Wednesday 31 March 2010

Moneys Too Tight To Mention














I been laid off from work my rent is due.
My kids all need brand new shoes.
So I went to the bank to see what they could do.
They said son looks like bad luck got a hold on you.
Money’s too tight to mention.
I can’t get an unemployment extension.
Money’s too tight to mention.
I went to my brother to see what he could do.
He said brother I’d like to help but I’m unable to.
So called on my father, father.
Almighty father, he said.
Money’s too tight to mention.
Oh money money money money.
Money’s too tight to mention.
I can’t even qualify for my pension.
We’re talking ’bout Reaganomics.
Oh lord down in the congress.
They’re passing all kinds of bills.
From up there on Capitol Hill, we’ve tried it.
Money’s too tight to mention.
Oh money money money money.
Money’s too tight to mention.
Cutbacks!
We’re talking ’bout the dollar bill.
And that old man who’s over the hill.
Now what are we all to do.
When money’s got a hold on you.
Money’s too tight etc.
We’re talking ’bout money money.
We’re talking ’bout money money


Moneys Too Tight To Mention - The Valentine Brothers

I feel the chill wind of another Eighties revival blowing in. First we resurrect the fashion. Then we resurrect the music. Now it’s the turn of the economy. God help us all.

Friday 26 March 2010

The Impecunious Mr Yates

In the Mid Eighties Mitch Douglas, in an effort to secure a further advance for his client wrote;

“as it happened yesterday, when Richard Yates tells me that he has lost 15 pounds and looks like a concentration camp victim because he has had to survive the past few weeks on two eggs mixed in a glass of milk, and that he was going to have to go back in the hospital simply to have food to eat…”

Richard Yates was also a mentally ill alcoholic, and a great writer to boot. He had very little success during his lifetime, and was almost forgotten about until recent years. He had a lot of bad luck; and was chronically lacking in the schmoozing skills required of a modern author.

I feel kinship with Yates regarding his inability to walk the walk and talk the talk. I found it impossible to use the buzz words that have come and gone during my working life; so I guess that’s why I never became a middle manager. And my current run of bad luck appears to be matching his Eighties nosedive.

The amplifier I sold last week was one of my oldest possessions. A piece of Eighties High End audio equipment, and it sold for a pittance. The money was to pay for basic things, a telephone bill, water rates and food. Your £64 a week does not really allow for extravagant things like running water.

After 5 days in transit the amplifier arrived at its Italian destination, broken. A capacitor had snapped. I consulted a friend who knows about these things, and he suggested Soldering the capacitor back on or buying a new one. Neither of which would be expensive. But my buyer had already got the thing fixed, and sent me a snotty e-mail demanding payment. I’m sure there is insurance associated with a package arriving damaged, but a small component working its way loose, that could have happened at any point on its journey.

So I will suffer the cost, which knocks a third off its sale price. I’ll put it down to bad luck. With my change, the telephone and water will get paid. I’ll say a prayer to the Patron Saint of bad luck, Richard Yates and hum a tune he may appreciate.


Brother can you spare a dime ?

Thursday 25 March 2010

Losing My Religion













T
he first thing that happens when your redundancy runs out and you’re forced to exist on £64 is a big nothing. It’s the phoney war. Wait a month, or maybe two and the mysterious calls will begin. They will accompany the letters threatening Court Action and a visit by Debt Collection Agents.


Tip One: Keep the lines of communication open, write a letter to all your creditors explaining your circumstances. But don’t expect sympathy; don’t expect the calls or letters to abate. This is your insurance for the future.

Tip Two: Log all calls. Type the number in Google, most times the search will return a company name. If the calls are to your mobile, either block or reject calls from the number. Or if the calls are to your land-line, screen using an answering machine.

Tip Three: Don’t answer any of these mysterious calls. If they come in fast and furious and at unusual hours, write another letter like the one I include at the base of this post.

Tip Four: Speak to the Consumer Credit Counselling Service. Beware of other money making companies masquerading on the web as the CCCS. The CCCS will give you some good advice. They can help you prepare a budget; take the first steps towards bankruptcy (if that’s the way you need to go).

