Microwave clock
Bleep. The microwave ‘Clock set’ button says bleep. I would
be better off waiting ten minutes, that way I could set it to 13:00 and wouldn’t
have to press the minute button so many times. But where’s the story in that?
What could I have done in ten minutes to cope with the uncertainty of a clock
that just flashes ’00:00’. It is not 00:00, I can tell because sunlight
reflects off the microwave display. I have cereal digesting in my stomache,
which only rarely happens at 00:00. This morning has been productive. I include
a 10:38 lie-in with that, sleep is difficult sometimes so it feels good to have
some in the bank. The flat is cleaner that it was an hour ago, not quite to the
level of Lisa cleaning but it looks like a human could live here, and for now
that will have to do. I unplugged the microwave as part of cleaning, to get in behind the toaster and wipe away crumbs so potential mice can't get to them. I count writing as being productive, I tentatively
declare that is my thing and even frivolous poems and prose like this are part
of what I could later call my life’s work. I can appreciate such things better
now I’m doing the PhD. Even though it’s in lab-based science.
Beep. I poke my head over the kitchen window. The pharmacist
and her colleague in white uniform are locking up across the way, smiling as
they part company. Working on a Saturday morning, when today’s rain has already
fallen, perhaps they each have domestic duties, perhaps social stuff to make
the most of half a day off. I presume the lady in plain clothes, civvies, is the
pharmacist and the other the one who mans the till. In my experience
pharmacists prefer wearing their own clothes. The veg lady returns to her shop
on our side of the street with short hair and small movements. I try to compare
her, perhaps to a small animal, but I will the mouse I saw earlier in our flat to
die in any of three traps. I wouldn't wish that on the veg lady, I start to
think of practical reasons like I want her to live because she sells us food
and provides Lisa with company and chats when selling us melons and nectarines.
There are better reasons I don’t wish death, but for some reason these things
surface first. I suppose I take morality as a given. Perhaps I should call her the fruit lady, that's mostly what we buy from her.
I have a part-finished book on how to write a
PhD thesis in the loo. Not down the pan, it’s in the basket on top of the
cistern with other reading material, including a densely-written book chapter on the basics of chromatography. Most of the reading material is mine, and
it doesn't need to be there because all I read on there at the moment is the
story of Monkey. They’re trying to save a kingdom from oppressive Taoists,
three immortals advising the king of the land and treat Buddhists as slaves.
Ironically, Monkey, then a Buddhist priest, was unable to sit still and is a
monkey of action not of peace. The book does seem biased towards the Buddhists, the introduction says the structure of heaven in those times was considered an almost
replica of bureaucratic setup on earth. As it happens, I read some tweets in the last day or so accusing the BBC of institution-bias when they didn't report on the peoples assembly gathering in London to oppose cuts to public services. I remember considering such a thing
when I was a teenager, thought of writing a novel based on that where there are
spirits each responsible for a certain area or function and each was a bit
human. Perhaps I’ll follow up on that one day (certainly not until 2-odd
years from now).
For a long time, I’ve wrestled with a sort of
existentialism, wondering what I am, what’s my role in the world and why am I
here? In wondering this, I write out problems so I can see them with some
perspective and consider the right course of action. My poem ‘my line’ refers
to this (
video here). The general technique started in physics lessons in school, when solving
Newton’s laws of motion. The teacher, Mister Lloyd, set out a framework called ‘given’
and ‘to prove’. We would write out what facts had been given in the question
and what we needed to find out, and then pick the formula that fit the problem.
This was quite a revolution for me, simple being able to express what there is
and what I needed to do. I was quiet as a child, at least I was in public. Only
when I felt safe to do so could I really be me and say what I thought. So I got
a bit lippy when in some lessons, when I knew I could do well academically and
the teacher had no need to criticise me on that level.
I can see this turning into a biographical chapter, but I
don’t want to do that right now. Another time, yes. But what am I avoiding?
Perhaps I should keep going.
These days I’m generally ok at speaking in front of people.
I’ve given several talks as part of the PhD, several to my industrial partners
and one to members of the faculty at the University. Poetry readings are quite
a straightforward thing for me these days, I did an open mic on Thursday at the Arts House cafe and it
was like second nature to me. As an aside, it's a proper laid-back venue, after I quizzed the lady with dyed-blonde locks at the cafe counter she said it was an informal thing. The host Jeremy Toombs rocked up just before 8:30pm with a bushy beard and a cap on, sorted out the basement room whilst welcoming in people with a strong southern US accent. I still got nervous, felt the heart thumping in
my chest before I volunteered, before I stood up. A bit like in Jiu-Jitsu, when
training at ULU at first I couldn’t possibly volunteer myself to practice in
front of everyone else but after training for a few months I would quite
happily go first sometimes. Not that I train at the moment, I have the PhD to
focus on and poetry/prose writing is enough of a hobby, doing two and a PhD
probably needs more hours than there are in the week. Truth be told, it might
be possible but to the detriment of my relationship with Lisa. I’ve waited almost
three decades of my life to find my perfect love and all I really want to do is
be in her company. In some ways I’d like her to train with me, but she doesn’t
like being picked up, and wouldn’t take kindly to receiving atemi. The reason I
mention Jitsu is I’d like to start training again, I think it would help focus
my studies also. When Lis is away on placements, I find myself sprawling my
working day from 9:30am to 8 or 9pm at night. This is fine in that most of that
is lab work or excel work looking through data. But the days when I have to
leave by a sensible time helps me really focus on what I need to get done, and
doing this more regularly could help me. I also need to write, and even when I’m
not training (will probably go twice a week, generally once a week is a bit too
sporadic to really enjoy it. You end up spending most sessions refreshing
yourself and it’s difficult to progress). PhD write, that is. I’ve a paper to
get written on HILIC-CAD, which is progressing ok but it’s becoming urgent that
I get a paper out with me as first author. The advice I’ve heard is that it
makes the viva and marking much easier if your work has already been
peer-reviewed and published. The reason it’s urgent is the Journal of
Chromatography A is putting together a special issue of work presented at the
HPLC 2014 conference in New Orleans. I made a poster for it, and that work on
HILIC-CAD is the meat and potatoes of the paper. So it’s fresh in my mind and I
have some conclusions to draw, this week I’ll crack on and get a draft within a
fortnight or so.
I presented a poster this week, and I feel explaining my work
to non-lab scientists went ok. The Pro-vice chancellor that introduced one of
the oral presentation sessions referenced the conversation he’d had with me a
few moments before, pointing out I struggled to explain it. I thought I’d done
ok and deserved some credit for effort and enthusiasm (also not being
judgemental when someone literally has no idea what I do, even what I work in
the same faculty). From what he said to the lecture theatre, I think he got it
better than he gave himself credit for, as it made sense to me.
It’s now 13:54, so it seems rather than filling ten minutes
I’ve filled an hour with these contemplations. I remember my mum telling me ‘a
writer writes’, and google tells me plenty of others said this too. But I’m a
scientist too and need to find things to write about. The lab whispers like a Jimmy Hendrix song but I need to make lunch and welcome my woman
home. Monday will be the start of a good week.
doph
:o)