Thursday, December 28, 2006

eChristmas?

I'm going to start with a tale of Christmas past, which at least partly explains why Christmas present is the way it is. Think w-a-y back to Christmas 1989. At the time, my first ex-husband and I were living in Egypt with the (then) three children, and we decided that it was the chance of a lifetime to spend Christmas in Jerusalem. However, travelling with three children and rucksacs meant that there was little space for bulky or fragile gifts, so we decided to save the gift-giving till after we returned at Epiphany. It was easy to persuade three children under 8 that since Jesus waited till Epiphany for his presents, they could do the same.

Christmas Midnight Mass in Bethlehem, seeing the New Year in listening to the bells clanging from churches of every denomination imaginable in the Old City of Jerusalem: these memories remain vivid. And in early January we headed back to Cairo and our decorated house and presents under the tree, to discover that our Coptic brothers and sisters in faith celebrate their Christmas on 7th January, so we were more in tune with our neighbours than we'd expected.

We've always kept an Advent fast and not started Christmas celebrating until after dark on Christmas Eve. For the rest of our stay in Egypt, we continued to have modest stockings for the children on Christmas morning, but the rest of the gifts remain under the tree until Epiphany. As part of this, we also dropped the b-i-g meal on Christmas day and moved it to 6th January, leaving the first day of Christmas free for people to eat just what they fancied. We've had some odd things over the years: one year the children were delighted to be allowed to have tinned spaghetti hoops. There was the roast honey and charcoal duck one year, and such humble dishes as egg and chips, welsh rarebit and bacon butties have at some seasonal moment tickled someone's fancy. Last year, second youngest son just had to have a M&S Hoisin Duck Wrap from the sandwich counter, which is actually rather hard to get hold of on Christmas Eve.

When we returned to the UK the children opted to continue our rather odd family Christmas instead of reverting to the usual UK pattern, and over the years it has proved to have all sorts of advantages. Their father, working in a Muslim country, rarely came home for Christmas, but could usually take a week off over the New Year so that our family feast could take place at Epiphany. When I was nursing for a while, it was no hardship to volunteer to work Christmas day, freeing staff with families to spend time cooking, a chore I didn't have to do. As they grew older, the children were always happy to work on Christmas day (for a vastly inflated hourly rate) which helped to keep them solvent. Gift buying could be done in the sales. They could spend Christmas day with boyfriends/girlfriends and their families. And after my ex-husband and I separated, they were able to spend Christmas day with him and his new wife celebrating a conventional Christmas without missing out on our big day. The lazy, piggy anything-goes Christmas day that became our pattern is stress free and easy, and over the years I have come to appreciate how rare a stress-free Christmas is among my acquaintances.

This year, youngest son flew off to Egypt early to spend Christmas with his Dad and step-Mum, and second youngest, who would normally have been home, was instead skiing in Sweden. All three of the older children have flown the nest, so I was planning to have a very low-key time, without the usual tree and decorations. However, youngest son was adamant that the house, the cat and I needed to do it properly to keep the cosmos in balance, so on Christmas Eve I baked mince pies, put up decorations and the tree, and trotted off to Midnight Mass as usual before coming back and opening the tin of Quality Street for my first chocolate since before Advent.

I had Christmas day planned: a long lie in, smoked salmon for breakfast, and then an orgy of West Wing, having treated myself to the boxed set of all seven series on dvd, with plenty of good white wine. It went wrong shortly after the lie-in ended. As I waited for the kettle to boil, I had a few chocolates. And a mince pie. Then a couple more chocolates. By the time the coffee was ready, I didn't much feel like smoked salmon. Second son rang to ask how to cook duck and lamb, and the kids and I sent text messages to one another to say "Merry Christmas".

I turned on the TV, loaded a dvd and settled in to watch West Wing. I'd only watched about 20 minutes when I remembered that second youngest son was going to be out on a ski slope directly in front of a webcam, so I turned on the laptop and squinted at the blurred figures hoping to catch a glimpse of him. In fact I got several good shots which I saved. I'm still amazed that I could watch my son skiing on Christmas Day, and then was able to chat to him on MSN the following day and show him the pictures.

While I was doing that, eldest son arrived and we decided to do gin rather than wine. But then we moved on to coffee and tea - well, if one really can have anything, then that includes choosing the ordinary. Later on, an ex-boyfriend arrived, and then in the evening, son number two and daughter also called in, and we revisited the gin as they chatted to their father and I had a long natter with youngest son, both in Egypt, thanks to Skype. By the time everyone left, I'd watched exactly half of one episode of West Wing, eaten no smoked salmon, and drunk no wine. In order to rescue the plan, I went to get the smoked salmon out for supper, but some thick slices of ham caught my eye, so the salmon was relegated to Boxing Day as I tucked into ham and chips on a tray in front of a couple of episodes.

Eldest son, meanwhile, set off to drop his brother and sister off at their respective friends' houses and then headed off up the motorway to Leeds. The traffic came to a standstill at Junction 37 (it later transpired that a fatal car accident had blocked the road). He doesn't have Satnav, but he has the next best thing: a mobile phone with handsfree, and a Mum with a computer. As we chatted, I took a quick look at Multimap and suggested an alternative route and he headed off home.

And so to bed, and one last thing to do. I picked up the Queen's Christmas message podcast, and fell asleep listening. Something about children, I think...

And of course, this blog is technology-driven - and this photo was taken with my phone. What with SMS, dvds, a webcam, Skype, all-singing all-dancing mobile phones, Multimap, podcasting and Blogger, it's been a technology enabled Christmas. iGod bless us every one!


(Photos: Jerusalem - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/7/7c/West_wing_cast.jpg/200px-West_wing_cast.jpg
and West Wing - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5b/Israel-Jerusalem_Old_City.jpg)

Monday, December 04, 2006

To everything there is a season.

Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8
To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; a time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; a time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; a time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; a time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away; a time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; a time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.

I've always thought this the perfect Bible reading for Advent Sunday, though I have never yet heard it used that way. The end of the old church year and the start of the new one has marked two major "times" in my life, the one by choice and the other by coincidence.