Tip Five: Speak to your friends/family. Once you’ve done this; the fear of being shamed, exposed as an impecunious fool, will subside. You will loose some friends, because not everyone will understand the complex set of circumstances that got you into debt.

I found discussing my problems a liberating experience; not everyone was sympathetic; not everyone will offer financial help, even if you ask directly for help. Get over it, human beings can be selfish, self serving and really strange when the word money is mentioned.

Tip Six: Remember you are dealing with businesses here, no matter how they dress themselves up. The Bank that listens for example, they will suddenly develop a dead ear once you stop paying them. They will make threats; try to scare you half to death. They will do anything to get their money back. So know your rights, scour the internet for information. Call the CCCS for advice.

To use a cliché, there’s no such thing as a free lunch. You may eventually become bankrupt, but there will be a cost. Oh it’s not the same as when Charles Dickens’s father was locked in the Clink Prison, but it will be humiliating. You will most probably lose your bank account and have problems getting certain jobs.

But ultimately the real cost will be to your health. I keep fit, take my heart medication, and eat healthy. But I know there is a drip-drip, a threatening letter here, an early morning phone call there. Torture techniques for the post Credit Crunch. They are shortening my life, narrowing the distance between now and the day I draw my final breath. Every day I loose a little something, call it hope, call it optimism, call it what you like.

That's me in the corner
That's me in the spotlight, I'm
Losing my religion

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Harassment by telephone letter
Your Address
& postcode
Date
Company Name
Road
Town
City / County
Postcode

Re: Harassment by telephone


Credit Card/Account Number: xxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Dear Sir/Madam

I am writing in relation to the disturbing telephone calls that I have received from your company, which I deem to be personally harassing.

I now require all further correspondence from your company to be made in writing only.

I am of the view that your continued harassment of me by telephone puts you in breach of Section 40 of the Administration of Justice Act 1970, and the Protection from Harassment Act 1997.

If you continue to harass me by telephone, you will also be in breach of the Communications Act (2003) s.127 and I will report you to The Financial Ombudsman, OFCOM, Trading Standards and The Office of Fair Trading, meaning that you may become liable to a substantial fine.

Be advised that any further telephone calls from your company will be recorded.

Furthermore, should it be your intention to arrange a “doorstep call”, please be advised that under OFT rules, you can only visit me at my home if you make an appointment and I have no wish to make an appointment with you.

There is only an implied license under English Common Law for people to be able to visit me on my property without express permission; the postman and people asking for directions etc (Armstrong v. Sheppard and Short Ltd [1959] 2 Q.B. per Lord Evershed M.R.). Therefore take note that I revoke license under Common Law for you, or your representatives to visit me at my property and if you do so, then you will be liable to damages for a tort of trespass and action will be taken, including but not limited to, police attendance

I now request that you send me a copy of your official complaints procedures. Failure to do this will also result in your company being reported to the Office Of Fair Trading, Trading Standards and my local MP

Yours faithfully,

signature

[Name Here]

Wednesday 24 March 2010

Jobsearch #1

In another life I was Magnum PI. Magnum was the chat handle given to me by people I worked with. We all had names; it added a different dimension to the day-to-day stuff. I bare no resemblance to the actor Tom Selleck who played Magnum, but I can see where my co-workers were coming from. Dark hair, slightly older, colourful shirts.

Jobsearch #1 is so named because it’s the first interview I’ve had since the Dole Wallah blog started. Thanks Mr Jobcentre Plus for pushing me over the edge.

An e-mail with the company’s address and a checklist of things I would need was sent. All I had to was turn up at quarter to five and take my clothes off.

Magnum PI was often seen running down a Hawaiian beach in trunks, and I was supposed to do something similar in Shepherds Bush.


Sometime back in April last year I registered on an extras website. There’s a couple of photos, my height, body measurements and age. And for the past year I’ve had no extra work. I applied to be in a binge drinking video for the NHS, but nothing came of that.


