7 Reasons

Tag: funny

  • 7 Reasons To Be A Father

    7 Reasons To Be A Father

    This piece is entitled 7 Reasons to be a Father.  It is not 7 Reasons You Fathered a Child, we all have our own reasons for that, often involving a combination of beer and lust or – for the less fortunate – calendars, timetables, fatigue and oh God, it’s bloody sex again.  This is a plea to bring back into popular usage the title Father.  It’s important that women read this too, as it’s mostly from them that children learn how to address their fathers.  I’m printing this piece out and posting it all around the house when I’ve finished it for my wife to see because I, more than almost anything else, also wish to be addressed as Father.  Here’s why.

    A portrait of a Victorian father with a new baby

    1.  Fathers Have A Day.  Dads and daddies don’t have a day, but fathers do.  It’s called Father’s Day, and it’s a whole day devoted to the celebration of fathers.  Less formally titled male parents have nothing similar to Father’s Day.  The nearest thing they have is Daddy Day Care, which is a film starring Eddie Murphy from 2003, made a mere eighteen years after he ceased to be funny.*  If you want to be celebrated, you have to be a father.

    2.  It’s Not Mentioned In The Phrase “Who’s The Daddy”.  I have an irrational hatred of the phrase “who’s the daddy” that borders on the pathological.  I don’t know why people ever need to say this (actually, it’s usually bellowed, boorishly) but they do.  I dislike this phrase so much that my (fortunately resistible) desire on hearing it is to beat the sayer around the head with the nearest sturdy but moveable objects to hand – which today, would be a large beige parasol and a teacup** – while saying “who’s the father“.  This is problematic as the best known user of this phrase is Ray Winstone (in the film Scum), and in terms of people you’d be ill-advised to assault with a beige parasol and a teacup, he’s right up there with Sebastien Chabal and the hairy-armed woman from my local branch of Superdrug.  If more people used the word father, I’d be in less danger.

    3.  It’s Your Duty. While my son and I were playing our version of peek-a-boo that bears the catchy name, Where’s Father? My visiting mother-in-law looked at me aghast.  “He can’t call you Father” she said, “that sounds horrible.  Fathers are remote and distant”.  While I agreed with the first part of what she said (he can’t call me Father.  He’s a baby.  He usually refers to me as Agoo-Agoo), I wholly disagree with the latter part.  Fathers are not remote and distant; bad parents are.  Father is just a name associated with another age when the social norm was for parents (especially male ones) to be more distant from their children.  Were all fathers cold and distant?  No.  Were all of these men bad parents?  No.  But they’ve been tainted by the modern distaste for the word father.  Don’t we owe it to people who will be forever associated with the word father to reclaim the name, to show that being addressed as father and being a good parent are not exclusive?  Yes.  I think we do.  Being addressed as Father, rather than as Daddy could be seen as performing a civic duty.  A very untaxing one at that, which is by far the best sort.

    4.  The Name Father Lends Itself To Formality.  If you ever ask a child what their dad has been up to, the answer is never good.  It’s usually, “Daddy drank too much and fell asleep on the kitchen floor.”  Enquire after a father, however, and surely you’ll get something more formal and considered: “Father imbibed injudiciously and was importuned adjacent to the pantry” or “Father’s club won a tournament of association football and, on his return to the familial abode, he was so awash with joy and hubris that he swooned in the scullery”.  The more formal account of your character and your recent occurrences will give everyone a much better impression of you.***

    5.  Father Is Right For Our Era.  It’s been a trend in recent years for children to be named more traditionally and formally and Britain is now teeming with Samuels, Lilys, Lottys and Benjamins.  With superb irony, there was even a flood of Noahs two years ago.  What better fit for the era then, than to be known as Father?  Can you imagine any conversation beginning “Hephzibah.”  “Yes, Dad”?  No of course you can’t.  Gary has a dad.  Jeremiah requires a father.

    6.  The Word Father Is Synonymous With Excitement And Adventure.  The word father is redolent of suitably-attired men drinking port in their oak-panelled libraries; of men that had rounded the horn six times afore the mast when they were scarcely twenty; of men that invented telephones and telegrams and multitudinous things that don’t begin with tele; of men that built vast industries where once there had been nothing; of men that – with scant regard for the peril they placed themselves in – explored and charted the world that was their plaything; of unreconstructed men that sallied forth to ride atop elephants and take pot-shots at tigers whilst clad in crisp linen; of men that reposed languidly – though impeccably – in the leather armchairs of their clubs and in the saloons of well-appointed hotels; of men that wore a panoply of hats – tall and short, soft and hard, cloth and silk – for every occasion, but never indoors; of men that marched long in shambling, hobnailed ranks to their capital when their families fell hungry; of bewhiskered men that shrank their world, bringing far-flung and wondrous exotica and ephemera to and from all the ends of the earth; of men that unsealed newly-received missives at their breakfast tables with a silver letter opener and a flourish; of good men whose reliability, indomitability, solidity and sheer bloody ability went unremarked upon though thoroughly remarkable; of men for whom adventure, discovery, conquest, knowledge, power, expansion, great works, boundlessness and greatness were commonplace.  Those men were fathers.  And dad?  Dad drives to B&Q on a Saturday morning in his people carrier, puts up shelves in the afternoon, drinks crap lager while watching Britain’s Got Talent in the evening and then falls asleep at night during Match of the Day.  And Saturday is the highlight of his week.  Being a father is so much more exciting.

