Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Women's Liberty in Arabia



Since I currently work in Saudi I’d thought I share a few facts about the way it is for women here in Saudi.

Saudi women are generally not allowed to work in their country. In spite of the fact that around 70% of Saudi women go to university they make up around only 5% of the total workforce.

Women cannot testify in a Saudi court of law unless it was a personal matter that did not happen in the sight of men (except presumably a male defendant if she is testifying against him). Non-Muslims, male and female, cannot testify in a Saudi court whatsoever. When a woman testifies it is treated as a presumption rather than a fact.

Women are not allowed to drive motor vehicles or ride bicycles on public roads in Saudi Arabia.

Woman citizens of Saudi are prohibited from marrying non-Muslims.

Women, especially Saudi women, are required to wear ‘abaya’ in public. The abaya is an overgarment that goes from the shoulders right down to the ankles. Traditionally it is black and most women’s abayas are black. They are also required to cover their heads with a scarf. Many also cover their faces. Foreign women (especially non-Muslim) do not have to wear the abaya but they are required when in public to be modestly dressed and that means long sleeves, full length trousers or skirts and they should not show too much neck.

Above is a picture of Moon dressed in her abaya. Suits her don’t you think? Moon came to stay with me here in Saudi during the last two weeks in July.

Women cannot generally go anywhere in public without being accompanied by a male relative. There is a provision that the male can be a young boy. I have seen women here in the supermarkets seemingly without their men but almost always they are in the company of one or more other women. From what I understand, women who go anywhere without a male relative, have to have the permission of their husbands.

What some call gender apartheid is prevalent. Segregation of male and females in public places is commonplace such as waiting rooms in hospitals and banks. Beaches and restaurants have areas segregated for families and non-families. That means you can only go to the family section when you are in the company of your spouse and or children.

Daniel McNeill in his book published in 2000 The Face: A Natural History wrote:

Most Saudi homes have one entrance for men, another for women. Women ride in the back of the bus in Riyadh, and enter it through a separate door. Until 1981 a woman couldn't meet her spouse unveiled till after the wedding. Saudi daughters inherit half as much as sons. Amusement parks and skating rinks have segregated hours, so families cannot visit together. Saudi banks are so segregated that only female auditors examine women's accounts. Medicine is the sole career where the sexes mix, because, though fundamentalists object to women doctors touching male patients, there aren't enough male physicians to go around.”

Women following Muslim practices under Sharia law are not supposed to make eye contact with any male except their spouse and perhaps certain family members such as their sons and fathers.

Under Saudi Basic Law women are denied participation in public law or government. They do however have the right to own property, transact business and have their bank accounts in addition to their husband’s support.

A Saudi woman cannot leave the country without her husband’s or father’s permission and almost never without being accompanied by a male relative.

In 1978 the late and well known American feminist Andrea Dworkin wrote about Saudi Arabia:

“Seductive mirages of progress notwithstanding, nowhere in the world is apartheid practiced with more cruelty and finality than in Saudi Arabia. Of course, it is women who are locked in and kept out, exiled to invisibility and abject powerlessness within their own country. It is women who are degraded systematically from birth to early death, utterly and totally and without exception deprived of freedom. It is women who are sold into marriage or concubinage, often before puberty; killed if their hymens are not intact on the wedding night; kept confined, ignorant, pregnant, poor, without choice or recourse. It is women who are raped and beaten with full sanction of the law. It is women who cannot own property or work for a living or determine in any way the circumstances of their own lives. It is women who are subject to a despotism that knows no restraint. Women locked out and locked in.”

The severity of the situation today has probably lessened somewhat than what it may have been in 1978 but how can we know for sure that in some remote parts of the country that this kind of extreme injustice isn’t still going on?

Saudi Arabia is a country that practices both capital and corporal punishment. According to an article in the Daily Telegraph there were 191 public executions in 2005. So far this year (2007) to July there have already been 107 public executions including just 3 women. There is a case going on at present concerning a Sri Lankan maid who was working for a Saudi family. She was 17 years old and had only just come into the country. She has been sentenced to death by beheading for strangling a four month old boy. The girl now 19 and whose job as a maid was not meant to include child care now denies this and says she was forced to sign a confession under duress and that he was choking on the milk and she tried to save him but to no avail. The girl was denied a lawyer to represent her in court.

The last I have heard was a report in the Times on 26th July that says:

It was only when the BBC World Service radio reported on the case in Sinhala, the main language of Sri Lanka, that the Asian Human Rights Commission intervened. It raised £20,000 to hire a Saudi lawyer and accused the Sri Lankan Government publicly of failing to protect its citizens. Last week, the Government sent Hussein Bhaila, a deputy foreign minister, to Saudi Arabia along with Nafeek’s parents, who visited her in prison yesterday. “Emotionally and mentally, she’s very down,” Mr Bhaila told The Times.”

In the case of women migrants, especially domestic workers to Saudi families, there is a lot of abuse going on. Presently the Sri Lankan, Malaysian and Philipino embassies can have as much as 150 women in embassy shelters because of abuse at the hands of their employers. This may only represent the tip of the iceberg of the actual amount of abuse still going on.

Saudi Arabian men can have up to four wives at any one time according to Islamic law. And many wealthy Saudis do just that. Tribal societies still exist in Saudi Arabia. There was a report in the media (I recommend following the last link below) in January 2005 about a very wealthy 64 year old tribal chief who was a shepherd turned business man - Mr Al-Sayeri and at the time of the report he had already married 58 wives, although only four at any one time. Whilst Mr Al-Sayeri is more of an extreme example, Saudi men having several wives during the course of their lives is much more common than first meets the eye.

