Saturday 24 November 2012

Steam locomotive "Union of South Africa" at Kings Cross Station, London 24/11/2012

I had a rather special experience today. I saw on the Ian's blog that a steam train will be visiting Kings Cross today and we went out to see it.
The train is the "Union of South Africa", a British Rail  LNER Class A4 steam locomotive built in 1937. Here is the locomotive entering the train shed at Kings Cross:
Locomotive entering King's Cross Station

I liked the colour scheme - gold on red with green paint:
Close up of the locomotive in motion
This is me and I like the wordplay "Rudolph of South Africa". :)
Rudolph of South Africa
The driver/engineer changing the headlamp.
Engineer changing the light
Changing the headlight
Front of the train
This is the old Union of South Africa coat of arms that I grew up with. "Ex unitate vires".
Union of South Africa's coat of arms
A shot of the driver's cabin of the locomotive:
Driver's cabin
And of the wheels.
Wheels of the locomotive
This is the old "flying springbok" used by the South African airways and railways. Also something you don't see anymore.
Flying Springbok

Locomotive from the other side

Blowing steam




Wednesday 3 October 2012

Conflict between the conscious and the subconscious

I've been pondering about the curious process of healing that triggers when you suddenly have a realisation about an internal, subconscious conflict. Most recently, I've had a few of those and it was quite surprising how quickly I felt better after each realisation.

Last night, I felt the Black Dog approaching and fast. Earlier the day, I learned that the Hatmaker killed a deal I was trying to set up between his company, a mutual customer and myself. Obviously I have no idea why he did that, because it is not in his interest. He feels I'm threatening him when I have been trying to get money out of him that is now overdue by fourteen months.

Needless to say that it unsettled me greatly. I spent the whole day thinking it through and only this morning did I realise that the conflict is quite obvious. On the one hand, his behaviour has always been erratic and this particular act is just madness. He is out for revenge and not thinking about any kind of mutual benefit. On the other hand, having just learned about Attribution Errors, I try to explain his behaviour by analysing it and searching for a rational cause. Which I can't find. So I've been experiencing this complete duality. One part of me can see he acts irrationally and he just acts in his self-interest. The other part of me wants to believe that he is right and I am the crazy one and that everything makes sense from his perspective. The one side feels intense shame, because I am not good enough for his 'standards' and the other side can observe the erratic behaviour and they can't be reconciled.

I found this text that describes the process and it matches my own experience:
It is well known within the psychoanalytic community that people require time to integrate insight and apply their new found understanding of themselves to their current life challenges. Freud came upon this understanding after impatiently surging forward to uncover the early conflicts that lay at the root of his client’s then current symptoms by first trying to hypnotize his clients, and then simply explain to them why they suffered from these symptoms. He soon realized that forcing premature insight led to a less than satisfactory, lasting ‘cure’. His clients may have had momentary suppression of symptoms but this was often followed by a return of symptoms, often in some other form. This led him to understand that he could not circumvent an important part of the psychoanalytic process; the affective uncovering, understanding and processing of these early, intensely emotional events, by the now, current more mature ego of the client. It is this moment of insight, reached by the client himself, and not prematurely forced upon him, that is actually measurable by new brain scanning technology. 
Cognitive/behavioral therapy, while often having an important role in ‘quickly’ reducing symptoms, may not lead to a more long term ‘cure’. We have only to look at the statistics of return to treatment of clients who undergo rehabilitation for addiction to see this clearly documented. From a psychoanalytic perspective, those suffering from a lack of internal ego structure may temporarily benefit from external structure, but we know that only after extended exposure to external structure will the ego begin to internalize that structure; a prerequisite for a truly successful resolution of symptoms.

Saturday 22 September 2012

The story of the horse and carriage

Recently, I had to think hard again about the events of 22 months ago. Someone asked me if I really put the company at risk when I left in January 2011. What I can say, without any doubt whatsoever, is that if I didn't leave I would have done further damage to my health, perhaps unrecoverable.

So what happens when a founder, a key resource and a leader suddenly has to go? Does that put a company at risk, considering the circumstances? I don't know. What comes first? The company or the person?

I think I thought about a good analogy for the events as I experienced them then. I cracked that problem yesterday.

