There are some real people in the world, and some who are pretend.

Me

Me
(a long time ago)

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Grow old gracefully, no chance!


I started going grey when I was 16. So, from the ages of 19-29 I dyed my hair. Being a very honest kinda guy, I just used to tell people it was dyed, and no one believed me!

When I became a manager for the first time in 1996, I got real paranoid that none of the old guys I was dealing with would take this 29 year old seriously - so I decided to go grey. So I went off to holiday and never dyed it whilst I was there, came back - and one of my colleagues said - "well, if that's what happens to you when you go off on holiday, I'm not going!".

My Persian style consultant had been urging me to dye my hair, seems like youth is more important to everyone here. Above is a pic of the latest results. I'm getting to like it. I went to VERY expensive hair dresser the first two times I dyed it again. I was beginning to feel ripped off. She was always asking me to buy "products". These seemed like the same gunk that you can get in Safeways, only in a fancy bottle and coating $30 more! She also encouraged me to buy one product the first time, then told me to forget that product 2 weeks later and buy a different one that did the same thing. Having been charged $240 (labour and "products"), the effort above I did myself, for $230 less. I can't figure out if I really suit it, or if I'm just a sad old thing, trying to look young. I'll be getting my teeth whitened next.......

Coyote Point


I took this photo at Coyote Point, we went for a walk there after work on Thursday. It is on the Bay, south of San Francisco - near the airport. I took a lot of photos of planes coming into land too! I bought a Leica digial camera last year. I was not sure about it after I bought it, but I'm beginning to like it. think I got some great pics that day. I may post some more, when I can be bothered to learn how the uploading thingy works on this website.

Asian Film Festival - watch out for those Fortune Cookies


Was at a showing of 7 short films at the Asian Film Festival today.
This pic is from my favourite, the film was called "Fortune Hunters" and it is about an Asian guy who has broken up with his girlfriend. His job is to write fortune cookie messages (I suppose some has to be employed to do that). He begins to write messages like - "Confucius says, you will die alone" as he is do depressed with his personal situation. The photo is from a scene which contains his Dad, who own the fortune cookie factory, getting exasperated with his son's messages. He also manages to miss type his personal e-mails and gets them mixed up with fortune cookie messages, very funny.

Scotland 2 Georgia 1 - Good old Annie McGuire

Got up early today to listen to Scotlands vital euro qualifier and WE WON! I managed to screw up the time difference with the UK AGAIN (it's 7 hours for two weeks, as the US put it's clock's forward early this year) and was awake at 6.30 am local time and the game didn't even start until 8.00. The commentary was only supposed to b heard in the UK for rights reasons, but it managed to hang in there until the BBC blocked the feed when the game only had 10 minutes to go. Frustratingly enough, the game was poised at 1-1 at that stage, but Scotland scrambled home a last minute winner with 2 minutes of regular time to go.

The break to the feed, led to me sending the following e-mail to Scotland's leading football phone in, "Your Call". (Your Call). Your call is very funny. I love all the petty soap opera of Scotish football. Jim Traynor is a Scottish journalist who chairs the phone (the nearest we have to a Shock Jock! Or maybe he is a form of shocking jock!). Annie McGuire is his long sufferng sidekick who reads out the e-mails and takes all sorts of abuse from Jim. I'm always cleaning the bathroom at the time on a Saturday that Your Call is on, and it really cheers me up when I'm doing this borting housework. You can hear the audio archive of this episode, all next week from the website.

"Hi

Was enjoying the on line commentary of the Scotland match but it disappeared in the last 15 minutes. Was the BBC on line department trying to save us ex pats from anything?

Also, I have been wondering for ages what Annie looks like and I found this picture of her on the internet.

She is more lovely than I imagined and I'd like to take her away from rainy scotland and have her live with me here in Sunny California (just south of San Francisco).

cheers

Tom
San Jose
USA"

Annie did read my comment out, but minus the stuff about the internet feed.I seem to have started all sorts of other comments being sent in about Annie's photo. The BBC is probably not wanting to publicise the fact that they let the "UK only" feed be heard in other countries by mistake. Annie is gorgeous by the way........

We play Italy next, we will probably be hammered.

Ireland won too (hooray), england only managed a draw (hooray).

