Free Heatherington; Turing Lecture

Glasgow Uni D 755

At the beginning of the year, Glasgow University announced that the Heatherington Research Club would be closed, because they’d accumulated £40,000 of debt and didn’t have any way to pay it back. Well, here it is nearly 6 months later, and the postgraduates have rebelled: they broke into the building last week and have occupied it, serving free coffee and tea, and giving the postgraduates a space in which to congregate once more. It was silly of the University to leave the space unused (D. wished that it could have become postgraduate office space, as there is so very little of that on campus). Now, it’s back to being a postgraduate space … without the membership fees.

This evening D. went to a “Turing Lecture” given by Donald E. Knuth. It was deadly dull (one of the questions was on whether P=nP, and Knuth asked whether anybody wanted the problem explained … and a lone hand extended: one of the university faculty. D. and the rest of the audience could have screamed and chased the man out of the room.), but the man is a legend in computer programming circles. D. admits that he’s been away from the computer science people for long enough to feel uncomfortable at the vast amounts of body hair and all-around geekery present. When nerds want to get a book signed, be afraid. Be very, very afraid.

-D & T

February 7, In Retrospect

bathroom sink cabinets in showroom 4
Yellow.2.Knit.Top.1 Yellow.2.Purl.Bottom.3

February 7, 2007, found us deep into the renovation of our condo in Benicia, picking out cabinets and fittings. The floors had been torn out and had begun being replaced, the place was in chaos, yet we were honestly thinking that we’d be there forever … or, at least another few years, to enjoy living through all of the dust! D. was working as a technical instructor, teaching people various programming languages. T. was busily writing, trapped in a single room away from the builders. That month also saw us finishing up some interesting knitting projects, such as this yellow hat … which was made for an adult who begged and pleaded with D. to make her one. It’s a baby hat, but she just had to have one for herself.

Tacos 1 Tacos 3

Two years later (2009) found us living in Glasgow, Scotland, making Tacos. Between the two points, we’d finished the remodel, rented out the condo, sold everything else we owned, and moved to Glasgow. D. had finished another Master’s degree and had embarked on a PhD. A La Carte had been published, and Mare’s War was four months from being released. We were living in a converted church, a block from the largest reference library in Europe, with no idea where we’d be in two years.

Flash forward another two years to today, and the end of the PhD is in sight, we’re contemplating selling everything yet again, and moving … again. And contemplating buying stock in a box company…!

A scientific fact – recently humorously discussed on NPR – is that human beings can’t go from Point A to Point B in a straight line. Unlike birds, with their magnetic senses, blindfolded, a human being makes a staggering line of loops and circles. That has some parallel to how we live our lives. In many ways, not being able to see what’s coming next feels like being blindfolded, but the good news is that even as we’re making crooked loops, we’re circling our goal… and eventually, we end up safely where we started from. We don’t believe we’ll do that geographically, as there will be transportation involved with people who actually can see where they’re going, but we do live in faith that metaphorically, at least, this will work to our advantage. A person walking blindfolded eventually circles and ends up back where they started from, and so we, too, will find our way “home,” where ever that will mean next.

-D & T

Weekend Snack: Blueberry Yogurt

Blueberries, Sugar, and Yogurt

If you’ve never had it, we strongly encourage you to try mixing up a cup of blueberries (or blackberries, but you know you’ll spend an hour picking seeds out of your teeth), a generous dollop of Greek yogurt, and topping that with a few tablespoons of brown sugar. Don’t worry about not stirring this very well: it’s all about the contrasts in flavor between fresh, sour, and sweet. It’s also about how the brown sugar melts into the yogurt, but remains sort of gritty.

Truly – this is a favorite in our kitchen, and the early berries — from some warm hothouse far from Britain — were a Spring-to-come treat.