References:

Daily Telegraph article; http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=45BQVYBAZNEV1QFIQMGCFFWAVCBQUIV0?xml=/news/2007/07/16/wsaudi116.xml

The Times;
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article2141360.ece

Anything & Everything Blog;
http://ballyblog.wordpress.com/2007/08/01/teenage-girl-faces-beheading-in-saudi-arabia/

Sex Segregation in Islam;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_segregation_in_Islam#_note-13

Polygamy in Saudi;
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-01-01-saudi-polygamy_x.htm

Other sources used:

Wikipedia on Human Rights.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(6 total)

I had an absolutley gorgeous Saudi friend, whose husband was with the embassy here...obviously from a wealthy family, obviously well-educated, charming, polite, and gracious. She once had a coffee at her home to try to explain Saudi customs...and why it was such a good deal for women. She didn't get too far with us westerners. She had four or five children at the time and became pregnant (against her wishes) just before they were stationed to China. She left Spain in fear of her life because she would have to deliver the baby in a Chinese hospital...(full of infidels) and was hoping to return to Saudi to wait for the baby while her husband went to China. I have no idea what happened to her...I lost touch after she left. But, I adored her... I've had one or two other Saudi aquaintances here...most Saudi women with the embassy don't go out much...one of the reasons is that Spaniards keep dogs and are not at all good about cleaning up after them...so going out for a walk is almost impossible for them, as it is against their religion...it's unclean. Like all women, I long for the liberation of women all over the world. I wish we in the west set a better example with our liberty than we do. If all I were a Saudi Muslim woman, with Britany Spears and Paris Hilton as the only western women I was familiar with...I'd stay covered up and in the house, too.

Wednesday 29 August 2007 - 07:30AM (PDT)

Hi Anne... on what you have just shared I have to agree with you. I've not had as much opportunity to have open talk with Saudi women while here which is a huge shame. While Moon was with me I could have had the opportunity to visit a family home as a guest but unfortunately in those two weeks that she was here my closest Saudi colleagues were all on holiday.

I am aware that many Saudi women are comfortable in this lifestyle. It is the culture and religion that they've been brought up in. Even those Saudi wives who have had the opportunity to go abroad still feel that their way of life is fine and perfectly right.

The quality of family life in Saudi Arabia for many is in fact very good. The men do look after their wives very well indeed. And for many wives, being behind the veil is very comforting and secure. They feel very special having a body that is hidden from the world and that belongs only to the eyes of their husbands.

I wish I could have more opportunity to hear more from the Saudi women of how they really feel about their lives.

One thing I am sure of is that there are many women who hate the life they have to live in Saudi. For women who for whatever reason cannot be part of family life, and there are plenty of them, I think the situation can be extremely difficult for them.

Wednesday 29 August 2007 - 02:51PM (GMT)

Thank you so much for sharing this...for myself I know I would find it difficult to be there very long at all. I wish we could take some of the best parts of the many different cultures and put them all together. The life of a married woman there sounds like it has some positives; but the general lack of respect of women in general would be abhorrent to me and I would not feel safe there at all.

Wednesday 29 August 2007 - 09:08AM (MDT)

Power is a terrible thing to have over another human being. Each person should have their own power over their own lives and their own destiny, without being permitted to hurt anyone else of course. I have been a very lucky woman...living as I do at this point in history. The great evolution on women's rights, which started actually as a result of the industrial revolution, and gathered tremendous steam at the turn of the century, has allowed me to live well and pretty much as I wish. As this light of freedom shines brighter...eventually women living in the darkeness in oppressed societies will see it and want to bask in its warmth.

Wednesday 29 August 2007 - 10:45AM (PDT)

Lucky me, I am not an Arab woman! I think they are beautiful anyway(under their marks/clothes).

Thursday 30 August 2007 - 02:09PM (ICT)


i am for sure that for me... there is not a job anywhere nor money to follow that would make me think that i needed to work, live, visit where you are...

this helps remind me that my part-time job, my crappy love-life, and my low job skills make me far more happier than any $$$$ i once thought could...

thanks for this blog-post!

Monday 17 September 2007 - 02:07AM (CDT)

Monday, August 27, 2007

When Heaven Vibrates

It's Monday morning and you need something to put a smile on your face?

How about this version of the Lord's Prayer?


My vibro, which brings me heaven, rabbit be thy name, till kingdom come,

thou makest me come, on earth with eyes on heaven. Give me this day my

daily orgasm and forgive me my screams as I forgive flat batteries. Lead me

not into temptation but deliver me from frustration for thine is the

rotation, the power and the buzzing for ever and ever no men.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(1 total)


LOL love it....... I did once write a poem to mine :0
and thanks for the comment on my comments on Will's blog. It is nice when u know others appreciated what u had to say. U did very well yourself in that area too :)

Monday 27 August 2007 - 07:16AM (MDT)


Saturday, August 25, 2007

Just call me Abe!