    7.  It’s Rare.  There just aren’t many Fathers out there so you’ll stand out.  This has other benefits too.  Should you find yourself in a beer garden populated by the balding, the pudgy, the badly-attired and the bloodshot of eye, observe what happens when a child calls out “Dad”.  Everyone stops what they are doing and looks around, certain that their progeny is in urgent need of their attention, only to discover that it’s the child of someone else who then announces to the assembled company that they have done a big plop.  If your child calls out “Father”, you’re likely to be the only person that looks around so it’s not just more individual, it’s more sociable too, as no one else has their conversation about how much of Match of the Day they missed last night when they dozed off disrupted, and no one gets to hear about the big plop.  Except you.

    So, who’s the daddy?  Who cares?  Who’s the father?  It’s me.  Indubitably.

     

    *Oh God.  I’m old enough to remember when Eddie Murphy was funny.  This is a truly horrific watershed moment.

    **Note to self:  Sit near more manly objects when writing.

    ***This may be fanciful.  Learning to crawl up the stairs would be more efficacious.

     

     

     

  • 7 Reasons That It Should Be Impossible to Drive Into The Sea

    7 Reasons That It Should Be Impossible to Drive Into The Sea

    This year, there have been eight incidents of motorists being rescued from the sea near Holy Island.  But it just seems completely impossible that this can happen.  Here are seven reasons why.

    This isn’t possible.

    1.  There’s A Bloody Great Sign.  As you approach the causeway to Holy Island, there’s a sign.  It tells you not to drive across to the island when water approaches the causeway.  It’s a big, yellow sign, and it’s big and yellow because big, yellow things are highly visible.  Can you see the sun?  Yes?  That’s because it’s a big, yellow thing.  Just like the sign that tells you not to drive into the sea.

    Can you see this?

    2.  It’s Called Holy Island.  What’s in a name?  Well, in this case, there’s a hint as to the nature of the place to which these people were headed.  There’s the word Holy, which means tread carefully, and the word Island, which is a declaration that this is a place that is cut off from the mainland somehow; most likely by water.  If I were going to an island, I’d expect water.  And, hopefully, an ice cream.

    3.  You Have To Drive Along A Causeway.  A causeway is a raised road that crosses marshy ground or water.  Now I understand that not everyone knows this and, indeed, there was a time in my life that I didn’t know what a causeway was.  And then, when I was seven, that all changed and I learned that word. Now, given that you have to be at least seventeen to drive a car is this possible?  Are there people over the age of seventeen in this country that are unfamiliar with the either the word island or the word causeway?  There can’t be.

    4.  Another Sign.  Perhaps I’m wrong when I assume that these inadvertent submariners were approaching Holy Island.  Perhaps these hapless buffoons were leaving it.  But maybe I’m being harsh and these people were just a tiny bit muddled and forgetful.  But no, they can’t be, because there are more signs; signs to warn those people that are about to drive across the causeway for a second time.  Big, yellow signs and different signs too.  Signs that tell you to consult a tide table if you’re in any doubt as to whether you should attempt to drive across the sea.

    5.  Tide Table.  But telling people to consult a tide table isn’t overly helpful, is it?  After all, who keeps a tide table in their glove-box?  And, come to think of it, who keeps gloves in their glove-box?  Why isn’t is known as the half a pocket pack of tissues and the charger for a phone-box?*  Anyway it’s conceivable that people won’t have a tide table on them so perhaps, once again, I’m judging them too harshly.  But…

    …oh look, there it is.  That wasn’t too hard to find after all.  Are these foundering fuckwits an early indication that humans are reverting to apes?

    6.  Boats.  Britain is an Island.  And, because of our glorious seafaring history, it will be apparent to anyone with even a modicum of an education or cognitive function that, to cross the sea, you need a boat.  Did Nelson fight the battle of Trafalgar on a horse?  Was Hitler able to drive his panzers across the sea in 1941?  Did Sir Francis Drake sally forth to dispatch the armada at the wheel of a Nissan Micra?  No.  This is because you can’t drive in the sea.  That is a widely known and commonly accepted truth.

    7.  Other Nations.  I’m assuming that these shipwrecked simpletons are British though.  But there are other nationalities that have done this too.  Because in the latest incident in which motorists had to be rescued from the sea by a lifeboat near Holy Island (and who wouldn’t want to be a fly on the wall for that conversation?) they weren’t British at all.  And I suppose that it’s quite conceivable that if you were from a landlocked nation and weren’t familiar with the English language that it would be possible for you to inadvertently get caught out on the causeway.  So which landlocked non-English-speaking land with no absolutely no history of seafaring did these people come from?  Australia.

    It’s not possible that people are driving into the sea, but they are.  How?  Why?  Answers on a postcard please.