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Memories of drunken times in the Highlands, with fires and local music


Got a nice surprise today. My friends, and sometimes musical collaborators, the Cylinders (in particular Darren, the bass player thereof) has sent me the long lost video of their performance at the Dalmally music festival in 2001. This festival was great. I was only there twice, but had a great time each time. They should have twinned Dalmally with Craggy Island. The music festival reminded me of the first Father Ted episode where they are improvising a whole fun fair, Dalmally had this great improvised feel to it too. Dalmally is a little village in Argyle (north west of Scotland). These guys inherited this run down house with a huge amount of land too - presumably land is cheap up there. Anyway, I think the best use they made of the land was to run a music festival every year. I remember there were some really dismal cover version bands that used to play the festival, but some nice original stuff there too.

The first time I was there (2001, the year this video was made) it pissed it down with rain for hours - it does that in the highands. They built this huge fire next to where we were standing, so we were warm, but drunk guys kept trying to jump over it. I was sure someone was going to fall in and we were going to have a whole highland person alive burning horror story type incident (a bit like the Wicker Man, only by mistake), but everyone seemed able to jump over the fire without getting killed. I can hear popping sounds between songs and I think that must be the fire.

I was also horribly drunk when the Cylinders finally got to play (my memory was that this was around 2am), so I was shouting all sorts of nonsense at the band. Happily I can't hear much of this on the DVD. I was partially dreading hearing this again for this reason, but I am not listening for myself too hard.....

Long live the Cylinders, please get back together again, you are a lot better together that you are apart. Makes me want to go to this festival again - but I hear, due to some new laws in the UK, they have had to re-locate and scale down the thing now. Shame - it's not as if anyone ever did anything dangerous there in the old days, right?

The Yahoo spell checker wants to change "Dalmally" into "Dismally", is that a computer type joke on the bands, or the weather?

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Foggy San Francisco Afternoon


OK, so this wasn't taken this afternoon. But it's one of my favourite views in the world. For those of you who know the area, this is the bit where you come round the corner on Interstate 280, and suddenly the Business District of San Francisco is in front of you. I also thought that "Celtic Removers" was a great name. Do they just move Celtic people? This photo was my desktop image on my big imac for a long time. It's been replaced by a lovely photo my Dad took of my old car (he still has it) in the snow in the North of Scotland. I get very attached to cars.

However I was in 'Frisco this afternoon. It was glorious here down in the South Bay, but it did it's usual thing around Daly City, and the fog descended. So it was all cold and gloomy around the Presidio where I was. I was at my ex-pat Europeans meeting. This is a great thing. It was started around November 2005, when I was desperate for some social connections. We had a good time and there were some new people there. We got talking about how expressions in one the language of one country can seem strange in another. I find the expression Americans use "break a leg" for "good luck, really strange. I wonder what it's derivation is? Must look it up. I watched a film last week called "Outsourced" about an American guy trying to train up an Indian company to sell tacky American souvenir goods. The American guy said "break a leg" to the Indian call centre manager. The Indian guy was astounded, when the American guy explained it was meant to mean "good luck", the Indian guy replied, "well, I hope you break both your legs"!

My mind was drifting around, on my way back down to the south bay on Interstate 101 (not the most scenic road in this area). I thought it would be great if I had two cats. I'd call one "familiarity" and the other one "contempt". It would be even better of one was a boy cat, and the other a girl cat, then; "Familiarity" could breed "Contempt". The more boring the road, the more bizarre the day dreaming.

Off to do some research on Wikipedia (the font of all knowledge) on nervous breakdowns, then eat the end of last night's Chinese food.

The cultural muddle that is St Patrick's Day in the USA (or whatever would Michael have said?)


Around this date ten years ago, it was my ambition to become Irish. To most Americans I suppose, being Scottish would seem enough. But the whole capitalist thing is all about choice - right? So why not change my nationality and try out another Celtic nation for a while? Around the same time the year before I was on holiday. I had fallen madly in love with an girl from Cork who was at the time, working as a barmaid in a hotel that I knew, in the far north of Scotland. It seemed perfect at the time. To me, the far north of Scotland is the most beautiful place in the world. It reminds me of that joke that people tell about San Francisco. You know, the one where the guy dies, goes to heaven, looks around and says "well, it's OK, but it's not San Francisco". I tend to think of the North of Scotland that way. I find the north heatbreakingly beautiful and my whole experience of that time in my life was a dizzy making cocktail of romantic attraction (both to an area and a person). I was also living in Swindon in England then. At the time, the move seemed the only way to advance my career. It was both the best professional move I ever made and the worst personal move I ever made. Swindon is as far different from the north of Scotland as you can imagine. I remember that holiday, arriving in Durness, sitting on the beach and thinking, "I'm now as far away from Swindon as I can get". So I think it was, in part, the contrast between the drab newtownness of Swindon and the wonder of the North that made this time in my life very special.

