Showing posts with label illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illness. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Love, hate and Twitter. Or, the good and bad of the internet.

Yesterday, someone called me a pompous, sanctimonious arse.

I was ill for three days; that is why there has been radio silence. There was a fairly ordinary state of health one moment, and then – hit all over with hammers. It’s that kind of thing when you can hardly move or speak, just groan. It made me think of how I take health for granted. I always say of course, of course it’s the most precious thing, but I’m not sure I really stop to appreciate the actual truth of that. When your entire body hurts and you can’t move, nothing is worth anything. You could have a cellar full of rubies downstairs, and it would not matter a damn. I thought of all those people who struggle with chronic pain every day of their lives, and felt very small and very grateful.

Anyway, it’s a Sunday, so I’m going to tell you a rambling story. Yesterday, I was a bit better, but still very tottery, so I lay in bed with my swimmy head and Stanley the Dog gazing at me with his best Florence Nightingale eyes, and watched the racing. I still get rather grumpy with Channel 4 for aspects of their coverage – they have the maddening habit of putting banging, non-specific music over all their montages and even across Clare Balding saying interesting things about the history of Ascot, almost drowning out her accomplished words – but I do appreciate that they allow me to watch the racing live on their website. (I have no television in the bedroom.) It was good racing and even though my eyeballs felt like boiled sweets I was enjoying it.

A mighty German horse called Novellist absolutely hosed up in the big race of the day, under the great Johnny Murtagh, and, because it is that time of year, all thoughts turned to the Arc.

Twitter is fascinating in its sociological and cultural make-up. Quite unexpectedly, the racing community has adopted it wholesale, and you will find everyone there from jockeys to betting shop managers to clerks of the course to work riders. One of my favourite Twitter friends turns out to be the head of Coral, which I find rather grand. It’s clever too; he is so nice that I now bet with Coral as well as with William Hill, which is my default account.

So, immediately after the race, where the classy French horse, Cirrus des Aigles, underperformed, and the German horse smashed the track record, a great post-mortem broke out. One gentleman got very shouty and I suddenly could not deal with it, in my weakened state. Instead of sensibly just unfollowing him, I announced it.

This is the danger of social media. It’s in its infancy, and the rules and mores and small etiquettes are still being worked out. Also, I find that when I am in a Twitter storm, which happens usually during sporting events, I often type before I think. I get into a zone, and everything goes public. Some of my kind followers find this faintly diverting, but sometimes it is dangerous.

I did not mention the gentleman by name. I just wrote something like: ‘Am unfollowing cross people. Too weak.’

The cross people clearly knew who they were. Back came the reply: ‘Good riddance.’ Hm, I thought, mazily. Ungracious. I pondered what to do. He is a stranger, and I generally do not have conversations with him; the online ones who have the power to hurt are those with whom one has struck up a relationship. I was not wounded, but perhaps my pride, or something, was a little dented. Foolishly, I wrote another tweet. It went something like: ‘Don’t take it personally, cross people. Festivals of crossness must not be stopped. Just not my thing. Each to each.’

I admit, this was a bit passive-aggressive. The rational part of me knows that some people find a bit of expressed fury marvellously cathartic and invigorating. I believe ardently that speech must not be shut down. On a purely subjective level though, I really do hate it. I do wish that everyone was polite and minded their Ps and Qs. So I was being a little disingenuous. If I had been entirely honest, I would have said: oh, for God’s sake, Cross Person, stop being so grumpy and shouty and rude. I was especially narked because he was shouting at another racing person whom I rather like, and for not much reason.

And that was when he got really cross. ‘You are a pompous sanctimonious arse,’ he wrote.

Well, I thought, that’s that. I went back to the racing, and felt happy as clever, canny Sir Mark Prescott, one of most idiosyncratic characters in the whole of racing, had a quickfire double, with two tremendous, doughty campaigners, Big Thunder and Alcaeus, both of whom are on an unstoppable winning streak. I had them in doubles and trebles and a fivefold accumulator, and I won a shed-load of money, even with my viral load, and I felt that that would show the cross person.