     

     

    *That’s a charger for a phone, not a charger for a phone-box.

     

     

     

  • 7 Reasons Not To Make Your Own

    7 Reasons Not To Make Your Own

    Yesterday Marc hit the mother lode and in his excitement urged us all to make our own. Being the type of person that does exactly as Marc says, I set out, full of the joys of a rainy spring, and immersed myself in an afternoon of crafting. The results, unfortunately, were not quite what Marc had advertised. Let’s have a look at what went wrong.

    7 Reasons Not To Make Your Own

    1.  The Winning Waistcoat And Sequin-Trimmed Belt. “Want to dress like Charlie Sheen?” Marc asked. “Of course I do!” I replied. It was quite an intricate design and not being a professional needle-worker I felt a prick for a good two hours. However, I got the job done, and proud of my new item I slipped it on and went for a walk around the roughest part of the South East. Kent. The locals were hardly going to mess with someone with Tigerblood were they? Well, yes. Yes, they were. It was said that this product was “so fabulous people would literally point at you.”. Erm, no. I got a lot of middle fingers pointing skywards and the one person who I thought was pointing at me was actually punching me in the face. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution.

    2.  The Tie Hanger. “A stylish and practical gift for Father’s Day?” Yes, please! The Austin Reed vouchers are wearing rather thin on originality these days so I am always happy to receive new ideas. The tie hanger seemed right up my street. My Dad likes ties. And it was this ‘like’ that caused disaster. Call me stupid but I thought this tie hanger was for all my father’s ties. As a result I attached the hanger to the wall and then added the 216 ties to it. Then the wall fell down. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution.

    3.  The Wig Stand. I don’t know any bald men. I know even fewer bald women. So when I was crafting this stand the one thought that kept crossing my mind was, “who on earth am I going to give this to?” And then, just as I was adding the pink eyebrows, it struck me. Yes! I met a bald bloke on Saturday night! At Andy’s 30th Chimenea Party! I couldn’t remember his name, but we had talked about rugby and I remembered he said he was a prop forward for Aylesford. So yesterday evening I got on my skateboard and headed down to the club. I suspect I’ll be walking with this limp for quite a while. I shall of course update you when I have managed to remove the other pink eyebrow. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution.

    4.  The Gift Ribbon Flowers. A genius idea. I am ashamed to admit that I haven’t bought Claire flowers for a good few months now.* However, I lacked one necessary ingredient to make the gift ribbon flowers. Ribbon. Long gone are the days when I had a ribbon printer. “What can I cut up into ribbon-like strips?” I wondered as I stood in front of Claire’s wardrobe. Two hours, one trip to Zara and the best part of £80 later, I replaced the garment I had hacked to pieces. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution.

    5.  The Trendy Ties. “Is your wardrobe a little drab?” Yes! One hour, one trip to Reiss and the best part of £150 later, I replaced the garment I had hacked to pieces in Claire’s wardrobe. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution.

    6.  Tat. Now, this confused me. Despite reading the instructions and staring at the accompanying visual for thirty minutes, I was still none the wiser. While I understood I was supposed to ‘learn to tat’, I had no idea what tatting was. Quite frankly it may as well have said ‘learn to wickytrickyjicky’. Eventually I just tied a bit of string around my finger and gave myself a pat on the back. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: caution (bloody pointless).

    7.  The Bearded Puppets. I don’t have any children, but given that I often have nightmares about shaved lambs and Judy Murray, anything was worth a try to change the routine. So I made them. Two bearded puppets. Last night’s dream? Judy Murray with a beard. Riding a disembodied lamb’s head. Thanks Marc. I give this product a 7 Reasons rating of: extreme caution.

    *Reminder. Now you’ve finished writing this, go and buy Claire some flowers.**

    **I can’t now, I’ve got work to do.***

    ***Okay, do it tomorrow.****

    ****Good plan.

  • 7 Reasons To Make Your Own

    7 Reasons To Make Your Own

    Readers of 7 Reasons, something very, very, exciting has happened.  I’m a big fan of the craft boom that’s going on at the moment and see the trend for knitting, sewing and making your own stuff as a very good thing indeed.  As a father, I’m much happier knowing that my child is playing with toys that we made him at home, rather than playing with mass-manufactured plastic ones that are cheaply-priced as a result of the exploitation of cheap labour.  It’s sometimes hard to find patterns and ideas for things to make though, but today I hit the mother lode (courtesy of a craft time-capsule from my mother-in-law’s loft).  I’m sure you’ll agree that every single one of these items is a reason to make your own.  Let’s go!

    1.  The Winning Waistcoat And Sequin-Trimmed Belt.  Want to dress like Charlie Sheen?  Of course you do.  You can do so in this stylish Winning waistcoat and matching belt.  He’s probably wearing one right now (in his head).  Now you can too.  You’ll look so fabulous that people will literally point at you with envy.

    2.  The Tie Hanger.  Want to make a stylish and practical present for Father’s Day?*  Why not make this attractive tie hanger (that in no way resembles a stick, some string and a few drawing pins)?  Your father will love it, and on seeing it, his ties will probably be so delighted that they’ll try to hang themselves.  Everyone’s a winner with this sumptuous and sophisticated storage solution.

