29 October 2007

Income tax, leave to remain, call bank


The clocks turned back an hour, or maybe they pushed ahead. Yesterday felt like two days in one and this morning I woke with a panic because there was more light in the sky than what I’m accustomed to. I got to work early and feel more rested than I have in days, but it’s going to be very dark by the time I leave. Nobody can explain these things to me properly though.

Last night we went to see Bat for Lashes perform at Koko. The opening act was one of the strangest I’ve seen – weird in the way of French music, campy minus the gay aesthetic and oddly palatable in spite of its many quirks. I wish I could post the tiny, shitty photo that currently sits on my phone, or even remember what the band was called. But if you can picture a black man in dreadlocks, white tennis socks and a deep pink chiffon skirt rapping in French, well. Good for you I guess.

My dentist appointment was not too traumatising, at least beyond a few bad moments wherein I made an ass of myself by trying not to curl up in the foetal position after the shot of Avocain. Which basically meant that I pulled my knees to my chest and flailed about in a way that would not win over any hearts in England, let me tell you.

He also seemed confused when his assistant handed him some kind of scraping/picking tool, asking her “What’s that for?” and doing a bit of something or other with it after she demonstrated in the air over my head. That wasn’t overly comforting.

Then I nearly passed out at reception (just because), eliciting only an uncomfortable laugh from the receptionist when I told her I was feeling faint.

Yet there was no pain once the numbing wore off. None at all, at least until I bite down on something by accident and then great bloody hands of Christ does that ever hurt. You’d think that the removal of nerve endings would put a stop to debilitating mouth pain but you’d be wrong.

Bruce finally managed to convince me to watch Grizzly Man after confirming for the fiftieth time that no, we don’t see him get eaten and no, we don’t hear him get eaten. And then when the time came to hear him get eaten, I said with some disappointment, “So we don’t hear him get eaten then?” I’ve spent the last several hours trying to envision this sound, as I can’t possibly let a description of what a person being eaten by a bear sounds like stand.

And I’m wondering how come a whack job like that gets to pet wild foxes when I can’t even walk into the same room as our cats without them making a federal case out of it.

Ideas?

Okay bitches, over and out.

5 comments:

palinode said...

Grizzly Man is worth it just for Timothy Treadwell nearly crying over the fate of a bee, and then hearing Herzog saying things like "I believe the common character of the universe is not harmony, but hostility, chaos and murder." Imagine being stuck in an elevator with those two.

Treadwell: This is such fun.
Herzog: For me, this is a fate of immeasurable dahk-ness.
You: Ah, fuck, get me out of here.

Friday Films said...

TT's sudden realisation that the bee wasn't actually dead is probably the funniest thing I've ever seen.

Friday Films said...

Apart from your Second Life avatar, I mean.

palinode said...

I think I'll wander around Second Life, crying out "The poor little bee! Wait - was it just sleeping?"

My avatar is funnier standing up, because he's got a huge gut, a ridiculously oversized package, knobby knees, bow legs and big feet. I strut around like a demented Robert Crumb character at a Renaissance Faire, bumping my head into people's crotches.

Friday Films said...

Which must make you very popular over there!