In the life before that other life I’d done a little bit of extra work. Reconstructions, when budgets were big. I remember a programme about arms dealing actually using a real 747, and a lot of money going missing in Rwanda. But that’s another story.

At the weekend I prepared like a method actor. The jobs a game show, not Shutter Island or Green Zone; but I take my work seriously. I’m supposed to be Britain’s Hairiest man, that’s the brief. A celebrity will interrogate the clothed me. And I’m supposed to have some witty retort up my sleeve. I’m supposed to let my personality shine through; the Production Company’s words not mine. The real hairy man, will be in the line-up too.

My first thought was Genetics. Mr Hairy UK will have inherited his hirsuteness. So I invent a Great Grandfather. Great Granddad Hairy was the Hairy Man from Afghanistan. A Victorian fairground attraction. His skin was swarthy and some boot polish was applied to enhance the darkness. He occasionally sported a turban and charmed snakes. In the extended biography his name appeared on the poster that inspired John Lennon to write For The Benefit Of Mr Kite. But I ditched that as too obscure a fact for a TV celebrity.

I Googled Britain’s hairiest man, he’s from Gateshead and it takes four towels to dry his body. Sunbathing is an issue too with all that hair. I appropriate these two facts for my method-act.

The Hairy man will be writing a memoir, Hair To Stay. I resort to Google again but get a hirsute ladies porn site. So the name is changed to My Hairy Life.

The Production Company’s e-mail asks me to wear shorts underneath my trousers. But makes no other clothing stipulation. I select a Fleet Foxes tee-shirt. There hairy blokes, so I’m showing solidarity with other hairies.


For a Dole Wallah I have a surprisingly busy day. I post an amplifier to Italy and a Guitar Case to Bath, and I run to the post office to send off a Ted Baker Jacket. After some press-ups and shower I’m off to Shepherds Bush. It’s raining and I arrive dishevelled. A group of 3 men sit in the reception; a young girl is asking them questions about their lives. For a moment I assume they are auditioning for some fitness programme – maybe as the new Mr Motivator. All three are gigantic body builder types. Then I hear the crucial question, so are you hairy.

When I sat down the young girl shot me the briefest of looks, she looked over again a couple of times. I let her lead them into the audition room, wait five minutes, then ask the receptionist what’s happening with my appointment. I know of course and the young girl is despatched to pull me in. The hulks have finished theirs, so I fill in a questionnaire and a release form. One question begs for an interesting answer, which celebrity do you look like. I’m tempted to write Magnum PI, but the bright young things will have no idea who he is, so I leave that section blank.


We’ll be in touch they say, and I leave. I feel an unusual empathy with Woody Allen. The Tom Selleck resemblance recedes; it’s replaced by the forty inch chest guy, who's no muscleman. The lift does not come, so I take the metal stairs. They are exposed to the rain, and I slip and slide my way down five floors. An old Elvis Costello song, Pump It Up plays in my head.

Tuesday 23 March 2010

American Ruse


I wake up like a Richard Yates character. And then it gets worse, I read a pointless lead article on the Guardian website about American High School Proms. What the writer does not get about Britain is we don’t need this imported shite. The whole concept is wrong, unless you really want to ape your parents and your parents parents. I first visited America when I was 15 and found it reactionary and conservative and the whole prom thing sits well with those squeaky clean teenagers I met. And the funny thing is its all about denial.

Squeaky clean was doing drugs, was as depressed as hell, and was no great looker. But like all the best Hollywood movies, they had great dentistry and smiled like their lives depended on it. And Hollywood and Guardian Journalists would have you believe American teenagerdom is something to crave. Stephen King did actually satirise the whole thing and killed off everyone at the prom in Carrie. He exposed their petty, conservative, trivial and xenophobic outlook. Driving to the prom in your dad’s car; posing in an expensive dress; hey try that when your parents are poor you spoilt brat.

This is a true story, and it’s no High School Prom. It’s the feel good equivalent of squeezing a zit onto the mirror. Spot is a better word, but this is a bilingual post, so I’m including the Yankee lingo in with the English. Especially as this concerns two teenagers from across the pond, who never attend a Prom.