Way back in 1998 I started to research the activities of the Usenet group uk.religion.christian, and shortly after I started, the then moderator asked if I'd like to take over the post. Once I had addressed the methodological issues this introduced into my research, I agreed to become moderator in 1999.
I didn't actually meet the outgoing mod until later that year when we staged an impromptu "handover ceremony" at one of the occasional real-life meetings of some group members. A year to the day after the handover, he and I were married.

Seven and a half years later, my research having finished, the PhD secured and with the pressures of full time work and new research pressing on me, I started talking about finding a successor way back in Spring, and after much careful consideration, a suitable candidate proved both willing and available, though not till Autumn because of other commitments. So we fixed Advent Sunday as a good date for the start of a new chapter in the life of the group.

Meanwhile, the machinations of the legal system mean that by coincidence I received through the post my divorce decree absolute just two days before I handed over to the next mod: my marriage lasted two days fewer than my term as moderator. There is a wretched sense of failure that comes with the end of a marriage, so that I could take little pleasure in contemplating my period as moderator as a job well done, though it was that, I believe.

The traumas of the weekend were numbed by illness as a vicious fluey cold made my joints hurt, my head ache with fever and confused my brain so that I remember little of Friday afternoon or evening at all. Perhaps physical collapse, and the disengagement from reality that conferred, was the merciful anaesthetic I needed to survive the weekend. I spent much of Saturday asleep or fitfully dozing, so that by Sunday I was recovered enough to tackle the Advent Sunday rituals of cardmaking, mince-pie production and setting up Advent candles. I also went to church for the first time in months, though I'm not sure I'm ready for regular attendance again yet, if ever.

Work, meanwhile, has produced highs and lows. Donning my red togs and processing around York Minster as three of our students graduated with MAs (two merits and a distinction with the University Postgraduate Prize) basking the in the reflected glory of their achievement was a delightful outcome of the learning partnership with three lovely people. My current cohort of undergraduates are blossoming as novice ethicists, and I'm hugely enjoying supervising research degree students (including our recent distinction MA graduate) in addition to some fun work with MA students working on research modules, dissertations and Liberation Theologies.

On the down side, the realities of the approaching term are starting to haunt my sleep. The colleague who works most closely with me on undergrad and postgrad taught degrees is taking a term's study leave to complete her doctorate, so that with only a little additional tutoring assistance, I have to manage, deliver, tutor and mark all the postgrad and undergrad taught, practical and research modules between January and Easter. None of the content is new, though I always do a complete revision whenever I dust off an old module, but the sheer volume of teaching means I shall be somewhat busier even than usual, and I'm rarely under-occupied now. The most recent blow has been a suggestion from the University that we might reconsider the module to be delivered at Level 1, occasioning a rapid review of the programme and the possibility that I may have to write 10 two-hour lectures on the Old Testament between now and January. It's going to be a term that will demand huge amounts of planning and self discipline if I'm to keep all the balls in the air.

So as a new church year starts, it's especially appropriate for lots of reasons to be keeping a disciplinary and penitential fast. I like keeping Advent this way: it makes it a thoughtful and frugal time of preparation in the midst of all the excess of secular Christmastide, keeping me surrounded by a pool of quiet, unadorned calmness with space in my life and my head to consider what is to come.

(Tree image from http://static.flickr.com/51/112367618_552587d7ea.jpg?v=0)

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Isn't it nice when...

...one's labours bear fruit?

The Vancouver conference was one such. Amidst the chaos of a messy summer, I slogged away at my paper which was itself a fruit from a seed planted many years ago by the late David Lochhead's writings. I was still polishing it the day before I left, and by the time I got to the David Lochhead Memorial Symposium, I had it at my fingertips. I was surrounded by people whose names I know, and whose work I admire, people who had known and worked with Lochhead and in whose company I was overawed. It was especially wonderful to meet David's wife, herself a fine theologian and philosopher, and a formidably intelligent and delightful woman.

The conference was very much a working meeting, and the second day included seven substantial papers, or which mine was the last. People were tired and had worked very hard all day, and I was certain that the bad luck of having the last slot would make it impossible to get across the excitement of my findings. Leaving my pages on the desk, I delivered the paper substantially without the notes, engaging with the audience and using the slides to deliver the factual content as well as illustrations. It worked, and how! They laughed, engaged, sat up in their chairs and joined in, and it was all over in a blur of merriment. Delegate after delegate mentioned how much they enjoyed it, and as a direct result of the performance (for such is any conference presentation), there may be the possibility of future collaboration with some of the people there. If you want to see for yourself how it went, the conference archive is at http://www.virtualtheology.info , where you'll find the text of several of the papers and podcasts of all of them as well as a slide show of the event. Dr Gary Kush put a huge amount of effort into recording the conference and making it available online, and his own paper on accounting and QA in developing online courses has already provided some invaluable insights for work I'm doing here in the UK.

Meanwhile, over the summer and at the start of term, I put into place a more rigorous academic tracking system at work. Our modular courses have given us a few headaches because we don't always have records of students' modules, results or plans. This term, after producing some appropriate paperwork, I interviewed every student before the start of term and made sure that all our records were up to date. I'm accustomed to being on the receiving end of some tart comments from the administrator at the university, so when she rang to discuss students' records, I waited for it to start. She asked me if I knew what students had done, and what they were planning for the next year... and I was able to answer confidently for every student. For once, I knew more than she did. I corrected a number of errors on the university's records and gave a full account for every student registered with us. For the first time since I started, I had all the information I needed at my fingertips. That particular fruit was sweet indeed.

Finally, back to my research. Seven years of postgrad research and 18 months of undergrad project work before that has given me some accumulated expertise in my field. As a result of my discussions in Canada, I decided to set up some work with my students that used the insights gained to develop new ways of delivering courses.

I have a trial running now using a combination of web-based virtual learning environment (VLE), MSN and web resources, and on Friday my boss asked if I'd like to explore the possibility of developing this in a more focused way to draw in some church funding. Whilst this kind of diversified approach to delivery is qute widespread in the US and Canada, it is less so here in the UK, and my experience and expertise have now become valauable assets to develop and exploit. It's all good for my ego and career, and it's something I love doing: combining my role as educator with innovation in pedagogy and technology. It feels as if all that work is finally paying off, not only financially, but because I'm doing what I enjoy most as part of my job.