Imagine a heavy carriage, drawn by four horses. And a driver on top. Cracking her whip while we work our butts off. Picture something like this:
Our little company, happily trotting along in 2010
That is a little what our company was like at the end of 2010. Of course there were more horses, but some were on breaks and others were stabled so that the doctor could look at them. The three men with brown hats on top, they were our customers and all their baggage made the load quite heavy. I imagine myself as the horse at the front, the closest to the right edge of the photo. My right hand man was always on my side and we made a very good team. Behind the two of us, we had two other colleagues, doing their bit, faithful and loyal as always. Our beloved leader with the whip? Well the image doesn't do him justice. The real one looked more like this photo of Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, Empress of India and so on and so forth. You can get a sense of the personality from this classic photo of The Queen:
Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, Empress of India and so on and so forth
I have to add, that our leader usually wears a hat and not a crown. I am sure you know exactly what that hat looks like. HM Princess Beatrice borrowed it off him last year for the Royal Wedding. Yes, that hat. Imagine our driver with his hat on and you've got the picture. This is Princess Bea, not the driver, but it is his hat:
The famous hat
So back to my story. In December 2010, we were working hard to get our three customers and their luggage to where they need to be. But we were getting tired. And every time we stopped for water, the driver would load up more passengers and their luggage. And crack his whip. The burden was getting too heavy. My memory is foggy about the next part, but somewhere, while we were at full trot, the driver uncoupled two of the horses from the team and sent them on holiday. These two made up the right of the procession. He left the two of us on the left to carry on. So while the other horses were having a nibble and a trot, he himself jumped off the carriage for a well deserved rest. He cracked the whip, jumped and with the usual fanfare, he was gone. 

But as you can image, the show had to go on. So we were. Imagine a steep hill on the left, a winding road ahead and a sharp drop on the right. And then the ensemble started getting out of control. The wagon veered to the right. We pulled and pulled, but it made no difference. The cliff was next. At the very last moment, just before it fell, the two of us broke free and watched the carriage careen down the road. I don't know what happened to the carriage.

So back to the question. Did the horse put the company at risk? Or was the company doomed because of what happened earlier?


Guerrilla Knitter struck at the secret Thames Path

I took to the old, semi-derelict part of the Thames path today to sort out a few loose bolts in my mind. I was pondering the meaning of life and suchlike when I suddenly realised that something was very different. It was the pole on which the sign is mounted at the end of the blue-walled part of the path between the containers.

Something unusual is up in the alley

On closer inspection, it appears as it someone covered the two poles with knitted jackets of some kind? This was just weird.

I walked up to the the two poles and my eyes were drawn to the left. Astonishingly, they covered the railings of the disused steps too. The rest of the journey turned in a magical experience. I will try to show you.
Colour on the steps
Hallucination?
Adding colour to drab old boats.
White and red knitwear for steps
I came upon a tree with a cosy and colourful... stem garment?
Doily for a pretty tree
Another lamppost...
Lamppost with some added colour.
And an octopus with six legs caught in a fish net...
Six-legged octopus trapped
We then found a little children's doll with a flag tied to a fence!
Smile! And do not enter.
Whose flag is this?
And a tree with a very comfy looking branch hanging over the water...
Tree.


Tuesday 18 September 2012

Demotivation

I feel awful today. I have the time, but not the energy and the motivation to work on... anything really. Started with a Google search on "demotivated working alone". It describes my current feeling best. Demotivated. Lonely. And then I hit this post. It breaks demotivation down to 10 sub-types:
  1. You’re demotivated by fear
  2. You’re demotivated by setting the wrong goals
  3. You’re demotivated by lack of clarity about what you want
  4. You’re demotivated by a values-conflict
  5. You’re demotivated by lack of autonomy
  6. You’re demotivated by lack of challenge
  7. You’re demotivated by grief
  8. You’re demotivated by loneliness
  9. You’re demotivated by burn-out
  10. You’re demotivated by not knowing what to do next
My biggies are in order #9, #8, #7 and perhaps a little bit of #6.

#9 Burnout

This is the big one. Even after 21 months, I've still not recovered from the burnout at PMT. I feel I still need more rest, but I am not getting that because of insomnia. 

#8 Loneliness

I am trying to do everything on my own. I don't have a team close to me that I can talk to and that works with me on my plans. Skype and IM are not substitutes for a real team. I have no clue how to fix this at present. The anti-madness woman said the same thing last week. I need to find someone that can sit next to me that can execute part of the plan. 

#7 Grief

Yep Grief. I am still grieving the loss of my company and the friends and support the gave me. This one is getting better - I've reestablished most of the friendships that were taken away from me, but one. I guess this will take time. One of the major issues remaining is that I need to come to terms with the loss of my team. This ties in with #8 above. I think as soon as I get the team-issue sorted, the grief will also go away. I big part of grief is also that I am not getting the validation I am looking for so desperately. Validation from the very people that betrayed me. How crazy is that? I guess step one is to understand that I have that need and then to accept that and not do anything about it. 