Above is a picture of me in 1966 when I was about 3 to 4 months old with my brother.
The Famous Person I am apparently similar to...
So watch out! I must not be good on civil wars! But does that mean I'm not good at pacifying family disputes? I did say in my earlier post that I like sitting on the wall which unfortunately I suppose lends itself to making me vulnerable to being shot at from both sides... Really I was hoping to be like Einstein.
Below are the results of a personality test I took on similarminds.com
Advanced Global Personality Test Results
Extraversion |||||||||||| 50%
Stability |||||||||||||||| 66%
Orderliness |||||||||||||||| 63%
Accommodation |||||||||||||| 56%
Interdependence |||||||||||||||| 63%
Intellectual |||||||||||||||| 63%
Mystical |||| 16%
Artistic |||||||||||| 43%
Religious |||||| 30%
Hedonism |||||| 30%
Materialism |||||||||||||||| 70%
Narcissism |||||||||||||| 56%
Adventurousness |||||||||||||| 56%
Work ethic |||||||||||| 50%
Self absorbed |||||||||||||||| 63%
Conflict seeking |||||||||| 36%
Need to dominate |||||||||||| 43%
Romantic |||||||||||||| 56%
Avoidant |||||| 23%
Anti-authority |||||||||||||| 56%
Wealth |||||||||||| 50%
Dependency |||| 16%
Change averse |||||||||||||||| 63%
Cautiousness |||||||||||||||| 63%
Individuality |||||||||||| 50%
Sexuality |||||||||||||||| 63%
Peter pan complex |||||||||| 36%
Physical security |||||||||||||||||||| 90%
Physical Fitness |||||||||||| 50%
Histrionic |||||| 30%
Paranoia |||||| 30%
Vanity |||||||||||||||| 70%
Hypersensitivity |||||||||||| 43%
Indie |||||||||||| 45%
Take Free Advanced Global Personality Test
personality tests by similarminds.com
I took the test twice. The decription for Stability and orderliness came out exactly the same in both tests but the extraversion came out as moderate in the first test and moderately high in the second. I took the test again because I'd lost the descriptive part of the results the first time. The table above is from the first test.

Stability results were moderately high which suggests you are relaxed, calm, secure, and optimistic.

Orderliness results were moderately high which suggests you are, at times, overly organized, reliable, neat, and hard working at the expense of flexibility, efficiency, spontaneity, and fun.

Extraversion results were moderately high which suggests you are, at times, overly talkative, outgoing, sociable and interacting at the expense of developing your own individual interests and internally based identity.

trait snapshot:

social, outgoing, worry free, optimistic, upbeat, tough, likes large parties, makes friends easily, rarely irritated, open, enjoys leadership, trusting, dominant, thrill seeker, strong, does not like to be alone, assertive, mind over heart, confident, controlling, feels desirable, likes the spotlight, loves food, social chameleon, hard working, concerned about others.
Conclusions: I must be a bit dishonest with myself because I don't believe I'm an extravert.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(2 total)

Some disagreements: I tend to see myself as flexible & efficient. Large parties are ok but I wouldn't go so far as to say I like them a lot. I sometimes find making friends difficult & even frustrating. I can enjoy leading but I'm no natural at it. I'm too soft to be particularly dominant, assertive or controlling. I only enjoy the spotlight if it's going well and others are enjoying it too.

Saturday 25 August 2007 - 07:31AM (GMT)

He, he, he...you can call me Ghandi... Actually, it's kind of true...I value morality and doing the right thing, and admire this man for the nerve he had to stick by his convictions, no matter the cost to him personally. But, I am by no means that much of a goody-goody...I would cave in, if facing the entire British Government. I'm too much of a chicken. Thanks for the interesting morning of test taking.

Saturday 25 August 2007 - 03:04AM (PDT)

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Sitting on the Wall... Thomas Jefferson.





I go by the icon of a bird. Whether it was a purely coincidental choice or subconsciously deliberate I cannot say. The bird is blue and the bluebird is a renowned symbol for happiness. The bird is a dodo and dodos are dead. Perhaps what I am is dead to ignorance and indifference.

Birds often perch on a fence or a wall. That’s good because I can see down onto either side of the wall. I can see the good and bad of both worlds. From the wall I can see if the grass is greener on one side or the other. On one side I can see the cat hiding in the long grass with its tail slowly swinging from side to side. I know it’s after me… But on the other side there is a big dog sleeping his cares peacefully away. On the wall I am happy and I can sing and I am safe…

Or am I safe? There’s a boy playing on the same side as the dog. For now he’s chucking stones into the pond. If I continue my chirping for much longer he might just soon be throwing them at me… You see… Sitting on the wall I can be hit from either side…

When I die it might be the same as it was before I was born. And I have no pre-birth memories so perhaps I didn’t exist. And if it is the same after this life then there is nothing to fear. When I die I might find I can still think and therefore still am! Well jolly good if so, I’ll simply embark upon it as a new day in a new situation. Until then I shall be the jolly bird sitting on the wall as happy as can be. I’ll listen to the noises made on both sides; I shall enjoy them and be fascinated in all things new whichever side they come. I shall be as fair as fair can be. I shall take flight from the perils of ignorance and learn as much from all that I see. Sitting on the wall of life is good and I make it so.

But that brings me to…

Thomas Jefferson!

Let’s suppose I’m sitting on the wall of American past history and American present politics.

I don’t know what Jefferson’s final words were before his death on the 50th anniversary of the declaration of Independence but he instructed that his tombstone shall read:

HERE WAS BURIED THOMAS JEFFERSON

AUTHOR OF THE DECLARATION OF AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE

OF THE STATUTE OF VIRGINIA FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM

AND FATHER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA

On reading the declaration of independence I should like to highlight the following part of it:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

I rather like that sentence!

In drafting the declaration, Jefferson helped in establishing a nation free and independent of a state mal-influenced by a corrupted church and religious laws.

