Saturday, 2 August 2008
Guardian All Ears 2nd August
Have also managed to squeeze in a picture of the odious Jeremy Kyle* into thew background of this illustration because every time I'm in a hospital waiting room this sort of soul rotting programme is on the TV
(* unless you're a) unemployed b) a student c) freelance with weird working hours you will hopefully have been spared this hideous man & have no idea what I'm going on about)
Anyway...the article follows...
Spend enough time waiting in hospitals and you find yourself noticing that your fellow patients can be split into distinct types, each having developed different behavioral traits based on the extent and nature of their experiences with the health service. A recurring character is the “Angry Optimist” who believes the way to overcome long waiting times is through verbal indignation based on a sense of perceived injustice. Though they may have a point, it is far from the Zen mindset required to wait four hours for an appointment you were half an hour early for anyway, as the two people I watched unravel last week demonstrated.
Woman:(in her 70’s, indignant) “I was first here, we should be the first to be seen. Why are other people called first?”
Receptionist:“That’s not how the clinic works.”
Woman:(dentures clacking softly) “Where’s the girl what’s normally here?”
Receptionist: (with audible envy) “She’s moved to the pharmacy.”
Woman: “But these lot have got 8.45 appointments, ours is for 8.30”
Receptionist: “There’s nothing I can do about that.”
Man: (the woman’s husband, who it transpired was the one who had the appointment) “Yeah, just sit down.”
The woman sat down but carried on complaining quietly to the man until he’d eventually had enough.
Man: (shouting) “What do you want me to do about it?”
Woman: “But we were here first. Where are you going?”
Man (walking off) “Nowhere.”
Woman “Say something to them.”
Man (almost in tears) “Will you shut up for five minutes? Will you please just shut up and stay out of my head?”
That did the trick. Five minutes later they called his name.
Article by Michael Holden
Saturday, 26 July 2008
Guardian All Ears 26th July
A PROPER Oompa Loompa (with added eye poke!)
I was about to overtake a man who was walking along the pavement in front of me when I caught wind of his mobile phone conversation and reduced speed to try and hear more of what he was saying. I made a swift diagnosis of what was going down and came to the assumption that he was talking to the mother of his kid, a woman he no longer lived with, and who had called him to ask why their daughter was in a bad mood.
Man: (wearily) "Well she got home from school and she was all upset, there doing Charlie and the Chocolate factory as the school play, they've cast her as an Oompa Loompa, she isn't happy…no of course not…she wanted to be a human."
He was silent for a minute while he listened to her response.
Man: "Yeah but it's more than that. She says the same kids that got the lead parts before have got the lead parts again…exactly…so I said well if you don't like something you have to speak up in life, I want her to know that this is how things are in life and this is what you do, you gotta speak up…she wasn't keen, she said they're teachers, you can't argue with the teachers…"
He listened for a moment and then his tone changed became harsher.
Man: "If there's a reason she doesn't know the difference between asking a question and having an argument, whose fault is that?"
There was evidently an emphatic response from the other end.
Man: "Ok, I'm sorry…well in the end I said to her, who do people remember from the story? It's Willy Wonka, Charlie and the Oompa Loompas, it's a big part…no, she wasn't buying it. She just wants to be a human."
Article by Michael Holden
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Thursday, 24 July 2008
Tuesday, 22 July 2008
Threatening geezers
Having a general muckabout with some nice textures etc. - we call this research not procrastination!
Labels:
gangster,
geezer,
knives,
skeleton,
www.stevemay.biz
Saturday, 19 July 2008
Guardian All Ears 19th July
I like a floral dress me!
Mostly elevators are spaces where conversation ceases. In very tall buildings though where you can be in them for several minutes no such rules apply, as I discovered as I descended slowly from work one Friday night with an elderly couple who's weekend planning had gone awry.
Woman: (coyly)"How would you feel about…"
Man: (sensing danger)"C'mon, I'm holding my breath here."
Woman: "Andy coming to the house on Saturday?"
Man: "Andy who?"
Woman: "Andy, you know Andy. He just turned 65 and I haven't even acknowledged it."
Man: (scowling) "What do you mean' acknowledged it?' Who is this guy?"
Woman: "I mean I didn't even send him a card or call him up. I have to do something."
Man: (looking at the ceiling of the elevator as though it were the sky) "Well the weather doesn't look very congenial."
Woman: "He won't care about the weather. He's a very outdoors person."
Man :"Who is he again?"
Woman: (angry now sensing subterfuge) "Andy! My friend with the horses."
Man : "What horses?"
Woman "He used to run the polo stables in Uruguay, now he lives here."
Man: "Andy! Christ, he drinks, right?"
Woman: "He's an expert on wine."
Man: "He can come."
Woman: "I didn't say he was going to bring wine."
Man: "He can bring what he wants, I'm not going to be around."
Woman: "Where are you going?"
Man "There's a thing at the university."
Woman "Maybe we can all come?"
Man (staring hard at his reflection in the polished door) "Maybe."
Article by Michael Holden
Labels:
elevator,
horses,
lift,
pensioners,
the Guardian,
wine,
www.stevemay.biz
Friday, 18 July 2008
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