I'm so tired. I'm carrying some sort of cold bug that just won't go beyond the first few, throaty symptoms. I'll feel rough for a few hours and then it eases back for a while. This has been going on for over a week.
Last Monday, my throat was so swollen, I skipped rehearsal and went to bed early. Gradually felt better on Tuesday, rough on Wednesday and OK by Friday. This Monday, I spent most of the day with a splitting headache, partially masked by painkillers. Couldn't miss another rehearsal, but felt more and more knackered as the evening wore on. I yawned my way home, went to bed fairly quickly and promptly woke up at 4am. Couldn't get back to sleep. Felt like a zombie for a large part of yesterday then, at 3pm, my Commercial Director bought me a cappacino. The caffeine kicked in around 5 and didn't wear off until midnight. Today, I was woken by the rain but felt human until just before I left work.
Right now, I'm peering at the computer, feeling slightly feverish with a sore throat. I haven't had an on-off, dragged-out illness-in-stages like this since the winter before I got diagnosed with hypothyroidism. I just wish the damn thing would either develop or go. I'm sick of it.
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Channel 4
Last night, I watched 27 Dresses on E4 (one of the TV stations controlled by Channel 4). Good film. Very funny. Cute leading man, James Marsden. Almost totally ruined by Channel 4's insistence that they insert 5 advertisements every 10 minutes, cutting scenes in the middle, without sensitivity to the story line. They do it by the clock. You can set your watch by it.
I hate Channel 4 for this! I remember the night they totally ruined The Elephant Man. They don't care about the film or their audience, just about their advertising revenue. I rarely watch programs on Channel 4 - wonder why?
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Eye Candy
Talking about James Marsden, I spent a considerable part of the film thinking he looks a lot like the poster-boy of English cricket, Alistair Cook.
Alistair, when you cricket career finishes, I hope Hollywood comes calling.
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Toying with an idea - PipneyJane's Wartime Experiment
World War 2 is back on our screens in the form of the Wartime Farm on the BBC. The thread discussing it on MSE got me thinking. Five years ago, Thriftlady did a ration book challenge - feeding her family for (I think) 2 weeks on the same quantity of rations they'd have got in 1942. Could we do something similar? Who would be willing to pretend it's September 1939 again? War has just been declared and rationing is imminent.
These are the ration quantities per person, per week:-
Meat –this was rationed in money not by weight but it was roughly equivalent to 12 oz mince/stewing steak. Chicken was scarce. Offal and sausages were not rationed but hard to get. Wild game such as rabbit was not rationed.
Milk - 3 pints
Sugar ½ lb
Butter – 2 oz
Margarine – 4 oz (for this challenge can up the butter ration to 6 oz instead of using margarine)
Cooking fat (dripping/lard) – 3 oz (for this challenge can substitute up to 3 fl oz oil)
Cheese (English hard cheese) – 3 oz
Bacon and ham - 4 oz (or have an extra 4oz of meat instead)
Eggs - 1 Dried egg -¼ packet (equivalent to 3 eggs so use 3 eggs)
Sweets and chocolate - 2 oz
Jam- 3 oz Tea - 2 oz (18 teabags) (need an equivalent for coffee)
There was a points system - 16 per person per month – which allowed you to buy tinned goods, orange juice, cereals, rice and pulses. Off ration were: bread (finally rationed in 1947), potatoes, oats, fresh fish, and homegrown fruit and veg.
As to the rules for the game, so far, I've come up with these:-
- All mod-cons are allowed if you already own them (freezers, food processors, microwaves, etc).
- You don't have to buy a whole week's ration every week. If you routinely only shop once a month, then buy a month's worth then.
- You can eat out of the freezer or the pantry but limit your weekly quantities to those of the ration.
- You can stockpile a week's ration, but you can't spend one in advance, i.e. you can save up your chocolate ration for several weeks in order to purchase the chocolate needed to make coconut rough for Easter.
- You don't have to eat wartime recipes, just adapt what you normally eat to fit the restrictions of the rations. (However, the various recipe collections such as Marguerite Patten's Victory Cookbook are a very good resource if you need ideas.)
- Petrol/gasoline rations. Since I'm dependent on a car for work, I was thinking 1 tank of fuel per car per week.
- Clothing rations. How about throwing in a Fashion on the Ration challenge as well? The 1941 clothing ration was 66 coupons. (Yarn and fabric already owned doesn't count towards your ration.) This is what your coupons could buy according to Fashion Era:-
Item Of Clothing | Women | Girls |
Lined mackintosh or coat over 28" | 14 | 11 |
Under 28" short coat or jacket | 11 | 8 |
Frock, gown or dress of wool | 11 | 8 |
Frock, gown or dress of other fabric | 7 | 5 |
Bodice with girls skirt or gym tunic | 8 | 6 |
Pyjamas | 8 | 6 |
Divided skirt or skirt | 7 | 5 |
Nightdress | 6 | 5 |
Dungarees or overalls | 6 | 4 |
Blouse, shirt, sports top, cardigan or jumper | 5 | 3 |
Pair of slippers, boots or shoes | 5 | 3 |
Other garments including corsets | 5 | 2 |
Petticoat or slip, cami knickers or combinations | 4 | 3 |
Apron or pinafore | 3 | 2 |
Scarf, gloves, mittens or muff | 2 | 2 |
Stockings per pair | 2 | 1 |
Ankle socks per pair | 1 | 1 |
1 yard wool cloth 36"wide | 3 | 3 |
2 ounces of wool knitting yarn | 1 | 1 |
I'm still not sure I'll go through with this.
- Pam
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