Tomorrow is bonfire night, and I stop being an educator and tutor for 24 hours to be Mum. We have sausages and buns in abundance, parkin for afterwards, and an awesome load of fireworks including some pretty big rockets. We've always had our own fireworks in the garden, and traditionally the catherine wheels always either fail or set fire to something. For the last three years, it's also been tinged with sadness for me: the baby I lost to miscarriage was due on 5th November that year, and I now always light a sparkler to remember the child who would have been celebrating her third birthday this year.


(photos linked from:
Vancouver School of Theology - http://www.vst.edu/about/images/IonaAbout.jpg
Sparkler - http://www.chemistryland.com/CHM107Lab/SafetyTutorial1/sparkler.jpg)

Friday, October 13, 2006

Visiting roots

Yesterday after 20 hours travelling, youngest son and I arrived in Vancouver. I am here for the David Lochhead Memorial Symposium, to present a paper, but much more importantly to pay homage to the roots of my academic interest in cybertheology. In 1995, I was just starting to explore the possibilities of a theological approach indigenous to cyberspace community when I discovered the writings of Professor David Lochhead online. It was these papers which gave me the inspiration to explore the possibilities, and 11 years later, I have at last got empirical evidence which addresses some of the quastions he was asking as early as the mid 1980s.

Professor Lochhead died in 1999, so I never had the opportunity to meet him in virtual or other reality. The invitation to contribute to this symposium has brought me to Vancouver School of Theology to meet those who were fortunate enough to work with him as students and colleagues: people whose names I know from Ecunet and academic papers. It's a privilege to put faces to names and a source of astonishment that many of them are genuinely pleased to meet me. So this is very much a visit to the place where the roots of my academic career are planted.


But we found another sort of roots today as well. The symposium didn't start till this evening, and I was excused the business meetings of the conference today, so on the advce of Cathy Bone of VST and Gordon Laird of Ecunet (who, wth his wife Marilyn met us off the plane last night), youngest son and I explored the University of British Columbia campus this morning, and the Museum of Anthropology this afternoon. The First Nations of this area are honoured in memory and art in a strikingly beautiful way through the artefacts and displays which tell their story.

UBC is a very large institution - 40,000 students - and the campus is new, extensive and developing at an amazing rate thanks to endowments. The commitment of the people and government of BC to education is evident everwhere one looks,and there is a fascinating collection of buildings that are beautiful, functional and exquisitely apt for their purposes, from the Chan auditorium, designed to look like the inside of a cello, to the library which is shaped like a book opened and then laid flat with the spine upwards and the science building shaped like a cell.

Tomorrow the real work of the conference starts, and I'm delighted to be part of David Lochead's legacy.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Kitchen, sink, drama (three words, not one phrase)

KITCHEN

I'm thick with cold, and exhausted from a busy week, but at last there's some really positive news. I think the pictures tell it all, really. Here's what my kitchen looked like in mid-September:


Here's what was originally planned:

And this was a picture I took last night:

Not bad, eh? Second son did a magnificent job, and although there's a small amount still to do by way of snagging, I have a fully functional dream kitchen. All I need now is someone to appreciate my cooking in it.

SINK

And yes, the sink *is*, truly, to die for. Black astrocast, 1.5 sinks with a steel inset in the .5 bit, which also houses the waste disposal unit, and a sexy mixer tap that really mixes. I still can't wash up, though - it ruins my hands, dah-lings.

DRAMA

Just as I was taking the picture above, Mr Scrabble-Player-ex turned up to drop off a cd. So for all you soap fans out there who wondered what happened next, here it is: his married lady love is really, really, really going to tell her husband, just as soon as their current project is over. Really. And then she'll leave him and she and Mr S-P-e will live happily ever after...

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Autumn Rhythm PS

Today I received an email telling me that "kind-customer-support-man whoever you are" is called Nick. Google and whois offer more detail, but a simple name is quite enough for a blog. How many blog readers count as a public, I wonder...?

Monday, September 18, 2006

Autumn Rhythm

Another blog-reader emerged from the woodwork today - I find I do have a public after all! A chap whose name I quite forgot to ask mentioned that he'd had a peek when I rang to ask about a missing domain name. This was all I needed to remind me to update again - my ego requires very little persuasion. So thank you, kind customer-support-man, whoever you are, for your kind words.

The long summer is over, and I'm not sorry to see it go. It hasn't been a great one - messy, bitty and overshadowed by heartache. Autumn, mists and mellow fruitfulness notwithstanding, is dominated by the start of a new academic year. Today the new research students arrived; tomorrow the taught students descend en masse for the induction event. All of a sudden the rising stress of the last couple of weeks, last-minute admin tasks and a full timetable of meetings, are eclipsed by the buzz of returning and new students keen to get underway. Mountains of handbooks and forms will be handed out with the usual dire warnings about deadlines and plagiarism, and then everything settles down to the comfortable hum of industry.

There's actually a two week gap until the teaching starts, but that time will whistle past in an unbroken succession of interviews, tutorials and supervisions, the handing out of booklists and assignment marks, and liberal quantities of encouragement and coffee. (In case any students are reading this, mine's black, strong - two teaspoons of coffee - with one sugar. To go with it, I like, in order of preference, doughnuts, cream cakes, double choc-chip muffins and Hob-Nobs)

Normally, this period also marks the return to an autumnal pattern of domestic life: flaking out on the settee when I get in from work, stews and curries replacing the salads of summer, and weekends with friends. Alas, this cosy domesticity has been stymied temporarily by the ongoing work in the kitchen. After a rather complicated and stressful period acquiring the stuff to go into it, I then had to watch as Son number two ripped out everything that made an empty room into a functioning heart-of-the-home and set about knocking holes in the wall (to increase the number of electric sockets from two to twelve). So far we've had takeaways of several varieties and eaten out twice, but I'm starting to ache for fresh veg and real coffee. On the plus side, having Son number two doing this instead of a random workman is paying off in the quality of workmanship. If I can stay sane for a few more days, I'll remember why it was a good idea to have the work done...

