Monthly Archives: February 2009

We all should really love our skin because it keeps us in

AS I AM SURE you have worked out for yourself, I am not a vain man. You really cannot get anyone less stuck-up than me. There is a theory that it is in our nature to show off and that the only people who are not full of themselves to a certain extent are those who have nothing to be proud of. Being my size, I think it is because I have rather too much of everything.

Unlike some people of my ken, I don’t check my look each time I pass a mirror; I don’t buy the latest fashions, and I don’t shave my legs. Waxing them for charity doesn’t count and it was only the unsteady hand of an excited fundraiser that meant the sticky tape ripped off part of my bikini line. I didn’t know what that was until I had it plucked.

The fact is that, nowadays, men are more concerned about how they look, if what I read is correct. A lot of men who even I know admit they moisturise. Pah. Whatever next?

But maybe I should just explain that just because I hardly ever go out without being liberally smeared with Avon Skin So Soft I wouldn’t want you to think I had turned over a new leaf. No, I use it only to keep away the midges.

It is the only thing that works. I have tried the well-known alternatives of taking large quantities of whisky, Marmite or garlic, but I just got wobbly, sick or smelly in that order.

One year, I took the advice of a helpful friend from Ness who declared that if I had a drumstick of guga before going to the peats, the oily nourishment would be circulating in my system by the time the first slab was thrown and the tiny airborne bloodsuckers would flee over the hills.

They didn’t and I just got wobbly, sick and smelly all at the same time.

So I am sticking with the Avon Calling lady’s ointment. In fact, I am wearing it right now. I am just being careful.

Who says you don’t get swarms in February of culicoides impunctatus, to give them their right name? You can’t be too sure. But isn’t that aroma simply gorge?

And it just so happens that my repellent of choice does wonders also for the firmness of my epidermis and keeps it in the pink. After all, it is a big organ, in my case bigger than most, and I have to keep it in tip-top condition for whatever it comes up against.

A while back, I think I told you, I took to drinking. Not the beverages served up in the licensed hostelries of the burgh of Stornoway, you understand, but just water. Every women’s magazine I pick up in waiting-rooms and on the bedside table opposite mine claims that drinking eight glasses of HO, as well as scoffing five half-plates of fruit and veg, is the key to vitality, happiness and a youthful, pink glow.

So when the people who distribute the water that Geri Halliwell drinks asked me to try it out for them and write up my conclusions, I took up the challenge.http://www.willowwater.com/templates/willow/images/buy_online_today.jpg

They sent me cases of Willow Water from a hole in the ground in Cumbria and I began glugging. Do you know, I think there may be something in it.

I started properly on New Year’s Day, a time when people have been known to have a noggin or seven. From midnight to midnight, I drank only Willow Water and, just to make it interesting, I had nothing to eat, either.

Now, after six or seven weeks, did it work? Well, I don’t quite look like a Spice Girl, although I am scary, but, er, my skin is softer.

I can’t believe I just said that. What is happening to me? I am speaking like they do in the TV ads.

But wait till I tell you about my plukes. You should see them. They’ve gone. Ooh, they were bad. If I was going to anything posh, like a wedding or a divorce party, I used to have to squeeze them a few days beforehand. Now, there is nothing left to squeeze. Not on my face or chest, anyway.

Despite my own lack of vanity, I have been forced to put a more up-to-date photo up there beside my name. This follows ridiculous and distressing allegations which were levelled against me by certain readers of my own parish.

I was, they decided, deliberately getting the Press and Journal to publish an old photo of me each week.

One woman reasoned that it was because I was very vain and desperate to pass myself off as younger than I am.

Her proof was that in the image she so obviously scrutinised closely in recent copies of this paper, I was sporting a rather dashing wee goatee beard. My wee tickler, as my wife called it.

The dear reader pointed out that when she had seen me in the fruit and veg aisle in Tesco recently, that particular fungus around my mouth was not in evidence.

So I was at it, apparently, to put her concerns in the lingo of Seaforth Road.

While it is, indeed, true that the goatee became unattached during an episode of reckless early-morning speed shaving, while an impatient member of my family was rapping the door and threatening to wet the landing, it was, indeed, the case that I just never got round to snapping my naked chin for the P&J.

It is, of course, utter nonsense to suggest that I would do anything to deceive the magnificent readership.

So, to mark this column’s move to Mondays, I now offer a current representation of my jowls.

