Wednesday, September 24, 2025

The Window Shatters


I'm  not talking about a literal window. I'm talking about the "window" of time set aside for the boiler repair guy to show up yesterday. It was supposed to be a simple day: boiler repair in the morning, a quick trip to the post office to mail Dave's passport documents, get to work around lunchtime.

Instead, I waited all morning from 8 a.m. to noon, when the repair window expired. No boiler guy. I called British Gas and was assured that although he was on a "longer than usual" call he would arrive by 1 p.m. I called again at 2 p.m. and was assured that he really was on the way this time. He finally showed up at 3:45, grousing about how terrible his day had been. No doubt he and my boss, who was all alone in the library, could have shared their perspectives about that.

On the plus side, I was able to get a lot of reading done. But sitting around waiting for a repairman isn't relaxing or enjoyable. You're constantly aware of your phone, aware of the door, and you can't go anywhere -- not to the store or, ahem, the post office. I was even afraid to go out in the garden for fear of missing his knock. It's like house arrest. (Or like I imagine house arrest to be!)

He did finally get the boiler repaired, but then the comedy of errors took an unexpected turn when we discovered we had no water! The taps were bone-dry. This is a problem because we were unable to test the newly repaired boiler. I went out in the street and found Thames Water on the next block, repairing a broken water main. The water would be out for about three hours, they said.

So the repair guy left and Dave and I hoped for the best when we turned on the boiler later. We're getting hot water, thank God, but there was a lot of scary banging in the system because of air in the pipes, and now the valve that lets us top up the water levels in the boiler doesn't seem to be working. ARGH!

And of course I have to go through all this again tomorrow, when the drains guy is coming.


Have you heard about Nigel Farage's latest crazy plan, to do away with Indefinite Leave to Remain? IRL is an immigration classification for people who want to remain in Britain to work or for some other purpose. Dave and I, for example, were required to apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain when our initial work visas could no longer be renewed -- as I recall, four or five years into our residence in the UK. It's actually quite a demanding step, in which we had to pass an exam on British history, culture and politics -- but afterwards we were permitted to stay as long as we wanted, before we ultimately applied for and received citizenship.

Now Farage wants to put people on visas indefinitely, rather than granting IRL. This would be a tremendous hardship for our school and many of the teachers there. I know people who have IRL but not citizenship -- in some cases people who have lived in the UK for decades -- and asking them to submit regular visa renewals forever seems absurd. Failing to submit or receive a renewal would lead to deportation.

According to The Guardian, these renewals would come "with stringent salary and English language requirements and tougher rules around bringing dependents...(Farage) left open the possibility that families in the UK could be broken up and that Ukrainians and Hongkongers who moved here using special resettlement routes could have their rights to remain revoked."

Ah, dystopia. Coming to theaters everywhere, including one near you!

(Photos: Islington on Sunday, and the Hebe in front of our flat in full bloom. This is one of the plants that Mrs. Russia had trimmed to within an inch of its life, and wanted to remove entirely. Fortunately we prevented that!)

52 comments:

  1. How many of us born and brought up here could answer questions on British history, culture and politics?
    Plus whose versions of these would the "correct" answers reflect???

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    1. Nowadays that latter question is so true. Is there an objective reality anymore?

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  2. If Farage's ever becomes Prime Minster we would be following Trumps route down a very dangerous path. Too many people hear his headlines without thinking about the consequences.

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    1. Farage would indeed be very Trumpian, I suspect. He says all the right things for some people.

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  3. Farage sounds like Garage - a place where you store all your useless shit. "Reform UK" - the latest horror movie - coming our way - like Godzilla on steroids.

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    1. I really hope Reform doesn't win but they sure seem to be riding high.

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  4. Is Fargae taking lessons and ideas from a certain fat orange person??

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  5. House arrest is the term I have been looking for to explain how it feels waiting for a repair/service crew or a delivery. You hit it on the head.

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  6. Yes. I am under house arrest often. I don't like it.
    I fear this dystopia will hit Australia. I think the process has already begun.

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    1. I'm sure it will in some form or other. You have Pauline Hanson, who is your version of an extremist.

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  7. Fascinating photo at top.
    Farage makes me crazy. He and The Orange Menace should be locked away together.

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    1. They are definitely reading from the same delusional playbook. Farage is even a bit of a buffoon himself, though more articulate than Trump.

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  8. Gosh, that boiler issue is certainly frustrating! I have been reading about Farage. He sounds like a British version of #45/47.

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    1. Yeah, that's exactly what he is. He was considered fringe not too many years ago, and now he's practically mainstream.

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  9. The world is going to hell in a handcart - or more likely, an express train.
    Your hebe repaid its harsh treatment with kindness and beauty.

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    1. I love this. What a beautiful metaphor, jabblog.

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    2. Some plants bounce back well from a good pruning. Even the landscapers were afraid to trim it as hard as Mrs. Russia wanted, for fear of killing it -- but it survived, thank goodness.

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  10. It's a mess inside the house and a looming mess outside the house as well, it seems.

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  11. It really feels like they could give you a half-hour warning - I'm on my way! so you could at least relax while waiting. Or would that really work? Probably not.

    I'm sorry that the world seems hell-bent on becoming little isolationist islands. Ugh.