When I met the two people in question, High Ho Silver Lining was commonly played at English School Discos. It was an old song then, but for some reason DJs liked it, and played it. They also played Lady Marmalade by Labelle and Lo Rider by War, but mostly they played rubbish. They were your typical Wedding, Engagement and Twenty First DJ all rolled into one. My sister even went out with one of those horrible creatures, but that’s another story.

On the other side of the great divide. The Captain and Tennile sang Love Will Keep us together. The Hustle by Van McCoy played along with The Eagles and Ads for RC Cola. There was a chain restaurant called The Ponderosa, Square Meal Square Deal Ponderosa went the slogan. I played basketball in back yards, which were really gardens. I drank coke by the gallon and ate burgers, because I’d never tasted Burgers and thin French Fries. England was different back then, just Wimpy and Birds Eye.

The two Americans were siblings, the second generation of a large family. The first generation had a different father who was killed tragically when they were babies. Father number two was bad, as bad as you could get. An abuser of the first generation and a mean motherfucker to boot. He even walked with a limp, like a Movie villain. He was the one armed man who killed Dr Richard Kimball’s wife.

I will call the girl Mary Ellen and the boy Jim Bob. The Walton’s was a big TV Show back then, so I’m stealing two of the characters names.

Mary Ellen was a sweet thirteen year old. A fan of Nancy Drew Mysteries, like a member of the Scooby Doo Crew. Jim Bob was tall and played basketball. He was uncomplicated like many an American male. My sister corresponded with Mary Ellen; they were old fashioned pen pals. And because she was young and plain, and wore braces on her teeth. My fifteen year old self paid her zero attention.

I played basketball with Jim Bob and his brothers; or rather we shot hoops and talked loudly about nothing in particular. They ribbed me that Elton John was American, and they liked Heavy Rock. I enjoyed myself, and drank another gallon of coke. I had nothing in common with these severely shorn teenagers, but they were nice to me, even though I had long hair and funny clothes. English people in those days dressed like African Americans. Americans dressed like English Mods from the Sixties and wore their hair like Skinheads. Cool was not a word I would associate with these suburban teenagers.

America was supposed to be Kojak and Harry O, Frank Cannon Private Investigator and Petrochelli. It was supposed to be Groovy, but Bad was now the in-word over there, although it would take another decade and Michael Jackson to get known over here. And with all this culture shock happening, the real story never got told. The unmentionable alcoholic priest remained unmentionable. The man with the limp lurked at the side of photographs, on the family’s periphery.


A decade happened. America invented MTV; music was siphoned and videoed beyond recognition. The Regan Government funded death squads in South America and the Mujahideen in Afghanistan. Thatcher drooled over Pinochet, yuppies boomed and busted. I grew up and so did my American cousins. They visited on world tours, smuggled dope in their underwear. Mary Ellen stayed at home. She stopped writing in 1978, the year her brains fried and she entered the mental institution.


Mary Ellen was sixteen when she was found, tripping on the roof. She had climbed up through a skylight and sat, sneakers resting in the guttering, babbling. She had taken enough Acid to fell a giant redwood, it had her foaming at the mouth. When my cousins came over they said she had fried her brains, she was on Acid at fourteen and never came back. Her dad had abused her from a young age. The girl with the braces and Nancy Drew books, was also adept at giving a middle aged man blowjobs, and having her anus stretched until it bled. So she took too much Acid, and escaped to a mental institution.


Jim Bob fared better. He was no genius, but was good with his hands. He became a carpenter, and then a builder. He built those large wooden framed houses that are a feature of American suburbia. He had problems with girls, so had no date for the high school prom. But the eighties were kind to him; he made a ton of money and built himself a huge house. He built the coffin for dad, and attended the funeral along with his brothers and older sister. He sent cigarettes and candy to Mary Ellen, and visited her at weekends.