Son number one has been in residence for a while now, and is on the point of returning to his own house in the wake of departing ex-partner. (Daughter and boyfriend have just split up as well. I wonder if it's infectious?) It's been nice having his company, but he's found commuting to Leeds daily a tiring chore. His period of residence has left me with a nicely decorated spare room and a renewed respect for his good nature as well as an empty fridge and an exhausted washing machine. Last night Sons numbers one and two and I went out for a drink and a pub quiz, and it was good to be reminded what pleasant company they are.

Meanwhile, what one correspondent referred to as my "perfidious lover" has made occasional contact, assuring me with confidence that his ex will tell her husband just as soon as she can find the appropriate circumstances to do so. My broken heart is nicely on the mend after a night under canvas alone with my demons when he and I should have been enjoying a romantic weekend in Paris. There's nothing like a tiny tent, a sleeping roll and waking with aching joints to a view of the sun rising over Mam Tor for rekindling the senses of proportion and humour. Well, proportion anyway - I laugh less than I used to, I think. On the plus side, I have crosswords and books strewn across the bedroom again and I've migrated back to the middle of the double bed.

A new academic year, new possibilties, a new kitchen: life's not so very bad.

pictures linked from:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/79/Mam_Tor_from_the_south.jpg (Mam Tor) and http://www.focusdiy.co.uk/content/ebiz/focus/invt/28620/28620.jpg (Socket)

Saturday, August 26, 2006

"Exes ought to be ex": ups, downs and how to enjoy a bank holiday weekend

Obviously my darling public is away on holiday, since I have had no sharp reminder to update. But update I must, because much has changed in the month that has passed since last I wrote. Let's start with the positives, shall we?

My boss is back at work, albeit on "light duties". This actually means that we throw her out if she looks unwell. This is a good arrangement, and there's an element of reciprocity in that she threw me out - well, told me to go home - when I was unwell a couple of weeks ago. I finally finished my somewhat overdue piece of contract work by the Wednesday of my week off work, and was therefore free to go away for two night B&B with second youngest son for a day's walking in the North Yorks Moors. My new kitchen units and stuff are being delivered next week, and second son is installing the whole lot the following week for me. So life isn't all bad.

But some bits are less wonderful than they could be. Eldest son and his partner have separated, and until they sort out their affairs (fortunately this is a largely civilised separation) he is living here. Quite how he gets his 6' 2" frame into my boxroom is a mystery. It's always sad to see one's kids troubled, and the fact that he's 24 and earns more than me doesn't stop me fretting over him.

My car finally went in for its first service in three years after I found steel wire poking out of one of the front tyres. I gather they aren't meant to do that. However, once the mechanic started to check out the suspension, the dodgy boot lock and the dripping oil, I faced a bill of £600 to make it fully healthy again - and then I discovered that getting an additional key (I only got one when I bought the car) will cost me £100. I console myself by saying that £600 on repairs averages out at £200 a year, which isn't too bad for a W reg car, really.

But the real bummer is the end of my affair with my scrabble playing friend, who found himself unable to continue our friendship while hoping for a reopening of his affair with a married woman. The quotation above is from her as she commented sourly on his continuing friendship with his ex-wife. Clearly she wasn't able to live up to her own dictum, since she punctuated our time together with angst-ridden phone calls. I gather than she is now (for the umpteenth time) about to leave her husband to make my ex-lover the happiest of men. I wish him well and hope that she does...

Work is a happy antidote to trauma to the heart, and longer usual working days mean that I have managed to catch up on most of my paperwork, update the college website and make significant inroads into my teaching programme. Students are starting to drift in and out again after their summer breaks, though term doesn't start till mid September, and it's nice to have them around once in a while. I suppose I ought to be worried that I went into the kitchen last week and heard three of them discussing me as "the college rottweiler"? However, I had a more encouraging encounter with someone with whom I had a pretty strong run-in at one of our summer conferences. He came in to talk about the possibility of postgrad research, and I spent about an hour chatting with him about it. When he left, he said he'd found my direct and challenging approach very stimulating, and please could he come back another time to carry on the conversation.

So this bank holiday weekend, I'm not thrashing around under a pile of unfinished work, and I have no romantic interest to occupy my time. What is a girl to do? Open a bottle of the best chilled Chardonnay, tuck into caviar and sour cream blinis, and watch West Wing episodes back to back snuggled up in the warm embrace of an elderly teddy bear.

Friday, July 21, 2006

Certified, doctored and half-baked

Actually, that order is wrong. I was half baked before I received my certficate and doctorate.

After two weeks of close to insane activity, tempe
ratures creeping up as summer hits Sheffield with a vengeance, and rising stress levels as the day approached, yesterday was the Big Day. This involved dragging myself away early from a two-day staff meeting in order to throw some smarter clothes on and hurtle around Sheffield gathering children in time to go to a lunchtime reception at the University. It was a sweltering afternoon in the rising heat wearing full academicals as we drank pimms and cocktails in the Union garden before finally finding a measure of cool and quiet in the Octagon for my graduation. Youngest Son, Only Daughter and Lover all came along to watch and the rest of the brood and Best Friend followed proceedings on a big screen in the Union. After a couple of pictures for posterity, we all came back to my office for a reception in the garden with other friends and colleagues.

There was a certain amount of perplexity as people took on board the fact that among the guests were my first ex-husband's wife, my second ex-husband, my ex-boyfriend and my "friend" (he prefers this title), all being perfectly civil to one another and all treating me with affection. The kids were all fantastic, at their most sociable and poised, and my most respected colleagues were all there as well.

After the reception proper was over, several of us wandered back up to my house, where the merrymaking continued into the evening. It was a relaxed, funny, friendly kind of affair, and a memorable end to that chapter of my life.

Now I have some holiday booked and I plan to catch up on sleep, get the backlog of private contract work completed and do some housework and some serious mothering. I may even have a little time away, as well.

Now, where do we go from here, I wonder?