Oh dear. You can see that the lady was right. There is no doubt I do look older, fatter and more confused than ever before.

Happy now, Mary?

A fine bunch of bankers. Not.

Question: Who is the odd one out from the following list?

Lord Stevenson, former chairman, HBOS
Andy Hornby, former chief executive, HBOS
Sir Fred Goodwin, former chief executive, RBS
Sir Tom McKillop, former chairman, RBS
John McFall MP, chairman of Treasury select committee
Alister Darling, Chancellor of the Exchequer
Sir Terry Wogan, presenter of Radio 2 breakfast show

Answer: Sir Terry Wogan. He is the only one with a banking qualification.

Acknowledgement:  Private Eye

Unaccustomed as I am to being romantic, I did once get it right

AT A CEILIDH in the romantic wilderness that is Garrabost on Friday evening, I fell into the company of a charming housewife from another part of the peninsula. Bursting with excitement, she told me how she was looking forward to Valentine’s Day. Her beloved spouse had been told not to get her anything, but she knew what would arrive in the morning. A deep freeze.

She assured me it was just what she needed. Therefore, it was exactly what she wanted. Anything else, she told me, would be a pointless, empty gesture.

Her husband, I am sure, is romantic when he needs to be and is also caring and loving, but in a practical way.

Having been lovey-dovey myself about twice in living memory, I began to think back to how a spurt of romanticism changed my life many years ago.

Maybe I was worried that a scoundrel of the parish, one George Gawk, would make a move before I did. I had seen that glint in his eye; a glint seen only if there is the prospect of strong drink or a woman of a certain age. Actually, make that a woman of any age.

Herself had mentioned she was in need of smalls and had wondered when she would next get to rummage in Bhs, her favourite drawers dispensary. I devised a wicked four-part plan to whisk her off to Glasgow to trawl knicker counters but also, secretly, to beguile her with my famous generosity and lure her into the holy state of matrimony.

Part One meant inventing a tale of a cancelled business trip which left me with two return flights to Glasgow going spare. Be a shame to waste them.

Part Two was the shopping. I left herself to browse in Sauchiehall Street with a thick wedge. Meanwhile, I went shopping in Argyle Street.

When I say shopping, I mean I made purchases in a shop at the Kelvingrove end. You may know it. A most welcoming wee shop called the Park Bar. They sell a range of courage-boosting potions which were to prove very useful that day.

Emboldened after shopping like a fish for an hour, I headed for the Grosvenor Hotel, which I had selected as our weekend quarters.

When she arrived at the rendezvous, weighed down with bags from What Every Woman Wants and Pants R Us, she was impressed with the lodgings. Yes, I’m in there, I surmised.

Part Three involved taking her for a slap-up supper to Antipasti, a fine ristorante on Byres Road. How she adored the garlic bread, the so-smooth red Italian vino, the baked stuffed pasta shells with ricotta and something else that tasted excellent, that very fine Italian plonk again followed by heavenly tiramisu and finished off with lashings more of the gorgeous vino da tavola.

It was then time for Part Four. Wibble-wobbling across Great Western Road, I led her to the splendid Botanic Gardens and I began silently rehearsing the vital question. Which word should I emphasise? Will? You? Marry? Or me?

Right, I’m ready. Er . . .

Suddenly, a raucous park-keeper stormed out of a bush and chucked us out as he banged on about how some people have no homes to go to and he had to rush home to watch something called Ra Fitba, Jimmy.

Disaster. I had to strike while the iron was sizzling. Herself had swigged enough vino collapso to agree to probably anything, I figured. I couldn’t let the chance pass. Darkness was falling and we found ourselves meandering up Queen Margaret Drive. How could I salvage our future together from the plughole. I hit blind panic. OK, nothing else for it.

Right there on the pavement in the middle of Kelvin Bridge, I slumped on to one knee and asked her if she would do me the honour and all that stuff. Her reaction was not what I hoped. Screeching with laughter, she was. I blame that Italian plonk. She was in kinks. Bent double. She wasn’t ready for that. And I didn’t expect her hysterics.

Becoming suddenly stern, she ordered me up. Now. But I couldn’t. I had crashed down so hard on my knee, it just locked up. That leg wouldn’t budge. I ended up on both knees as if offering up some late-evening prayers high above the River Kelvin. And about time, too, I could hear my auntie Kirsty Ann saying.

Twigging what was happening, a taxi driver pulled up and he and his passengers wound down the windows and were hushed waiting for her response. But none came.