In writing the statute of religious freedom for the State of Virginia he sought to establish the rights of men not to be forced to practice any religion against his will, and to be permitted to freely express his religious opinion and that civil rights do not depend on religion.

And then perhaps for a moment you can imagine a wall, where upon the blue bird is perched… the wall of separation.

To one side is the garden of the church and to the other is the wilderness of the world. As described by Baptist theologian Roger Williams and used by Jefferson to describe the First Amendment to the US Constitution which effectively says that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

In founding the University of Virginia he sought an educational establishment unbiased of religion and with a diversification of subjects such as astronomy, architecture, botany, philosophy and political science.

Quoting Jefferson from Phillips Russell’s - Jefferson, Champion of the Free Mind

"This institution will be based on the illimitable freedom of the human mind. For here we are not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long as reason is left free to combat it.”

Jefferson even opposed that theology should ever be taught at the university. (In spite of that the university now boasts one of the most highly rated religious studies program. It also has a ‘non-denominational’ chapel.)

I see there has been an ongoing debate about what Jefferson’s private religious beliefs were. Many say he was a deist, others say he was a Christian theist and still others say he was practically an atheist. I think he wound up in life as a deist with atheistic sympathies, but that is besides the point. Jefferson provided the framework for people to respect one another’s beliefs and perhaps to find a way to live in harmony with one another.

Now let us suppose as I sit on the wall I turn to look to the present day politics of the US.

I hear of such books like that of Kevin Phillips – American Theocracy (which I’ve not read) but I have read an article on the internet by him which gives a summary called Theocons and Theocrats

I’ve searched around to try and get a balanced view. I’m satisfied he’s not a crank or an alarmist. His statements appear to be accurate and not exaggerated. And his concerns are real.

I have also read an article by Gary Wills called Country of Faith issued in the New York Review of books Vol 53 No 18 dated 16th November 2006.

Reading both these articles I find that what appears to be happening to be very disturbing.

Gary Wills’ article is about a silent ‘invasion’ of the Whitehouse by right wing evangelicals. In it is a quote by former attorney general John Ashcroft who once addressed an audience at Bob Jones University and said “We have no king but Jesus” and he called Jefferson’s wall of separation between church and state a “wall of religious oppression”.

I read of things like faith-based initiatives in law-enforcement, education, medicine, science, war and justice. I hear of the increasing roles of religious institutions in politics, business and economics, Christian Zionism, Christian Reconstructionalism, I hear of infringements of women’s civil liberties in respect to numerous issues including abortion, a rise of homophobia, a campaign against the separation of church and state, schools teaching creationism, stem cell research being banned… to mention but a few things all as a direct result of the influence of right wing evangelicals.

Now with all due respect to the belief of evangelicals – I used to be one; people need to be extremely careful about what’s happening here. People following their evangelical beliefs are failing to see that they are having an impact on the civil liberties of those who do not hold their beliefs. And they don’t care because to their mind it is God’s Will. To them the Scriptures are the inspired Word of God.

The wall of separation has already started to erode and the First Amendment is at an ever increasing risk of being devalued and who knows? One day it could even be removed.

The day that Jefferson’s Wall falls,
the happy bluebird will have flown away,
and it will be America’s Darkest Day.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(7 total)

Thomas Jefferson was not an athiest...it's obvious that he believed that God endowed us with the rights he so elloquently outlined. I do think that religion, that is to say churches, has to stay out of politics. But faith, the principles of the belief in an ultimate consequence to life, doing right not wrong, loving your neighbors and so on MUST dictate our government. So...it's a fine line we have to walk...like that bid on the fence...that can fly wither way.

Sunday 19 August 2007 - 03:48AM (PDT)

I agree with you, and feel that the extreme right wing evangelists are fanatics, and as such, are dangerous, as they preach that their way is the only way. Fanaticism of any religion (or lack of such) is inflamatory, and leaves no room for differences. This frightens me.....

Sunday 19 August 2007 - 08:34AM (CDT)

Thanks Anne for your comment. Perhaps it appears as a fine line if those morals are seen as religious. I believe we can hold a very good set of morals and values without subscribing to religion and so for me I don't see a fine line. I'm a great respector of religion and of people's faiths.

However I have come to recognize over the years that within some sections of certain religions there are extreme beliefs which can infringe on the civil rights and liberties of persons who choose not to follow them and I consider that when these particular beliefs are imposed on others we have immoral and unjust actions that the First Amendment was designed to protect citizens of the US from.

I'm a strong supporter of the principles Jefferson laid down and men in his time sacrificed their lives to establish these principles. When I see what appears to be happening in US government now, then I consider that the principles of the First Amendment and religious freedom are being eroded away. American citizens should treat this matter with all seriousness and urgency.

Sunday 19 August 2007 - 01:46PM (GMT)

Donna, thanks... it frightens me too.

Sunday 19 August 2007 - 02:00PM (GMT)

Good Blog!

Wednesday 22 August 2007 - 12:16AM (CDT)


i have not abandoned you. but that is too much of something that might make sense to me right now... and my eyes r tired and my heart hurts so i will be back later to read the greatness in which you spew...

Wednesday 22 August 2007 - 07:52PM (CDT)

Don't worry Sai. I know you will come back in the goodness of time.

Saturday 25 August 2007 - 07:33AM (GMT)

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Going SuperHero Planet Saver!





I had the fortunate privilege last time I was in the UK of hiring a state-of-the-art Hybrid vehicle for the duration of my stay.

