Thursday, 12 October 2017

Onsdag den 11. oktober 2017

04:00 Jeg står tidligt op, som sædvanligt, men kl 7 hopper jeg tilbage op i sengen til Lois, og vi bliver liggende i sengen indtil kl 9:30, hvilket ligner os ikke.

11:00 Vi går ud i baghaven og rydder lidt op i grøntsagshaven – vi tager årets stangbønnestativer ned – hvilket er lidt symbolisk  og repræsenterer enden på sommeren for i år - hulk, hulk! Vi putter resten af bønneplanterne, også courgetteplanterne ind i en af vores 4 kæmpe-kompostbeholdere.

Mens jeg arbejder, føler jeg mig pludselig lidt dårligt tilpas, og lidt svimmel i 5 minutter, men derefter går det hurtigt over.

12:30 Vi spiser frokost, og bagefter går jeg i seng for at tage mig en eftermiddagslur. Jeg står op kl 15 og hopper op på min kondicykel. Jeg cykler kun 6 miles i dag, i stedet for mine sædvanlige 9 miles, og jeg går glip af min rutinemæssige milde vægtløftning på grund af det tidligere anfald af svimmelhed, bare for en sikkerheds skyld. Yikes!!!!

Mens jeg cykler, ser jeg på en biografisk video, der handler om Elizabeth Taylor, der var født den 27. februar 1932 i forstæderne til London. Men det viser sig, at videoen bare er en katalog af hendes mange film og ægtemænd, og det mislykkes mig igen at trænge ind i hendes sind, som før.  Pokkers! Jeg mistænker, forklaringen er, at hun måske bare var virkelig dygtig til at spille roller, med andre ord, en sand skuespillerinde, og ikke var kun en personlighed, der altid spillede sig selv, som mange af de største Hollywood-stjerner.

Elizabeth Taylor som baby (til højre)

I stedet for at koncentrere mig om Liz’s biografi, der faktisk ikke er ret interessant, bliver jeg fascineret af fortællerens charmerende accent og dialekt: han hed Jerry Skinner og kom fra Mississippi. Jerry siger ordet ”filming” og jeg hører ordet ”famine”, for eksempel. Og hans ”1932”  lyder som ”19 and 32”, hvilket jeg ikke har hørt for. Er der noget sprog i verden, der har så mange interessante variationer i accent og dialekt, som det engelske? Men det er jeg ikke helt sikker på.

Jeg gør lidt forskning på nettet. Jeg læser, at hvis man har lyst til at efterligne Mississippi-accenten er det vigtigtste at løfte kæben, hvilket resulterer i en højere tonehøjhed. Man får en mere åben hals, og der er derfor mulighed for, at mere luft bliver udvist fra lungerner, nå man trækker vejret. Det forsøger mig lidt med, men jeg er hemmelig bange for, at jeg trods alt stadig lyder som en englænder – pokkers! Men måske gør jeg det ikke ret rigtigt.

18:00 Vi spiser aftensmad og bruger resten af aftenen på at lytte til radio og se lidt fjernsyn. Vi hører et interessant, skræmmende radioprogram, der handler om, hvordan ældre patienter bliver behandlet i offentlige hospitaler.


Vi hører eksempelvis en skræmmende historie om en gammel kvinde i Warminster-hospitalet, der led af demens og urinvejsinfektioner, og blev dårligt behandelt af personalet, der ignorerede anvisningerne om kvindens specielle behov, og forfalskede sygejournaler osv. Vi får det indtryk af, at de betragtede hende som en, der snart kom til at dø, og som  lige var uvigtig, og de bare afskrev hende. Heldigvis havde hendes mand sat et skjult camera op, og det lykkedes ham at bevise den dårlige behandling.

Jeg synes, at alle (herunder Lois og jeg, der selv er 71 år gamle) har en fristelse til at afskrive (andre) gamle mennesker. Det er rart under dette radioprogram, at høre lidt om kvindens ungdom osv, hvordan parret mødtes og forelskede sig i hinanden (hun fik øje på ham ud af vinduet af butikken, hvor hun arbejde, og hun sendte ham et fingerkys – du godeste, sikke et vanvid! Men  ægteskabet varede «til døden dem skildte ad» (over 50 år).

Det kan være, at tilfælde af dårlig behandling er et mindretal, men sundhedsombudsmanden siger, at mange slægtninge ikke anmelder sager, og ofte kan dårlig behandling ikke bevises. Moralen er, bliv ude af hospitalet, så længe som muligt ha ha ha!

20:00 Vi slukker for radioen og tænder for fjernsynet. De viser en interessant dokumentarfilm (3. del af 3), der handler om arbejdspladser og den moderne filosofi af arbejdslivet.



Et interessant program, selvom det prøver at dække for mange aspekter af arbejdsverden, efter vores mening, så resultatet er lidt forvirrende. Personligt interesserer jeg mig meget for begrebet om ”kunstig intelligens”. Det var i sær interessant at se på en højskole i USA, hvor én lærer ”underviser” en klasse på 75 elever, hvor hver elev er i gang med at studere lidt forskellige aspekter af emnet – eller helt forskellige kurser for eksempel astronomi, programmering osv. Eleverne lærer via computerprogrammer på deres individuelle skærme.




Det er interessant og lidt opmuntrende, at disse nye metoder faktisk ikke er så effektive som traditionelle undervisning af en levende lærer, og elever har tendens til at kede sig hurtigt uden den normale menneskelige interaktion.

21:00 Vi fortsætter med at se lidt fjernsyn. De viser det seneste afsnit af ”Grand Designs”. Programmets vært er den charmerende Kevin McCloud.