But it’s slightly scratched away at me ever since. I was not hurt, because, as I have discovered online, you need to have built up a degree of intimacy for a sudden attack to hit the target. I am vulnerable on the blog, and on my Facebook page, but not to random Tweeters. On the other hand, there was a part of me that really did want to punish that rude person for being so disobliging and intemperate. I wanted to smack him back and hang him out to dry, even though I knew that would be ridiculous, and the only thing to do was gently move on.

Just as I was examining all these feelings, I came, rather late, to the saga of the Jane Austen hate club. I don’t know if you have followed this story. A woman called Caroline Criado-Perez started a campaign to get dear Jane on the British banknotes, and succeeded, and all was lovely, until she started getting a vicious, concerted set of tweets, some of them containing rape threats.

This put my little spat in perspective. I at once went over to sign a petition for Twitter to put up a Report Abuse button, so that these kind of haters can be dealt with. This felt meaningful and pointful, and I forgot my own tiny pinprick.

The whole thing made me think again about the nature of life online. I choose to regard the internet as a benign place, and treat it as such. Most of my blogs and tweets and Facebook posts are positive; I try to resist the temptation to let my inner bitch come out and dance. I feel I should confine her to the privacy of my own room. Unless Channel 4 Racing drives me to a pitch of distraction, which I admit it sometimes does, I attempt to emphasise the positive and skip over the negative.

In particular, when writing racing tweets, I have a very strict rule not to criticise jockeys, even if they do make a hash of a race, because I grew up with a jockey and I know damn well that even the most brilliant will have an off moment, run into traffic, misjudge the pace, and that they will be far too busy criticising themselves to have any need for outside help. Besides, I suspect that the armchair jocks have absolutely no idea what it must be like to have to make split-second decisions whilst going at forty miles an hour on half a ton of youthful thoroughbred, perched on a saddle the size of a postage stamp.

Generally, I find that I get back what I put in. At the very same time the cross man was calling me names, another lovely gent, with whom I have bonded over our mutual love of lurchers, was sending messages of ineffable funniness and sweetness. The good and bad were marching there together, and I chose to let the good win.

But I am perhaps a little naive, even wilfully so. As the blameless Caroline Criado-Perez found, you can do something which seems utterly ordinary and uncontroversial, and suddenly insane people are threatening to violate your very body.

As always, I’m never quite sure what to make of all this. I shall bash on in my hopeful view of the online world, because 90% of it is charming and funny and illuminating and generous and kind. I get glimpses of other lives, radically different from my own. I get sudden belly laughs from complete strangers when I am feeling low. People I shall never meet ask after Stanley the Dog. Properly useful information is shared. There really is wit, and quite often wisdom too.

There are moving collective outpourings, such as the very touching concern for St Nicholas Abbey, as he recovers from a life-threatening injury and two complicated surgeries. He is a great horse, not much known to the general public, but hugely beloved by racing aficionados, and the hope for his welfare touches my heart.

If the price I pay for this is the occasional sanctimonious arse, I think I may count myself lucky.

As for the real, vicious haters, the ones who attack women from behind the craven cloak of anonymity, the interesting thing about them is they do seem far outnumbered. The majority has risen up against them, pointed the finger and said no. They may never go away. We shall never know what private miseries and bitternesses drive them to their own twisted outpourings. But I do know this: they shall not prevail.

 

Today’s pictures:

Pouring with rain outside and still too tottery for pictures, so here are some quick beloveds:

Stanley the Dog does not give a bugger about the internet, BECAUSE HE HAS A GREAT BIG STICK:

28 July 1 23-07-2013 15-46-45

And now he is going to look for another one. You can’t keep a good dog down:

28 July 2 23-07-2013 15-47-23

And Red the Mare, after our last lovely ride, thinks only of the green, green grass:

28 July 3 24-07-2013 10-00-58

Sunday, 17 February 2013

No blog.