The stay was originally planned to be just a couple of days. I came back from Saudi to pick up Moon who I'd left with my Mum and Dad in Manchester and then return to Saudi. But in the grand scheme of the 'Saudi Visa Saga' there were more delays and I ended up having to stay in the UK for a full two weeks. (Damn & Blast! What an inconvenience! He says with some measure of sarcasm.)

Well it was inconvenient in the sense that it was not a planned vacation; it rained almost daily for the entire duration of my stay, I was 'forced' to go shopping and spends lots of Sterling, and there were other less mentionable inconveniences.

It was perhaps a consolation that I could play the SuperHero Planet Saver for those two weeks by driving around in a Toyota Prius T-Spirit. I was lucky! I had in fact ordered a Golf automatic or equivalent from the car hire firm SIXT but instead of the super trendy Golf I got the 'short straw' equivalent.

During my 2 week stay I covered just over 1200 miles, driving about in cities and towns and doing a load of motorway driving. On motorways I usually did speeds of around 85mph. An impressive overall mpg of 51 was achieved with every tank fill.

It was a very comfortable car to sit in and extremely easy to drive. I found it quite roomy in the back. The sat-nav that was fitted wasn't to my mind very user-friendly and it took a while to work out how to operate it effectively. The fact that you can't add in a destination whilst in motion was for me an annoying safety feature.

When you put the car into reverse, you automatically get a camera rear view on your sat-nav screen complete with an intelligent guiding tracker. Good for those who like to be perfectionist at parking in tight spots. Most irritating though was the reverse gear internal 'warning' bleeper. It might be possible to turn it off - I'm not sure!

Some people remarked that it's a bit of an ugly shape but personally I grew to like the shape of the car. The boot size is small and if you're planning to go on a fortnight's holiday to the seaside with four persons you'll struggle to find room for four suitcases, coolbox, windbreak and Pikachu surfboard. There is a small compartment under the boot floor but it won't get your favourite picnic hamper set in there! I suppose you could purchase a special roof-rack for those 'special' summer holiday occasions. If there's just two of you, then you can put the back seats down and that will give you loads of room for taking such things as your old and non-environmentally friendly fridge-freezer to the recycling-tip!

Driving along in the T-Spirit you'll find your good conscience salved by the fact that you are spewing out around 30% to 50% less CO2 than most other cars on the road. It boasts a CO2 emissions output from less than 104 g/km.

And because Gordon Brown recognizes that you are being a SuperHero Planet Saver by owning one of these cars, you are kindly exempt from paying Red Ken's London Congestion Charge. More over, your annual road tax bill for the year will cost you the same as about 6 pints of Guiness in a trendy London pub. You may even find your car insurance will be lower too!

And urhmm, oh yes, if you do let's say about 15,000 miles a year on average and pay 95 pence a litre of fuel you will save more than 400 GBvsPS (Gordon Brown's very strong Pound Sterling) in petrol alone for every year of driving over and above a car that does 37 mpg average.

So, London residents and London commuters who travel by car will certainly find themselves saving quite a lot of money if they invest in a Prius

Certainly, if I was going to be working in the UK and needed a car, the Prius would be very high in my considerations. I was genuinely impressed with the car.


Comments

(1 total)

With the evident absence of comments after a month I guess perhaps nobody really likes the Prius then! :-(

Saturday 25 August 2007 - 07:38AM (GMT)

Monday, July 23, 2007

The Bluebird Returns...




I've been thinking about what to write for my next blog after having been away a short while. I found the answer to that question while reading one of Nigel's post of the 16th July 2007.

Oh, all right, I'm happy sometimes as well ... !

In response to this post I have this to say:

What the furrrrrrrrrr.... flappin feathers have I flown into here? The Bluebird has been away a little while and upon his return he finds.... a poem about him as the Bluebird of Happiness.

I'm.... I'm.... I'm quackless! It's an honour Nige that you should write such inspirational poetry about the Bluebird!

Oh, but I'm not metaphorical bird, I'm a real bird. This is the standard flag I fly by... to be a living testimony of happiness in all that I do. Wherever I fly, regardless of whether I be a doomsayer or a message of hope, the underlying energies within are the fabric of my happiness.

Ok, I know it's not really about Phil-losophical Bird, but still it's an honour that you should represent this happiness by the colour of his feathers.

I love your poem because you have it precisely right in that this happiness is found in the small and almost unnoticeable moments of life. By being still within in those moments we can experience that happiness when we see the colours of an autumn field or hear a baby's laugh, or watch the antics of a silly but playful pet. And if we are still enough, we can even see the Bluebird in the darkest of moments.

I should say though that to learn about Framework Agreements and Peter Gershan at the same time as to learn of a beautiful poem about the Bluebird of Happiness sort of lends new meaning to:

‘Happiness weaves before us a dream

And is seldom ever what it seems’.

I’ve been away from 360 a short while but it seems too long and I’m looking forward to getting back into the swing of blogging again. Thanks again Nige for being so inspiring! As an eternal bird, I recall in a previous life of yours you wrote of this Bluebird so its really nice to see him fly again... for me this is one of those small moments of happiness.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(3 total)

There we go, my friend, the mysteries of happiness and the threads is weaves through our lives. Good to see you up and flying again! We missed you!

Monday 23 July 2007 - 09:21AM (BST)

Yeah it's great to be back Nigel! Thanks.