The relationship didn't go anywhere, but I remember thinking, OK I like these Irish girls, where can I find another - yes, Ireland! These thoughts of Irish women also got terribly mixed up with my huge Scottish nationalism that I was going through at the time. My friend from Aberdeen, who had lived in London since 1990, said that moving to England would turn me into a huge nationalist, as it had done for him - he was right. There's a whole other piece that I'll maybe write one day about the relationship between the various parts of the horrible old anachronistic legal and political entity that is the UK. But suffice to say, that a few years in England convinced me that, for the good of all the nations in the UK, we had to break it up and go our own ways. So I became fascinated by the little nation to my left, who had managed that. I wanted to live there, be part of this brave little nation who had taken on the British establishment and (mostly) won, I wanted to find another woman like the red haired vision from Cork, and I wanted to get as far way from England as I could. At the time, my own home nation seemed a little pathetic alongside Ireland, grumbling away about England, but never really having the guts to make a go of it on their own. There is yet another revival of nationalism back home again at the moment, but I doubt if it will come to anything. So I had many short trips over to Ireland at the beginning of 1997, but failed to get a job. The strategy changed when I finally got a job back in Glasgow in 1998 and realised that I maybe was getting too fundamentalist about the whole nationalism thing. Moving back to Scotland seemed to give me a much needed reality check on that score.

So wind the clock forward 10 years, and it's St Patrick's day in the San Francisco Bay area. When I first came here in the late spring of 2005, I liked the Irish bars here. As a Celt, who felt pretty lost in this huge new country, I felt a little at home in them. There seems to be an Irish bar in every downtown here (OK not Santa Clara, as they misplaced their downtown in the '60's), but in almost every downtown, there are three within walking distance of each other in Sunnyvale! This is interesting on a number of levels. A nation of only 3.5 million (not counting the diaspora) seems to have a huge influence on the USA (particularly the bars of the USA). My secret view is that Americans still feel that alcohol is a slightly shameful thing, so they prefer the Irish to take the blame for alcohol and have outsourced the identity of the alcohol providing establishments to the Irish.

Most Irish bars here don't have much in common with bars in Ireland. The Irish bar here in San Jose has as much atmosphere as the inside of a refrigerator. When I first came here I was jealous of this Irish cultural domination, after all, the fellow Celtic nation of Scotland has a bigger population (even bigger if you count the Poles now!), so where are all the Scottish pubs? We have an even more dubious record than the Irish have, in terms of our national self destruction over the love of alcohol, the West of Scotland is the alcohol related disease capital of Europe - so how did the Irish get all their bars into the downtowns of America and where are all ours? The longer I live here though, the more grateful I am that the Irish have colonised this space here. One of the Irish bars in downtown mountain view has all these black and white pictures of poor starving peasant farmers (presumably from the late 19th century) and a big oil painting of a ship being loaded with peasants, off to the new world. I haven't a clue what your average American makes of these pictures. I find them pretty offensive. It seems like the Irish have prostituted their own troubled past, and now all sorts of atrocities they suffered seem somehow devalued as, 150 years on, they are turned into kitch to put on the wall of bars in America.

So I was supposed to be at a party in San Francisco last night - but at my age, I sometimes run out of energy, so I decided to stay in the South Bay and have a quiet pint and go to my favourite Chinese restaurant. I forgot it was St. Patrick's day. I was at the St. Patrick's day parade in Dublin in 2001, which was the year that they had to have it on a different day because of the chaos that the outbreak of foot and mouth disease caused that year. I had a great time. OK most of the floats at the parade were pretty boring, but the atmosphere in the pubs was terrific and I have fond memories of standing outside the pub on the banks of the Liffey with a southern comfort in my hand, watching the fireworks. So I have some nice memories of St Patrick's day and last year (which was my first in the US), I kinda looked forward to it.