#6 Lack of a challenge

I think this is a secondary issue that will just go away as soon as I get the three issues above under control. 



Sunday 26 August 2012

The Pelican Dance

I had the best experience ever today! The plan was to do a bit of street photography around Green Park. I got exactly one worthwhile photo:

In Hiding


Then I walked through St. James's Park and started taking photos of the birds. I got quite a few nice ones and I think this one of a goose eating oak leaves is the best by far:
Goose eating leaves


Then I spotted the pelicans!

The Pelican


And ended up watching them for almost two full hours. Here is the result. Enjoy!

Saturday 25 August 2012

My video Moonscape I

I got some really cool footage the other night of the nearly full moon behind the Cable Car. I turned that video and a few other clips into this video. Hope you like it.

 Music by Dan-O at DanoSongs.com

Inspector Sands Tube announcement at London Bridge Station

Something interesting to cheer up this rainy Saturday afternoon. This is a coded message that alerts staff on the London Underground to prepare for an emergency. This is usually a fire alert or security evacuation. "Will Inspector Sands please go to the operations room immediately" :)

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inspector_Sands

Saturday 28 July 2012

I stumbled upon the Royal Barge Gloriana today

I decided to take a walk along the Thames Path just as the sun was setting. The river was very quiet considering all the hustle yesterday with the Olympic opening ceremony.


This is my first wide lens - granted, 18mm on a crop body isn't that wide, but I still like the effect.

On my way back, just as I got close to Slice of Reality, I noticed the reflected sun on the water and decided to take a snapshot of it. The shot came with a bird in flight. I liked the motion.

Then a tug came into view and I focused on that. I did not notice that it was towing Gloriana until it was right in front of me. It was quite a surprise. I then ran after it and got a few more shots. And this is it.

Sunday 8 July 2012

Closeup video of Canada Geese feeding

We live right next to the Greenwich Ecology Park and there are lots of birds around. I was playing with my SLR camera yesterday and capture some great footage of the local Canada Geese feeding. I think the camera was made for this kind of close-up work. What do you think?


Paddle steamer Elizabethan

I got my new Canon 650D DSLR camera yesterday and I tried my hand at some videos. We occasionally see the Elizabethan, a restaurant boat sail past our house and I took the opportunity to make a short video of it.

It is operated by Thames Luxury charters and takes tourists to the Thames Barrier every few weeks.

This was my first published video recorded on my Canon 650D DSLR and I am still practising. I used my Canon EOS EF 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 DO IS USM lens for this. I found that it was reasonably easy to capture the video, even at the full 300mm zoom. However, the camera does seem to hunt for focus sometimes.



Friday 6 July 2012

UK Weather warning...

It seems it is time for the next weather warning. It seems as though we are in for a bit of flooding. Weather warning 2012 07 06

Canon 650d Camera and links

I've recently decided to buy a new DSLR camera and it has been tough deciding between these cameras: I didn't want to pay a fortune, but I still wanted a better camera than my current Canon EOS 350D My list of criteria was pretty simple
  • It needed to be more sensitive than the 350D - the 350D only supports up to an ISO level of 1600
  • I want a video capturing ability. At present I take a lot of video clips with my iPhone 4, but the quality is not good enough.
  • It needs to support my lenses, which ruled out Nikon
  • It would be nice if the camera has a flip-out screen that I can use to compose photos from weird angles - something I can't do with my 350D
I couldn't really make a decision, because each one of the cameras in the list above had something counting in its favour and I couldn't make up my mind. But then Canon launched the EOS 650D a couple of weeks ago and that got my attention. This is why.
  • Has very good video support
  • Includes a touch-sensitive, flip out type screen that you can use to focus
  • Has a better processing engine
  • It is affordable
Hopefully I'll receive my camera tomorrow and I'll post a short review. I found these reviews helpful: And this video:

