Sunday, 15 March 2026

Mothering Sunday reflections.

 It’s Mother’s Day. Or is it Mothers’ Day. I’m never sure where the apostrophe should go. All the mass of advertising that has been bombarding us for the last few weeks usually refers to Mother’s Day, or even to Mothers Day, omitting the apostrophe altogether. It probably should be the first option: Mother’s Day. After all, we have just one mother, except that nowadays there are families with two mothers or no mothers at all but two fathers. And then there are the separated parents who have then remarried, meaning that the children have a mother and a stepmother. It’s a lot easier in Spanish where it is El Día de la Madre - just one symbolic mother.


Whatever the punctuation, there has been a lot of advertising for this Day, giving advice on what presents to buy, even what to give your children on Mother’s Day. There was even an article in the Guardian telling us what are the best Mother’s Day gifts for … wait for it … mums, grannies, aunties and friends. Some of their suggestions are quite pricey! 


It’s a far cry from when I was a child and we went (or were sent) 4along to Sunday School, learning our bible stories and singing songs like “Jesus wants me for a sunbeam”, “Daisies are our silver, buttercups are our gold”, “Jesus bids us shine with a clear, pure light” and, as we dropped out threepenny bits into the collection bag, “Hear the pennies dropping, listen where they fall, every one for Jesus, he shall have them all.” 


Once a year, on the fourth Sunday in Lent,  we children were given a card to take home to give to Mummy, because it was Mothering Sunday, not Mother’s Day, and they didn’t sell Mother’s Day cards in the shops. It was a less commercial-dominated time. Our mother usually received two such cards. We were four siblings but by the time the two youngest were old enough for Sunday School my older sister and I were deemed too old for that and had to attend grown-up church. 


Anyway, there it was: Mothering Sunday. 


According to one source, “in the 16th century, Mothering Sunday was less about mothers and more about church. Back then, people would make a journey to their ‘mother’ church once a year. This might have been their home church, their nearest cathedral or a major parish church in a bigger town. The service which took place at the ‘mother’ church symbolised the coming together of families. This would have represented a significant journey for many.”


The ‘mother’ church, another source tells me, is the church where you were baptised. On Mothering Sunday you were supposed to go back there for the Sunday service on that one day of the year, even if you had moved away and regularly worshipped elsewhere. Does this have anything to do with Mary and Joseph having to go to Bethlehem ‘to be counted’, as the story goes? I wonder.


I wonder how many people have been or will go to church today. Maybe more than would usually attend. For most of us nowadays going to church is for special occasions - baptisms, weddings, funerals - if we go to church at all?


Another theory about Mothering Sunday, the one I was always told about, is that young women ‘in service’, ie working as domestic staff in wealthy household, would be given this day ‘off’ to go and visit their mother, clean her house, prepare a meal for her. Some ‘day off’!


Our smallest grandson, 6 years old) put rather lot of effort into making a special surprise present for Mummy. I collected him from school on Thursday. On the way home he planned his work, asking me did I have see-through plastic pot he could use. We rummaged through the plastics recycling bag to find something suitable. He then decorated it with coloured card. Did I also have some ‘googly eyes’ he could stick on his creation? We found some in my craft box. We would need some ‘dirt’, he told me. Did he mean ‘soil’? “Yes, but I call it dirt. You should have some in the garden.” This is what he produced. 



Ideally he wanted to plant cress seeds, to make hair for his creature. Through the creature’s open mouth he hoped to be able to see the roots! However, I didn’t have cress seeds and, besides, they probably wouldn’t grow sufficiently between Thursday and today. So we compromised and he agreed I could buy a plant of some kind to insert into the work of art and his “surprise” could remain here until Mother’s Day. Here is the result.



Now I wait for Mummy to bring him round so he can present her with her surprise.


Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!

Saturday, 14 March 2026

Sunny day. Sending warships? Tax dodgers! Tourists visiting the favelas of Rio.