    3.  The Wig Stand.  Do you have a wig that needs somewhere to live?   Perhaps your uncle wears a toupee during the day but likes to be bald when he’s asleep. Maybe your sister wears a wig.  You could make this lovely wig stand either for yourself or as a gift for others.  Who wouldn’t be thrilled to sit around the tree with the family on Christmas morning and unwrap this lovely new home for their pretend hair?  It’s well-equipped too, as there’s even a space to store a pair of eyebrows.

    4.  The Gift Ribbon Flowers.  Have you got too much ribbon lying around the house and want to woo a lady with flowers?**  Why not make her a gorgeous bouquet from your surplus gift ribbon?    She’ll be wowed by your creativity, dazzled by your originality and bowled-over by your frugality.  This man’s a keeper, she’ll think as you sit down to dine at the chip shop.  After all, real flowers don’t grow on trees, you know.

    5.  The Trendy Ties.  Are you feeling a little unfashionable?  Is your wardrobe a little drab?  Do you want to catch the attention of the new girl in the typing pool?  Does your boss consistently overlook you for promotion?  Why not make yourself an attractive new tie?  You’ll get everyone’s attention with one of these and you’ll also be trendy. Perhaps they’ll even give you a new nickname.  Awesome-Tie-Man or some such, I shouldn’t wonder.

    6.  Tat.  Feeling a little left out?  Can’t sew, knit, or pin string to a stick? Well, don’t worry, there is a practical craft that you can do.  You can…

    …learn to tat.  Even if you’re not very good at it, you can achieve the look of a professional by simply applying an entire lip-stick and gazing haughtily at some string in your hand.  You may not be able to tat, but you’ll look like one.

     

    7.  The Bearded Puppets.  Do your children sleep at night?  Are you scared that they’re going to grow up to be well-adjusted?  Is there not enough terror in their lives?  You can fix that right now by making them a pair of these bearded disembodied-head puppets.  You can be sure that this is one present that they’ll never forget, no matter how hard they try.  Or how much they spend on psychiatry.

    Okay, that’s it.  I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed writing a 7 Reasons post more.  I’ll leave you now with one picture that I’m not going to mock, because this young chap’s probably a chief constable now.  Or my bank manager.

    *Note to self:  Hide this post from own wife and child.

    **Lazy cultural stereotyping suggests that this seems unlikely.

     

  • 7 Reasons It Was Nigh On Impossible To Write 7 Reasons Today

    7 Reasons It Was Nigh On Impossible To Write 7 Reasons Today

    Sometimes it’s easy to write 7 Reasons.  You set aside a quiet couple of hours and the thoughts and words flow as if they were being dictated to you by some sort of eloquent, inspired and kindly spirit.  Sometimes, on the other hand, it’s nigh on impossible.  Today, has been one of those days.  Here are seven reasons why.

    1.  Because I Began With Confidence.  I Had Many Things To Do.  Today, I needed to:  Put a third coat of paint on a bedroom; clear all the decorating detritus from that bedroom; hoover and mop that bedroom; put all the furniture back in that bedroom; write a 7 Reasons post, visit Sainsbury’s and bathe a twelve week old child.  Well, there seems like a lot there, I thought, but if I work hard and well it will all fit in.

    2.  Because The Best Laid Plans Often Go Awry.  10am:  Having read the papers, played with my son, consumed two cups of coffee and a banana and done various bits of 7 Reasons admin over the previous two hours, I was ready to write.  It was at that moment my visiting mother-in-law announced that she had a migraine.  Bugger, I thought.  That’s the free childcare out of the window.  I spent two hours trying to write and was constantly interrupted.  We went through more nappies and tantrums in those two hours than one would expect to go through in a year.  Some of the tantrums weren’t even mine.  The twenty minutes of writing I managed to get done in those two hours wasn’t even any good.   I decided to bin it and start again.

    3.  Because It Turns Out That A Change Isn’t As Good As A Rest.  I decided that as it was such a nice day, I would take the laptop outside and write in the garden.  This was a great idea.  I sat under a parasol and began to write.  Then, a baby cried and I got to play a new game: Whose Baby?  Was it my baby?  Was it one of next door’s babies?  Was it the baby from two doors down?  Was it a nomadic passing baby?  Eventually the crying stopped so if it was my baby then my wife was dealing with it and I didn’t have to.  Then all of a sudden, a bee appeared.  But this was no average bee, this was Beezilla: A veritable beehemoth* of a creature that angrily buzzed its way through the garden as if drawn inexorably to me.  With an audible thud it landed on the table.  I considered calling for help, but realised that it would be too long in coming.  I made a run for it.  I watched the bee from the utility room window for half an hour or so as it relaxed next to my laptop on the table.  This wasn’t getting me anywhere.

