Family Pics
We had a family reunion today. Aunties&uncles, direct cousins and their offspring. Too tired to write but will leave you with some pics. All images are clickable to enlarge.
Labels: Thru the Lens
We had a family reunion today. Aunties&uncles, direct cousins and their offspring. Too tired to write but will leave you with some pics. All images are clickable to enlarge.
Labels: Thru the Lens
Time to re-open for business me thinks. So as per my last post, I went off in search of snow & mischief and found myself a good fresh 2 meters of the first and whole bundle of the latter in the form this wee 'un:
I feel compelled to add: Hurray for German efficiency. 800kms of no legal speed limit, and toilets every five minutes. It was a true blessing ;-)
I made it home in one piece and headed straight for bed with a high dose of painkillers. By the time Dr.Jim and his Miss Lou arrived, I was feeling and looking a lot worse for wear. To allow them time to recover from the shock of having landed in such an extremely flat weird li'l land, and to give myself an extra night of recuperation, we decided to start off the visit with an early night. But if you think 4 days of meds and an early night would have cured me, you'da thunk wrong. When I woke up on Tuesday morning I had entirely lost my voice. My unfortunate (?) guests thus spent the remaining four days in the presence of an excitedly squeaking/whispering host. I did, however, carry a bright orange referee whistle with me at all times, should there have been a need to draw attention to myself where my voice couldn't ;-)
For a full and perhaps more coherent account of the visit, I suggest you await the next edition of LeScientist, but for now, I would just like to mention Dr.Jim's highly amusing tipsy endeavours to consume as much Tierentyn Mustard as humanly possible in one go, without spontaneously combusting. I think he's established that small inputs yield high returns. As for Miss Lou, I would first like to appologise for the fact that one of my walls attacked her in the middle of her sleep. It shall duly be removed. And second, I'd like to thank her for proving that it is physically possible to touch/pick up/evaluate every item of clothing in a store within the space of an hour. I was well impressed and may pull a copy-cat when the spring-shop-bug finally hits.
We've established that pink is a definite no no, confirmed that the brits have trouble adjusting to belgian pub opening hours and that guiness tastes different in flatland. We decided that concepts matter, agreed that bosses who ignore clever ideas ought to be dumped, discovered that all belgians wear trousers of leg-size 36 (male&female) and have proven that is in fact possible to drink a Kwak without spilling it, if you simply skilfully keep turning it round whilst you drink. A very good haul for a 5-day visit, I think you'd agree ;-)
I've never invested much time in building a "gay" social life here back home. Picking one's friends based on their sexuality is beyond me, and I'm quite averse to the general gay-"scene". Moreover, I left Belgium when I'd just turned 21, so there's a 5-year hiatus in terms of expanding the home-social circle. Though I made many new gay&straight friends during my time in Lisbon, England and Scotland, the temporary return to Belgium this summer pretty much implied a return to a predominantly, if not entirely, straight group of very close friends. That suited me just fine. The post-break-up rebound phase is all too messy, so I'd no pressing urges to "mingle" with potential flings. And as every PhD student knows, the whole write up experience is in essence a time of withdrawing from society and simply directing every bit of focus you can muster, upon completing your thesis.
Labels: Lesbian
Just press play...
I received an important looking letter in the mail this morning, stamped with the university seal. I was absolutely bricking it when tearing it open, dreadful doom-scenarios of scientific inquiries already unfolding in front of my eyes. But here's what it said (click for larger image):
Labels: PhD Faff
I nearly wet my pants when I read this newspaper clipping (click on image for a larger version):
Well, sheer elation has indeed set in and I've not had much time to update the blog. But I feel compelled to at least briefly mention "Syriana". A fiction feature so rooted in reality it is ridiculously scary. Well-balanced, well explained. A not so subtle warning. Recommended.