19 September 2018

Ordinariness

Image result for Donald Sutherland in Trust
Donald Sutherland as John Paul Getty in "Trust"
An ordinary day in September. I press the button on our radio alarm clock and soon the droning voices of the morning news presenters send me back to sleep again. Discussion of Brexit has become the best cure for sleeplessness known to man. They should bottle it. "Can't sleep? Try new Brexit. Available at your local pharmacy. Now!"

At nine I am downstairs in my dressing gown creating breakfast. A big mug of tea, a banana and a bowl of fruit and nut muesli with three plump raspberries on top. Thence to the front room. TV news on. Computer on. Check. Consume breakfast. Check.

Forty minutes later I am back up the stairs. Don't you get tired of showering, shaving and brushing your teeth? It's the same thing every day. Rub-a-dub-dub. The suds go down the plughole and the toothpaste tastes as minty as it did yesterday and the day before that.

Clothes on. Hair combed. Shoes tied. Grab the bags, I am off to Lidl on Chesterfield Road to get some shopping in. It's pretty quiet and there are several free places in the car park. I have got everything we need in twenty minutes including strawberries for Nurse Pudding.

Back home I unload the dishwasher and put a burger under the grill for lunch. I put the shopping away and make a mug of coffee. Fried onions in a pan. You can't have a burger without onions can you? I catch the last ten minutes of "Bargain Hunt" and then get ready to walk a mile to the Oxfam shop. I take exactly the same route I have taken for the last four years and arrive at twenty seven minutes past one ready for my shift.

There are book donations to sort through including an erotic novel aimed at women. I spend two minutes thumbing through it. It's clean but the contents are rather filthy.  I can't put it on the shelves. It might cause outrage. I drop it in the rejects sack.

At two thirty I count the takings for both Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning then stroll up to the bank near Hunter's Bar roundabout. I pass a homeless fellow near Sainsburys. A few weeks ago I overheard him say to a passer-by, "Can you get me a drink please - I'm parched!" The passer-by agreed and then the homeless man said, "I'll have a bottle of Ribena - the purple-topped one. Not the strawberry one. I don't like that!" The passer-by said he'd get him some water.

Back at the Oxfam shop. An hour on the till. I am pretty good with this till now and hardly ever make a mistake. It's so easy to press the wrong button. The shift finishes differently with a staff meeting and volunteers I rarely see  have arrived to participate. The agenda is mundane but it stretches far enough to make me get home late.

A woman at the bus stop says, "Can you see what number that bus is?" And I say, "As I am not a peregrine falcon I can't help you!" She chuckles.

For once, Shirley is in the middle of making our evening meal. The bolognese sauce is definitely  too salty but I don't say anything. Just send it down the hatch without complaint. Whenever I have spaghetti at home it is accompanied by a glass of cold milk. That's not salty.

Then I come to this laptop and tap away at this blogpost. I am looking forward to the second episode of "Trust" on the television. It's about the oil billionaire John Paul Getty and the kidnapping of his grandson John Paul Getty III. The old man is played brilliantly by Donald Sutherland who was born in Saint John, Canada eighty three years ago. "Trust" is probably his swansong but you never know.

23 comments:

  1. I agree. The morning ritual does get boring! Sometimes, if it is just Big Bear an me at home for the day, I will admit to skipping everything else except the brushing of teeth. The telly is never on during the day unless there is some disaster. I would turn it on if I read online that Donald had lost all his marbles and ran across the White House lawn naked and the cabinet finally invoked the 25th amendment or if he just decided to resign without all the dramatics.

    I really like the Donald that is pictured at the top of your post. He is one Donald that is good at his job.

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    1. You have put the image of D.Trump running naked across The White House lawn in my mind and as a consequence I am feeling quite nauseous. It is a hideous picture. But yes - Mr Sutherland is indeed a good Donald. I guess it's all ying and yang.