-D & T

Worst Flight Ever

Southampton 03

I’ve had some bad flights before, but they’ve been bad for being long, or occupied by obnoxious people, squalling babies, hyperactive children, or other somewhat tolerable things. This morning’s flight to Southampton, for example, was a bit frightening getting underway, because we made such a steep ascent, almost like we were going to do a loop. We didn’t level out until 25,000 feet and we were practically pulling g’s. It was a bit bumpy along the way, but we did eventually head out.

Today’s return flight from Southampton, though, qualifies as the worst flight I’ve ever been on because we had to abort the landing 2 times due to sever wind shear, and wind gusts from between 35 and 56 miles per hour. We were finally told that we had fuel enough for one more shot at it, and if we couldn’t make that landing, we’d have to divert to Aberdeen. The prospect of being diverted to Aberdeen is a fair horror because it’s several hours away by bus, which would have been how they’d have gotten everybody back to Glasgow. But the landings?

The aborted landings were a true horror of flight. The first was aborted at about 10 feet from the ground, the second at several hundred feet from the ground. In both cases, the pilot yanked the plane into a high ascent (think, better than 45°), powered the engines to a high whine, and said nothing until we’d climbed back to altitude to circle around for another try. You’d think that the first one would have been worse than the second, because we knew something of what was possible. Not so: the second was worse, because we’d all had time to worry about what might possibly happen. By the time we were circling for the third attempt, people were vomiting, and those who weren’t were either cursing, whimpering, or very quiet.

There weren’t even any bumps on the third attempt, except for the very definite jolt of the aircraft as the pilot sought to get us firmly upon the ground.

So, I made it home, after a fairly successful business day, and am supremely grateful that it’s over.

(T. adds, Thank God.)

-D

Starting Over…

Gung Hay Fat Choi! Never has the Lunar New Year seemed like such a good idea. 2011 hasn’t seemed to have much to recommend it thus far, what with the ice, cold, and illness it has had to offer, so we’re gratefully looking to the Year of the Rabbit to begin. Can’t believe it’s February already — ! In the dissertation countdown, D. now has five months until his oral exams, and his first deadline to turn in a completed first draft.

The next few months promise to be better. The program for our March concert has been set — and it’s definitely a long one, timed down to the second to take advantage of the orchestra until the final moment. (The Musicians Union is pretty fierce.) We’ll be singing a few of the aforementioned “choral classics,” including, for our choral aficionados, the Parry, I Was Glad, Faure’s Cantique de Jean Racine, a really gorgeous arrangement of Elgar’s Lux Aeterna from Nimrod, and the Easter hymn from Cavalleria Rusticana — PLUS the Rossini Vespers! Yes, there will be the usual twelve minute or so intermission, and boy are we glad.

Also, in March, we’ve got company coming — our last of the year, unless the Georgia friends come in June — we may have T’s “little” though-taller-than-she-is-and-has-been-since-he-was-thirteen brother and niece coming to visit, if all the passport issues go well. Looks like they’ll be our last guests, though; after March, the Purge and Pack will continue in earnest. So far, T’s rid the house of three suitcases full of books, and next week will weed out all of the extra clothes that won’t be needed. After that, small appliances and furniture will be sold and given away — because we want to travel as lightly as we can. We still have no idea where we’re going, but especially after D’s last bout of illness, T. is beginning to feel like the East Coast city slickers in the 1800’s who were told to move West to help out their consumptive relatives. Much as we love mist and fog, there’s something unhealthful about it in a big city, and we’ll have to find someplace either cleaner or drier — or both. D. has been sick here every winter, at least twice, and was sick for the entire month of January. He’s finally — gratefully — on the mend… and job-hunting.

frosted weeds

Right now, we’re trying to be open to possibilities, but T. would very much like to live where she can have a few herbs growing in a sunny patch — even a sunny patch of concrete with little pots. D. tends to be looking toward where the best money could be made, as he’s looking ahead to those student loan bills, but he’s planning to do some sort of teaching or mentoring wherever we end up, even if it’s volunteering somewhere. One of the best things we’ve learned from being here is more of what our personal strengths are. Living abroad, you learn to do without familiar things, but you also learn what you cannot do without. Despite the pipes and the mold on the window casings, with which T. battles on what seems an hourly basis, it’s been a good experience.