Then a double-decker bus stopped behind the taxi and soon the traffic was backed up in both lanes as, scarlet-faced, she tried composing herself while commanding me to get to my feet so we could skedaddle somewhere and talk about it.

I couldn’t go through this rigmarole again, not with my wonky knee. Zombified, I stayed down until I got an answer. Any answer. With taxis honking, expectant faces on the bus staring down at us and boy racers revving their engines and calling to her in the most colourful Glesca lingo to say yes so the traffic could start flowing again, herself was in a bit of a quandary.

Finally, with the city of Glasgow nearing gridlock, she caved in. She publicly consented to my eminently sensible proposal and it has been wine and roses ever since.

I haven’t always got it right, though. I went down to Point Street one Valentine’s Eve to buy her card but I stayed too long in the Crit. I lost the card, but I still had the can of WD40 I got in Charlie Morrison’s. I found giftwrap under the stairs. It was a lovely blue and yellow can. She must have been chuffed.

I wonder how Katie Ann is getting on with her Valentine freezer. When she is cleaning and dusting it, she will always be reminded of the loving warmth behind it.

New day in the P&J

My column in the Press and Journal will appear on Mondays from now on.

How I became a stocking filler

MEMBERS of the European and American aristocracies in the 16th century did it. Even Robin Hood did it. And last week I did it. I took to wearing tights.

While I didn’t actually go out and buy a pair of black fishnets in Murdo Maclean’s, I was unceremoniously handed a pair of these fine seamless creations before that wee operation in the Western Isles Hospital.

One tried to decline, of course, with a nonchalant shrug confirming one would simply resist any transvestite inclinations I might feel during my hospital stay, but they were having none of it.

Despite my sneer of appalled disdain, my otherwise caring nurse Michelle was firm. She told me it was a circulation thing and I just had to get into them. Surgeon would insist. “Oh and, Mr Maciver, also put on these paper pants if you don’t mind, thank you very much.” I know, surgeon will insist.

They were actually antiembolic surgical stockings but when you wear them everyone assumes they are tights and makes merciless fun of you.

Any portly person putting on any long legwear is a palaver best not witnessed by anyone of a nervous disposition. And it is even more harrowing in the middle of a surgical ward.

I had to do a balancing act trying to pull on the stockings with one hand while holding the curtains round my bed shut with the other so no one could barge in on me and catch me at it mid-hoist.

A couple of burly fellows from Bayble and Tong were in the beds opposite. In that uncomfortable silence, I knew they could hear me tugging and pushing, wheezing and panting.

What these guys thought was going on behind my curtains, I dread to think. Why was no one forcing them to get dolled up in ladies’ unmentionables?

Thinking I had carried out the yanking-up rather well even though I thought so myself, I was miffed when Nurse Michelle returned and was far from satisfied with my handiwork. I had to get all the wrinkles out, she insisted, otherwise the stockings would not help my bloodflow at all.

She ordered me to have another proper bash. Have you ever tried to get every single wrinkle out of your tights or stockings? You can’t just flatten a bulge or ridge.

My stockings

My stockings

I began to see Nora Batty for the much-misunderstood sex symbol she so obviously was. I had to roll them all the way down again then haul them up, keeping them very tight and only releasing a bit at a time to keep up vital anti-wrinkle tension. It took back-breaking effort.

Designed for someone with longer legs than little me, the stocking went all the way right up to my, er, the top of my leg. Just like tights.

Then eventually, finally, after tugging away for what seemed a lifetime, success. I lay there perspiring but I’d got ankle, knee and thigh all gleaming smooth as silk.

Suddenly, nestling beside the overstretched nylon I felt something warm and hairy which made me realise that I had much grunting still to do. My other leg.

After I got home, all sore and moany, I still had to wear my yanked-up stockings for several days. I got used to them. It is not a bad feeling, actually, having one’s leggy bits and bobs snug in a sheer, seamless, shimmering sausage skin of wafer-thin man-made fibre. Not so much pantyhose as mantyhose.

I had this idea of keeping them on until the weekend, putting on a mini-kilt and going to the Sunday morning service at the Free Church (Continuing). It was only the threat of a messy divorce that put me off that idea.

Taking off these supportive stockings was very weird. I’d no idea that thighs and ankles could get quite so floppy. How I longed for the subtle cupping that must have so tickled the men of Sherwood and the cloth-eared superhero of Gotham City.

