, I didn’t really work as such. In fact, I barely worked at all. In fact, even implying that I worked might be inaccurate to an incredible degree. So I was used to failure. In fact, I felt a total failure most of the time, but I was depressed and I didn’t really care about myself.

    These days I’m a much more sane and happy bunny. Indeed, in general I’m a pretty happy individual, but not today, because today I got back the “I didn’t get it” essay. I didn’t get it when I handed it in, I didn’t understand how an essay that was, as far as I could see, descriptive could include the extent of critical evaluation required to be a level 3 essay. Others, they did, I just couldn’t grasp it. I still haven’t entirely.

    Unfortunately, phrases like “very descriptive” and “should have” are scattered through the non-marker’s comments (because they’re working to rule and not marking). I’m 95% certain I’ve failed this essay. Which is the first essay in 3 years which I’ve failed. It whines about me not including a private reflection, which I referenced correctly but didn’t include (what with it being *private*. Fucking uni). But mostly I’m trying to summon the will power to look at it. The worst thing is that if I got 40% (i.e. just a pass) then I could disregard it, ‘cos you get to disregard your lowest mark if you do the disseratation. But if I fail, then I’ve got to re-write it, but I’d still be limited, I think, to 40%. Fuck.

    I’m obsessing about it too. I can’t stop thinking about this stupid damn essay.

    Ah, examining it makes me angry. That helps loads. Comments like “use reference more judiciously”. After “Use available resources… (BNF, research articles)” it says “eg. read BNG, Nursing standard”. How exactly does her fracking comment differ from mine? ARGH. Oh I hate this management fucking crap.

  • International help Kate day

    So, I’m filling in this exciting form to apply for a job. I’d like to send it off in the next couple of days; but I’ve been reminded how much I hate (really hate) application forms. Hell, application forms, interviews, everything.

    So, if anyone has any suggestions for improvement on the following I’d be really grateful:

    Prior to starting my training I worked for 15 months as a healthcare assistant in [Freds Magic Hospial]; this enabled me to gain experience of the hospital environment and of hands on patient care. I have continued throughout my training to work in this role as it provides a degree of continuity with ward work which is not provided by the nursing course. This has given me a good grounding in the interpersonal skills required to engage with patients; and to build a comprehensive and evidence based care programme with the client’s involvement. Maintaining this role has also granted me far greater ward experience than would normally be the case and as staff have been aware of my student status they have often made use of my skills.

    In both roles I have worked in a wide variety of wards and departments (including trauma / orthopaedic, surgical, medical, gynecological, rehabilitation, accident & emergency, assessment and palliative care) spread across four different hospitals and also working in the community.

    I will bring to the ward commitment and enthusiasm for the role, and an appreciation of the importance of team work in the delivery of high quality care. I am a friendly approachable individual with a good grasp of the limitations of my current knowledge and experience as a (soon to be) newly qualified nurse. [I think this should probably read as something about my opportunites to develop as a newly qualified staff nurse rather than my limitations (cheers Aisling!)]

    I am a highly motivated individual, and am keen to both consolidate my knowledge and, over time, to  develop as a nurse within a ward environment. I have particular interest in the needs of disadvantaged social and economic groups within the care process and in the provision of evidence based holistic care.

  • Progressing

    So, I rang BSA Regal and ordered the bits for my bikes; on the basis that I’d rather know that the Charlie’s brake calliper is fixed (and the iffy master cylinder is okay) rather than leave dodgy brake bits in a box where they can shock me later. Fracknuts, I should have got some brakepads too. Although, that said, the ones on Charlie aren’t that worn and could be slapped onto Cherry. Yes. Hrm. We’ll ignore that problem for now.

    That’s 50 quid spent, 30 on Cherry and 20 on Charlie. Not too bad really. Just hope it all works, although given the ultimate bizarreness of the weather recently motorbikes look less fun, especially since my gear is about as waterproof as a paper bag, it’s all up for renewal when I get paid, but hey.

    I also rang the govt. dept that’s been failing to sort out paperwork for me; they’ve extended the deadline again, but are getting a bit difficult about extending it. Given that it’s *their* fault that the paperwork wasn’t sent to the NHS in the first place; well; it feels a bit pot-kettle-black for them to say that the NHS is taking too long. Yes, it is, but if they’d’ve sent it when they said they had, then this’d’ve been sorted by now. I can’t ring the NHS again, not yet anyhow.

    I’m trying to get the nerve together to ring the hospital I want to work at. It’s scary. I’ve half filled in their application form, I just want to have a chat with them about the jobs, and so on. I hate selling myself, I’m not good at it. Yesterday I managed to pay the house money bankers draft back into my account, and the money I withdrew from my credit card (yeah, I know) back into that (which was to pay auction fees).