    4.  Because When One Door Opens, Another Gets Rung By Parcelforce.  As suddenly as it had arrived, the bee departed.  It was 1pm.  There was still time to write.  I returned to the garden.  I wrote for five minutes; swiftly, sharply, with rapidity and alacrity, then I heard the sound of my neighbours’ door opening.  He strode out into the garden and seated himself on the other side of the wall that my back was to.  We were no more than three feet away from each other.  Oh no, I thought, as I had some inkling of what was about to happen.  And sure enough, he began to play his mandolin.  Now I love music, and I love writing.  But I can tell you that being three feet away from the former is not conducive to the latter.  I struggled on nonetheless, writing manfully but badly.  Then my mother-in-law appeared. “Marc“, she said quite correctly, “there’s someone at the door and I can’t open it“.  Annoyed at the interruption but glad of the opportunity to escape the cacophony I went through the house and opened the front door.  It was a delivery driver. “Can you take in a parcel for next door?” he enquired, “They’re not in“.  I seethed for a moment, I briefly considered ParcelForceicide, I also considered bellowing “They are in!  He’s playing the fucking mandolin in the garden and can’t hear the door.  Feel free to smash it down and kill him to death!” but I realised that might make me look somewhat unhinged so I took in the parcel.  I also decided to abandon writing.

    5.  Because A Change Still Isn’t As Good As A Rest.  If I couldn’t write then I could at least get some of the other stuff out of the way.  I went upstairs and put the third coat of paint on the bedroom walls and ceiling.  It’s a large room and I loathe painting but it went well.  Eventually I completed the task and, having washed all the paint from my hands, my hair, my eye and my left nostril I headed back to the room with the hoover.  “You can’t use that,” my wife said, “Mum’s gone back to bed“.  I couldn’t go to Sainsbury’s, I was still wearing my decorating clothes.  I couldn’t bathe the baby, it wasn’t time.  Then I had a novel idea.  I would eat something.  I ate, then I paced, growing steadily more furious at the delay.  Eventually after about an hour I decided to return to writing.  Five minutes later, my mother-in-law surfaced.  I was purposefully typing away in the dining room and as she passed she said, “You’re always on that computer“.  I distinctly remember thinking that were I a cat-kicker, at that moment, I would surely have kicked a cat.  Even if I had to go a long way to find one.

    6.  Because Like Sands Through The Hourglass, So Was This Day Of My Life.  I returned to the room to clean it up.  I hoovered, I mopped and then I changed.  “Right, I’m off to Sainsbury’s” I announced.  “But we have to bathe the baby“, my wife objected.  “Fine, let’s do that now then”, I said tersely.  “But it’s not time”, she replied.  I seethed, “It’s now or not at all”.  We agreed that we would bathe him right then.  I turned on the tap to draw his bath at the same moment as the washing machine started up in the utility room, stealing all of the hot water.  Drip…drip…drip, I angrily watched the bath fill drop by drop by drop by endless bloody drop.  After what seemed an age, and probably was, the bath was ready.  We bathed the baby.  That was fun.  I went to Sainsbury’s and returned.  It was half past seven.  All I had to do now was put the furniture back into the thoroughly clean and immaculately decorated bedroom and write 7 Reasons.

    7.  Because Just When You Think You’ve Got It Licked, It Bites You In The Posterior.  I worked hard. I shifted a wardrobe, a bed, a dressing table and many smaller items around the upper floor of my house with furious resolve.  I toiled and I sweated and I lugged things round and pushed endless heavy things through tiny spaces until I was exhausted.  Right, I thought (it was 8:37pm), I’ll do one final thing before I sit down to write, I’ll put the Venetian blind back up.  I reattached the blind to its long established fixings and began to raise it, to better let the fresh air flow through the open window and dissipate the paint smell.  Then this happened.

    Half of the newly painted wall came away depositing plaster, cement and brick all over the immaculate floor, the newly polished dressing table and in my (just refilled) glass of sparkling water.  I believe that I may have announced my displeasure at this turn of events to the entire town of York.  In Anglo-Saxon.  I may have foamed at the mouth.  I may have punched what remained of the wall.  Right, time to write 7 Reasons then.

    I Sat Down.  So, what does an angry humourist with a sore hand that has just abjectly lost his sense of humour write about?  Oh, this apparently.

     

    *I’m actually proud of that.

     

     

  • 7 Reasons To Have A Second Birthday.  Today!

    7 Reasons To Have A Second Birthday. Today!

    It turns out that today is the perfect day to have your second birthday.  Here are seven reasons that you should.

    1.  Because You Can.  You might not think you can have a second birthday on June 10th, but you can.  You probably think that only the Queen can have two birthdays, but you’re wrong.  The Queen doesn’t have two birthdays, she has three.  She has her birthday, her official birthday and today, in the Solomon Islands – but nowhere else – it’s the Queen’s official birthday there.  Is it really fair that the Queen should have three times as many birthdays as the rest of us?  Of course not.  No one would mind if you had a second birthday on June 10th, least of all the Queen who’d still be one better than the rest of us.

    2.  Because The Weather’s Right For It.  The date of June 10th falls during the month of June, you may not be surprised to learn.  This means that the weather is guaranteed.  Because on any birthday in June, it will rain.  This will make the weather on your actual birthday – unless that too, falls in June – seem positively glorious in comparison.