The wind has dropped, the sky is blue and almost cloudless, and the sun is shining. All in all a fine spring day.


Mr Trump would like to UK to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz, the strait between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, the strait which provides the only sea passage from the Persian Gulf to the open ocean and is one of the world's most strategically important choke points. Mr Trump would like the UK to help keep the strait open. We shall see where that goes!


Meanwhile, some wealthy British nationals are trying to get out of the Gulf states. According to one report some of them are trying to bypass the UK, where they might find themselves liable to pay UK taxes, by going to Ireland or France, hoping to stay there until the conflict is over. With only about three weeks remaining in the current financial year, many overseas residents have already “spent” their allocation of days in Britain without incurring tax liabilities. Some are seeking guidance from HMRC on whether they would be granted 60 extra days under an “exceptional circumstances” provision. “Exceptional circumstances’ during the Covid lockdown allowed some people to remain in the UK longer than their  allocated time without paying tax because they were not able to travel. Oh! It must be hard having all that money and being expected to contribute to your country of birth, or at least the country whose passport you hold. 


One wealthy man, hiding away in Dublin, commented: ““I’m happy to pay income tax and tax on investments next tax year, but I don’t want the sale of a business that I sold years ago to fall within UK capital gains tax.” He added, “I paid for my own travel home, by the way.”


How nice of him to pay his own travel! 


It’s understandable that people want to escape from conflict zones. They should consider themselves lucky that they didn’t have to pay huge amounts to escape in a flimsy dinghy! Clearly a different class of refugees! 


I read that the thing to do if you go on holiday in Brazil is to visit the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.  Apparently tens of thousands of tourists have flocked to a specific  terrace, known locally as the ‘’Porta do Céu (Gateway to Heaven), since last year, when favela entrepreneurs began making viral drone videos showing visitors swaggering or dancing through a metal door and across the roof to a euphoric Brazilian soundtrack, before the camera zooms out, revealing the favela’s place in the heart of Rio’s awe-inspiring landscape.




I was reminded of the film City of God (2002).

Description: This iconic film captures the brutal reality of life in the Cidade de Deus favela in Rio de Janeiro, following the lives of two boys who take different paths amidst the rise of gang violence.

Fact: The film was shot on location in Rio's real favelas, and many of the actors were non-professionals from those communities


I suppose it’s a bit like visiting the old quarter of some Spanish cities, except that most of those are not still occupied by the poor. 


Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone.

Friday, 13 March 2026

More windy weather. Seeking compensation for travel problems. And a linguistic conundrum.

Today looked like a perfectly good day to hang washing out to dry in the garden - very windy, although cold, but dry. Surely the wind would compensate for the cold. I was too optimistic. At one point I had to rescue a sheet which the wind was trying to steal. And then it started to drizzle, despite my weather app assuring me that would not happen until about 6.00pm. So it goes! The spare room is now draped with damp washing! 


Some years ago we were supposed to fly home from Milan Bergamo with Ryanair. The fog came down. Our flight was cancelled. Apparently the pilot of the incoming plane was not qualified to land in foggy conditions and so it had been diverted elsewhere. We were given a list of local hotels and left to our own devices. Fortunately we speak Italian and so were able to organise ourselves. The next morning we returned to the airport to make enquiries and were told that we should turn up for the flight that evening in the hope that we could get on that one. We were top of the waiting list, they assured us! There are almost always some last minute possibilities, they assured us!  


I had fun phoning the college where I worked to tell them I would be absent that day as I was stuck in Italy. Oops! And so we had the day to explore Bergamo, a bit of serendipity as Bergamo is well worth a visit. And we did manage to get on that evening’s flight. Some people were less fortunate and did not get home until later in the week, sometimes flying to a different UK airport from the one where their car was parked! So it goes. 


Today I read this piece of news: 


“Bailiffs have boarded a Ryanair aircraft after the airline refused to pay compensation to a passenger whose flight was delayed.