The end of Dye transfer printing

I had this indescribable fascination with Dye Transfer printing since I saw this interview with Ctein a few years ago. Since then I've been keeping in touch with Ctein and I was a little alarmed when I spotted the announcement that dye transfer is going to end soon. It is sad in a way, because he is the last person that I know of that still prints in this way. Kodak stopped producing the chemicals, matrix film and paper back in the early 1990s and Ctein bought all the stock he could find so that he could continue printing. When his stock runs out, it will be gone forever. So we decided to order three prints just to see this in real life. I am excited to announce that Ctein will soon send me mine. (Sorry Ctein, I lifted the descriptions and photos from your site). He quoted me a price in dollars, but he was not very specific about the exact flavour of dollars he wanted. Obviously I offered to pay him in the now defunct Zim dollars and be generous and add a few zeroes onto his price. He didn't fall for it. Smart man! I ordered these three prints: Fresh Pahoehoe Fresh Pahoehoe, Mothers Day Flow HI -- 2002 A tongue of bright cherry-red lava seeps from under sparkling black and white crust. A brilliantly textured and detailed scene, with filaments of orange-gray new crust solidifying on the tongue. Competing Ferns Competing Ferns, May '73 Lava Flow HI ~ 2002 A cluster of ferns in greens, reds, oranges, yellows, and browns springs forth from a crevice in the charcoal black pahoehoe from the May 1973 lava flow. Mud Horsetails Mud and Horsetails, N. Ontario Canada ~1980 In the light of the setting sun, horsetails glow with almost luminescent shades of yellow-green, as they grow out of the rich brown-maroon mud of the stream bed. I tried to pick three that appealed to my own idea of good composition and that I believe should show the advantages of dye transfer. I don't have any idea what they are going to look like, so I am waiting. Here are a few dye transfer links:
  1. http://ctein.com/dyetrans.htm - Ctein describing the process.
  2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvqGN96Q9WU - A video of Charles Cramer describing the process
  3. http://www.charlescramer.com/dyetransfer.html - Charles Cramer's article about the printing process
  4. http://luminous-landscape.com/video_journal/video_clips-11.shtml - Ctein's videos on the Luminous Landscape where the man himself shows us how to make prints.

Friday 29 June 2012

My new London photo blog!

Hi guys! Have a look at my new London photo blog: http://randomlondonview.blogspot.co.uk/ I've been collecting my own Instagram photos for the last eight months and I wasn't sure what I was planning to do with them. I realised that a blog would be the simplest way of getting them 'out there' - because most people will only see one or two of them on Facebook and never see the collection. I really hope you enjoy it! Rudolph

Wednesday 27 June 2012

An experimental video I made while walking through the Greenwich Foot Tunnel

I was fascinated by this tunnel underneath the Thames between Greenwich at the Cutty Sark and the Isle of Dogs near Canary Wharf. Initially built to allow dock workers to cross the Thames effectively in the 1800's, it was bombed in the second world war and damaged. You can see where the the temporary repairs were made at around 5:00 in the video.

I have plans to turn this footage into one of my experiments and use it as the video backing to some of Herman's music in the near future. But keep an eye on this blog. And sorry for the noise :) That is part of the charm.

Rough cut walking through the Greenwich Foot Tunnel

I later went back with my mother for another try and ended up with a great shot:
No cycling here - and the cyclist

Ironic is the clear signs prohibiting cycling, but everyone is still doing it regardless.

Tingvall Trio - first performance in London!

Herman and I were privileged to be invited to the very first performance of the Tingvall Trio in the UK. The percussionist is Jürgen Spiegel, a friend of Herman's. We really enjoyed this and we will certainly do this again!



PS: Recording was allowed in the restaurant, but please send me a mail if you want me to remove this from Youtube.

Tuesday 26 June 2012

Interesting insight about depression and sleep


Yesterday I felt terrible again. I had the most incredible resistance against doing work I really should be doing. I wondered how on earth am I going to be sustaining myself if I continue this way. I went for loads of walks yesterday and had a late afternoon nap. I slept like there was no tomorrow. Herman came home and we went for another walk. I thought about what I was feeling and tried to explain it to him. I said I was not depressed, but tired. A sort of depressed-tiredness. Then I remembered that I had the same feeling a while ago and that I didn't sleep well the previous two nights. I decided to stop torturing myself and went to bed and took one of my precious few Dormonocts. I had an amazing night and didn't wake up until just before seven this morning. Today, I suddenly started to spontaneously work on the document that has been causing me so much pain lately. I've now added 10 pages to it and I am not even remotely done!

So what is the lesson? If you feel that way, watch your sleep. It is hard to distinguish between a lack of sleep and a feeling uninspired, demotivated and depressed.