    3.  Because It Can Only Improve Your Day.  Today, I was woken at 5:30am by my wife announcing that our son had wet the bed.  “Never mind”, I said, “you can put him in our bed for a couple of hours”.  “I can’t”, she replied, “it’s our bed that he’s wet”.  You need a second birthday to get over that sort of news.  I’m sure that many of you have also woken up to similarly bad news or had unfortunate experiences today (possibly involving rain).  It’s not too late to have a second birthday.  Have it now, you deserve it.

    4.  Because Tomorrow Is World Gin Day.  Tomorrow, in its infinite wisdom, the world – or gin – has decided that it’s World Gin Day.  If you have your second birthday today and request gin, tonic, limes, Angostora bitters, ice and glasses (because receptacles are important), you’ll be perfectly equipped for tomorrow’s festivities.  And you’ll have got the cake-eating out of the way, because if there’s one thing that gin doesn’t go with it’s cake*.  Have your cake today.  And eat it.

    5.  Because Something Good Needs To Happen On June 10th.  Sometimes, when writing about a particular day we do actual research via the medium of Google.  Having researched June 10th, I can confirm that it’s one of the dullest days in history and can disclose that the two events with the most humour potential from this date are that the first public zoo was opened in France in 1794 and Elizabeth Hurley was born in 1965.  It’s not just that you need June 10th for your second birthday.  June 10th needs you.

    6.  Because It’s The Right Time Of Year.  If you have a birthday in February or November, you probably lose out presents-wise because of your special day’s proximity to Christmas.  That’s right, Jesus was born too and he’s far more important than you.  June 10th is almost in the middle of the year and is as far away from Christmas as you can hope to get**.  So, with your second birthday on June 10th, you’ll get better presents and you’ll foil Jesus.  It’s all win.

    7.  Because It’s Jon’s Birthday.  Today, June 10th, is my writing partner Jonathan Lee’s birthday.  If everyone else had a second birthday today then he would age at half the speed of the rest of us (though anyone that saw yesterday’s post might say he’s making rather a good fist of that already***).  We’d all become world-weary and cynical and while, in the Autumn of our lives, our minds had closed to fun, tomfoolery and japery, Jon would still be merrily frolicking away, committing acts of piracy in his garden.  The world’s a much better place for that. Happy birthday Jon.

     

    *If there are two things that gin doesn’t go with they’re cake and cycling.

    **Except for Mecca.

    ***He wrote, in his glass house.

     

     

  • 7 Reasons Windowgate Is Baffling

    7 Reasons Windowgate Is Baffling

    If you’re at all interested in cricket or windows, then you can’t have failed to have noticed that, in a tale that came to be known as Windowgate, a window in the England dressing room got broken by Matt Prior at Lord’s yesterday.  This story then snowballed taking many unexpected twists and turns along the way.  I was listening as events unfolded.  Here are seven reasons that the story is baffling.

    1.  The Explanation.  The ECB’s initial explanation for the incident was that “the glass had been broken after Prior’s gloves ricocheted off a kit bag and knocked the bats, resting on the window pane.”  This seemed almost entirely plausible.  To the abjectly mad.  People who have no concept of the relative mass and density of gloves and bats might also be misled by this statement.  I, as an owner of both gloves and bats, however, am not taken in by what we can only call the Magic Glove theory.  I can categorically state that in over thirty years of glove ownership, I have never seen one ricochet.

    2.  The Withdrawal Of The Explanation.  By the time the explanation was withdrawn, my speculation had become fevered.  So if it wasn’t a Magic Glove, what was it?  Was a lone glove-man in the England dressing room hurling gloves at bats from a grassy knoll?  Were bats being hurled from book depositories?  Were books being hurled from bat depositories?  Was there a shadowy third glove-hurler in the showers?  Oh, they’ve withdrawn the explanation now.  Wait!  That makes it seem even more sinister and mysterious.

    3.  The Explanation For The Withdrawal Of The Explanation.  On withdrawing his initial explanation, England spokesman James Avery said that he “had been working from second-hand information”.  He failed to mention that not only was the information second-hand, it was also implausible gibberish.  After all, second-hand information isn’t intrinsically bad.  I didn’t find out about the sinking of the Titanic first-hand, and I’m fairly sure that you didn’t either.  I’m confident that it happened though, and in the manner that it was told to me.  To blame the implausibility and inaccuracy of a laughably shoddily fabricated account on it being second-hand is preposterous.  What he should have done is blame it on an idiot, because there’s definitely one involved there somewhere.