However, I'm now developing a number of problems with St Patricks Day , American style. Strangely enough, this is the only day of the year where you can walk into a bar here on a Saturday night and the bar is busy. That may seem strange to people outside of this country (especially those in Scotland and Ireland), but most of the bars here in the Bay Area are empty on a Saturday night. But on St Patrick's Day, for once a year, the bars here seem more like a regular Saturday night in Scotland. Where do all these American drinkers suddenly come from? It's maybe just another part of the outsourcing alcohol from America to Ireland. Just more so, on St Patrick's day.

America's relationship to terrorism changed forever on 911, rightly so. However, as someone who grew up with daily news stories of innocent people getting blown to pieces by the provisional IRA, it seems astounding that American's think it's OK to play Irish folk music containing lyrics glorifying the IRA. Hearing this last night made me feel physically sick. Come on Mountain View, have a bit more sense. The IRA used to bomb bars in Birmingham, do you think you should be promoting them in your bar? I wanted to go up and ask the bar staff if we could have a song next about Al-Queda, maybe one about the Basque Separatists, maybe even a whole terrorist party mix, but I think that would have gone over their heads. St Patrick's day here seems a whole cultural muddle, as much of the American interpretation of European culture seems.

So being unable to handle any more songs about the glorious freedom fighters who used to leave bombs in bars and litter bins in railway stations, I went to the other Irish bar, which is only two doors down. As I sat looking at a young guy with a green hat on with lights that flashed on and off, I wondered what that great figure of the Irish struggle, Michael Collins, would have made of all this, or if there is life after assassination, makes of this. Before I'm accused of muddled thinking here, I have to state that I make a huge distinction between the Irish Republican War in the early 20th century and the Provisional IRA campaign on of the 70's and '80's. I think, back in Collins's time, that his tactics were justified as the Irish were backed into a corner and had to fight. I think the partition of Ireland was a horrible, but maybe inevitable, mistake. The campaigns of the provisional IRA had their justifications in the massive discrimination that the Catholic population suffered, post partition. However, the Provisionals dragged on with a terrorist campaign when they could have made much more progress through the ballot box, and they degenerated into gangsterism. Many innocent people were killed needlessly before the provos arrived at the conclusion that the political process was best - if they had arrived at this conclusion a lot earlier it would have been better for all of us.

So having cleared that up, I have to say that (controversial though may be) Collins has always been a kind of hero to me. So whatever would Michael have said of St Patrick's day in the Bay Area? I think he would be pleased that Ireland is now (mostly) free and that there is celebration of his country every year, that people around the world can enjoy. I think he would be bemused by the strange cultural muddle of plastic shamrocks everywhere and those green hats with the lights on. But I really think I he'd want to switch off the pro-terrorism songs and move on. Though he caused a lot of violence, he died trying to make peace. The original IRA was a means to an end. Once the end was achieved, there was no need to glorify the violence.

So let's raise a glass for Ireland, remember beautiful Irish girls (especially those from Cork), and be glad Americans seem to have an excuse to fill the bars for one day of the year. But lets remember that there was a lot of lives wasted In Ireland and the UK and that it's maybe not tasteful to listen to songs that glorify that, whilst you are drinking your Guinness under the black and white pictures of the poor peasants, and wearing your green flashy light hat.

Christy Moore and Bono wrote a beautiful song about the Irish troubles. I used to listen to it a lot when I was in love with my red haired barmaid from Cork. There is a line in it - "... there's some high ground that's not worth taking and some connections are not worth making, there's an old church bell no longer ringing and some old songs are simply not worth singing". I'll drink to that.