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Happy returns and roses

A shorter gap than usual between posts prompted by a note inisisting that I "update [my] Bluestocking Ramblings to reflect the current state of a) play; and b) [my] heart."

No, it's nobody's birthday. The happy returns are two. Let's start with youth: Penultimate Son has returned for the summer after a term living with his father overseas. Another inch taller, an extra dollop of maturity and the outrageous confidence of a smartarse 15-year-old don't really affect that fact that I still see him, as all the others, as a small child who needs his Mum around, and it never feels quite right when he's away. That is not to underplay the huge part the youngest plays in my life: he is so much like me that it's like having my own shadow there, and when he's away, it feels as if part of myself is missing.

And the other happy return is my scrabble playing lover, whose crisis of confidence worked itself through while I waited and watched. I still love playing scrabble. I also love planning our trip to Paris, listening to soppy CDs and falling asleep over French films, watching our kids make friends while we cook, holding hands and talking, and doing chores together.

Work has settled down too - we've survived to the end of term with the boss still off without cancelling any courses and managed to keep the whole institution running effectively. I've booked a fortnight's holiday in July so I can have a complete break. And it's becoming clear that the college is finding me an increasingly important member of staff as a representative of the institution as well as being a useful tutor, lecturer and general good egg.

All these positives feed on one another, of course, so that my much improved state of mind generally makes me more positive about work, and my sense of being valued at work makes me feel better about life generally. Because I'm happier, youngest son and I are much more contented in one another's company, and that means that he is happier too. It all seems to have been at best grey and dismal for so very, very long, and now it's as if the sun is coming out.

Youngest Son went to stay with Eldest Son for the weekend, and ES rang to tell me YS was on the train - and to ask if YS could come over a lot more often because he and his partner really liked having him around. And to add to the general air of optimistic smugness, Only Daughter passed her first year exams with an average 2:1, and Second Son passed his retakes, so he's going back to Uni next year, and Eldest Son is starting an MA at a local university in Sept.

"Everything's coming up roses..."



Thursday, June 22, 2006

Highs and lows

I wonder what happened to equanimity? I've learnt the hard way that it is imperative to maintain calmness whatever is going on, and a professional air of sang-froid is a very useful defence against the world. I'm really very good at that. But it's been sorely tested of late.

My boss is still signed off work with a long term back injury. The additional work that this involves isn't just about time, though extra students to tutor and additional lectures do eat into that commodity. It's also about making decisions and trying to take into account what I think she'd want to do, knowing that she and I have different views on almost everything, but work in a complementary way. Only a couple of weeks ago, another colleague and I had to negotiate a major restructuring of some of our courses, and I felt all the time as if I were arguing two opposing positions, my boss' and mine.

Around the same time, I met a new man and all that seemed to be going rather swimmingly, but alas, he backed off suddenly at the weekend. Two weeks of romance and French cinema and Scrabble disintegrated overnight into - well, just Scrabble. Now don't get me wrong, I like Scrabble. But I like all the rest of the stuff as well.

Which reminds me of today's silly story...


As part of a rather boozy Scrabble game, I removed my glasses so I could read the dictionary, and put them on the floor behind me. (No comments about "why don't you get telescopic arms?" please.) I suppose it was inevitable that I'd sit on them. I did, and the lenses popped out. So this morning I went off to visit the nearest decent optician. The lenses are three years old, and the edges are badly chipped, so this seemed like a very good time to replace them. I explained that I'd had my eyes tested last time at a chain store in a local mall, and the receptionist rang through to ask for my prescription. Then they took the prescription and my specs (temporarily mended) into the workshop.

Several min
utes later the girl re-emerged looking perplexed. "These are your specs, Madam?" I said they were. She turned to the receptionist: "Are you certain you took down the prescription correctly?" Then "These specs are not made up to this prescription." I explained that they were three years old, so there may have been a little deterioration, but it was clear that she meant that the discrepancy wasn't to be so easily explained away. In the end, an eye test established that the prescription was close to accurate, but that I have been wearing specs with the wrong lenses for three years. Perhaps that explains my jaundiced view of the world?

The ups and downs of my life were illustrated in an even more vivid way at lunchtime today. Several months ago I was invited to a symposium in Canada that is of crucial relevance to my research, and I applied for a British Academy travel grant. I ha
d a strong application and good references, so I was very distressed to received the letter this morning telling me that I had not been awarded the grant.

I'd convinced myself that I would be able to go, and this new disappointment was rather hard to bear in my present general state of feeling sorry for myself. Without funding, that kind of travel was impossible. My son's Dad had agreed to pay half of his fare so he could go with me, but the cost of my fare, accommodation and food, without any grant funding, would be more than I could afford.


I spent the rest of a busy morning of tutorials and phone calls feeling rather horrid after that, and every time I started an email to the organisers to try and explain that I couldn't come,
the phone rang again. I was trying to work out if I could do a paper and send it to the Symposium for someone else to read, and other equally desperate measures. But I didn't manage to send an email, and decided to compose something suitable after lunch.

Eventually at lunchtime one of my best friends and I went out for a sandwich and to bewail my bad fortune. It's a grey, miserable, slightly drizzly day here, so we sat in a cafe in the park, and as geeky people always do, we started comparing our new mobile phones. Mine has full internet access, so I was demonstrating how I could check my email when I saw one from the Symposium organisers. And this was when I read:

"Debbie, we want to make sure you and your son arrive in ___ for the Symposium. We would be delighted if the grant you have applied for comes through, but if not, we want you to be at the Conference. We want to be able to count on you for some aspects of your work, either in a workshop or in your own presentation, or both, depending upon which other papers come in."


...followed by an offer to accommodate and feed me and my son, and to pay my air fare as well. This isn't a funded conference, either: the organising committee have come up with the offer out of generosity and respect for my work. I was so touched - I didn't know whether to laugh or cry.


And finally, another high:


Today my mortgage was completed I've bought my ex out, raised a mortgage in my own name and signed on the dotted line to give them a chunk of my earnings until I'm in my dotage. In return, for the first time in my whole life, I own my house - not as someone's partner or spouse but in my own right. It feels so awfully grown up! I can now order that kitchen (Maple, I decided. And the sink is still to die for, darlings.)

