I felt fine when I woke up this morning. I continued to feel
fine all the time I spent lying there ruminating on the prospect of not
ruminating but getting up instead. But get up I did eventually, and then I
didn’t feel fine. My face was suddenly attacked by the combined forces of
earache, toothache, blocked sinuses, and a general facial malaise down the left
side. So then I felt rough instead.
But being ever in thrall to my practiced routines, I still
had a breakfast of a bowl of cereals, milk, and sugar, and I still went out for
my customary walk, and after lunch I completed the job in the garden which I’d
set myself to do today. I even worked through the light rain which was falling
at one point. So then I told myself what a good boy I am and noticed that the
symptoms of the earlier lurgy had eased quite a lot.
By the time I’d finished the garden work the light was
falling rapidly and so I spent an hour or so thinking about the Lady B. I often
do, you know – think about the Lady B. I’d watched a YouTube video last night,
you see, about the genetic origins of hazel eyes – which the Lady B has to
complement her very dark hair – and the fact that they’re commoner in Ireland than
most places. It encouraged the speculation that the Lady B is not (physically)
a throwback to some ancestor from the regions around the Mediterranean
as I’d often suspected, but has an element of the dark Irish in her
antecedence.
And that led me to another realisation. The good Lady once
told me that she was attending a course on some aspect of computing with her
sister, and members of the group had remarked that they couldn’t tell them apart. To me that was nonsense because to me they didn’t – and still
don’t – look even slightly alike. And further, neither of the girls look like
their mother. And that was when I realised that when I look at somebody I don’t
just see the outward physical form. I add to it a quickly formed sense of the
person’s innate characteristics, and so their appearance takes on a different
quality. Maybe I’m weird. Who can tell?
After that I decided to research the author Algernon
Blackwood, the well known writer of paranormal and mystical novels and short
stories. He’s especially known for his stories The Willows and The Wendigo,
and the great Lovecraft himself considered Blackwood to be possibly the best of
all such writers. I read The Willows
and a few others many years ago and was very impressed myself, so today I
finally got around to finding out a bit more about him. It turned out that he
was very much like me in his attitudes and interests, which pleased me.
The ear, tooth, and sinuses are pretty much back to normal,
by the way. Time now to make the usual highly laboured attempt to persuade my
old friend (and he really is old) computer to play YouTube videos. The Lady
Guanyin usually helps eventually.