    It is again scary. I think moving up to B’ham or M’chester will be a good thing. It’ll save me money, it’s like a dry run for Canada – new place, new people, all that crap. Well, b’hams not a new place (it is, in a way, it’s changed so much since I was there). I just like having certainty in my future; and that ain’t what’s there at the moment. I should get on, I’ve got my dissertation to write too.

  • And pause.

    So, I went to see my mom (deliberate) this weekend; I’ve not been down for a while and consequently the list of things that needed doing was quite long. I did start to wonder about how my dad kept up.

    (skip past this bit for the wittery kate talk)
    I… bought fencing material and fenced off with barbed wire both ends of the river (after 6 years of people trespassing and damaging my mum’s garden the fight just got a bit nastier; incidentally, while Nikki I’m sure (being a farm-lass) would have had no problems dealing with barbed wire, I found it almost as much fun as it looked like it’d be); put up the new washing line; repaired the gate; removed the excess fencing from the gate post; ‘repaired’ my mum’s car door lock (it jams, locked, irritatingly); cleaned up mouse crap from high up where my mum couldn’t reach; put up a shelf and hangy things in the shed (well, technically, my mum, in a disturbing character change has decided to become much more independent (she’s perhaps fed up of having broken things around the house waiting for me to visit) so I drilled holes and she screwed the bits of wood up); I also prepared but didn’t put the edging up on the bridge (I think we need some ‘nicer’ wood). This took up the large majority of the weekend and when I left, just before lunch today I was knackered.

    I also checked and found out why the speaker in my car was working intermittently, the ‘quality’ soldering I’d done when I put it in (like a lot of other jobs) was rather botched, so it’d snapped. I put that on my ‘when I get home’ list. However, when I got home I did the supermarket shopping (Woot, I have food!); finally fixed the frying pan that’s been broken for months (now it has a screw made from some high-quality-metal or other which will I’m sure soon add the daily requirement of rust to my diet); the saucepan that’s had a loose handle and thus sat on the table for weeks; the broken wire to the speaker in my car (‘cos I couldn’t go to work without it working!) and now I am… knackered.

    Oh, I also watched Jean de Florette, with my mum, which turned out to be excellent and added to the strangeness (my mum had been excitedly showing me screwdrivers earlier in the day, a quality I presumed I’d inhereted from my dad…) when my mum professed a need for a widescreen telly. I tried and tried to persuade them when my dad was alive, but no need for a widescreen telly ever existed before… suddenly now, I’d given up hope and watching stuff on the ex-rental telly with the poor colour rendition and the flickering from bright to dark had become kind of normal. And then, suddenly, she’s all ‘I need a widescreen telly’. The world is going odd.

    (and stop skipping) 

    Anyway, I had a long chat with my mom about moving. About not being able to afford to stay in Bristol and thinking about moving Northward… I kind of expected a flurry of ‘no’ – me being further away will almost certainly mean less of me seeing my mum. But there was none. My mum basically said ‘for god’s sake, get on with it’. So, now I’m thinking about it more meaningfully. I’ve even got a Birmingham Univeristy Hospital application form sat on my desktop waiting for me to fill it in.

    I guess I’m starting to step outside my comfort zone again. Which is kinda scary. I was talking (I do a lot of that) to Trey about it; and it came down to the fact that I want to leave this country in 2 years. Either I can struggle in Bristol, probably not be able to get the kind of house I want, and so on; or I can move up North, get paid the same, live in a cheaper area, almost certainly find a house I actually want, or at least that’s appropriate and in my price range (and has a garage, hell, I’ve seen a few on Fish4 just scanning the listings). This will hopefully also allow me to save up a bit, and having a garage will mean that left-hooking Rebecca and getting her all prepped for the journey shouldn’t be so hard. So I’m going to give a couple of places a ring on Monday afternoon, see if I can’t scare up some jobs.

    Of course, this is in addition to writing my dissertation; and I’ve realised I really need to start preparing Rebecca for Pride. The call is still out, incidentally for Stewards. We just need two shiny people who’d like to be stewards around a shiny, shiny black Minor. Go look at (last years, okay, I know) the Pride of Minors website. The car that needs stewards is Fifi, the shiny black one, driven by our mate Guy. Go’wan, y’know you want to be a star…

    Anyway, I seem to have stopped, and I want to go play with this form, so I can get it sent off nice and sharpish like. So. Yes. I’m also very tired, and quite hungry (all I ate for lunch today was a slice of plum and chocolate cake).