    4.  The All-New Explanation.  The ECB then had another go at explaining the breakage.  “Prior had his bat on the ledge where the wall met the window of the dressing room. The bat handle bounced off the wall onto the glass and the glass broke.”  Ah, this sounds more plausible (as most things do when there isn’t a magic glove involved).  This account of events is far more believable than the first, unless, that is, you’re an exponent of that arcane and little-known (to the ECB) science, physics.  Newton’s law states that “to every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction”, and that holds true in this case.  In my over thirty years of bat-ownership, I’ve never seen one move of its own accord.  I also believe that if England possessed a magic or sentient bat, Straussy would have been using it in the second innings, so we can be certain that this is a conventional cricket bat.  This means that for it to have bounced off the wall, there must have been an action to which the bat was reacting.  In this case, the only possible explanation is that the England dressing room at Lord’s has a twitching wall; a wall that twitched and caused the bat handle to bounce onto the glass, which then shattered.  In the interests of research I googled “Lord’s twitching wall” and found no account of it, which is strange for a cricket ground with such a well-documented history.  I smelled a rat.*  The second explanation was no better than the first.

    5.  Just What Are They Trying To Keep From Us? So if neither of those explanations are to be believed, what could possibly have happened in that dressing room that would cause the ECB to go to such lengths to cover it up?  Some sort of second Roswell incident?  Was Glen Miller in there?  The Loch Ness Monster?  All the ECB seem to have achieved with their accounts of the incident is to fuel much conjecture, discussion, speculation and publicity.

    6.  I Have A Theory Of My Own.  Some may call it fanciful, some may call it far-fetched, some may call it pie-in-the-sky, but here’s what might – in my mind – have happened.  Competitive sportsman Matt Prior, who was, according to an eye-witness, “…cursing and muttering when he walked up the stairs to the pavilion”, furious at being run out, entered the dressing room and angrily hurled his bat to the floor. It then ricocheted off the floor and struck the window, causing it to break.  This theory of mine is unsubstantiated, unlike the Twitching Wall theory, which has been endorsed by Andrew Strauss (though he was on the balcony at the time and didn’t see it himself), but it does have some advantages over either of the explanations offered by the ECB:  It’s plausible, it’s physically possible, it doesn’t involve a magic glove, it doesn’t involve a twitching wall, and James Avery didn’t say it.

    7.  The Biggest Mystery Of All.  If my theory were, in fact, true, no one would have batted an eyelid at that course of events.  No one was badly hurt and Prior apologised and was fined.  We would all have put it down to a bit natural frustration and moved on.  The ECB seem to have taken what was a very unremarkable incident and have turned it into Windowgate: An epic tale of ineptitude, implausibility, bullshit and chicanery.   Quite why they did this is the most baffling thing of all.

     

    *Figuratively.

     

  • 7 Reasons I Won’t Be Using The Self-Checkout Machines At My Local Supermarket

    7 Reasons I Won’t Be Using The Self-Checkout Machines At My Local Supermarket

    I’m not totally against self-checkout machines or progress, but the ones at my local supermarket have turned shopping into a living hell*.  Here’s why I won’t be using them.

    1.  They’re Confusing.  Now I’m not a man easily confused by technology.  I can put together websites that almost work and look good; I can write HTML and CSS code and I can do things to the inside of PCs too.  And given that the self-checkout systems are supposed to be a user-friendly interface that are accessible to people with little tech-savvy or confidence, you might expect that I’d be able to use them easily.  But they’re bewildering.  Not in and of themselves, but because they are located in a packed group of self-checkouts in a very small space going through different stages of the transaction but bellowing instructions at their customer in the same identical voice.  “Please scan your first item”.  Wait, what!  I’m on my third.  “Please replace the item in the bagging area”.  What!  I haven’t removed the item from the bagging area.  “Please wait for assistance.” Assistance?  To scan a jar of cloves? How daft do I look? Having a row of three machines with only one voice is idiotic.  It’s like having a third member of Jedward.

    2.  Buying Alcohol Becomes Difficult.  Occasionally** I like to buy some beer or wine.  This is not a straightforward purchase at the self-checkout because a light suddenly flashes above your machine (sadly no klaxon) and a member of staff has to come over to approve your purchase.  I have no problem with that whatsoever (except that I haven’t been asked for ID for about two years now); I hold a personal licence to sell alcohol myself.  I have a problem with the amount of time it wastes when I’m shopping in a small store.  Both mine, and that of the person who has to verify that I’m over eighteen.  Because at my local shop…

    3.  When You Need Assistance Everything Comes To A Halt.  In my local supermarket, no matter how busy it gets, the staff working at the manned tills are the ones that have to come over to verify age, remove security tags or deal with the halfwit that’s wondering where the barcode is on a lime, at the self-checkout.  They have to abandon their tills – once they’ve finished dealing with their current customer – leaving you waiting for them to do that, and while they’re dealing with you, there’s a queue of people waiting for the staff member to come back to deal with them.  This annoys everyone.  This means that far from being an efficient system that eases the burden on the staff, they end up spending much of their time travelling between the checkout and the self-checkout and when they are dealing with customers, those customers are ill-tempered.  Essentially their working lives are spent rushing around placating a mob.  They aren’t even equipped with truncheons or tall hats.

    4.  The Machine Tells You Off If You Move Anything.  This is annoying at any self-checkout but, when added to the other frustrations in a small store it becomes infuriating.  The bagging area is tiny and the chances are that you’re probably buying more than one thing.  But if – during your game of bagging area jenga – you move anything in the bagging area, the checkout (or possibly the one next to it, who knows?) bellows at you to replace it.  I don’t go to a supermarket to play a game in which I am forced to balance an assortment of dissonantly shaped objects on a small space while being bellowed at by a robot.  If I wanted to play that game, I’d go to a Japanese television studio.