Wednesday 8 February 2012

The bad dream


The year 2011 was fascinating from the morbid perspective of a victim. It was the worst year but also one with the faint glimmer of a new life. The year lost me most of my friends and colleagues and it forced me to abandon something I thought precious to me. Something precious that was draining the very life out of me and that almost succeeded in killing me. This was a time of intense fear, old friends betraying me and the horror of the isolation that followed.

I clawed my way back, slowly. I took up a new job after I was also robbed of income. That gave me a first hint of what stability feels like and the possibility of hope. I traveled to places far away. Had to change anti-depressants. Got permanently sleepy and then got hammered down by insomnia. Withdrew from people and got to a point where all I did was to stare at people around me.

But we managed to move out of central London and into a great home on the Thames. I forced myself to take up running for exercise. Changed medicines again. And slowly, so very slowly, I started feeling alive again. But in my mind, I relived the horrors of 2010 and 2011 every day and every night. A lot of damage was done. It took me months to write this down. I have changed the words and removed whole sections many times. And I had to change the wording and make it subtle, with innuendo that puts the meaning beyond the mental capacity of your average company hijacker. This was done on purpose, so apologies if it makes reading this essay more difficult.

That character lurking in my darkest nightmares is real. And I fear a retaliation, a return, a comeback to scream at me in the never-ending monologues and the inconsistent e-mail diatribes. It is this horror I want to banish from my soul.

Fourteen months ago,  I took a flight to SA to try confronting that bad dream. I feared that my life's work was slowly being dismantled and I had to do something. Employees resigned too often and the atmosphere I sensed from the other side of the world was... uncomfortable. Colleagues were barred to contact me. They were berated at the first hint of communication involving me. This would be denied of course. Naturally, it was all to 'protect' me or to 'minimise distractions'.

Arriving home was always a wonderful experience. But not this time. The last act of an urgent evacuation was in progress.  An urgency necessitated by my imminent arrival.  I witnessed it in the glowing tail lights of an expensive car. There was no possibility of eye contact - only a silver car door banged shut before I could move. According to the receptionist this holiday has been planned for a long time. Approximately as long ago as the day before. It was no coincidence.

I spoke to a few of my colleagues who have gone. The themes were clear and consistent. And the themes were not of joy. Eventually the holiday ended and I managed to be granted an audience. I tried very hard to prepare and to figure out a way to make things work. I even met with my ex-business partner and tried to get his help. He was very sympathetic and told me he will support me. I was a fool to believe him - this meeting set the scene for a betrayal even bigger than the one here. Maybe I'll write about that some day.

I needed to get a few very important points across during the upcoming audience, but had no idea how to do it without triggering Armageddon. Eventually I decided to make a list of ten thoughts that made my position clear. Usually I was very direct. But I feared that it wouldn't work. So I selected my ten points, complements carefully balanced constructive feedback. I printed this list and took it with me. Essentially, I tried to make it clear, without triggering an outburst, that everyone was living in a state of fear and that there was a certain lack of people skills.  Well, when I presented the list, it was read with the kind of disgust usually reserved for dealing with rotten flesh and sewers. It was cast aside and the screaming started. I heard that the company only survived because of his glorious sales efforts and selfless contributions. And that I have once again failed to deliver on my commitments. It was not a good last meeting. Later I read in an email that my list was laminated and exhibited as an example of how disturbed I am.

I returned to London feeling dreadful. But worse was to come. Worse, in the sense that the rest of the leadership team decided to go on holiday without telling me. And leaving me alone to deal with our then biggest customer and support mission-critical systems over the December holidays. From Europe.

This harks back a few years when then current leadership did exactly the same and left me drowning in the consequences of a financial meltdown of Greek proportions. And once again a year or so earlier when they left me to conjure up a system due for delivery eleven days into the new year. On my own. All alone. While my partners bake in the sun. I think I see a pattern now.

This time though, everything was imploding. The systems were overloaded, traffic crippling it in ways it could not handle. I struggled for days without sleep to stabilise this, tracing issues never anticipated and deploying fixes in a never-ending stream. This while the customer called me non-stop. This was as close to hell as you can get without actually dying I think. I can't describe how tired I was. I think I got the system stable on 1 or 2 January 2011. I can't remember. I only have a photo of me sitting with my computer at 23:00 on New Year's Eve monitoring fixes while everyone else got drunk. I also burned myself out. Not a single person thanked me for the work and personal sacrifices since Christmas. I felt dead and betrayed.

Oh yes I forgot - a crucial detail. In a previous reality I committed to deliver another system in this same timeframe, but weeks before. Obviously I didn't, because I was dealing with that meltdown. I would be reminded of that fact roughly nine seconds after the blue glow turned on and the white chair was occupied. The truth is, I couldn't do it - I wanted to, but I had no more to give.