”Grand Designs” er programmet jeg først og fremmest elsker at hade fordi jeg hader disse enorme grimme moderne huse med deres enorme ekkoende stuer, enorme hvide vægge og ukomfortable sofaer, og jeg er fristet til at hade også de par, der er så friske på at få disse slags huse bygget. Du godeste! Jeg er sikke et pivehoved – ingen tvivl om det!!!!

Aftenens afsnit er lidt anderledes, fordi selve huset er ikke grimt – det har en usædvanlig form: spiralformet, inspireret af en ammonit, så ganske skønt.

For mig virker huset imidlertid mere som en arbejdsplads, hovedkvarteret af et mellemstort selskab, snarere, end et hjem. Og det handler om kun 2 personer, et ægtepar – deres børn er vokset op og har forladet hjemmet – du godeste, sikke et vanvid!!!!


det nye, spiralformede hus

parrets gamle hus: hvorfor ville nogen, der ikke er sindssyg, flytte fra
dette dejlige traditionelle hus for at flytte ind i
hvad ser ud som en kontorbygning, hvor smukt end det er??

Du godeste sikke en skør verden vi lever i !!!

22:00 Vi går i seng – zzzzzz!!!!

English translation

04:00 I get up early, as usual, but at 7 o'clock I jump back into bed with Lois and we stay in bed until 9:30am, which is not like us.

11:00 We go out into the backyard and clear up in the vegetable garden - we take down this year's bean-poles - which is a little symbolic and represents the end of summer for this year - sob, sob! We put the rest of the bean plants, including the courgette plants, into one of our 4 giant compost containers.

While I work, I suddenly feel a bit rough and a little dizzy for 5 minutes, but then it quickly passes off.

12:30 We have lunch, and afterwards I go to bed and take an afternoon nap. I get up at 3pm and jump on my exercise bike. I cycle only 6 miles today, instead of my usual 9 miles, and I miss out my routine mild weightlifting due to the earlier dizzy attack, just to be on the safe side. Yikes !!!!

While I'm cycling, I watch a biographical video about Elizabeth Taylor, born February 27, 1932 in the suburbs of London. But it turns out that the video is just a catalog of her many movies and husbands, and I fail to penetrate her mind, just like before. Damn! I suspect the explanation is that she might just be really good at playing parts, in other words, a true actress, and not just a personality who always played herself, like many of the biggest Hollywood stars.

Elizabeth Taylor as a baby (right)

Instead of concentrating on Liz's biography, which is actually not specially interesting, I'm fascinated by the narrator's charming accent and dialect: his name was Jerry Skinner and came from Mississippi. Jerry says the word "filming" and I hear the word "famine", for example. And his "1947" is read as "19 and 47", which I haven’t heard before. Is there any language in the world that has so many interesting variations in accent and dialect as English? But that's something I'm not entirely sure about.

I do a little research online. I read that if you want to mimic the Mississippi accent, the most important thing is to lift the jaw, resulting in a higher pitch. You get a more open throat and more air can be expelled from the lungs when you breathe. I have a little try at that, but I'm secretly afraid that despite everything I still sound English - damn! But maybe I'm not doing it right.

18:00 We have dinner and spend the rest of the evening listening to the radio and watching a bit of television. We hear an interesting, scary radio program that deals with how elderly patients are treated in NHS hospitals.


For example, we hear a scary story about an old woman in the Warminster Hospital who suffered from dementia and urinary tract infections and was treated poorly by the staff who ignored the instructions about the woman's special needs and faked medical records, etc. We get the impression that they just looked on her as someone that was going to die soon and was just unimportant, and they just wrote her off. Fortunately her husband had put a hidden camera up and he managed to prove the bad treatment.

I think everyone (including Lois and I, who are ourselves 71 years old) has a temptation to write off (other) old people. It's nice during this radio show, to hear a bit about the woman's youth, etc. how the couple met and fell in love with each other (she caught sight of him out of the window of the shop where she was working and she blew him a kiss - good grief what madness! But the marriage lasted "till death did them part" (over 50 years).

It may be that cases of bad treatment are a minority, but the health ombudsman says many relatives do not report cases and often mistreatment cannot be proven. The morale is, stay out of the hospital as long as you can ha ha ha!

20:00 We turn off the radio and switch on the TV. An interesting documentary is on (3rd part of 3) all about jobs and the modern philosophy of the working life.



An interesting program, although it tries to cover too many aspects of the world of work, in our opinion, so the result is a bit confusing. Personally, I am very interested in the concept of "artificial intelligence". It was particularly interesting to look at a high school in the US, where one teacher "instructs" a class of 75 students, where everybody is studying slightly different aspects of the subject - or different courses such as astronomy, programming, etc. Students learn via computer programs on their individual screens.




It is interesting and a little encouraging that these new methods are in fact not as effective as traditional teaching by a live teacher, and students tend to get bored quickly without the normal human interaction.

21:00 We carry on watching a bit of television. The latest episode of "Grand Designs" is on. The host of the program is the charming Kevin McCloud.


"Grand Designs" is the program that I most love to hate because I can't stand these huge ugly modern houses with their huge living rooms, huge white walls and uncomfortable sofas, and I'm tempted to hate the couples who are so keen to get these kinds of houses built. My Goodness! what a whinger I am - no doubt about that !!!!

Tonight's episode is a little different because the house itself is not ugly - it has an unusual shape: spiral shaped, inspired by an ammonite, so quite beautiful.

For me, however, the house seems more like a workplace, the headquarters of a medium-sized company, rather than a home. And we will only have 2 people in it, a married couple - their children have grown up and left home - good grief, what madness !!!!


The new spiral-shaped house

The couple's old house. Why would anyone who isn't insane 
want to move out of this lovely traditional house to go into
what looks like an office building, however beautiful it may be ???

My god what a crazy world we live in !!!

22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzz !!!!


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