Austrian officials took action after the budget carrier ignored a court order to pay the unnamed woman €890 (£742) in legal costs and compensation for a delayed flight two years ago.


A bailiff entered the plane, which was bound for London, as it sat on the stand at Linz airport on Monday and fixed a seizure sticker to the cabin when crew were unable to settle the debt.

The label, known as a “cuckoo sticker”, gives the court legal control over the aircraft, which was allowed to continue to operate under set conditions. The court can sell the Boeing 737 at public auction if the debt is not paid by a deadline.”


Oops! It would be rather interesting to witness the public auction and see who ends up with a Boeing 737.


Our daughter is a year six primary school teacher. Her class is facing SATs this year. Here is a sample question about use of language (?), level of language used (?). As a linguist, I fail to recognise either option as truly impersonal but if pressed I would select the second. But no! I would fail SATs! The correct answer apparently is “Jack reckoned”. Hmm! And does all this improve the written English of 10-11 year olds? Maybe the question setters don’t understand either! 



Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!

Thursday, 12 March 2026

Cold winds a-blowing. How to deal with asylum seekers. The vagaries of language.

Gusty winds and thundery showers are apparently the order of the day. There were certainly gusty winds, and an extremely cold ones at that, when I went out firt thing this morning. 


Thinking of cold, we all criticise ICE in the USA for its treatment of supposedly illegal immigrants. How about the treatment of asylum seekers in the UK? The latest thing is that families whose asylum claim has been denied are being offered up to £40,000 to voluntarily “go back to where they came from”., £10,00 per family member. They have a week to decide whether or not to accept the offer. In the event that they turn it down, theybwill be forcibly repatriated: ‘If you do not go back, we will definitely deport you and your family, and if you or your child tries to get away, our officers will handcuff you, your child and your wife and put you all on a plane using physical force’. 


Okay, they’re not being swept up,off he street and put in a detention centre far away from family and friends, but it’s still a very threatening message being put out by the home office.


Image the situation: you’ve gone through whatever trauma caused you to flee your homeland in the first place. You’ve spent years applying for asylum here. In the meantime you’ve settled into a community, you”=e made friends,your children have gone to school, they may be about to take GCSE exams. And suddenly you have a week to decide what to do, a week to reconcile yourself to another change, a week to reorganise your life.


On a world-wide scale we need to find a better solution to the movement of people problem. 


On a less serious matter, someone asked on social media, “Why is it called lukewarm, like why isn’t it medium warm? Who is Luke?l”


Merriam-Webster dictionary responds:


“Luke” is an archaic word meaning ‘tepid, warm but not hot”.


Which means that ‘lukewarm’ is technically redundant …


“warmwarm:


Language is odd at times. For example, I read that ‘avon’ basically means ‘river’ in old Celtic. So the River Avon, of which there are apparently several in England including the one that flows through Stratford upon Avon, is really called River River. 


So it goes.


Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Marching and banning marches. Attendance at Parliament and appearance on Question Time. And a poem.

 It seems that there has been an annual march in London for the last 40 years or more, a march in sport of Palestine, often on the last Friday in Ramadan but this year scheduled for Sunday. It’s called Al-Quds Day and was created by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution. Al-Quds is the Arabic name for Jerusalem. The march is billed as an international day in support of Palestine. It’s not just London.


It is organised by the UK Al-Quds Committee, which involves several organisations and in which the Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC) plays a central role. Organisers say the annual march has taken place peacefully for 40 years to highlight the continuing plight of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank.


And home secretary Shabana Mahmood has banned it this year because on precious occasions participants expressed support of Hezbollah and waved Iranian flags. The Metropolitan Police said the decision was based on the high risk of serious public disorder, citing the expected numbers of protesters and counterprotesters and heightened tensions linked to the Iran war.


There you go!


It’s perhaps a good job we don’t have Holy Week processions in this country. There would probably be a move to ban them too. 


Some things I saw on social media:


“MPs’ salaries should be dependent on attendance at the House of Commons.

