Sinister: Stuart and ME
No, not "Stuart and me", "Stuart and ME": an article by Paul Whitelaw in the Scotsman, what wrote that book. Possibly it's an extract or condensed Reader's Digest version. http://news.scotsman.com/features.cfm?id=1811622005 Obviously I have an interest to declare as I've had the same thing for 12 years, and our pal Ciara MacLaverty, the cover star of Feeling Sinister has for longer. If you don't have ME, you're just not hip. Calling it CFS just isn't where it's at, but if you're not in the UK, that's what you might know the condition as. It's not a fantastic description of ME - I'm currently in the biggest relapse of my life, and wouldn't manage sitting at a piano for half an hour just now as per the article. In fact, we have a harmonium in the front room, Ivor Cutler fans. But it's broken, which is probably a blessing, at least for cats and neighbours. My favourite Ivor Cutler song is probably "Sharks", which you need to hear. Anyway, the other point of this mail is to test the list, because it's having jitters. I spent yesterday trying to figure out why, with the admirable help of Sir Kenneth of Chu, who I have yet to thank. I think I know why now, and it's due to the stupidity of my hosting company for missprint.org, who've suddenly taken it upon themselves to count anyone mailing to more than about 10 people at a time as a spammer, with idiot new software what they wrote (I seem to be quoting Morecambe and Wise today, which isn't a core symptom of ME - sorry). Funnily enough, if you pay them a heck of a lot more money, they stop counting you as a spammer. I've put in a kind of part fix to fiendishly avoid the stupid block, so I guess if you get this mail it might have worked. Miss Print's will probably just explode though, like Willy Wonka's lift. So it looks like I will have to move missprint somewhere more friendly, which brings in a whole lot of other difficulties. Progress will be slow. In the meantime, please bear in mind that there may be times when the occasional message will get through to the digest, but not to the main list, and won't be listed in the archive until I patch it up later. I'm really sorry about this, and will fix it. If you're on the main list and notice your own message didn't get through, please feel free to resend, but wait 24 hours or more, like Spacey Stacey did. Digesters may have to put up with the odd repeated message until I can summon up the energy to move the list. But I'd rather be using it to write "We Rule The School", if I could. Please don't be put off posting! List membership number is a very very mysterious thing, worthy of investigation by Institutes of Parapsychology: it has remained constantly at near 1500 for about 5 years, much to my astonishment, and that's with me weaning out the old addresses constantly. So pipe up. Honey x +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +---+ Brought to you by the Sinister mailing list +---+ To send to the list mail sinister@missprint.org. To unsubscribe send "unsubscribe sinister" or "unsubscribe sinister-digest" to majordomo@missprint.org. WWW: http://www.missprint.org/sinister +-+ "sinsietr is a bit freaky" - stuart david, looper +-+ +-+ "legion of bedroom saddo devotees" "peculiarly deranged fanbase" +-+ +-+ "pasty-faced vegan geeks... and we LOST!" - NME April 2000 +-+ +-+ "frighteningly named Sinister List organisation" - NME May 2000 +-+ +-+ "sick posse of f**ked in the head psycho-fans" - NME June 2001 +-+ +-+ Nee, nee mun pish, chan pai dee kwa +-+ +-+ Snipp snapp snut, sa var sagan slut! +-+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Some idiot said:
Please don't be put off posting! List membership number is a very very mysterious thing, worthy of investigation by Institutes of Parapsychology: it has remained constantly at near 1500 for about 5 years, much to my astonishment, and that's with me weaning out the old addresses constantly. So pipe up.