While I don’t really want to go into the details of my procedure, I am concerned at the ongoing speculation over the surgery. In dark corners, the gossips are making up their own minds about how much was snipped and where and why. They whisper: “They were at him for four hours, you know”, “I didn’t know you could have Botox down there”, and the cruellest barb: “He obviously failed his MoT.”

For the record, apart from maybe some skin, nothing was snipped, snapped, chipped or chopped off. Everything is working just as nature intended. It was more a fine-tuning of my engine. Mere adjustments were made to my carburettor, you could say. So my crankshaft is still in good working order and they didn’t have to touch my big end.

Iain Maciver is moving . . . to a new, permanent slot on Mondays from February 16. Don’t miss his weekly column on this page every Monday.

I am too ill to be writing this

IF YOU are reading this, then I am probably still very unwell. Or at least so unwell that I have been unable to write my column this week.

So who wrote this, then? Well, I did, but not this week. All these fine words were chosen carefully by me and then finely crafted together at the weekend before I went into hospital on Monday.

You really don’t want to know the details, but I was due to have an operation two days ago. So I wrote this in advance just in case I was not fit enough to write on Tuesday. Now I am really worried because I have no control over how relevant what I write will be by the time the middle of the week comes around. I know, is it ever?

But what if something of great importance happens between the weekend and Tuesday, or yesterday if you are reading this on Wednesday?

What if that lady from the Free Church (Continuing) begins to panic when she realises that I am not at our usual Monday meeting place? Will she find someone else to tut loudly at?

What if the next great credit-crunch-busting project to create jobs on Lewis is announced while I languish under the cold steel? I needn’t worry about that. The majority of people on the island are now so comfortable that they will oppose any job creation, especially if it doesn’t all shut down on Sundays for reasons of tradition and amenity.

Apparently, it is nothing to do with faith or religion or even Sabbath observance any more, because that could affect the human rights and no one wants that.

This is the way we have always done it, so it must be right, goes the, er, new thinking.

It is now even being argued that there is a tourist spin-off to this sabbatarianism that isn’t. A certain well-kent person has been lecturing me that visitors are flocking to the island so they can see how Stornoway is a shining example of how every town should be resisting any changes on the seventh day.

He tells me how Christians everywhere envy our packed pews and deserted streets and want to come and see it for themselves and be part of it. He seems to genuinely believe this.

Puzzlingly, he forgets to acknowledge that the real Stornoway Sabbath is, in fact, very different. Our streets are, indeed, empty. However, that is because the pubs are full. And the pubs are full because all our sports halls are empty.

Who says we Hebrideans are not forward-looking? I don’t know why island doctors were ever allowed to use antiseptics. There was a day when wounds were cauterised with the use of a red-hot poker. It worked fine. It was the way we always did it. There was always a poker to be found. Tradition and amenity. Why change the way our fathers did it, and their fathers before them?

There, that’s done it. Having a go at the coterie of rabid traditionalists who impose their will on the freethinkers of these islands will still be very relevant by the middle of the week. I feel better already.

So what was it that put me in hospital? It’s none of your business, you cheeky beggar. That’s between me and my new best friend, Sharath Shetty. However, since you do ask, it was not a big operation at all. Or at least that is what he said beforehand. I am having a procedure done which is the term for being sliced open by a skilled scalpel-wielder like Mr Shetty, being poked around in, having running repairs done in there before being stitched back up. That was the plan. Whether it worked will become obvious if this column appears next week.

By the time you read this, I should be out and making the most of the TLC that I will so richly deserve for being so dreadfully incapacitated. But I will still be very, very sore. Hopefully, er, I mean probably.

Actually, I am looking forward to some pain – as long as it is not excruciating. The nurses pay far more attention to you if you are moaning and wailing. It’s a bit of a waste of time if you get better too soon. No one talks to you. You might as well just go home.

Oh heck, what if I get better a lot quicker than I thought? I’ve spent so long writing this, but I would then have to write another, more up-to-date piece.

Still, I really don’t think I’ll be too well at all on Tuesday. I am getting these funny twinges already.

Cards, grapes and bottles of anything to the usual address, please.

Ol’ red eyes is back

That scary photo up there. Don’t worry. It’s only me. If you see me in the street, don’t run off.

http://adsoftheworld.com/files/images/Bkjoe-scalpel.preview.jpg

I didn’t go six rounds with Ricky Hatton despite how it seems. Just the after-effects of a procedure at Western Isles Hospital.