this goes out to all the guys of what you might call a larger size who love their life and want to show it intrigued by fashion but don’t wanna blow it so here are a few essential tips and without further ado let’s get down to it
one: and this is my most important point hold yourself like you own the joint sure you’re bigger – what’s the beef? chin up, smile, and give us some teeth you’re exactly where you need to be all you gotta do is show it to me
two: go for style & go for fit sharp is smart – don’t be scared of it there’s nothing better than a tailored cut make suits your friend, no ifs no buts (belts put bulges where ya waist is so learn to utilise beautiful braces)
three: colour good, pattern bad enormous flowers just make you look mad you gotta learn to harmonise to charm the heart and ease the eyes how to blend? that’s the question neutral colours for a classy impression
four: a fulsome beard is a noble pursuit so long as you don’t go crazy hirsute trim that sucker, keep it neat a well-kept beard is a manly treat and you balding geezers? (little cough) call it quits and shave it off
five: remember – 13.8 billion years ago it all began with lotsa nothing then a great big bang then after millions of years of tedium atoms of hydrogen and helium the building blocks of everything with gravity to stop them dissipating until eventually it came to pass stars were born from clouds of gas oxygen, carbon, nitrogen the fundamental origin of everything you are and will ever be so why try hide it with a baggy ass T?
Oi! Hands off the octopus! The news today is a shock to us! your plans for farming are too alarming very concerning not what you might call life affirming
They look like aliens, super-intelligent what they taste like with lemon completely irrelevant calamari’s problematic and at the risk of sounding dramatic it’s like ordering takeaways of fried professors in mayonnaise
Oi! Fork off the cephalopods! Out from the Cambrian against the odds suckering about for millions of years from the Abyssal Plain to the Palace Pier (although Brighton wasn’t a thing back then it’s only been a resort since 1810) and now this bleak and cruel decision to cram their beaks in tanks like chickens
They’ve got 3 hearts! Blue blood! Psychedelic skin like they’re swimming in drugs! Brains like a water-based supercomputer! Arses that work like an inky shooter! Their value to science uncategorizable! (just bad luck they’re deliciously fryable)
It’s hand, foot & armageddon / burn the books and pass the weapon / party first and family second / destiny smiles, eternity beckons / we’ve got about a minute I reckon
Asking myself again – what IS this / dumped on the corner like a tree at Christmas / but I suppose that’s how it goes in show business / one minute baubles, the next scared shitless / life’s ridiculous / often ambiguous / an experience gift for a cannula at Dignitas
I’m caught red handed, in cahoots / on OnlyFans as Piss in Boots
I’m queuing at the local high street cleaners / back of a pack of bloody hyenas / I don’t know what they’re laughing at / the service here is not all that
I’m a werewolf in a salon chair / waving my clawsy paws in the air / howling fix this goddam hair / the moon’s nearly full and I’m having a mare / so they do me a perm / which is bouffant and firm / and I look like an influencer, sexy and stern / and I pay them with silver and make them squirm / the swivel chair straddle / my wolf teeth dazzle / then lyco-skedaddle / off to the beach for a doggy paddle
I’m screaming at the live-streamed crash / a plate on my lap of schnitzel and mash / the commentary’s crap! totally trash! / jabbing my fork and making a splash / on my Nazi shorts and oily thatch / my big cleft chin, my toothbrush moustache
I’m the Daily Mail with poisonous tropes / smiling as the hangman shows me the ropes
I’m dining on a sinking ship / paid for dessert so I’m finishing it
I’m facing death with Staff Nurse Moses / snapping his fingers for a hallelujah bolus
I’m captive after the revolution / a witness for the persecution / pleading with the jury for a fair conclusion / but they’re used to all my shameless shit / they laugh and talk and hawk and spit / I can tell from here they’re just not having it / shaking their heads when I ask to acquit / NO! screams the judge as she whacks her hammer / Off to the slammer! / fifteen to life for a feckless manner
A chilly welcome to the land of Mogg / mists and mellow fruitfulness, poisonous fog / where you keep your head down and work like a dog / for off-book, outsourced, zero hours Mcflog / while the corporate hogs and political partners / piss through rights and public charters / legal non-starters / protest martyrs / laughing at the news from yachts in harbours
Remember when you clapped for carers / turns out you were only there to scare us / politically prepare us / to be smacked down and beaten / as the crisis deepened / profits skimmed and services cheapened / offshore gold stores nicely sweetened / the magic money tree’s in the Garden of Eton
So – the gingerbread man caught a ride with the fox / but the deal was dodgy and they hit the rocks / in a real-life, wildlife, snack-attack shock / but hey – what did ginger really expect? / so much effort to such little effect / run a little faster, be more select / trust a biscuit to trust a fox / ferry you across? / when you’re mostly fondant and your buttons are boss?