…and it will be an even better one when all the loose ends are tied up, and we’re on the road to somewhere else.

Meanwhile, we’re scuffing our feet in our metaphorical bunny slippers, and vowing to take what comes with curiosity and equanimity. Just like a rabbit.

Ahh, Customs Declarations

Syrup, Candy, HAH 1

They’re ubiquitous, when shipping into and out of the European Economic Community: Customs Declarations. They must go on every package we send back to the US, and on everything coming over here. Occasionally something gets stopped by customs (we’re recalling having been told that we must pay £115 for a lens which we owned, but had sent to the factory for repairs – didn’t happen, ’cause we kept the sales receipt). But, most of the time, things don’t get stopped.

Syrup, Candy, HAH 2

In this case, what didn’t get stopped (and we’re so thankful) was labeled “Syrup” and “Candy.” Umm… really? The cough medicine must be the “syrup” and the Ibuprofen, therefore, is “candy.” Yeah, sure. Also? The dollar value beneath which things don’t routinely get inspected … would be $15 coming this way, and £15 going that way. So, if you ever need to have something slide beneath the radar, well, there you go.


It’s supposed to snow this evening, and D. is off to Southampton for work: a 6:15 a.m. flight down there, to arrive back in Glasgow at something like 9 p.m. Truly a long day, for someone who had been so ill. We’re glad that he’s now almost completely recovered from whatever nasty flu-thing he had, but looking forward to a decent weekend without sickness!

-D & T

etc. ad infinitum…

Lynedoch Crescent D 370

After a brief detour into the forties (or 7°C), the twenties (-4°C) and the ice are back, and have brought with them the deep, clinging fog, the thickness of which makes it almost impossible to see across the street. It is RIDICULOUS out there, but that’s just another typical winter day in Glasgow. Meanwhile, we strive to entertain ourselves, now that for us, at least the worst has passed. We are back to eight hours of “daylight.” It seems that we are sensitive to darkness in that we are sluggish when it dips below that amount… but now, we’re a bit more alert. And it’s a good thing.


We keep a running list of Scots words… well, really, they’re English words, and they’re “bad” words (because isn’t that what most people learn first when they’re in another country?) – or at least questionable words. These are mainly usage words which we stumble across in our conversations with the natives. Since our friend Mary’s interaction with it, we’ve been listening for the contemptuous phrase, “what are you like?” and we’ve heard “what are they like,” which made us happy, since the scorn wasn’t directed toward us! We also now know, for example, that when you call someone a “wee nyaff,” you are referring to them as that most hated of insects — a midge (or “midgie,” as they’re called here – apparently a midge is a garbage man in some parts) or a mosquito. So, a wee nyaff — knee-aff — is a pernicious pest. We also are a bit shocked — and amused, really — to learn that a “muppet” is not an innocent creature of Jim Henson wizardry. Och, nae — it’s a useless, stupid person who can’t seem to manage without the hand of another, er… making all of its movements…! That puts Miss Piggy in a whole new light, doesn’t it?


Lynedoch Crescent D 364

We dragged ourselves back to chorus last week to begin rehearsal for our last two concerts of the year. We began with Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle — which always sounds to us like a “little mess,” and, frankly, it is right now. (But, the title really means a little solemn mass.) It’s only a little messy, though, and we’re surprised at how good we sound. It’s challenging, but it has fugues, which make musical sense, and are not as hard as they sound, once you learn them and get up to speed. As the concert is in March, we’ll have to fast-forward our learning; the ranks are rather thin right now, as many people are still in the grip of the five-day-‘flu going around. (It has managed to miss T. entirely, which makes her nervous — she’s not sure why she’s so blessed!) However, since there are seven — SEVEN — soloists in the piece, there’s actually not that much for the chorus to do.