Monday 23 July 2007 - 02:27PM (GMT)

Welcome back, Bluebird, of course a real one who can fly and enjoy his happiness! ^_^

Monday 30 July 2007 - 08:44AM (ICT)

Monday, April 30, 2007

Lawrence and the Phantom of Arabia


There are days when the magic of inspiration and imagination has escaped from the high security prism of my Quartz. You see! There was a pun intended there and you didn’t get it did you? That’s proof that I’m living in the void of wannabe-magic-but-never-impressing-even-the-permanently-laughing-psycho-patients of Alice’s Wonderland.

Living here in the Paradise of the Arabian Resort of Yanbu-al-Bahr hasn’t succeeded to stir the thick mud of imagination that lies deep inside my Quartz recently. And yet I bet I could write a very long list of things to do here on a 1001 Arabian Nights - not that I plan staying here that long! Although in my line of work you never know!

What? I hear calls from my very large blog audience… You’re challenging me to that bet? How much? 1001 Rials per blogger? You’re on! Just give me nearly three years to prepare the list ok?

Anyway, more seriously I can tell you that on my days off which in this part of the world are on Fridays I will often venture to the beach by way of having something to do. Accompanied by one of my colleagues from work I went driving along the coastal road heading north from Yanbu town centre and we saw some really beautiful white sandy beaches that go on for several kilometers. At intervals along the beaches are shade pavilions and children’s playgrounds. There are also loads of benches to sit on and even small beach shops selling snacks and drinks. Sadly, there is a tragedy to this tale of paradise beauty. Fridays is not the day to come here as the beach shops are shut as required by Islamic law. Thursday would be a better day to come if I wanted to enjoy thirst quenching drinks and play volleyball in the lovely soft sand. But, even then only if I was accompanied by my wife otherwise I’m not welcome into the family designated areas. And even if I were permitted there’s no chance of hoping to see beautiful bikini clad Arabian women here. Instead I can see them from a safe distance wading in the sea fully clad in their black chadors. This is genuinely a tragic paradise!

Yanbu Al-Bahr has beautiful white sand beaches.

As I carried on driving north I passed a place called Happyland which again on Fridays is closed. There they have small funfair type rides for children. Farther on I saw a place with the words ‘casino’ in the name. Yup! I had to rub my eyes and check again. The place seemed a bit rundown and possibly not in use any longer. Still I asked myself the question when in Saudi did they ever allow casinos? And what kind of casino I wondered? Even further up I passed a place called the Dolphin club. I had heard about this place which is walled all the way round with entrance permitted only for privileged Saudi Aramco employees with passes. I’ve been informed that within those walls are restaurants and (non alcohol serving) bars. There’s also a beautiful clean sandy beach and an array of various seaside leisure facilities on hand including water jet skiing. You know, as we passed the gate to the club I could have sworn I saw St Peter outside but it could have been a mirage I’m not really sure!

Is this the Phantom of Arabia? St Peter? Or just a mirage?

On one stretch of beach away from the family designated areas we decided to stop and take a walk. In the sand we noticed a whole range of small mounds that was evidently freshly dug. Nearby to each mound was a hole. There were no prints in the sand to give me any clues about what kind creatures were responsible for this miniature mountain range of mounds. Was it some kind of large sea worm, turtle or mole? Could it be a phantom of a sort?

A range of mounds and holes! The real phantom needs to own up!

We carried on down the coastal road until we came to a section with a promenade and a pier with people fishing off the end of it including women. There was a beach here too and we took another walk round. It was here I came upon the answer to the mound mystery. We saw several crabs scuttling along sideways and gee whiz – they scuttled at some remarkable speed! I ended up having to run in order to see where they were heading until I suddenly saw them disappear into little holes in the sand. That was of course the moment when the light came on inside my dim Quartz! I decided I couldn’t miss this as a photo opportunity, so with a little effort and running around like an over-excited little boy I managed to get a nice snap of Sammy or Sarah depending on whether it was a boy or a girl.

Gotcha! The Ghost Crab of Arabia. Whooooo hoooooo!

After doing some research on the internet I found out that Sammy / Sarah is known as a ghost crab that digs his / her home in the sand between sunset and dusk. Without being able to consult an expert for verification, this particular Arabian species, maybe known as an Ocypode Samtari or Ocypode Saratan. Now what would you have done without that very informative piece of trivia?

While wandering these beaches I did come across another unusual species called philinwetsuitus flipperitus. It can sometimes be seen crawling out of the Red Sea, especially on Fridays. I was lucky enough to catch one red handed coming out of the sea and this amazingly tame creature was kind enough to expand its flippers for my camera. What luck eh!

A rare and unique species - philinwetsuititus flipperitus. Rumour has it that when this creature extends it's flippers like this it's some kind of mating call...

This dark four limbed sea creature can sometimes be seen swimming over the coral.

The coastline here at Yanbu has tens of kilometres of coral reef. The coral is among the best to be seen anywhere in the world. I’ve been enjoying some of my Fridays’ snorkelling over the reef. The coral grows over a flat lava shelf that sits out into the sea by somewhere between 50 and 150 metres from the shore to the shelf edge. The lava shelf sits just some half a metre below the sea surface. At the shelf edge it drops by around 15 to 25 metres. This kind of geology makes it absolutely perfect for snorkelling.

Thousands of tiny polyps make up these specimens of coral
The coral reef just off the Yanbu coast is as good as in these two pictures.