Consistent absence should lead to the offender losing his seat and being banned from standing for election again.”


Who is that about? i wonder.

And 


“it is interesting that Jeremy Corbyn has been an MP for 42 years and led the opposition for 5 years.


He’a been on Question Time once.


Nigel Farage, 44 times.


Our media is corrupt.”


And here’s a poem:


Sun-dried womanhood


The village women

in the north refuse

to speak

of their deaths

or return

to their sun-dried

womanhood,

but sing to a sea

that no longer 

holds their remains,

and no longer 

remembers  

their names.

They arrange the clouds

and adorn the graves 

of their loved ones.

The village women

everyone talks about have forgotten

their deaths and gone 

to dwell in their silence.


Mohammed Moussa.


Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Conflicting weather forecasts. Library irony. A bit of a tirade against AI.

An old gent I speak to from time to time in the village told me today that snow is forecast for the weekend. My weather app says no such thing. We shall see. Today is supposed to give us “drizzle and a gentle breeze”, neither of which I experienced when I ran round the village earlier. It was quite bright but the wind was bitter, not at all gentle: “A lazy wind that goes through you not round you,” my old gent said. 


As I have already related, I tried to return my library book on Saturday, unsuccessfully. By a supreme irony, yesterday I had an email telling me that my library books are overdue. I expect that this was an automatically generated message. I doubt that AI can be expected to know that I did attempt to return the books … at least up to now. It’s a good job they no longer fine us for returning book late to the library. If they did then in the current age of increasing development and use of AI they might automatically extract the fine from your bank account! Beware of an AI take-over!


A group of writers, including Kazuo Ishiguro, Mick Herron and thousands of others, have published a book called Do Not Steal This Book, in protest against AI firms using their work without their permission. The book has no content other than a list of their names. Academics are concerned that students are too dependent on AI and that critical thinking is disappearing. “Lea Pao, a professor of literature at Stanford University, has been experimenting with ways to get her students to learn offline. She has them memorize poems, perform at recitation events, look at art in the real world.


It’s an effort to reconnect them to the bodily experience of learning, she said, and to keep them from turning to artificial intelligence to do the work for them. “There’s no AI-proof anything,” Pao said. “Rather than policing it, I hope that their overall experiences in this class will show them that there’s a way out.”

It doesn’t always work. Recently, she asked students to visit a local museum, look at a painting for 10 minutes, and write a few paragraphs describing the experience. It was a purposefully personal assignment, yet one student responded with a sophisticated but drab reflection – “too perfect, without saying anything”, Pao said. She later learned the student had tried to visit the museum on a Monday, when it was closed, and then turned to AI.


As artificial intelligence has upended the way in which students read, learn and write, professors like Pao have been left to their own devices to figure out how to teach in a transformed landscape.”


Even the Pope has reportedly has taken steps to ensure that Roman Catholic priests don’t deliver sermons written by AI. 

“Artificial intelligence, the new pontiff said in a recent meeting with clergy, “will never be able to share faith”, which is what giving a homily is all about. Resist the temptation and write your own words, he urged.”


Just another aspect of our strange modern world.


In a throwback to a time when people didn’t get their news via electronic media, indeed to an age when many people could not even read, here is an article about a “cantastorie”, a news-singer, Franco Trincale, the last “cantastorie” alive in Italy.


“Famous for combining true crime and political scandals into songs – and antagonising Silvio Berlusconi – Franco Trincale keeps the tradition alive in his nursing home.” He moved into the nursing home to support his wife who suffers from dementia and sings to her there but also gives concerts outside the home. 


Meanwhile, out in the wider world, the madness continues. Trump is trying to convince us that the bombing of the girls’ primary school in Tehran was in fact the work of the Iranians!?! Hesgeth promises that today will be the ‘most intense day of strikes’ in war against Iran. There is evidence of a longterm strategy of starvation in Sudan. And Israeli settlers continue to grab land in the West Bank. So it goes.


Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!