Meanwhile we are wading through sight-reading Vaughn Williams’ Toward the Unknown Region, which is a fun one for the Americans, as it’s the words of a Walt Whitman poem (yay!) set to some really …unique 20’s era music. (Vaughn Williams is an acquired taste for many; “modern” music from the 1920’s tends to be full of clashing notes.) We’ll begin learning Belshazzar’s Feast, another “modern” piece, written in 1931, for our final official concert of the year. “Unofficial” concerts continue throughout the summer months, with short programs of “choral classics.”

The idea of choral classics is always a funny thing for us, as the songs which “everybody knows” and are classics to our Scottish friends are usually something we have to sight read and learn as fast as we can. (Can YOU belt out Verdi’s Va Pensiero practically from memory? How about Hubert Parry’s I Was Glad? THEY can. It’s kind of annoying.) Which begs the question, what’s an American choral “classic?” What are the songs that “everybody knows?” (Other than patriotic songs and Old MacDonald… which we’ve been informed is technically Scottish…) It’s such a big country, we can hardly say that there ARE songs “everybody” knows in all fifty states… which is yet another difference between the UK and the U.S.. Our choral “classics” must be more regional…?

Finnieston 258

Days of bone-deep cold, when the fog doesn’t lift, mean that we’re not too keen to go out. D’s finally finishing a bout of “the dreaded lurgi,” as the ‘flu is called here, and the cold air just aggravates his coughing. Usually times like these mean it’s time for hot baths, and languishing in the suds.

Well, it WOULD mean that. But, Glasgow has a wee problem with insulation — since our waste pipe froze and forced water back into all the flats, it’s obvious that the pipes aren’t insulated to counteract the cold. What does this mean? Tepid showers. Baths where one has to run the kettle and fill the largest (non-canning) pot a few times to “help” fill the tub. Very short prep time in the morning, as one does the basics of washing within a four or five minute period, and leaps forth from the shower with a quickness. We shake our heads at the whole thing, but then we ARE saving water, we suppose… it’s very green to take three minute showers. Right?? RIGHT???

To comfort ourselves at the lack of hot baths (at home, at least; the pool has insulated everything, so their showers can boil the skin from the body) we took time to resurrect the lovely Bad SciFi Night movie marathon, but this time we added our own twist. It was Bad Disney Flicks — and we had a good time making fun of movies that were filmed in Glorious Technicolor years before we were born, and have their own five flavors of bad. While we do love our Hayley Mills, OY, is That Darn Cat an awful, horrific and tiresome movie. Can’t reason why, but it is somehow cathartic to groan and roll one’s eyes at the stupid characters. (This explains the success of many, many movies…) Somehow, The Snowball Express has held up through seeing it at years of church socials and Family Fun Nights, and of course The Parent Trap – the Lohan-free original – remains forever as a favorite. (We’re withholding judgment on Moonspinners until next weekend when we finish it. Maybe now we’ll move onto Bad Westerns, and break out the John Wayne… Or not.)

View from Skypark 176 HDR

This reminds us of that dreadful parable of The House With the Golden Windows.

Glasgow at Night

Glasgow Merchant City 58

As we return from our weekly choir practice, we walk past George’s Square. Time and again, we say, “we ought to have brought a camera!” Usually, though, it’s just too much fuss, between music, water bottles, hats, gloves, scarves, coats, and (perhaps) our snow-cleats. This evening, though, we bothered, and were rewarded with the sight of the moon floating above the City Chambers building. Despite the forecast, it wasn’t snowing, nor really even very cold (a few degrees above freezing). We don’t know about stars aligning – we can never see but one or two, due to the light pollution – but we certainly feel fortunate to have been there.

-D & T