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Harvester

I am sat at a table in a Harvester restaurant. Our meals have been delivered, and I can see a waiter heading toward us. I am worried.

Here is why…

Over the last couple of years, I’ve developed a particular trait when visiting restaurants. Actually, it’s two traits, and I appear to have little or no control over either of them.

The first is that every time I notice a waiter or waitress approaching, the moment they arrive at the table, I’ll make a little noise, as if I am slightly surprised, “Oo!”. That’s right, “Oo!”. I make a noise that makes me sound like Alan Carr after a particularly saucy comment.

Now clearly I’m not surprised at the waiter’s arrival, I’ve seen them coming from at least two or three metres away, and yet I am almost powerless to stop myself. I don’t know when this started, my wife noticed and pointed it out a couple of years ago on holiday, and now it’s become a constant battle between my concious and subconcious mind, which invariably ends with an “Oo!”, followed by my wife stifling a giggle.

The second trait is, I think, rooted in the politeness that was obviously drilled into me as a child. When asked how the food is, the standard response is surely a jovial “Fine thanks.” and that’s it, right? Well, this used to be the case for me too. But not any more. At some undefinable point in the past, I progressed from “fine”, to “fantastic”, via “brill”, with a “great” along the way. Now I’m not sure if you’ve been to a Harvester, or any standard chain pub, but I’m not sure the food can really and truly be described as “fantastic”. Not that it’s not nice, it’s fine, but the main problem is that I’ve set too high a standard. I mean, where do I go from fantastic?

If I were to dine at a slightly posher restaurant with nicer food, what would I say? I can’t say “It’s fantastic.”, that’s the same level as a Harvester, and I think they’d know, they’d see it my frightened eyes. I’ll never be able to go anywhere nicer than Harvester! This is it, I am doomed to chain pubs and maybe a Pizza Hut if I’m careful.

I’ve complimented myself into a culinary corner, and there seems to be no escape. However, a plan slowly begins to form in my mind. If I can revert back to a “great”, or even better, all the way back to “fine”, then I am safe to expand my potential providers of pub grub, and beyond.

All I have to do is hold my nerve when the waiter gets here, and simply utter a basic, but complimentary “It’s fine thanks.” and I am saved.

Here he is.

“Ooo!!.”

Shit. That’s not the start I wanted.

“Is everything ok with your food?”

Well, that’s it, the moment of truth. Hold your nerve, hold your nerve, hold your nerve, you can do this…

“It’s AMAZING thanks!”.

I bow my head, finish my meal, and leave, quietly.

Winkleman

This morning, as I left the house, my wife asked me what the weather looked like. Opening the front door, I replied, “It’s lovely, although it’s looking a bit Winkleman.”

“It’s a bit what?” came the baffled reply. I perservered, “You know, it’s a bit Winkleman.”.

Silence.

“You know, Winkleman….. Cloudier.” I offer.

Nothing.

“Like the tv presenter Claudia Winkleman? It’s a bit Winkleman…… Cloudier.” I explain, slightly more desperately this time.

If I didn’t know her better, the sad shake of her head with her eyes closed might be misinterpereted as a gesture of pity or resignation, rather than the warm appreciation of my wit that I know it to be..

“I think I’m going to use that every time it’s a bit cloudy from now on.” I said, excitedly. “Oh. Great.” came the oddly unenthusiastic response.

I sometimes think my comic genius is completely unappreciated.

Awkward Situations For Men

Have you noticed in recent years, just how difficult it is to be a man in these enlightened modern times?

I have. I sometimes feel like I spend my time literally lurching from one potentially embarrassing situation to the next, often without pause for breath in the middle.

Like the other night, when I inadvertently asked a friend

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Local Boy In The Photograph

I’ve just arrived home, my throat is ragged, and my eyes are red.

It’s been an emotional day. Some people have lost a friend, a mother has lost a son, and Wales has lost an icon.

Stuart Cable, former drummer with the band Stereophonics, passed away today, at the far too young age of 40. I’ve spent that

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Get Lost

After 6 seasons, one of the television events of my generation came to an end last week. The story of our castaways finished, leaving a number of people angry, confused, and also delighted in equal measure.

Here are a smattering of my thoughts on the finale. They’re not all encompassing, and there are some things which I

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Welcome

Welcome to the all new looking adverse-camber. How exciting!

Bear with me for a little while, I’m still in the process of adding loads of content and thinking of things to say, but hopefully over the coming days and weeks, this sort of rambling to fill space will be a thing of the past.

We’ll see about

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David has a Sunday to himself

Over the weekend, me and Clare made great strides towards getting the dining room sorted. We managed to get the new dining table and chairs constructed and vaguely positioned in the now fridge-less dining room. It mostly thanks to Clare to be honest, she’s the motivator out of the two of us. If things were left

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The benefit of observation

I’d like to think that I’m quite an observant soul. I tend to notice things. A lot of the time, I notice things other people don’t. Sometimes I make things more complicated than they need to be, and so miss the obvious things… An example? Ok then:

The other day, when I came into work, one of

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Subliminal messages

I’ve been thinking about subliminal messages lately, from an idea to start slipping the odd suggestive phrase into documents at work.So, can you actually make people do things without them realising? If all it takes buy Dave new stuff to coerce people into actions without their buy Dave new stuff knowledge, then surely everyone would be

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All the fun of the fair

On Saturday night, there was a funfair in Donnington, near where I work. Now I think funfairs are a bit of an oddity. They seem to attract such a wide scope of people, from the blue rinse brigade, to the young families, right the way to the aggressive looking youths, having a crafty can of Strongbow

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