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  2. You have captured the minutia of everyday. How lucky we are to have ordinary days, though. I long for them if/when the crises hit.

    Your story of the homeless fellow reminds me of the time I offered to get water and a sandwich for a man I knew to have a precarious living. He wouldn't let me order it; he jumped right up from the curb and said he'd come in the store with me because he was rather fussy about his sandwiches ...

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    1. Ordinary, forgettable days ain't bad. If every day was thrilling and eventful we would soon reach mental and emotional meltdown! I guess your vulnerable fellow wanted prawn and avocado sandwiches?

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  3. I enjoyed hearing about your day and yes the morning routines do get old. It is nice to hear a play by play on another person's "ordinary" day. I have not seen Trust but it sounds good and Donald Sutherland is an excellent actor.

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    1. Thanks for calling by again Bonnie. Ordinary days are rarely recorded. People tend to talk and write about dramatic days - days in which we operate in overdrive.

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  4. Sutherland made the movie, "The Leisure Seeker" with Helen Mirren around the time he made, "Trust", too. There's no stopping the old fella! I've always liked him....probably since the first seeing the movie "MASH" way back when. I saw movies that he was in before "MASH", but that's when he first made an impression on me...and, no doubt, on others at that film when it was released.



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    1. This is reply on your previous post before your previous post, Yorkie...in response to your response....(Sorry for all the confusion)!

      "I think you may mean "Beaujolais", Yorkie. There is no Bergerac in my wine cellar, and never has been."

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    2. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bergerac_wine

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    3. Sutherland has always had a characterful presence and a wry sense of humour. Some film "stars" are quite forgettable but not him.

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    4. I stand corrected...or educated.

      Once upon a time, by working within the hospitality industry in various capacities I had a fairly vast knowledge of wines...local and imported, but I do not recall ever coming across Bergerac wines. As only about 15% of Bergerac wines are exported, I imagine, that could be a reason why. It may not even have been available here in this country during the years I was working in the industry.

      Quote: "’Brits know better, as they have become an occupation force in Bergerac, and have a detailed knowledge of the region, its restaurants and its wines. But to many wine lovers, Bergerac rings the least sonorous of bells."

      Read more at https://www.decanter.com/features/regional-profile-bergerac-245970/#OETQSzUUPkivmCjd.99

      Thanks for the info, Yorkie.

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  5. Ordinary days are what we shall long for on our death beds. I am certain of that. The ritual of teeth-brushing and showering, the taste of raspberries on cereal, the feel of a book in our hands.
    The amazing richness of the life of taking care of a body and a spirit and a soul, all wrapped up in routine and in wonder.
    Well. That's what I think, Mr. P.

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    1. I do believe that you are right Ms Moon. When we live these ordinary days we hardly give them a moment's thought but in fact they are the bread and butter of our lives.

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  6. That was a rather busy day . However, we have to remain active and you had a good day.

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    1. Yes. Stay active. Keep walking. Keep up your routines. That's probably the best recipe for prolonging our lives.

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  7. I have a deep appreciation of anyone who eats what is served them without comment or complaint, evenif they never make a single compliment

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    1. Perhaps I should have said, "Oh this milk is delicious!"

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  8. All life is repetition, as Australian biographer, David Maher, once said. The problem for him was finding the interesting bits in people's lives when writing about them.
    On matter how boring this repetition might seem, having another day is something I'm happy to see each morning.
    Alphie

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    1. Most people's lives consist chiefly of ordinary days.

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  9. I love routine, it makes me feel safe.

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    1. As I have grown older I have come to appreciate routine more and more.

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  10. Ah, the blessing of an ordinary day. I enjoyed reading about yours. I tried to get into Trust but couldn't gain any traction, although I love Donald Sutherland as an actor.

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  11. oh yes I get tired of showering washing my hai and brushing my teeth every day,
    What I hope is that one day i will be free of my body and be free to do wathever I want without tiredness, aches, hunger etc. But then will I be in a world worth it?

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Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

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