Time passes. More stuff gets done.
Supermarket success: one bag of Taste the Difference Jersey new potatoes for only 60p in the end-bin, which will do nicely for lunches; a sweetheart cabbage (also reduced) and some bacon for dinner (a cabbage, bacon & cheese bake which we ended up combining with the leftover pasta, and very nice it was too if I do say so myself); and some little pears (reduced -- spot the pattern) as snack-food for work. Didn't impulse-buy anything unless you count the pears, and that's really to save me buying less healthy and more expensive things later.
I've been slipping a little on the not-spending-money front: bought two summer tops on the market (8 quid for the two of them) and henna from Lush (and some shampoo, but I need to wash my hair with something, and the Lush solid shampoos last longer). Also bought a "Saint" book on eBay, but that was only 99p (+p&p). However I still think I'm doing a bit better than I was before, and now I've transferred the cc balance to an interest-free one that's another 10 quid a month or so that I'm saving.
Started reading one of the books on my immediate to-read pile, Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones, and decided that it's not really worth finishing -- feels like DWJ on autopilot, perhaps it's just intended for a younger audience? Or perhaps it's that I find DWJ less convincing when she's writing about wholly/mostly 'fantasy' universes, and at her best when she's writing more explicitly about the points where the lines blur between fantasy and the 'real' world. (See: Fire and Hemlock, Witch Week, Homeward Bounders -- in a way they're all stories about the power of myth/story, which is something that appeals to me a lot.)
I must convince myself that I really don't have to read everything in the world, or even everything in the house.
Having said that I did get through most of the first chapter of The Muse in the Machine: computers and creative thought by David Gelernter. It's interesting, but a lot of it seems quite obvious to me.
I also made progress on my dress for Glastonbury.
Supermarket success: one bag of Taste the Difference Jersey new potatoes for only 60p in the end-bin, which will do nicely for lunches; a sweetheart cabbage (also reduced) and some bacon for dinner (a cabbage, bacon & cheese bake which we ended up combining with the leftover pasta, and very nice it was too if I do say so myself); and some little pears (reduced -- spot the pattern) as snack-food for work. Didn't impulse-buy anything unless you count the pears, and that's really to save me buying less healthy and more expensive things later.
I've been slipping a little on the not-spending-money front: bought two summer tops on the market (8 quid for the two of them) and henna from Lush (and some shampoo, but I need to wash my hair with something, and the Lush solid shampoos last longer). Also bought a "Saint" book on eBay, but that was only 99p (+p&p). However I still think I'm doing a bit better than I was before, and now I've transferred the cc balance to an interest-free one that's another 10 quid a month or so that I'm saving.
Started reading one of the books on my immediate to-read pile, Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones, and decided that it's not really worth finishing -- feels like DWJ on autopilot, perhaps it's just intended for a younger audience? Or perhaps it's that I find DWJ less convincing when she's writing about wholly/mostly 'fantasy' universes, and at her best when she's writing more explicitly about the points where the lines blur between fantasy and the 'real' world. (See: Fire and Hemlock, Witch Week, Homeward Bounders -- in a way they're all stories about the power of myth/story, which is something that appeals to me a lot.)
I must convince myself that I really don't have to read everything in the world, or even everything in the house.
Having said that I did get through most of the first chapter of The Muse in the Machine: computers and creative thought by David Gelernter. It's interesting, but a lot of it seems quite obvious to me.
I also made progress on my dress for Glastonbury.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-16 07:37 am (UTC)<aside>
I've just gone to look at a DWJ site (http://www.leemac.freeserve.co.uk/chresto.htm) and it's now scrolling a message across my status bar in Netscape that says "Legends are an important source of true information". How nifty.
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Needing clothing: ye-es, well, I'm not short of clothing by any stretch of the imagination. :-} I can just always think of more kinds of clothes that I'd like...
Tops: they are (at least IMHO) pretty, and thus cheering. One is white, made mostly of something rather that strange ruched-lycra stuff that trendy swimsuits in the 80s were made of but with gauzy flouncy sleeves... it's nicer than it sounds, okay? :-) ... and the other is sleeveless, with open v-necked collar, in a 70s-ish red-and-black-and-beige design, big geometric patterns, very cool.
Toplessness: wouldn't bother me per se, in that I don't care if people see me topless, but I suspect it would probably draw unwanted attention of a type that I don't want.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-16 07:47 am (UTC)The tops sound nice. I bought a loud red-green-white stripy sleeveless one yesterday because what I'd gone out in was just too hot (and I promptly got yoghurt on it but never mind). And I finally found cheap Italia shirts for me and