It’s
got hot. Very hot. So hot that the internal combustion engine that
keeps me warm in the coldest temperatures in winter is currently
squinting at the thermometer and relishing the fact that it has finally
found some serious competition. It has bought itself some training
shoes and recruited a personal trainer and is really getting into shape,
I think it’s building itself up for the heating Olympics. This will
likely sound familiar to many of you who also feeling the heat a bit,
but I say it to try to explain why I am currently struggling to put one
word after another in a way that is anything other than arrant gibberish
(it may also go someway to explaining why I find the word arrant quite
so bewitching. It clearly means nothing at all, but has the potential
to go with pretty much everything to brighten things up, much like salad
cream really.
“Such an arrant picture”
“Arrant blogging, good sir”
“Andy played that shot most arrantly”
“Isn’t this heat arrant?”
“He’s really showing off his arrantness (arrantitude?) today”
And we could go arrantly on, but it’s probably best not to.) Bet you’d forgotten that was in brackets hadn’t you? How arrant.
Playing
with words is all very well, but it isn’t really getting us any closer
to a funny anecdote about my ineptitude as a father, which is, I
presume, why you’ve all come, so let me offer you this.
Picture the scene. Need me to flesh it out a bit more? OK.
Dramatis Personae:
Me
N
B
Actually,
two of those people are not true. You see yesterday I was out at work
and my wife had a conference to go to which meant that we had to turn to
grandparental help for the day. Nana and grandpa (they realised with N
it would probably require a tandem effort, that’s the wisdom of the
ages right there) duly turned up early on Monday so we could go and we
left them.
The
silence from them all day was deafening, neither B nor I heard a peep.
I chose to make the assumption that that meant everything was going
fine. No news, good news right? Well, almost. It seems N had rather
taken advantage of the supply teachers to lead them on a bit of a goose
chase. You see we have a park which is not that far from where we live,
but it is a reasonable walk. You wouldn’t undertake it without some
preparation, like crampons for the tricky climb at the end, (which is
probably only a Category 4, but we’re not all Chris Froome are we?), or
at least some concept of exactly where you were going. Except nana and
grandpa didn’t know this, so off they went, with N claiming every few
steps that they were almost there.
They
weren’t. At least not for a while. Eventually, after a route march
led by my incorrigible (not quite arrant but almost) daughter the park
was arrived at and a lot of fun was had by all, but mostly the daughter
who was the only one with energy left I’m led to believe.
So thanks mum and dad, we’re sorry about the blisters on your feet and hope that you haven’t been put off for life.
And
after all that, I still never got around to giving you a witty anecdote
about my own incompetence. Well how completely errant. Must be the
heat.
And did they all walk back or did N have to carry someone?
ReplyDeleteI have it on good authority that N only had to push Grandpa in the pushchair for a little way, then he was able to roll down the hill.
Delete