It’s the prettiest day Scotland has seen since I can remember and instead of being outside in it, I am groaning on the sofa. I’m trying to use being under the weather to catch up with reading but the swimmy head and cross viral eyes are not making it easy.

There really is no blog today. I am only writing this because something so sweet has happened that it must be shared with the group.

Mr Stanley the Dog has assumed a new position.

I understand that in some quarters this might be considered UNDERWHELMING. Some quarters know bugger all about bugger all.

He has decided that instead of lying beside me when I watch the racing or read a book or, as now, type with my computer on my lap, that he will arrange himself delicately around the back and arm of the sofa, so that he is effectively draped around my head.

I don’t know quite why I find this so ludicrously sweet, but I do. And it is obviously very important that you should know it too.

Talking of sweet, I just saw an article in this week’s Speccie saying that people aren’t sweet any more. It managed to blame liberalism for this.

Sometimes, when I am feeling a bit weak, like today, I find it slightly tiring being a feminist, single, childless, liberal atheist. The religious people think I have no morals; the right wing think I am a fuzzy idiot who wants to nanny state everyone to death; the traditionalists harrumph because obviously we feminists hate all men and are working to undermine society from within; and the family values crowd say I am selfish and pointless because I refuse to mate and reproduce. The Daily Mail hates me on all four points. So, just sometimes, when I see a perfectly respectable periodical blaming liberalism for a reduction in people being sweet, I decide I have had ENOUGH.

I’m generally very polite to the right wing. I quite agree with some of their ideas. Others trouble me. I stretch and contort to understand their small state, free market ethos. I nod agreeably when they speak to me of the inefficiencies of bureaucracies, like the NHS and the BBC. They seem to like it when I do this. At last, they think, a sensible liberal, who can see our point of view. But then I turn out to have a point of view of my own. If they give me NHS screw-ups and government inefficiency, I offer them, very mildly, Enron and Lehman Brothers. At this point, they decide I am not so charming after all and go red in the face and start shouting. (Not all of them obviously. Some go very, very quiet and give me deathray stares.) Enron, in fact, is my touchstone for why the unfettered free market is a load of buggery bollocks. But apparently, in the bigger argument, it does not count.

This Speccie piece on sweetness is another old right wing meme which I have never quite understood. It goes, to paraphrase The Big Chill: we were great then and we’re shit now.

I’ve never quite understood why the right loves to wheel this intellectually cheap, empirically incorrect piece of old horse-burger out of the closet. You can hear the creaking from three fields away. I was going to knock it down for you, but I can’t actually be fagged. I could give you chapter and verse; I could show my working. But the fact is that I, and all of you, will have people in your life of unmitigated sweetness. You will have kind people and funny people and touching people and people who do something to make the world a better place. You will all know young people who make the new generation glitter with their energy and brightness and goodness. In a wider sense, you will have observed that despite economic crash caused by the free market fundamentalists, charities are still working and society is still functioning and people are still doing crappy, unsung jobs for not much money with amazing amounts of good grace.

And really, the reason that I don’t have to knock this argument down is that the sole piece of evidence that society was sweet then and is cynical and selfish now concerned some actor from Dad’s Army. Anecdotal Klaxon goes off; please walk quietly to the exits and stop universalising the particular.

Also, I wonder, when people make silly, grumpy arguments like this: have they ever heard of projection?

Stanley has gone to sleep now. The sun is beating in through the windows. I literally sat down to write two sentences to tell you how there was not going to be a blog today because I felt too ill. And then forty-eight paragraphs just fell out of my fingers.

Ah well, sorry about that.

Photographs are of the New Position:

It starts off with a bit of window duty:

17 Feb 1-001

Then moves into delicate paws:

17 Feb 1

17 Feb 3

Quizzical ear:

17 Feb 5

Channelling Audrey Hepburn, even though he is a fellow. There is no male equivalent of this level of elegance:

17 Feb 7

17 Feb 8

Slight posing fatigue now:

17 Feb 8-001

Because I think there is a race about to come on at Market Rasen:

17 Feb 9

And then full-blown chorus of PLEASE RELEASE ME, LET ME GO:

17 Feb 11

So funny, the Pigeon and the Duchess used to get the exact same look on their faces when they had had enough of posing for the camera.