Honey x
- which turned out to be the words of a mad cow. In fact, as my fiendish scheme to thwart the idiocy of the hosting company showed, there were oodles of dead addresses subscribed to the list that I hadn't seen, which I'm weaning out now, and should remove the problem. We're a more select, secretive cabal now - a mere 1000 of us. I will probably still move the list at some point though, so there may be a little bump but no changes in addresses etc. I'll let you know if I do. It's taking me hours and hours and hours to remove all the old addresses, even with frightening space-age technology from the future helping me. So please, can I ask that you give some thought to your poor list mum slaving in the kitchen if you leave a college, place of work or webmail host for dead: remember to unsubscribe. The worst offenders are universities: I know it's hard to remember to do anything when you've finished your last exam, and are off to the city to become an accountant, but please try. Second worst are hotmail and AOL accounts, and places of work: similarly, please try and remember. It would make me happy and my life a little less bumpy (and stop the list jamming). I had a call from the hosting company this morning - two very formal sounding american gentlemen on a conference call, because I'd annoyed them by re-opening the fault call so many times. They were very polite, but I can only imagine what they thought of the annoying brit. If what they're now finally telling me is correct, the list problems should be cleared now or in a day or two, and won't recur if I clean out the dead addresses. Only a few more hundred to go. I'm afraid I won't be taking any prisoners with bad addresses in the near future because of the risk to the list, so if you run out of quota, expect to be removed from the list fairly quickly. But I made the list software kind in that it'll send you a few warnings after it's ejected you for a bit, and tell you what to do. And it'll remember if you were out of the nursery, and not put you back in. If you get bounce messages without going over quota, it'll probably be because your mail provider is using some broken software that's interpreting Sinister mails as spam (or *obscene*) and I can't handle the error messages. Sign up with someone else, get a Gmail account, or something: I can give you one if you like, just ask. Anyway, I'm sorry to bog down the list with admin, but sometimes the dishes need washing before you can settle down to watch Mork and Mindy. But it's not what you come here to read. Below I'm going to repost a mail from Michael and Lisa which didn't get through to the main list (Poor Michael tried twice on my suggestion!). Sorry to them and two others who had to resend! And to digesters who will have seen these before. But they're *so good* you'll want to see them again I'm sure. I should have listened to the scholarly Pinefox of course who told me in July that something was up. Lesson: always listen ye to the Pinefox, yay, though he may whisper humbly and tentatively. Honey x P.S. Know what? It's Sinister's 8th birthday on Saturday. What will *you* be doing? ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Aug 2005 03:50:38 +0100 From: michael grant <michael.digby.grant@gmail.com> Subject: Sinister: oh yeah, let's hit some fun summer storytime. oh yeah, let's hit some fun summer storytime. i haven't posted here for YEARS. (well, a while. i can't be bothered to check the archives and find out, but it's definitely over a year. probably many). i have however, always been keeping one eye on this old girl, just to see how's she's getting on. it had never really crossed my mind to post something here again (even when i - and the list - was more active, i'd never have described myself as a regular poster or anything) but stacey's post about summer bike rides, picnics and the like, just got me thinking. wouldn't it be great if everyone posted little fun summer stories? (sorry southern hemisphere people. you can have winter stories too). y'know, little anecdotes about wasting away summer days in the park, or a general 'this is what i've done / am doing with my summer' post. and when this thought crossed my mind, i realised how much of a sinister-esque idea it was. i don't think there's many places where posts about sitting in the park would be par for the course. and that got me all sinister-nostalgic. and that got me to here. sitting typing out a sinister post, listening to old skool b&s. it's been such a long time since i sat and listened to them. i do listen to the new stuff a fair bit, (i'm a huge fan of 'stay loose' and 'your cover's blown'), but i never really reach back and have a listen to tigermilk or iyfs. i don't know why. maybe i just over-listened to them in the past. but it's fun. as much for the memories of when i did listen to them every day (or thereabouts) as for the music itself. well, before i get all super-nostalgia crazy. (which inevitably leads to mind-fuckery-interal-conversations about what happened to my life in the intervening years. this is a BAD THING!!) i'd better get on with my summer post. which you are all welcome, nay obliged!! to join in with. - ------------------ my summer - ------------------ my summer so far has been kind of odd. i have moved to the big bad london town, from cosy glasgow. why, i hear you all screaming. well, numerous reasons that are either too boring for you to care about, or too exciting for you to cope with. but the short answer is boredom. and claustrophobia. not literally. i didn't find myself trapped in a lift or anything. but just the feeling that there was no space in glasgow