Say hello to bitcoin Barbie! / barbecue stylie / heart of plastic, smile like kylie / hyper-aware / thousand yard stare / 1.5 million followers out there / drives a Ferrari / drinks Bacardi / happy as a cop at a taser party
skip with me…
hey nonny nowhere, Jimmy can’t wait the full moon’s rising, the hour’s late there’s a wolf in the garden, a butcher at the gate there’s a doctor at the door with a big covered plate giving you a grin drawing a syringe his collar’s turned up so don’t…let….him….IN!
Johnson is sent away as a child to be educated by the wise centaur Eton (a centaur is a fabulous creature, half horse, half complete arse) who hides him away and raises him on the Mountains of Spondulix.
When Johnson turns fifty-five he journeys to The Tory Lands to claim his throne. At a nearby river, Margaret, the Queen of the Tories, approaches Johnson disguised as an old woman not for turning. While carrying her across the river, Johnson loses his comb and arrives at Number 10 with his hair a mess. The Tories are nervous when they see Johnson in this state, for an oracle had prophesied that a shag-haired clown shall usurp the throne.
Johnson demands his rightful place. The Tories reply that Johnson should first accomplish a difficult task to prove his worth. The task is to retrieve the Blatant Fleece, kept beyond the edge of the logical world on the Isle of Brexis.
The story of the Blatant Fleece is an interesting tale in itself. Murdoch, King of the Gods, had given a golden promise to Johnson’s ancestor Camoron. Camoron later flew on the golden promise to the Isle of Brexis, whose king was called Hateful, son of Poison and Media. Hateful sacrificed the promise and hung its Blatant Fleece in a sacred grove guarded by a dreadful, racist dragon called Enoch, as an oracle had foretold that Hateful would lose his kingdom if anyone got close enough to see the Blatant Fleece was actually not all that.
Determined to reclaim his throne, Johnson agrees to retrieve the Blatant Fleece. Johnson assembles a team of absolutely useless heroes for his crew, and they sail aboard the Farrago for Brexis.
The journey takes forever (feels like). The heroes have many opportunities and basically fuck them all up, including The Clashing Rocks of The Bleeding Obvious (each rock emblazoned with a made-up statistic); Barnier Bear Island; The Land of Europe, where bananas are straight and the rulers are not; Nigel and the Harpies; The Invisible Covid Parties; The Sirens (who try to lure Johnson onto the rocks by waving bundles of cash), and a terrifying robot called Starmus, who they eventually defeat by unscrewing a bolt in his ankle and letting out all his charisma.
Finally, Johnson parks the Farrago at the Isle of Brexis and asks Hateful for the Blatant Fleece as it belonged to his ancestor, Camoron.
Hateful knows that as soon as Johnson touches the Fleece all the paint will come off. So he comes up with another challenge. Johnson must first plough his cabinet, then sow it with the teeth of the Enoch. However, Media has taken a liking to Johnson. She gives him magical powers, and with her help he manages to slay Enoch, pull out his teeth and sow them in the vacant cabinet seats. Soon there grows a dreadful army of racist politicians, any one of which might rat on Johnson and bring him down. But Media had already briefed Johnson, who cast stones in news interviews that led them to turn on each other in confusion.
Johnson takes the Blatant Fleece, marries Media and together they go back to The Tory Lands to claim Camoron’s throne. But the people have finally realised the wool is being pulled over their eyes. So Johnson and Media are driven out of The Tory Lands – now renamed The People’s Lands – and they retire to the Mountains of Spondulix, where Johnson marries someone else, Media is slain by poor sales figures, and Johnson tries to make money by touring a jukebox musical called Fleece a Jolly Good Fellow! – but gets flattened by the reviews.
We’ve had some carers go sick so I’m helping out with the calls this morning. I like the change. So long as everything goes to plan, I won’t be called upon to make decisions, referrals, or any of the other worries that swarm in on you when you’re medically assessing a patient. In a lot of ways a care call is therapeutic – which I realise is easy for me to say, not having to do this day-in, day-out, chasing my tail across the city, stressing about keeping ahead, making time, all for a pittance.
Geoffrey’s house is on the kind of pristine new development where everything looks fake. I wouldn’t be surprised to be met at the door by a Playmobil figure. Instead it’s June, Geoffrey’s daughter, a middle-aged woman with an aura of stress so palpable you could use it to power the neighbourhood if you only had the leads.
‘Hello,’ she says, blinking emphatically. ‘Can you put these shoe covers on?’
The interior of the house is immaculate. Which explains the shoe covers. In fact, I’m surprised June doesn’t insist on a full body suit and respirator. ‘Dad’s still in bed,’ she says. ‘I’ll come up and show you what’s what.’