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    1. That's what I don't understand. Why can't they call and say, "I'll be there around 2 p.m."? And then I could go to work until then and be home by the appointed time. Maybe too many people miss the appointment...?

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  12. As I said earlier, the U.S. seems to be leading on these topics that are growing around the world, including immigration issues. Hopefully, out of all of this we can come up with meaningful reform that both sides can agree too and move onto other issues.

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    1. People in both the USA and Europe have been complaining about immigration for decades, if not centuries. It's easy to blame "outsiders" for all our problems rather than taking responsibility ourselves.

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  13. Fix one thing and something else goes off. Par for the course!
    Lately, some repair guys say they will phone me when they are on their way to my house and this is helpful because I can at the very least work in the garden or walk the dog in the neighborhood.
    Your boss must have experienced the same kinds of home repair issues. Nobody is excluded.

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    1. I specifically asked British Gas if they could call me when they were on the way, so I could go to work and then scoot home to be here on time. They said they could make that request but there was no guarantee the engineer would do it -- in which case I would miss the appointment if I wasn't already home. They basically force you to wait for them.

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  14. Oh dear. Dystopia is slowly but surely losing its -topia state, it seems.
    The boiler repairman story is so typical! I hope the valve can be adjusted soon, without you being under house arrest for another day.

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    1. Weirdly, the valve seems to have adjusted itself. It was working yesterday morning. I don't understand why, but whatever!

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  15. When my kids were in school, the libraries always had parent volunteers that would come in to help shelve books or check in / out when classes came in. That's how I got my start working in libraries. I wonder if your school could do that.

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    1. We had parent re-shelvers for a while, but re-shelving is only a tiny part of my job (although I talk about it a lot). I suspect the school will move more toward volunteer support when I retire.

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  16. I think I need some Hebe. Good grief, it's getting as bad there as here. I hope the people pull a "Kimmel Revolt" and let their feelings on IRL be known. Sorry about the boiler -- I feel your pain.

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    1. I am heartened that Farage's idea about IRL has not been received well. It would create a huge headache for the Home Office, as well as tens of thousands of people.

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  17. The Hebe is so pretty. Why on earth would she want to get rid of it.

    Trumpism is spreading unfortunately. I guess Farage doesn't want the UK to go to hell. How absurd. Seriously, what's the point of making life harder for non-citizen residents.

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    1. Make life harder and they'll leave -- that's his gamble. He then imagines that employers will magically hire British people who are not now working. Who knows WHY they're not working or if they're even able.

      I cannot begin to explain Mrs. Russia's hostility toward our landscaping.

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  18. That was not a fun couple of days. Problems seem to come all at once.

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  19. I am trying to figure out how the architecture in that first picture works. I am assuming that each of those doors is access to a different apartment. Do the apartments go back and up into the building behind? A rather grim front, I'd say.
    Anyway, it's a great photo.
    Can you imagine being one of those repair/service people? They must get so much flack. So much frustration is likely dumped on them. And for good reason! What a stupid system.
    I look back so longingly on the days when the fact that four young lads from Liverpool had grown their hair long (not even that long) was the sure sign that the world was going to hell.

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    1. I think the doors on the outer edges open into a hallway that leads to the rear part of the buildings, which are flats. The inner doors open onto the front parts, which could be shops or offices.

      Yeah, this repair window system must be a nightmare for the workers who get so much pushback. Or maybe people take it in stride and I'm the only one who gets frustrated!

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  20. Well never fear, DJT is on the way to save the day. Well at least that's what his UN speech suggests. You know, only he can fix the world.
    Sorry about your day of waiting and then the rest of the problems that followed. It really does seem like nothing is simple any longer. Every little thing seems to stretch into a major issue. I miss the days when dad would fix things with a little wire, duct tape, glue and WD-40 and it was as good as new.

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    1. That UN speech was really something else. I think Trump is losing his mind. I can't imagine why the leader of a global power would say the things he said.

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  21. Our boiler service it long overdue. Not heard a thing.

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    1. We had our annual inspection a month or so ago and it found nothing wrong. Then, BOOM -- a leak!

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  22. Repair work sometimes causes more issues than it solves. Ugh.I do so hate it when things don't work. It sounds like Trumpism is rearing its very ugly head.

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    1. Populism of the Trump variety is everywhere. It's basically a reaction to the concentration of global wealth among a very few people, I think. Migrants are just the scapegoats.

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  23. Farage is truly a piece of work. He is the Trump of England. Clearly he has given no serious thought to what he is proposing, pretty much like his stance on Brexit......

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    1. Yeah, exactly! He just says what he thinks his people want to hear. He has not given any serious thought to (or has no understanding of) what it would do to the country over time.

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  24. I'm glad you were able to prevent that plant's removal. It's lovely.

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    1. I think so too! I'm very glad we kept it. And the bees LOVE the flowers. They're all over it.

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    2. Maybe Mrs Russia was afraid of the bees.

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  25. Imagine Farage and the orange shitpile in government at the same time. Ugh.

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    1. Well, unless people push back against Trumpism in the next presidential election, we'll probably have Vance or someone equally odious in the USA and yes, possibly Farage here. So it could happen!

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