Search This Blog

Saturday 29 January 2011

I am a good dog owner

Owning dogs is a rewarding experience. For relatively little effort they remain loyal, loving and endlessly amusing. Food, water, training, play and a couple of walks a day is not much to give for this adoration.

Until winter arrives. Then the routine morning dog walk becomes a kind of daily torture. The alarm goes off at some ungodly hour and I grope blindly in the dark to turn it off. I then spend ten minutes sat on the edge of the bed almost in tears brought on by tiredness, before trying to find the dog walking clothes that I threw haphazardly about the bedroom the day before.
Once these have been found, I half-walk half-fall down the stairs before realising I've put two legs through one leg of my trousers. Hopping into the front room, I can finally put a light on without risking waking Husband up. Doing so, I'm met with the unimpressed, squinting eyes of Tangent, and the back of Willow who has turned around in her bed to better ignore me.

Eventually, after much chaos and confusion that involves falling over the dogs, trying without success to put gloves on my head and somehow clipping a dog lead onto the fish tank, we make it out of the door and to the park. A slight pang of depression hits when I notice the moon is still out because it's so damn early, and there are no footprints aside from mine in the snow because everyone else is  much smarter than me and still asleep lazy.

This pattern repeats itself until Spring, when the weather begins to improve and the fair weather dog walkers come out of hibernation and join me in the early morning dog walks. Much to my chagrin as over winter (short of laying a urinary claim) the park had become my territory.

And I do all this because I am a good dog owner, and I love my dogs. At least this is the mantra I tell myself when I am out in the snow, rain or frogs. Well, maybe not frogs. But it can rain frogs, I know this because it was on Wikipedia.

Friday 14 January 2011

Team Building

A few weeks back I had my work's team building day. I know that these days are supposed to encourage a good working rapport and be all teamy and jolly, but they invariably leave you feeling degraded and a bit depressed about your life
The sort of activities that you do on team building days would probably be quite fun, if you were doing them with actual friends and not having to do them to prove you can actually converse with another human being without imploding. And yes, implode rather than explode. Exploding would be far too extrovert for a sociopath.

 This team building day in particular was especially arduous. Coinciding with an intense PMT week, the last thing I wanted to do was laser quest and ice skate (fortunately it wasn't laser quest on ice skates).
Laser quest wasn't actually too bad, and was made more amusing by the illiterate attendant. I'm not sure how you achieve such a disregard for the natural order of vowels and consonants, but the attendant was certainly dedicated to this end.

So, we trundled into the gaming area (which would not have looked out of place on the set of Red Dwarf), with our unpronounceable names and spent a merry few minutes shooting the crap out of each other. The novelty soon wore off when I realised that I could just stay hidden in a corner and shoot the occasional passing colleague, and in the meantime just dream about chocolate.

By the time we reached the ice rink I had descended into a morose state with a touch of murderous intent. The prospect of being handed a set of shoes with razor sharp blades on the bottom was actually quite appealing. I did, however, sit this one out as I have a fear of ice-skating since I once slipped on ice and my knee went out to the side in an impressive, and bio-mechanically wrong, 90o angle. It was not comfortable.

From a business point of view, I think team building days are actually quite successful - you scurry back to your desk and work your productive little heart out to discourage managers from sending you on further team building days. You send unnecessary emails, make pointless calls to members of your team in an effort to prove that you are indeed a team player, and in no way require the perceived benefits of further team building events.


******Apologies for the long delay between posts. Due to being away and a family crisis, blogging took a back-burner******

Monday 3 January 2011

How to tell if your dog is really a Zombie-Dog

1. You realise that the fetch toy you've been throwing is actually one of your dog's limbs

2. Little or no bowel control

3. Poor reaction to stimulus


4. Poor social skills

5. No one comes to your dog's birthday party