Friday, 24 July 2009

Thoughts for the Day

This is really just a list of random thoughts.

  1. Quentin Tarantino is a complete psycho - is that why his filmes are supposed to be Genius?
  2. My Dad could fall asleep in an air raid if he was tired enough - and possibly make more noise than the bombs!
  3. I feel like I should learn the correct spelling of 'Numpty', I'm never quite sure if I have it right.
  4. I wish I could find an affordable resource to learn Kirundi. Funnily I found a free one for Kinyarwanda - Rwanda gets far too much recognition considering Burundi is not only bigger, but had much longer conflicts.
  5. I've spent 6 months in the sun and heat and I come home to rainy England and NOW I have hayfever.
  6. I would love to have a really cool uncle - someone like Dara O'Briain, Ed Byrne or Stephen Fry would be nice. I really worry that some of my actual relatives might show me up when I get married.
  7. I'm trying to decide what my favourite flower is. It's very difficult, I've only been given red roses before and I think they're overrated.
  8. I've recently become a big fan of twitter. Yes, it's true I love to tweet.
  9. Why is there so much sand in the desert? (Ok not my thought - Alan Davies on Qi, but it is a good question.)

Oh great here comes the snoring again!

Night All!

Sunday, 19 July 2009

Rainy Day

I've been back home from Burundi for the last three weeks now. I say home, but I've only actually been at home for one week and then we went away on a family holiday to Portugal. So this is actually my first experience of cold and rainy weather since the height of the rainy season (march/april).
This is the type of situation when I would normally curl up on the sofa with my favourite hoodie and big fluffy socks. My problem therefore lies in the fact I gave my favourite hoodie to a freezing child on the top of Mount Songa (tallest mountain in the Gitega province) and that my bedroom is still a total mess because my parents refurbished lots of the house while I was away and my things are still in crates and boxes strewn throughout the house.

I do honestly feel bad moaning about all these things when I know that there are people with far more to moan about, and yet some of the happiest people I've ever met have none of the "essential items" that we have in every home these days. I'm talking really basic things - not TVs and Laptop computers, but electircity and running water. Basic human rights yes? And yet these people devote their lives to helping others.
I really miss the simplicity of life in Burundi, I know I'll be back there as soon as I can, but I'm still stuck here in England until then.