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Sex, foul language and living with consequences...

Heh! That got your attention!

I've spent a week doing some teaching at another college to help out an old friend. So far - and it's only Thursday yet - I've had to explain to them that if you don't do the work, you don't get marks (living with the consequences), been aggressively reprimanded by a student for using "foul, and offensive language, too disgusting to repeat" (what I actually said was "bugger that for a lark!"), and been harangued by an arrogant young man who tried to hijack today's session to expound in detail his view that "the Word of God" says that "man is the head of woman" and that women should therefore submi
t to men (I invited him to leave the room, since women are not to teach men, apparently, but he didn't take the bait).

I feel so very sorry for some of them. The need to lay hold of an immutable Truth and take refuge in pious certainties overlies a terrible fear of contingency, human messiness and failure. I can't seem to penetrate the shell of anger and defensivness. But there's no light in there. I saw a poster a few days ago which seems apt: Blessed are the cracked, for they let in the light.


So where does sex come in? Ah, yes. I showed excerpts from three films, two of which are rated 15, and only one of which is rated 18, of men in gay relationships. I bet you can guess how that went down?


After a full day's teaching there each day, I'm belting back across the city to do another couple of hours in my own college because my boss is signed off sick for 9 weeks. And then each evening, I'm coming home to do
some work on a module revision for yet a third college. Will somebody please remind me why I wanted to be an academic?

Ah, I remember. Monday evening! Back in my own institution for a few hours teaching some urban contextual theology, I was able to deliver a seminar session on the CULF report, released from embargo only 6 hours earlier. A colleague had been one of the select few to have a pre-embargo copy, and she handed it to me just as 12 noon struck, giving me time enough to read it and prepare some teaching notes before my students arrived at 6. We like to be up to the minute.


On the plus side, my remortgage is nearly completed. This means I will own the house myself (with a little help from the building society) and can get on with some home improvements. I'm getting quite lightheaded (unless it's the tiredness, of course) over whether to have beech or maple cupboard doors, and the black sink I've chosen is to die for, dah-lings.

A few more relics left the house yesterday evening, though I have yet to evict the various derelict computers and several years' worth of old magazines from the loft. They will, I am assured, be going shortly. If n
ot, I can assure anyone who is interested, they will be broken up for parts where useful, and taken to the tip if not. I am open to offers for parts of PCs of various eras of contemporary antiquity.

Come to that, I'm open to suggestions, too. What do normal people do? I badly need to get a life. 15+ hour working days including weekends isn't a satisfactory long-term lifestyle. I take an evening off once every month or so to go to the theatre, to see experimental drama, mostly. I'd like to go to the pictures,
but I hate going on my own, and going out for a meal without a companion is just too Anita Brookner to contemplate. I'm way too old to do idiotic things like salsa dancing (I was always too old for that kind of exhibitionism), too earnest for mindless chatter, too easily bored to watch soaps on TV, and too poor to do a lot of theatre and art. There's no shortage of things to do: write my book (more work), follow up my research (ditto), write some journal articles (ditto). But I do remember, once, a long time ago, that I used to spend some time both awake and not-working. Hey ho. I'll try and keep the gaps shorter next time: darling public, do remind me...

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Holidays, champagne breakfasts and technology

After a whole month of silence, I feel a bit sheepish about another entry. I like holidays: time with family and friends, the fast and then the feast at church, and plenty of time to have fun. Did I manage any of those things?

There was more time with the family, but surprisingly little as I struggled to juggle the SST conference, planning for the coming term and the movements of said family between countries and houses. The lenten fast was somewhat compromised by the fact that I never impose my personal discipline on other people, so every time I went out for an evening or a meal, all the limitations were suspended - and I had a very social Lent! But it wasn't such a bad thing, really. I was feeling fragile enough that a strict fast this year would have been too harsh for my equanimity. Sometimes what one needs is a gentle Lent.

Holy Week was quite horrible, really. The most recent gentleman caller called it a day (not unexpectedly) just before Palm Sunday, and Maundy Thurs would have been my silver wedding had that marriage had more mileage. I don't regret the ending of the marriage - it's long in the past now - but I carried a sense of sin and failure through the whole week, and by Good Friday wasn't up to handling the raw pain of the liturgy. So I made hot cross buns and shared them with friends instead.

The bright spot was the Maundy Thursday service at York Minster. It was a three part affair: chrism mass, renewal of ordination vows and foot-washing. All the diocese clergy were there, and all processed in and out, which was pretty impressive - a fabulous sense of being part of the whole church.

I always like the blessing of the oils - again, it reminds me of being part of the fabric of the church somehow. The renewal of vows was impressive for being such a mass event. And I finally fell in love with the new Archbishop when he did the foot-washing - none of this two drips and a dab with the towel, and a host of minions. He hooked up his robes, got right down on his hands and knees and did a thorough job on both feet of each person, and lugged the bowl and jug around himself. After the first couple, he stopped and moved his stole from hanging round his neck to across one shoulder and tied at the side, like a deacon, to stop it dipping in the water. And then he left it in the deacon position for the rest of the service - a neat way of symbolising the servanthood thing. I was mightily impressed and I don't impress easily.

For various reasons we went to the dawn service this year on Easter Day, a mistake I shall not be making again. Meeting on the green, in the dark, at 5.30am was not pleasant, and there were so many pointless elements designed to make sentimental twenty somethings feel they were part of something meaningful that I wanted to scream. Why would anybody want to cense a green space full of daffodils, for goodness' sake? Much as I like Christina Rosetti, she didn't really write liturgical material, so why did we have to listen to an emotional rendition of one of her ditties as we stood ankle deep in damp grass getting cold? The bonfire (remind me - what is the liturgical significance of barbecue fuel?), casting palm crosses thereon, a procession to the church behind a torch that looked too much like a Ku Klux Klan flaming cross for good taste, candles and holy water and procession to odd places and a completely botched stab at Hail Thee Festival Day that reduced the whole congregation of 30 or so to giggles... and then a Eucharist without the Gloria. Grrrr.