I was thinking of them yesterday. I was thinking that I believed no one would ever fill their shoes; just too big a pawprint for anyone to match. But I must say, this fella is coming fast up the outside.

Thursday, 8 March 2012

Giving up

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

I have, finally, Given Up. I hate and loathe giving up; would much rather bash on. I rather despise the fact I do not have that much physical stamina. I am hoping that is going to change once I get all fit and my muscles harden from riding every day. So, I have conceded defeat to the aches and pains and heavy head and eyes like hot boiled eggs and general malaise and light-sensitivity.

I love all the Dear Readers being doctor. I am now choosing between low grade virus, too much excitement, over-tiredness, Vitamin B12 deficiency, and low blood pressure. Oddly, I have always had very low blood pressure, sometimes the doc has to take it twice, she can’t believe it is so low. I am oddly proud of this, although it is nothing to do with me. But I like the idea of not being in the danger zone for stroke and heart attack. Much better low than high.

Whatever the thing is, I have had to chuck a meeting with publisher and co-writer, since I cannot get down the stairs, let alone on a train. I am quite grumpy about the whole thing. I am typing this in bed, with a dozy Pigeon by my side.

I was worrying about the blog, since my plan is to sleep all day, so I can be well for Saturday, when I drive back north. I must be fit for the five hundred and fifty miles.

Luckily, one of the Dear Readers left a quite enchanting comment yesterday, about Nijinsky. It is such a lovely story that I am going to put it up here for today’s blog. This is very naughty, since I have not asked permission. I am trusting that the Reader will not mind if I share with the group.

This is what she wrote:

I met Nijinsky once when he was an old fellow. Had gone to the farm to visit another stallion and my guide that day was an elderly stud groom just off retirement named Clay Arnold. It was a quiet morning and I was by myself, so Clay took out several of the big names for me to look over (quite nice, as I hadn't a dime and clearly was not a potential client - he must have seen that I just loved 'em.

At the end, as I got ready to leave, he said, "Wait a moment, you can't go until you've see the best of them all. I'm not supposed to, but it's nearly time for him to go to his paddock." In a few minutes he came back with a dark bay stallion who was obviously a senior citizen (he was 24 at the time), but still a looker.

He walked pretty slowly, as old aches had caught up with him, but he had that indefinable air of greatness about him. They were so touching, Clay and Nijinsky, two old campaigners, very quiet and gentle with each other. They're both gone now, but I still have the photo I shot of them and have never forgotten the moment.

Nijinsky was everyone's champion, but he was one man's best friend.

Isn’t that the best story you have ever heard? I love it. Thank you, Bird.

Here are some glorious pictures of the old champion. Still can't quite believe he is the grandsire of my lovely Red:

8 March Nijinsky 2

Lovely to see old Lester in action. The photograph is uncredited, but I think that is Pat Eddery behind him. My guess is that it's the Derby. Wish I knew what that second horse was though.

Another delightful shot:

8th March Nijinsky

This is my mare's great-grandsire, the mighty Northern Dancer. Another uncredited photograph, but isn't it rather extraordinary?

8 March Northern Dancer

Their little descendant, with her rather flashy bay friend:

8 March 7 01-03-2012 12-55-51

My very own Northern Dancer:

8 March 8 01-03-2012 18-14-17

Some tulips, because you really have had to put up with an awful lot of horse pictures lately:

8 March 9 01-03-2012 21-57-08

And a really glorious picture of Kauto Star working at home, taken yesterday by Edward Whitaker, for the Racing Post. Whitaker has always taken absolutely luminous pictures of Kauto Star, I think he has a feeling for the horse. The mighty fella on the right is Big Buck's. So, not so shabby:

Paul Nicholls

The news on the great horse continues good. Now I start to think of serious reality. Even if he does get fit enough, he is still twelve years old, and no twelve-year-old has won the Gold Cup for something like fifty years. (The Older Brother would know the exact stats; he has a steel trap brain for racing facts.) I saw a picture of Long Run on the gallops two days ago, and he looks magnificent. If Grand Crus runs, all bets are off. I still think that dear old Midnight Chase might run a big race, if he gets a bit of luck in running. He stays all day and loves Cheltenham; that hill has no fears for him.

