Bullied by the birds
It’s two months since I wrote a blog about the drought called Summer days and thirsty hedgehogs, and since that time we have had no rain. The country is split between those who live in towns- and so...
View ArticleArt and soul – do they matter?
On Sunday I discovered that I am a member of a tiny minority. I belong to a group of around three million people world- wide who watch the live performances of opera filmed from the New York...
View ArticleThe Queen!
This post has been re-blogged for the reasons in my latest post The Tragic and Hilarious Life of a Blogger I’ve just seen a photograph of this radiant elderly woman coming out of hospital, her...
View ArticleZen and the Art of House Maintenance
I think house maintenance has a better ring to it than boring old housework… this way, instead of being a housewife I could even be called a house maintenance executive, or a house maintenance CEO....
View ArticleHollywood, Ruined Reputations and Truth
In the New Zealand Parliament this week the leader of one of the parties put up a motion congratulating the New Zealand Ambassador and his second secretary for “their courageous and commendable” role...
View ArticleThe upsides and the downsides of being a woman
Something made me re-read a book for girls which my Victorian grandmother had pressed on me when I was seven. It was about a girl who’d lost her mother, and whose military father was absent. It...
View ArticleThe good enough life
Back in the last century, a psychologist called Dr Winnicott coined the comforting phrase ‘A good – enough mother’ …. I looked back at yesterday, and thought, yes, I suppose it was a good enough...
View ArticleThe Tragic and Hilarious Life of a Blogger !
Laughter and tears are not very far apart was the subject of an essay I once had to write at school. This is somewhat how I feel as I go once more into Spam, to clean out yet another of the daily two...
View ArticleCarrying On With The Army Again (part 4)
This is the continuing story of ‘my brilliant career’ in the army! I had returned from my regime of prayer and fasting, otherwise known as a Religious Leadership course, none the wiser, but many times...
View ArticleSeize the day!
Today was not one of those days, but One of Those Days. Yesterday, as I watched the tiny, greenery- yallery birds we call silver- eyes in the trees, hunting for insects and the like, I thought how I...
View ArticleRise up children and be free
How to make yourself very, very unpopular! Years ago I discovered that in the tug of war between the rights of women and the needs of children it can be dangerous to take sides. I gave up writing...
View ArticleCricketers, bridge-players and great white hunters
These I have loved, to quote Rupert Brooke. I think I’m a serial monogamist – but didn’t dare put that in the title and invite a torrent of prurient spam into the file! Neither did I dare put ‘men’ in...
View ArticleThe mystery of other lives
Not a picture of hear no evil, see no evil and speak no evil, but a picture of the three fat wood pigeons sitting on the power line outside our house yesterday. They used to be plentiful, but...
View ArticleThe fun of fashion
What to wear has occupied many happy hours and years of my thinking life. So though some research has claimed that little girls and boys are conditioned to be male and female… pink versus blue… I’m...
View ArticleMany lives or just one?
“To live is by universal consent to travel a rough road. And how can a rough road that leads nowhere be worth travelling? “ A well known philosopher, MacNeille Dixon, asked this question in a series...
View ArticleFood, fear and films
Village life takes ingenuity in a tight spot, and stamina – plenty of it! These are the times that test men’s souls! Well, we haven’t actually had any chicken stealing like Mr Woodhouse in ‘Emma’,...
View ArticleThe drug we can’t live without
“Thank God for tea! What would the world do without tea! How did it exist? I am glad I was not born before tea.” I couldn’t agree more with Sidney Smith, an Anglican clergyman, who died in over a...
View ArticleTesting, testing, testing !
When Dr Christian Barnard, world-famous surgeon who invented the first heart transplant, decided to sue me for libel I was both intimidated and exhilarated. It wasn’t an easy time for us at that point…...
View ArticleThe noble art of reading in bed
When I was young and naive, and a novice journalist, I wrote an article in a woman’s magazine which began:’ I got most of my education under the bed-clothes’, and went on to discuss children’s...
View ArticleThe magic and the mystery of blogging
An ikon I’d never seen before popped up on the right hand side! Word Press, bless their little cotton socks, telling me I’ve been blogging for a year. Really? A whole year of writing,...
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