Friday, August 29, 2025

Senses working overtime #538

1 The feeling this week is...




...not the best as I suffered my second virus of the year, leading to the week off school. Unprecedented. I can't recall ever needing five days but I did this time. I kept testing negative for covid but this virus had all the same symptoms. Weird.


2 Spring's emergence at Maple Grove




The Maple Grove tuis love this plum tree's blossom. At one point this week we watched as three of them feasted.


3 Listening: Borboletta - Santana




4 Reading: Mojo Magazine #378




5 Reading: Kafka on the Shore - Haruki Murakami





Overtime: Asher Purdy-Hodge

'Creepy I like teeth because he likes time'.

Friday, August 22, 2025

Senses working overtime #537

1 Looong working week




The PPTA teachers' strike on Wednesday and two late night parent teacher evenings either side of the strike made this seem like a fortnight. By Friday night I was cream crackered!

Today (Saturday) - I have a solid 12 hour day ahead of me marking student work. Just saying'.


2 Reading: the hut builder - Laurence Fearnley





3 Listening: Riverside - Shine of New Generation Slaves





4 Reading: Look Wot I Dun: My Life in Slade - Don Powell/Lise Lyng Falkenberg




5 Listening: WTWMC - Spring in their steps




Overtime: Emma Meakin




This week has largely revolved around my Emma discoveries on Wozza's Place. More to come next week.


Overtime: R.I.P. Mastodon's Brent Hinds.




Tragically, he died in a motorbike crash this week. His legacy is secure with an amazing catalogue of music behind him. My Mastodon reviews on Goo Goo G'Joob are here.

Friday, August 15, 2025

Senses working overtime #536

1 Crisp mornings this week




2 Reading: Fay Wray's On the Other Hand




Fay's autobiography (no ghost-written help for her) is pretty amazing. I guess, like many actors, she drifts from role to role while the human drama of her life plays out.

Her role in King Kong was one of seven films she did in 1932 alone.


3 Listening: Nadia Reid - Out of My Province





4 Watched: The Dry




5 Listening: WTWMC - Spring in their steps




Overtime: Will Ahmed (entrepreneur)


"Success is being excited to go to work and being excited to come home."

Friday, August 8, 2025

Senses working overtime #535

1 Wintery rain this week at Maple Grove


Photo by Henry Lim on Unsplash


2 Watching: News reports on the NCEA changes and use of AI in marking




I wrote about it on Wozza's Place and tomorrow will have a similarly themed post on Baggy Trousers.


3 Reading: On the Other Hand - Fay Wray




Her autobiography is pretty fine. As the blurb says on the back - she turns out to be 'one of the most astute observers of the drama and hoopla of Tinseltown'. She also had a fascinating childhood.


4 Listening: WTWMC Spring in their steps




A playlist to prepare for spring. It's full of the joys. You can follow along in real time.


5 Listening: Red Hot Chili Peppers - Californication




Overtime: James Clear


"You are richer than 93 percent of people. Not in money, but in time.

Over 108 billion people have lived throughout history. 93 percent of them are dead.

You have what every king and queen, every pharaoh and ruler, every CEO and celebrity of the past would give all their wealth and power for:

Today."

Friday, August 1, 2025

Senses working overtime #534

1 A week of frosty mornings


Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash


2 Watched: A Man Called Otto on Netflix




I loved the novel (A Man Called Ove by Swedish writer Fredrik Backman), and Tom Hanks is an excellent Otto.


3 Listened to: my collection of Procol Harum albums.




Some absolute gems in this post. 


4 Reading: Fathers - Jon Winokur




A collection of reminiscences about famous, infamous, and fictional fathers from their children, with contributions by Candice Bergen, Angelica Huston, Thurgood Marshall, Calvin Coolidge, and other notables. Five dollars from Little Red Bookshop.


5 Listened to: Rammstein - Sehnsucht



The Rammstein albums are coming up soon on Goo Goo G'Joob.


Overtime: Arthur Schopenhauer

"The art of not reading is a very important one. It consists in not taking an interest in whatever may be engaging the attention of the general public at any particular time. When some political or ecclesiastical pamphlet, or novel, or poem is making a great commotion, you should remember that he who writes for fools always finds a large public. - A precondition for reading good books is not reading bad ones: for life is short."