This started a sequence of events that led to me being given a disciplinary in absentia. My colleagues were dazzled into endorsing a letter of reprimand. For bad attitude and dereliction of duty. And that led to resignation. And my discovery of the psychological disorder Narcissism. This is what I wrote on 13 January

From:    Rudolph van Graan <rvg@ex-company>
Subject: Resignation 
Date:    13 January 2011 12:08:58 GMT
To:      <Employee 4>, <Friend that I miss>

Dear <Employee 4> and <Friend that I miss>

It is time for me to move on.  This letter serves as my official resignation as a director from both <ex-company> SA and <ex-company> UK effective immediately. For 8 long years, I have put the interests of <ex-company> and the interests of staff first and my own sanity, career and relationship second. I can no longer afford to do this. 

These past three or four weeks have been absolute hell for me. My efforts have not been acknowledged and as I said yesterday I felt and still feel completely unsupported. I have considered many options, including another attempt to reconcile with the parties involved next week. As you know, I did exactly that in November. I can't do that again.

Please don't ask me to withdraw this resignation - I am not going to do that.

Please confirm receipt of this mail.

Thank you.

Rudolph van Graan

The time that followed this email was the most horrible time of my life. I got isolated from everyone I counted as friends - every single person except one. You know who you are. Thank you!

I now understand narcissitic behaviour and irrational fears. And that they act solely to preserve their own distorted sense of self.

It took me ten whole months before I could look life in the eye again. The past few months have been great. I rested, got fit, got back in contact with people I haven't spoken to for years and started to live again. I have been busy writing this blog entry for almost three months now and it is well overdue. But here it is. I don't fear the old Narcissist anymore. Obviously there is much, much more to say and I think I will - it is the only way to really heal. I don't know what will happen when and if he stumbles upon this article.

Monday 6 February 2012

The day I should have realised I was done for

I was just going through my emails trying to reconcile payments between me and a friend when I stumbled upon this email I sent in another lifetime:
From: Rudolph van Graan <rvg@ex-company>
Subject: Precipice
Date: 17 August 2010 13:51:53 GMT+01:00
To: <Narcissist>, <Friend whom I miss>
I have entered a major depressive cycle after Thursday's meeting. My ability to be resilient and deal with pressure is severely compromised. I simply don't have the energy to deal with <ex-employee 1> and <ex-project 1> and <ex-project 2> and a sick <ex-employee 2> and <ex-employee 3> at the moment. I simply can't. 

(to) <Narcissist> - I am sorry, but I have to take sick leave now, I am going mad. I cannot go to <random country> tomorrow.
I remember getting in the company car shortly after this - in tears - and driving home. It felt awful. I stopped somewhere under a bridge on the N1 and screamed and screamed. I got to Erna's house and went down to the bedroom and just fell on the bed shivering. I think it was my first ever panic attack. 
Honestly I can't remember what happened on the Thursday. I can see a lot of emails about <ex-project 1> and some from the customer screaming about <ex-project 2>. Ah... and then I found this beauty:
From: <Narcissist>
To: Rudolph van Graan, <Friend whom I miss>
Dear Rudolph and <Friend whom I miss>
I need an urgent Directors meeting at <time and location>. Please let me know if this is ok for both your diaries. I have a <another time> with <ex-customer> in <somewhere> with an <something>, so I need to leave by 3.30 pm
Thanks
<Narcissist>
I think it was about me not delivering on my commitments as usual and there was a lot of screaming involved.  Needless to say, it drove me nuts over the subsequent weekend so much so that by the 17th I was shattered.
I should have realised that I went over the burnout threshold then. It wasn't because I was a bad person or that I didn't want to meet my commitments, but because I had to manhandle 4 or 5 projects while some people could leave the office by 3.30 pm. My last mails in the previous week went out on average 22:30 and sometimes as late as 23:30. 


Sunday 5 February 2012

Snowy weekend

I must say this weekend past was just great. Herman's mother Erna visited us for the past two weeks and it ended with the first snow this year. I really enjoyed it. It makes you feel so alive.

I really love how everything just goes all quiet and that there is this amazing light everywhere.
Footprints
I took the image of the iced red berries on the Thames Path at Anglesey Wharf. Iced berries
I took the image of the snowman here around the corner from where we live in North Greenwich. It was obviously the nose that got my attention :)
Snowman with carrot