Beginning


Why do this? I have a suspicion that this blog may vanish into the sea of content that is now the internet. Back in 1996 when I first got on the wonderweb, it seemed easier to get noticed. You could put in a wrong URL have nothing happen. These days you always seem to get re-directed to some page or other that's acting as a placeholder for some company who may wish to purchase "www.bbc.co.uk" or some such variant, however unlikely that may seem. Even worse, you make a mistake and you end up on a different web site that contains content that is completely different to the content you are after. Our tool at work for recording vacation time is called "vactool". If you make a mistake with that (and I always do) you get taken off the intranet and onto the internet. Instead of recording vacation, you are tempted into a range of professional vacuum tools - just what I need when I'm rushing to get off on vacation. So I was a kind of pioneer back in 2000, with my own website and all. So is it easier to get noticed now? The website back then did a great job and a terrible job. It re-united me with some people that were very important to me from my past and also united me with many bored American school children, who had nothing important to say, beyond : "Hi, I'm Laurie and I'm bored, math is awful", you get the picture. However, I've been recently blown away by the quality of some of the content that is out there in blogland. I think the distinction from the early days of the wonderweb is that it was the (as marketeers put it), the "early adopters" of the technology who were creating the amateur content in the mid to late '90's and the early stages of the Millennia. Some was good, but some was pure cybergeek nonsense. It seems there are a lot more ordinary folks out there with ordinary, but interesting things to say. The technology has become mainstream and is driving much more interesting, relevant content. That can only be a good thing.

So I'm kinda going to gently drip some of my own material back into the vast sea of content that we have now in wonderweb land and see how I go, it seems the right time to do it. I also think I'm at an interesting juncture of my life and I have more interesting things to say now. After spending the first 38 and a half years of my life in Scotland, I moved to the wonderful, expensive, frustrating, diverse, rich, poor, risky area that is the San Francisco Bay area. OK - cliche time; you learn a lot about yourself when you move to a new country. Well, some cliche's happen to be true. You also learn a lot about your home country when you begin to see it with a foreigner's eyes. So I'm developing some new perspectives on the glorious cultural muddle that is exchanged between both sides of the Atlantic. I've been on somewhat of a voyage of self discovery (ugg that's a bit of a cliche too, two in one article) over the past 12 months or so. Becoming 40 was always a big worry to me. Some close family members had a real bad time when they were that age and the age of 40 hung over me like Banquo's ghost at the feast. So I took it upon myself to learn as much as I could about what drove me to make some choices in the past, how I was stuck in some behaviour patterns and how I could re-order some of my thinking. That's led to some real interesting change, I hope I can get round to talking more about that later.

I stopped keeping a diary at the beginning of 1985. I tend to think of the middle of 1985 as being the time that my life really began. I still think of '85 as the best year of my life (my sister has the optimistic notion that the best year of my life is maybe yet to come, I like that - Idon'thinkink I would have had that thought without some outside help!), it was mainly as a tribute to the incredibly good time I had in '85 that I started my old website. So just when it became interesting, I stopped recording my life. Tprepre-'85 entries are horribly boring, I'm glad all the diaries are locked in a storage vault thousands of miles from where I am now. e.g. "March the 1st 1981, "watched Porridge on TV"". As my life became more interesting, I stopped having time to record it. Well - OK, I was often too drunk by the end of the day in those days to manage to write anything sensible. I'd often thought about writing a diary again, but this seems better.

You have to make some sensitive choices about how much information to share with the whole world, but I like the notion of having a diary, recording stuff so you can remember your own state of mind at a particular time and at having other people somewhere out there wonderweblandand being able to share your experiences, maybe comment on them, maybe add to the total of human experience / knowledge- who knows? The danger here is that I'm one of the millions here in America who becomming cash rich (relatively) and time poor. I also work in the tech sector and I'm stuck responding to e-mails all day. So there will be somchallangeses inherent in trying to do this. Having written 1000 (or does it just feel like that of e-mails during the day, that say things like "OK, I can make 10.00 am pst meeting", I sometimes have trouble typing anything outside of work. I'm looking at the clock already and it's only 10.16 on a Sunday! But I'll see how I go, how much enthusiasm I can work up for this and how good I think my blog entries are.

So this is just a start and the picture is of my favourite, much used and much travelled iBook, with my first blog entry on it. It does however seem a bit strange that the Yahoo spell checker does not know the word "blog" , I suppose most people on this site have noticed that before. I did hear Yahoo's chief technologist at Oracle Openworld, say that Solaris was an "old fashioned OS", so what do Yahoo know......?
Tom's blog about life in America as a Scottish person, appreciating and making music, politics, travel, my own philosophy and other stuff not easy to categorise.


About Me

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Norwich, Norfolk, United Kingdom
I'm a 40 something Scottish person who lives in the USA. I'm also an aspiring part time musician and songwriter.