anymore. too many people and situations i was avoiding, i guess. some perfectly reasonable, others the fantasies of a paranoid mind. anyway, i did the sensible, grown-up thing and ran away from my problems. and ended up in big shiny london town. it's been good. it's kind of like being on holiday. the hot weather (we don't get real summers in glasgow), new people to meet, new places to go. when i first came down, i'd ride the train into the centre of town every day, and end up just wandering around. getting irritated by tourists, stifled by the heat, amazed by the random little places i would find, and amused by the absurdity of it all. the crazy bustle. the bizarre mixture of toursits and locals and whoever else might be wandering the streets. the super-familiar landmarks, that lose their landmark status so quickly after you've walked past them for the sixth time that day. (it's easy to keep getting turned in circles when you're wandering aimlessly). i've been here six weeks, and things are slightly different now. it's kind of like the end of a holiday. certain places and people have become more familiar to you now, but you still don't really know where you are. you know where the shops are, and the pub, and so on. but only because of the routine you've been following. you're aware you've only scratched the surface. and i think this is going to be the big jump. from holiday-tourist mode, into proper livng-in-the-city mode. i'm guessing this will be helped by the fact i start working on monday. and hopefully, i'll be finding somewhere to live soon too. (i've just been crashing with a friend so far). i guess this is why i've avoided making any quick judgements about living here. i know this is just the first transition phase. so every time i catch myself thinking 'this city's great', i'll stop and remind myself that this doesn't really count. i'm still just a visitor. i'll need to wait a little longer to make my mind up. but so far it has been fun. (with the obvious exception. which i'm deliberately leaving out. another train of thought for another time) anyway, there's a couple of specific anecdotes from my summer in london that i was thinking of posting. but i;m sure i've rambled on about the New Place enough for now. besides, neither of them are that funny. i'll wait til i've got some comedy gold to hit you with, and then post again. so come on kids. get your SUPER SUMMER POSTING FUN on. i want stories of day trips to the country, or day trips to the city. or another city. or your musings from your summer days of wasting. bring it on. i dare you. mg. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Aug 2005 21:09:12 +0000 From: "Lisa Claire Lakaparampil" <lisaclaire780@hotmail.com> Subject: RE: Sinister: Posting is the new lurking I've been a bit of a wallflower in here, the last few years, leaving and returning unnoticed, but I thought I'd drop a short line and maybe make my presence known, if a little awkwardly. I tend to be a bit shy... I blinked, and summer seems to have passed me by, here on the Canadian prairies... It's just mid-August, and I've already caught my first autumn cold, and have pulled out the scarf (muffler?) I use for inbetween seasons. The elms on my street are slowly hinting at a yellowy-green and as I ride the train accross the North Sasketchewan river to get to the south side of town, I can see bunches of bright yellow in the upper limbs of the aspens and poplars slipping by below me. Sad sad sad... I've actually missed the bi-weekly hour-and-a-half Greyhound rides to my hometown since I haven't had the chance to see the snowy fields turn to muddy fields turn to misty green to green and gold canola (rapeseed?) and wheat and whatever else might turn a profit for the farmers, these days. I've been living in the city for about three years now, and my trips "home" are getting fewer and further between, and somehow I'm missing the way the seasons change. From my Mom's kitchen window, you can see the seasons change in her garden and in the low hills that ring the town. Sorry, I'm getting sappy sentimental, but this 'far' north (I'm on the 52nd parallel, but my geography is crap, so I don't know where that is in relation to anyone else on here - you all seem so far away...) seasons changing is, well, how one marks time, and if I don't notice the seasons, maybe I'm getting old, or maybe I'm getting too wrapped up in silly unimportant things... who knows... anyway, I've rambled long enough... it's been lovely reading from all of you posting, lately... perhaps somebody in the Southern Hemisphere can write and tell me how spring is getting on? I heard it snowed somewhere in Australia not too long ago... well, yes, there's me, nothing better to talk about than the weather... love. lisaclaire ------------------------------ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +---+ Brought to you by the Sinister mailing list +---+ To send to the list mail sinister@missprint.org. To unsubscribe send "unsubscribe sinister" or "unsubscribe sinister-digest" to majordomo@missprint.org. WWW: http://www.missprint.org/sinister +-+ "sinsietr is a bit freaky" - stuart david, looper +-+ +-+ "legion of bedroom saddo devotees" "peculiarly deranged fanbase" +-+ +-+ "pasty-faced vegan geeks... and we LOST!" - NME April 2000 +-+ +-+ "frighteningly named Sinister List organisation" - NME May 2000 +-+ +-+ "sick posse of f**ked in the head psycho-fans" - NME June 2001 +-+ +-+ Nee, nee mun pish, chan pai dee kwa +-+ +-+ Snipp snapp snut, sa var sagan slut! +-+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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honey@missprint.org