However, the post-service breakfast with champagne, croissants, rolls, eggs, bacon, toast, coffee, tea, fruit juice, fresh fruit and easter cakes wasn't bad. I came away feeling very well fed but spiritually empty - not a good Easter, really.

I think the domestic highlight was the installation of wireless broadband, the first fruit of my payrise. In an almost trouble free couple of hours, I installed and set up a router that serves four computers and connected them all so that the rest of the week saw a surge in MSN activity by a few thousand percent. It's the first time the boys have been connected directly to the internet since the elder cooked his modem looking at porn.

This set me to wondering. When I was the age of the youngest, we had one fixed telephone in the house, and I had to ask permission to use it - and give a jolly good reason. We have four internet conected computers, two phone lines, and three mobiles. I can't now, imagine life without all this connectedness. When I was at school, I waited two weeks for a reply from my parents to the weekly letter home. Now, fourth child and I chat almost daily when he comes in from school, despite the 1500 miles and 2 hrs time zone shift that separates us. I love being so connected!

Saturday, March 25, 2006

End of term and end of an era

This week saw the last lectures in term 2: Virtual Theology (Level 3), Themes in Christian Theology (Level M) and Christian Faith in History (Level 1) have each in their own way challenged me, and I'm happy to look back on a busy term well completed. So I spent the rest oif this week at work compiling the paperwork for next term's modules: Elements of Christian Worship (Level 1) and Theology & Local Communities (Level M). There's always a rather breathless fear attached to a new module, which spurs me to enormous efforts to get it up and running smoothly. I always so very badly want students to be as excited about a new topic as I am.

This week also saw what will probably be the last reunion of the class of 98. The year I started my PhD study, there was only one other student. He is now coming to the end of his writing up, and it was rather pleasing to discover that our year group is the only one that will have had a 100% completion rate, with no drop-outs. This is partly, of course, because we've both worked jolly hard, but I like to think it's also because we've supported one another through the difficult processes of research and writing up.

I'm also getting to grips with the module I'm teaching at another institution in May, and I'm re-writing a distance learning undergrad module for yet another, so I'm in a very creative period right now. What doesn't make it into a new course ends up in the bin, though not one as aptly labelled as this I found behind Broomhill Methodist Church in Sheffield a couple of years ago.

At the back of my mind, I have a research project cooking, which involves applying some of my PhD findings in a different environment and trying to insert some Christology into the Trinitarian stuff I was doing then. But first I have some serious work to do networking, because I could use some funding for this. There is the possibility of some funded work on e-learning in the air, and if that materialises, I may have to put all else on hold for a while.

I received the notification that I have completed all the formal stages to graduate in Summer now, so it looks as if I shall be getting doctored in mid-July alongside a popular and very gorgeous local actor who is being awarded an honorary DLitt at the same ceremony. I'm not sure if the kids' enthusiasm for my ceremony is about me or about him - I fear the latter.

It's been a good week in terms of play as well as work. I've had company for a couple of evenings in, which is an unusual treat. I lost custody of a painting recently, and I had a day out and discovered a fabulous Tapas restaurant in Manchester while buying a picture to replace it.

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Faith as Social Capital and other social things

I was planning to write more last week, but life gets in the way of art. Is this art, I wonder? No matter.

This past week was dominated by a trip to London to the launch of the Rowntree Foundation Report Faith as Social Capital on Wednesday. I documented my personal response in an email to another delegate at the launch:

"...it's inevitable that as an academic and primarily as an educator, I welcome this kind of research for all sorts of mixed reasons. It's really pleasing to see this kind of cross-disciplinary social research into practical matters of faith, and as with all Rowntree projects, it's an exemplary piece of research in terms of methodology and presentation. For that alone, it feeds into my teaching, quite apart from its acute relevance to modules we teach on urban and community theology.

But I'm always slightly frustrated that there's no clear focus on the *reception* of the report: who is going to take in on board, how, for what purposes, and how successful will they be? It would be good to have a chronicle of the immediate, medium term and long term impact of this sort of project, and I'd like a piece of research to start now, seeking to identify some of those things. I suspect that it *does* have an impact, in some fields and areas, and at some levels. But I don't think we really know how far LSPs and the like actually *use* this kind of research. [...]

I'd also like to see series of formal responses from interested organisations etc, detailing what parts, if any, are useful, and what parts are up for discussion/ challenge. It's good that we can discuss it: how much more useful it would be if this topic were up for discussion in much more public, institutional ways. I'd like to see the Urban Bishops' Panel produce a written, published response: ditto other representative faith organisations, local, regional and central government and people like yourselves, Regional Commissions, regeneration bodies and so on.

There is also the question of how this relates to the CULF report, with which it is closely associated, not least because Rob Furbey was involved with both. I'll be keeping in touch with Rob in any case, and he may be able to respond to some of these concerns."

There were some quite lovely aspects of the day. The launch itself was very well done, with reponses from several people, most notably Lord Parekh who did a masterly critique of the agenda and the intellectual and social context of the report. Robert was there, and it turned out he knew well someone I know only from Christians on the Internet (COIN). There were at least two other internet acquaintances present, and a UTU MPhil student, and of course, Rob Furbey, the author of the report.

After the launch, Robert and I met Maddi for coffee. It's rare that my daughter allows me to treat her, so it was an unusual pleasure for me. Robert then went off carrying my packs from the launch (How nice it is to go to a good "do" and still go off to do things empty handed!) and Maddi and I decided to forego the delights of high culture (Tate Modern) for consumer lust (Hamleys, the Mac shop and Selfridges), before drinking immoderate amounts of chianti on the terrace of Carluccios in the sun (but with the benefit of a heater) until the end of the rush hour.

The evening with William and Laura (wine bar) was entirely pleasant too, and the next morning William and I breakfasted in a little Italian deli/cafe in Crouch End. As Uncle Martin commented when I told him all about it, "how very nice to be in the company of those who will lead you out to make an occasion of a simple meal."

