Some people seem quite blasé about things going wrong. They
either fix them there and then, get somebody else to do it or just brush the
whole thing to one side. I’m not like that.
I don’t mean I get all uptight when things go wrong, but I
don’t like that interim situation when things that ought to be fixed are, for
whatever reason, not fixed.
In that respect I’m not remotely political – I don’t fix
things simply by describing them as fixed or by treating a stated intention to
fix a problem as equivalent to fixing it. Either something is fixed or it
isn’t.
I don’t mean I live an existence of clockwork regularity and
machine like humming precision either. Nothing like it. I’m pretty clumsy, a
breaker of cups, saucers and glasses. Only yesterday I broke a decades old
Denby coffee cup, but as that can’t be fixed, it isn’t something that concerns
me unduly. Just as well really – considering my breakage record.
I dropped my laptop mouse onto a slate floor yesterday, but
yet again it survived. It’s a Logitech optical mouse and when I do finally
manage to break it, I’ll buy another because they must be amazingly well made.
Clumsy is what I am, arising as it does from an excessive
head in clouds tendency which you may have glimpsed from time to time. Toes regularly
stubbed on the leg of the bed, spectacles knocked off by a stray arm, Themos
flask covered in dents – that’s me. Why I risk chopping logs I don’t know.
Anyhow – back to fixing things or not fixing them. With me,
the niggle is more to do with things that aren’t right but could easily be put
right. The dripping tap, the moss on the drive, our EU membership – simple
stuff like that.
It niggles.
I could never be a politician. Obvious problems with obvious
solutions stay unfixed for decades. The EU is a good example. Some aspects of
the EU such as free trade and competition policy are desirable, but that was
what the EEC was supposed to be all about.
So we could easily fix the EU by going back to an EEC.
Unravel the single currency, sack truckloads of bureaucrats and repeal a few
skiploads of law. Tedious but do-able. But vested interests have their fat legs
under the table, politicians have their fat heads up their own arses, so the fix never happens.
It niggles.
3 comments:
The moss grows because it is as alive as we are and we share our space and time with it.
Moss will still be here long after our extinction. I'm not waving a placard for moss here - just stating that it is more resilient and persistent than we are.
You can only manage it because you have chosen a plot size which you can manage.
In managing our gardens our gardens actually manage us.
Too big a garden can drive you bonkers.
Well said EK.
Now what is the bureaucratic equivalent of Paraquat?
EK and Roger - the bureaucratic equivalent of Paraquat may be confusion - if we could find a way of spreading it liberally.
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