Bloody council offices. I ask for a simple form to be sent to me, it takes two weeks, three phone calls and it still isn't here. I wouldn't mind but it's something they should have sent me automatically when I left work!
And what is it with employers these days? I'm looking at job options and they want everyone to work to tight deadlines, under unbearable pressure, have masters degrees and at least a hundred and two years' experience, be working towards other qualifications, be willing to work unsociable hours, all for a salary of £18,000 and a week's leave! For God's sake.
I've just spent a week and a half living in a field in Derbyshire. It was great.
Setting up for the Gathering, the UK's largest live roleplaying event of the year, was really good fun. The crew we worked with this year were fantastic and we had such a laugh.
It took over a week to set up the site and four full days to create the set piece - a magical library, courtyard, attached guild rooms and sound/lighting control room. The players arrived on Friday, left on Monday and suddenly the field was empty and it was all over. It always seems like such an anti climax when everyone has gone home and the field is empty again.
I love being in the field. Waking up and hearing only the birds (and a distant hum from the generator!), seeing the view of the parkland and fields and the manor house through the trees.
We take a caravan with us and put lots of cotton rugs down in the awning so it's comfortable and dry in damp weather.
I often feel I could live like that but then I come home and realise what comforts I've missed. Like a shower that hundreds of other people haven't used that doesn't have a curtain that sticks to your legs. A flushing toilet that empties itself. That reminds me of something my dad once said after spending four weeks in Corfu - 'It's a lovely place to be but the bloody sanitation gets me down.'
The thing I miss the most are the people. I get used to being with a group of friends, working together all day and having a few beers in the evening and then when I'm back home it seems too quiet. Mind you I'd probably long for a bit of solitude after a while if I couldn't get away from people.
Think I'll go and sit in the garden and watch the horses, even though it's drizzling.
I'll look for a job tomorrow.