I follow her up the stairs and into a room brightly lit by the sun. Geoffrey is lying on his back in bed, his hands either side of his face, gripping the covers in that cliche, ‘man lying in bed’ style. ‘This is the carer, Jim,’ says June, running up the blinds. ‘He’s come to get you ready for the day.’ ‘Oh, aye?’ says Geoffrey.
June shows me into the bathroom where everything is laid out: pink flannel for the face and top half, black flannel for the bottom and legs. Creams of various kinds. A comb. Toothbrush and paste. The toothbrush is enormous, like nothing I’ve seen before, a cumbersome red plastic instrument with bristles like a carpet brush on one side and on the other, the kind of circular brush that wouldn’t be out of place snapped onto a vacuum cleaner. ‘I’ll leave you to it,’ says June, before turning on the spot and hurling herself back downstairs.
The washing and dressing goes smoothly. Geoffrey is as organised as his environment, and apart from his great age and frailty, manages everything pretty much independently. We chat about this and that. Apparently – before he retired – he used to be a dental technician. ‘Oh!’ I say. ‘That’s interesting! I know a story about dental technicians!’ ‘Hmm,’ says Geoffrey. I’m putting him into his tracksuit top so he can’t do anything else but listen. ‘You know that local natural history museum? Well the professor who used to run that place also helped the police out now and again. He was such an expert on bugs and beetles and skeletons and whatnot, they used to call him in for advice.’ ‘Oh, aye?’ says Geoffrey. I hand him a comb to sort his hair out. ‘Well – this one time, they asked him to look at a building site. The builders were renovating an old house and they found a load of teeth in the basement, which looked suspicious. But when the professor examined them, he said it must have been the site of an old dentures workshop, and you could tell by the tiny holes near the root of the teeth, where they used to wire them together.’ ‘Wire them…’ says Geoffrey. ‘Yes.’ I pass him his strange toothbrush. ‘Over to the expert!’ I say.
He carefully smothers the big brush with toothpaste, wets it under the tap, then starts busily scouring his teeth. It goes on for such a long time I’m worried he won’t have any teeth left. There’s a lot of spitting and hawking into the sink, followed by more brushing, followed by more spitting, and when five minutes have passed and I’m wondering if I should make an intervention, he unexpectedly puts the plug in the sink and starts filling the basin so full of cold water I’m worried it’ll overflow. But just as the level nears the top, he turns the taps off, then pulls out his top set, holds it under the water, and starts attacking it with the round bit of the brush. He scrubs it underwater for ages, pulling it out to inspect it occasionally, plunging it back under again to scrub some more, hawking and spitting into the basin the whole time. It’s a furious, all-elbows kind of procedure. I’ve never seen anyone clean their teeth like this before and I’m fascinated – so much so that I almost forget to catch him when he leans back unsteadily a few times. ‘There!’ he says, breathing hard, finally pulling the plug and inserting the top set back into position. ‘Now, then – what’s for breakfast?’
yesterday or maybe the day before I found I suddenly had to check myself in to the lost properties department
the clerk behind the counter kept fading in and out but was there long enough to ask me what the problem was
well I said how long have you got? I started out okay I had displacement, distance, velocity, acceleration and speed
yes she said
and I mean well this time yesterday I was pretty confident that all of this was in frame of reference to an observer measuring the change in position of my body relative to that frame with change in time
go on, she said
it’s just now I find I’m kinda nowhere
hmm, she said fill out this form I’ll see what I can do
we finally met him by the bins Stanley and I (or is it me and Stanley? I’m not too hot on grammar, evidently)
we were walking through the estate around half past eight (which is just for the rhyme: actually it was more like half past nine) and there he was! dressed in fluorescent yellow because he has one of those street collecting jobs where it pays to be nice n’conspicuous, obvs
a baseball cap earbuds in, listening to an app because I guess the job’s crap and let’s face it who wouldn’t use some music to erase it
there he was! master of the waste collecting gods! riding his tiny, shiny van the mythological POOBIN MAN!
a bit grumpy though when I smiled and said yo! I’ve got a little something for ya swinging a poo bag Stan filled earlier hoping he’d say something cool like ‘Poo me’ but he ground his teeth and looked right through me
Poobin, Poobin, whither thou goest? what foul bags wilt thy gauntlets knowest? and verily when it snowest I’m guessing it’s a blessing as the poo will be frosty and attractively glaucous with a little less chance of enterococcus
1 The Lurcher is my shepherd; I shall not want. 2 He maketh me to get the lead down and walk him in green pastures: he draggeth me beside the muddy streams. 3 He outdoors my soul: He leadeth me in the paths of excitedness for his games’ sake. 4 Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of daffodils, I will fear no teazel: for thou art with me (somewhere – who knows?); thy run and thy woof they comfort me. 5 Thou preparest before me for beagle, or Bichon Frises on extension leads; thou annoyest my head with howls; my patience runneth over. 6 Surely dogness and treats shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lurcher forever, and never have enough room on the sofa.