But look at the determination on that face on the left. As I always say, he might be a handsome devil, but he is no show pony. He is tough and true and honest as the day is long. I think he deserves his chance. My heart and my cash are on him anyway. It's a loyalty thing. It's an if wishing could make it so thing.

And now I am going to have a damn good sleep and see if I can't feel better.

Monday, 24 October 2011

Not much today

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

So sorry. Feeling rather seedy. That annoying thing where one is not properly sick but just scratchy and aching and generally off colour. If I were a horse, you would say I was not 'well in myself', a great equine expression that expresses the mystery of horses.

It may be a side order of fret. After all that rush and scramble, the book has not yet been read. This is quite par for the course; it is what happens. I am getting on with other projects. My friend The Photographer and I are pitching like all get out. There is plenty of news to occupy my mind. There is genuine tragedy in Turkey. My own small worries are, properly, small.

I throw the ball for The Pigeon. She is highly delighted. There were gales last night, which came and stripped almost all the scarlet leaves from the rowan trees, so they now look bare, and rather shy. Yet the shrub roses and the hydrangeas still flower; there are nodding violas, and even a brave little lavender.

I think: come on, come on. Sharpen up and concentrate. I always say that to myself. Some days I am better at it than others.

 

Pictures of the day:

24 Oct 1

24 Oct 2.ORF

24 Oct 3

24 Oct 5

24 Oct 7

24 Oct 9

24 Oct 10

PA242336.ORF

24 Oct 11

Hill, hiding in the dreich:

24 Oct 12

Friday, 15 April 2011

Off sick

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

In bed with stomach bug for second day. Apparently it is all round the village. Shall return to blogging tomorrow.

Stupid stupid iPad makes it impossible for me to add a picture. iPad is a godsend for the ill in bed; I can read the paper, watch the news, see Twitter. But it is really, really idiotic when it comes to practical purposes. We are not ALL sheer pleasure seekers. Just saying. Might be grumpy because everything hurts.

Normal service, including dogs and hill, shall resume vv soon.

Friday, 4 December 2009

A view from the sickbed

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

Andrew Sullivan over at The Daily Dish has a lovely feature called A View from Your Window.  I am still in bed, not now ill ill so much as weak as a kitten.  I know I am not ready to charge back into action because even the most glorious blue winter's day cannot tempt me.  I am grumpy about this because of course I never get ill.  This is my fantasy and I am sticking to it.  I think it developed because one year everyone got whatever virus it was and I escaped; this crystallised my immunity in my mind, and no amount of empirical evidence will shift my underlying belief.  Which is curious in itself, because most of the rest of the time I am a devoted empiricist and go around boring people by telling them what a damn child of the Enlightenment I am, as if they needed to know.

Anyway, just to divert you, here is the view from my sickbed, in a lovely east-facing room in my cousin's house:

view from sickbed with dogs 006

I can also see this:

view from sickbed with dogs 008

And this:

view from sickbed with dogs 017

(I freely admit the whole dog thing is getting entirely out of control.)

Do you notice the amazingly chic dog blanket?  I got it from the marvellous Black-Faced Sheep in the village of Aboyne, which also makes excellent lattes and delicious cheesecake, so if you are ever motoring through Deeside, do stop and pay them a visit.  http://www.blackfacedsheep.co.uk/

I am taking some chicken soup, so you will be glad to know that this weakness and whimsy shall soon pass and you shall have a proper blog again.

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