The colour and life around these corals is breathtaking and amazing. I’ve never been to anywhere like this before and to think that people pay hundreds of pounds on diving / snorkelling expeditions to see this kind of beauty makes me feel so very lucky to be paid while being here and doing this sort of thing. The variety and numbers of marine fish is astonishing. They are just like the fish you see in the big marine aquariums only a bit larger in size. The sheer numbers of them though does make swimming among them an experience not to be missed. I have seen blue spotted groupers, clown fish, and parrot fish to name but a few. There are also electric eels and turtles but I’ve not sighted any of those as yet. I did however see a stingray swimming gracefully beneath me some 5 or 6 metres below. That did bring to mind the tragedy of Steve Irwin. There are also sharks in the Red Sea and I’m kind of hoping I won’t be having any encounters with those unless it’s in controlled and safe circumstances.

There are diving courses available here in Yanbu and I’m seriously thinking of going on one after Moon has been out here and gone back home again. I think it’s an opportunity not to be missed. After I’ve done the course I could try becoming the next Jacques Cousteau and try diving around some shipwrecks on an organised trip.

Meet Darius and his pretty wife in the background! - Camelus Dromedarius
It beats me how it appealed to Lawrence to ride on one of these creatures.

One can’t come to Arabia and not see camels. So last Friday, on the way back from my not quite so Jacques Cousteau snorkelling expedition, I went on a camel spotting mission. It’s easy to find camels here and you only have to drive along the highway going north from Yanbu and look along the roadside to see herds of them. I’ve not seen any camel caravans as such. I guess I’ve not ventured far enough inland into the desert to see the nomadic tribes that ride camels. Come to think of it how do you ride a camel with one hump anyway? How did the colonel Lawrence of Arabia sit on those creatures with a rifle in one hand and help the Arabs succeed in their revolt of 1917?

Anyone for the Arabian Derby?

I had heard at work that Lawrence on his many journeys around the Middle East paid a visit to Yanbu Al-Bahr for a short time during 1917 to provide assistance to the Arab army that had a base here. The home where he allegedly stayed is supposed to be still standing. So off I went with a colleague on another mission to the old part of Yanbu town to find this place. We asked some Arabs and eventually one pointed to this grand old dilapidated home. I took a photo and went inside the place to have a good look round. This was a dangerous thing to do because this place was so derelict that the roof and ceilings are at the point of collapse. I was amazed at the number of rooms this place had and quite literally this place was like a maze. So much so that after we reached the back end of the house we actually got lost coming back out again. I joked with my colleague that the newspaper headlines tomorrow would say something like “Two English Expats go missing inside Lawrence of Arabia’s Home”.

Derelict home in the old part of Yanbu.
I went inside and very nearly never found my way out again!

I must add that this probably wasn’t the place where he stayed but it was a fun adventure all the same. I did find an old photo on the net that makes claim to a place where Lawrence stayed in Yanbu and it doesn’t compare well with the picture of the house I took!

Thanks for stopping by and reading. Hope you enjoyed the read as much as I did writing it.


Comments from Yahoo 360

(16 total)

HI LIL BRO!!! Be safe out there in the desert.....come visit my page when you can.... your loving beautiful but not very much older sis

Saturday 5 May 2007 - 12:55AM (CDT)

Fantastic blog and Pics Phil, thanks for sharing, xx

Saturday 5 May 2007 - 11:03AM (BST)

Brilliant stuff, Phil. Very impressed with the coral. Quite beautiful, and the colours! It strikes me that philinwetsuititus flipperitus is a truly fulfilled creature. Good for you!

Saturday 5 May 2007 - 11:07AM (BST)

Fantastic photos....and DO learn to dive! It's a peaceful freedom that can't be found anywhere else.

Saturday 5 May 2007 - 07:40AM (CDT)

  • Anonymous

Thanks Phil for the pictures. Going to work there and your photos helped me to picture where I'll be going to. Otherwise, kinda scary imagining just hot desert and blazing sunlight.

Saturday 5 May 2007 - 09:42AM (PDT)

Great blog and beautiful pics!

Sunday 6 May 2007 - 04:14AM (PDT)

Phil, I would love to go diving around there. It looks amazing. Wonderful pictures. Thanks so much.

Sunday 6 May 2007 - 09:34PM (BST)

did i get confused? or does this mean u r reeling in on the blogging for a bit?

Monday 7 May 2007 - 12:06AM (CDT)

I'm thinking of taking a breather for about two or three months. ALthough knowing me I'm likely to still put in the odd blog here or there. There's a whole plethora of reasons, one being I want to keep my attention on Moon while I'm with her, another is that I no longer have internet access back at home, yet another is that I'm struggling to find time to write, etc...

Monday 7 May 2007 - 05:15AM (GMT)

That is a fine plan, and I wish you both well in your adventures. Just drop by to give we lesser mortals a glimpse of your Gulliveresque travels. As ever, kind regards, Nigel.

Monday 7 May 2007 - 09:56AM (BST)

i will Miss u the Most*est...

but, i understand...

go & b good 2 and 4 your Moon and Moonbabies...

u r & have bin an awesome inspiration 2 & 4 me! well, all of the Me's... (<$>)

Tuesday 8 May 2007 - 06:59AM (CDT)

FRIEND
Written with a pen
Sealed with a kiss
If you are my friend,
Please answer this:
Are we friends or are we not?
You told me once, but I forgot.
So tell me now and tell me true,

So I can say, I am here for you.
Of all the friends I've ever met,
You're the one I won't forget.
And if I die before you do,
I'll go to Heaven
And wait for you.



¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶ aithful
¶¶¶
¶¶¶

¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶ espectful
¶¶¶_¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶

¶¶¶
¶¶¶
¶¶¶
¶¶¶ ntelligent
¶¶¶
¶¶¶
¶¶¶

¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶ verlasting or loyal
¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶

¶¶¶__¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶_¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶ aughtyand
¶¶¶_¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶

¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶__¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶___¶¶¶earest of all
¶¶¶__¶¶¶¶
¶¶¶¶¶¶¶

Tuesday 8 May 2007 - 05:21PM (CDT)

Wow.....just WOW!

Thursday 10 May 2007 - 07:41AM (ICT)

makes me want to travel, lucky you

Wednesday 16 May 2007 - 11:00PM (PDT)


I thoroughly enjoyed you blog. Have a safe and pleasant journey.

Thursday 24 May 2007 - 03:40PM (CDT)

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Sorry to mither you but today is my whinge day!




I’ve turned into a right old moaning crab but the creatures I’m referring to are like droids with claws and relating to humans is not their forte.

Welcome to the “philsaurus” – Yes he did! We were there doing what we shouldn’t have been doing and Phil saw us.

The focus words in today’s edition of the Philsaurus are – whinge and mither.

It is with some regret that I have to mither you with my grumbling for if I don’t get it off my chest and have a good old whinge I’m not going to feel better! So please accept my apologies now before I launch into my yawping. There’s a certain lamentable organisation that exists in corporations throughout England and the rest of the world described by two letters of the alphabet. I’m going to give some bellyache over this matter because they’ve achieved nothing but putrid rhubarb and enough sour grapes to give me cause to air my grievances. I protest their complete incompetence. I’m determined to bleat on and on about it and make a big-stink of it because they deserve to be picked at. I’ll complain until the cows come home! The criticism is entirely justified. I’ll squawk like a wounded crow, I’ll carp on until they whimper an abundance of grovelling apologies for their pathetic performances. Please forgive me for yammering like this, for droning like a dying bee. My gripes carry a lot of emotional pain and they’ve turned me into a twisted old kvetching twat! I know! I know! I’ve turned into a right old moaning crab! But it’s them twits in that unmentionable place that have made me blow off like this. Were it not for all the hoo-ha I wouldn’t be senselessly mewling in my corner of the world. Let me give them my beef! I’ll nag my disputes right into their nerveless shrivelled little ears until they pule enough tears to drown themselves in. I’ll cavil at them and make them go and snivel and whine to their devil. I will grouch about them in nit-picking detail for every one of their sins. Those repugnant scumbags will feel the wrath of my jeremiad! And who knows if after my objurgation these scallywag droids could begin to have the remotest comprehension of what relating to humans is really supposed to be about! Sorry to have mithered you my dear readers for going on and on like the Ariston advert and for having to read of my bemoaning. I know you didn’t have to take all my flak. But I also know you’ll not object because you my dear readers have compassion and understanding because you are all human unlike those insolent cretins with whom I have had to bear great suffering! There! I shall end my repining! I feel so much better now after that good old whinge! It’s what we British people are good at.

I think a philsaurus is better and more interesting than a thesaurus! Do you agree? You see, if Phil saw us then he’s decent and he wouldn’t tell a living soul, but if they saw us then we’ve had it! Were crucified! Because anything human is NOT related to by that department and they’d just crucify you!

Whinge 1

Whinge (v.) is a Northern English dialect variation of the word whine meaning to complain feebly or peevishly. From the Old English hwinan meaning “to whiz or whistle through the air” and used only to describe the noise arrows make. It also comes from the word hwinsian to describe the “whine” of dogs. Thus the word is ultimately of imitative origin. In Old Norwegian the word hvina means to whiz. In Germam the word wiehern means to neigh. Whine first appeared in English in 1530 and as a noun from 1633. Whinge actually derivates from the northern form of the Old English word hwinsian.

Examples: (1) Oh the silly old man was whining on like a pathetic dog! (2) Listen woman! Quit the whingeing and hear what I’ve got to say first! (3 slang ) What a whinge-bag that aunt of yours is!

Mither 2

Mither (v.) is Mancunian dialect meaning to bother (pronounced my-ther). Example: stop mithering me! The Scottish use this word to mean mother but pronounced mi-ther like the ‘i’ in bigger. I can’t help but wonder if perhaps the Manchester word for mither comes from the Scottish one in the sense that a mother will nag in a typical mothering ‘whinge-bag’ kind of way.

1. Online etymology dictionary

2. Phil’s noggin.

Picture courtesy of www.crackcomics.com



Comments from Yahoo 360

(4 total)

Now that I live in Devon I often have to explain the meaning of "Mither" to baffled Devonians. My wife, a southerner by birth, loves the word and doesn't know how she coped without it!

Tuesday 24 April 2007 - 10:58AM (EDT)

Crackers and cheese are excellent with whinge, I mean whine, I mean wine.....love you , little brother....

Tuesday 24 April 2007 - 11:46AM (CDT)


crackers and cheese! i need 2 go grocery shopping..

where have u been Mr. Phil? i miss your cookie crumbs but mostly i miss your Toes!

Tuesday 24 April 2007 - 10:24PM (CDT)

Language fascinates me, Phil - what we don't realise about English is that it 'borrows' from so many other languages, and is so efficient, it'll probably outlive the human race -- based solely on the fact that it's so adaptable.

The language in my lifetime has changed considerably - to the point that kids from today likely would have a hard time communicating with kids of my era, and vice-versa.

I find that amazing!

Tuesday 14 August 2007 - 03:20PM (PDT)