    5.  The Machine Is Patronising.  Once all the “fun” is over and you’ve paid for everything you were able to balance successfully in the bagging area and you’ve received your receipt (and twelve others), you start taking your items.  And, at some point while you’re doing that, the machine will bellow “please take your items” at you.  But you don’t need to be asked to do this because firstly, you’re already doing it and secondly – unless you’ve been kidnapped by a band of Gododdin tribesman and held prisoner for the past 1500 years or so  – you’ll be aware of how the concept of a shopping transaction works and you’ll already know that once you’ve paid for your items you should take them with you.  And that’s probably when you’ll snap.

    6.  Other Shoppers Will Look At You Strangely When You Argue With It. “I know!  I bloody know!  Of course I’m going to take my sodding items you authoritarian automaton!  That’s what I came here for!   I didn’t come here to give you money and then just leave my goods, that would be cretinous!  I wholly understand that if I leave this lime here with you then when I get home there will be no lime in my gin and tonic.  I get that!  I want the lime!”  It’s much like the modern tradition of arguing with the sat-nav in the car, except that in the car there isn’t a line of slack-jawed people backing away from you and shielding their children from Disproportionately-Angry-Man.  Or if there is, you’re a bus driver.

    7.  Human interaction.  I just like people.  I want to deal with a person:  Not an exhausted, defensive person whose shift has been spent in the service of an infernal machine and in placating the bewildered, the angry and the truculent but a person that is relaxed and at ease in their environs and with their customers.  But I can’t because of the machines.  I miss the happy people that the self-checkout machines have turned into the dejected and the unsmiling.  After all, if I wanted to be scowled at and resented I could just stay at home.

     

    *Okay, an unpleasant experience.

    **On almost every occasion.

     

  • 7 Reasons According To Them

    7 Reasons According To Them

    Everywhere you go, celebrities are endorsing something or other.  Now it’s our turn.*

    j
    "7 Reasons wanted to stop me. They failed. Now I'm going to crush them in my giant hand."
    "We will be judged by 7 Reasons. When they want to inflict great pain on the world they will stop writing."
    "I've bought a komodo dragon, a cross-eyed opossum, a Kim Jong Il and I've urinated in a policeman's helmet. Thank you 7 Reasons."
    "I adore 7 Reasons; it's an absolute joy to read every day. It's an essential lifestyle guide that has taught me so much about cats and biscuits. Both of the team seem lovely, but I especially like the tall, grumpy one with the spell-check facility. And thanks to the other one, I'm planning a trip to Whitstable."
    "I'm a devotee of 7 Reasons and can categorically state that it is NOT a cult. Not even close."
    "The 7 Reasons Marc Fearns picture book gets me hyped."
    "I read 7 Reasons and now I'd give my right arm to beat the French. At anything."

    *Only words and pictures have been altered and fabricated in the making of this post.  Everything else is real.

  • Two Posts On A Friday?!  What’s Going On?!

    Two Posts On A Friday?! What’s Going On?!

     

    My Lords, Ladies, gentlemen and uncategorised people that aren’t covered in the first three, prepare to be astonished!  Prepare to be amazed!  Prepare to gaze upon something new in wonderment and with awe!  We have something to announce and it’s big news.  Here we go.

    When we opened the 7 Reasons Emporium, we got all the products designed and ready and then we realised that we had nowhere to sell them and the shop got put together as a bit of an afterthought.  We tried to make it work as a part of our website’s theme (and failed) so we had to build a new site for it and we modified an existing theme to make it work.  Neither of the team were thrilled with the look or functionality of this theme and, as people that pride themselves on their eye(s) for design and general web savviness, that hurt.

    We realised that we had to redesign the Emporium for the sake of our own self-respect.  It got to the stage that we didn’t like to look at even.  We weren’t sure when we were going to be able to fit a redesign in (we’ve only just redone the main website) but then one of the team (we won’t mention which one) had a brilliant idea.  “Jon”, he said, “I’ve found the time to redesign our emporium.  I’ve calculated that we waste at least six hours every day just lying in the dark*.  Let’s use those wasted hours to set up a new site and build a new emporium.”  So that’s what we’ve been doing for the last ten days or so.

    Now, the 7 Reasons Emporium 2.0 is here.  It’s new, it’s shiny, it’s got stuff that moves, it looks absolutely bloody lovely and it’s got giant lemons.  We’re so happy with it that we grin like idiots whenever we look at it and feel dizzy whenever we stand up**.  We’d like to encourage you to visit it, to click on things and to generally gaze at it (and buy stuff).  We’re even offering 10% off the price of all t-shirts this weekend to celebrate the relaunch.  We’d love to hear your feedback and product ideas, which can be directed to this email address.  We hope you enjoy the new emporium,

    Marc and Jon.

     

    *Separately.

    **That may be fatigue.***

    ***Or gin.