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Visitors in Church

Another week over - or should that be, another week about to start? Well, it was a good one, as they go. On Monday I was offered a full time post with enough additional incentives to convince me that moving to another institution would be a silly idea. There are all sorts of reasons why I turned down the chance of a *very* well paid position that would have been less demanding in favour of this one. The main reason, though, is that I like the buzz of working at the cutting edge of academic theology in a maverick kind of way, and I could never have done that in the other college.

One Thursday I drove down to Oxford for the NoATE consultation the following day, and to have a meeting with colleagues there about some contract work. I had a delightful evening chez Alison, with takeaway pizza and wine in front of a roaring fire. The consultation was very good indeed - my paper was pitched just about right and fitted in with the day well, though much of that is down to excellent planning by the organisers. I learnt a huge amount, and made some useful contacts in the field of e-learning. Home via a monstrous traffic jam on the A43 at Towcester and patchy snow, so didn't get in till rather later than planned.

Meanwhile, it's taken me all week to shake off the worst of the cold, and I still have a nagging cough which will be a nuisance when I'm lecturing tomorrow and Tuesday. I think the strain of the last month or so is beginning to take its toll, and I may well take a week off after the end of term to catch up with myself. The next couple of weeks are busy, with meetings in York and London as well as the weekly round of lectures and tutorials, but then it settles down a bit. I could use a bit of time to deal with a tendency to self-pity that has crept up of late!

Oh, yes, the visitors. Silas had broken the eyepiece of his radio-controlled dalek,
and Robert very kindly repaired it and brought it to church with him this morning. His son insisted on bringing theirs, so we had two daleks wandering up the aisle before the service. We did wonder what kind of response they'd get, but we need not have worried: they evinced a smile or a chuckle from everbody, from the very small children to the elderly. Robert's comment is notable: "...did you notice how everyone of whatever age hailed the Daleks' presence in Church this morning? Doctor Who is as trans-generational as the Church itself, and there aren't many other things you can say that about". He's right, too.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

The common cold and the Da Vinci Code

Sunday evening, and I feel as if my brain is made of fudge: thick and sticky. Although I have nothing more than a head cold, illness is always a source of immense frustration for me because it compromises efficiency. I started the weekend with a couple of lectures to write, one undergrad, one postgrad, and also my NoATE paper and a presentation for a job interview. The postgrad lecture was a doddle, and I've pretty well finished the undergrad one, but although the paper is in my head, I can't seem to make the words make sense on paper. And the job interview presentation will just have to wait until I can think more clearly. And so I get frustrated and miserable and sulk quietly, until a dear friend pops in for coffee bearing chocolate and sympathy and cheers up my evening.

Someone once send me a "Prayer for the Common Cold": it bears repeating here. Oddly enough, when I checked out my email archive, I find that the person who sent it to me is the same friend who called round this evening.

From 'The Prayer Tree' by Michael Leunig

God bless those who suffer from the common cold.
Nature has entered into them;
Has led them aside and gently lain them low
To contemplate life from the wayside;
To consider human frailty;
To receive the deep and dreamy messages of fever.
We give thanks for the insights of this humble perspective.
We give thanks for blessing in disguise.
Amen

Part of the reason I feel so terrible is that I haven't been sleeping very well, and last night decided to use the wakeful time in the wee small hours to finish a chore. I have been reading "The Da Vinci Code", only because I am so often asked my opinion thereof, and so I read for several hours to find out whether the book has any redeeming features. There are a lot of reasons that I was disinclined to like it, and to be fair, it wasn't all that bad as an adventure mystery for the lumpen masses.

But it is not a book for the literati: The characterisation is almost non-existent, and the prose is typical of the genre, devoid of elegance or charm. I found the puzzles very simple, and the solutions over-explained, but I suppose the target audience isn't really Guardian crossword afficionados. Grail mysteries of one kind or another are almost a genre in themselves, and if that were all there were to it, I would pass the book over as trivial but entertaining. What gets my goat is the gross misrepresentation of the development of Christology up to and during Nicea, presenting as fact things that have no basis in truth, and against which there is overwhelming evidence. To suggest that Christology was invented from nowhere by Constantine in 325 ignores 250 years of theology and doctrinal development, and disregards the witness of Paul, the author of Hebrews, Clement of Rome, Igatius, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Tatian, Tertullian, Origen, Arius and Athanasius, to name but few.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Life is fun

I've had the kind of week that reminds me why I love my job: students of one sort or another coming out of the woodwork, from visiting American urban ministry people to PhD candidates, Methodist vocational students and new undergrads. I ended up writing my ecclesiology lecture (L1) late the night before, and the session buzzed so I left work yesterday evening late but on quite a high.

I've booked my ticket to London for a report launch: £8 return on a coach. Compared to £60+ on the train, it's a steal. And I booked in for the SST conference yesterday as well, the first time I've done a conference sponsored by my employer. I've yet to write my NoATE paper, but it will be done by the end of the week - I know exactly what I'm going to say, it's just a case of putting it on paper and assembling the Powerpoint slides.

But I do need to do some serious writing. If I can finish off this term's lectures now, I could start putting together a proposal for publishing my thesis - or at least a *very* revised version thereof. My emails to the editor who asked about it before are bouncing, so I don't set too much store by her, but I do have contacts through a colleague with other editors who may be very interested.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Fresh Start and optimism...

This seems like as good a time as any to delete all my old posts and start again. I've finally finished my PhD, stopped feeling sorry for myself, and given up expecting a knight on a white charger any moment.

Actually, it does feel like a time of change. I've been a student of one kind or another for almost exactly 13 years, and in that time I managed an Oxford first in Theology and a PhD. I'm about to draw finally an amicable but definite line under my marriage after two years separation. When I started studying, I was a single parent of 5 children: now I have just one teenager at home. I'm about to start a new stage in my career as a full time academic after years of part time, juggling and contract work.

I'm looking forward to it all with some fear: can I really pull this off? But I'm also excited and hopeful and more contented than I have been for a very long time. I want to document this period in my life as it happens, because I know for certain it will look different with hindsight. I was looking at my teenage diaries yesterday, and as I read them, I knew what it felt like to be 14 again. Bearing witness is so much more important than remembering. Women of my age don't usually explore this kind of stuff in public.