When his brothers and big sister moved away, Jim Bob stayed close to home. His house was in the neighbourhood, he was a dutiful son and attentive brother. He paid for sex at the local massage parlour, and subscribed to a cable porn channel. He remained blue collar, ate Sliders at White Castle and drank with friends from the fire department. He entered the nineties on an air punching high.

Mary Ellen was released to the care of her mother in 1994. She was on a cocktail of antipsychotic drugs and smoked like a trooper. I visited in 95, and took her out to buy cigarettes. Her weight had ballooned and her skin was bad, she was slow and had the personality of a ten year old girl. We sat on the ground outside the store and smoked a cigarette together. I sent her postcards for a couple of years, and included her name on Christmas cards to her mom.

Jim Bob was absent during my 95 visit; he was never mentioned.

Between the nineties and two thousand I had my own set of problems to deal with. I lost touch with Mary Ellen, and heard no news of Jim Bob. I received a letter one day in 2004 from their older sister. The sort of letter that should come with a black armband. She was clearing out Mary’s room and had found one of my old letters. And by chance the people at my old address had forwarded it on to me.


Mary Ellen had taken her final trip in 2004. She had ditched the antipsychotics and gradually became withdrawn and abusive. She climbed quietly through the skylight one September night, slipping on the wet roof. Her neck hit the old basketball hoop, and she was partially decapitated. She died instantly.

Jim Bob was also mentioned in the letter. He had sold his large house and was now travelling the US in a campervan. Big sister wrote her e-mail at the end of the letter, and I stayed in touch sporadically.


Last Christmas she sent me a card and letter. It was a catch up, listing the family’s doings. Mom was now in a home and the house sold. Her brothers were doing well; teaching school, selling real estate and vibrational equipment. She had visited Florida in the fall with her oldest niece. The niece was all grown up and had a husband of her own. She’d gotten over her problems with alcohol and drugs, and was expecting a baby.

She was going to call the baby Jim Bob, after her uncle. It was Jim Bob who had helped her through the drug and alcohol treatment. Jim Bob who had stood up to the Samoan dealer who came looking for her. He had chased the tattooed man down the street, waving his 12 gauge. Shouting crazy things like John Goodman in Barton Fink.

Jim Bob had upped sticks and headed south after that. His campervan was found close to Miami Beach; parked outside one of those stucco wedding cake buildings. The inside was a mess.

Miami Police had called the niece because her number was the most recent in his cell. And she had taken along her Aunt for support. The Police had not cleaned out the inside of Jim Bobs van. They left his brains on the windows and put-up bed; a red spray coated most of his effects. Niece and big sister later identified the body. His face was missing, but he wore the same faded Osh Kosh.


Jim Bob suffered from depression all his adult life. He never got over the abuse from his dad, or came to terms with his sexuality. He drank his business away, and sold his house to pay creditors. He travelled because he was ashamed of his failure. And he killed himself on a balmy night in Miami, after calling his niece to wish her well.


He had a portable CD player hooked to his ears, the MC5s American Ruse was on repeat.

Saturday 20 March 2010

Everybody's Free

If you’ve ever had a spell of unemployment, you will know the money covers basic subsistence and nothing else. Forget about your five-a-day, or takeaways, or nights out. You’re supposed to be uncomfortable as a Dole Wallah.

Now stretch that spell out into a year, and you start to take extreme measures.

I’ve sold my guitar for a pittance, sold a tee-shirt I bought back in 1998. I’ve considered selling my body; it’s not in bad shape. But heterosexual male escorts are as plentiful as decent jobs. So forget about being the male belle de jour, unless you fancy men or fancy being conned out of money (those sites on the internet or those classified ads are pure fakery). And you can forget about earning cash from home and modelling work, and just about all the other get-rich-quick schemes out there.


Reality is horrible, and sobering, and a pain in the ass.


I have no plan B. But I’m always open to suggestions, always on the lookout for something that pays more than the minimum wage. I’m looking into teaching, not in the school system though. I’ve lived with quite a few teachers and know it’s not for me.

Back during the last recession, I taught unemployed adults for a year. It was quite dispiriting because the training company were cynically exploiting people down on their luck. I faked exam papers to get the poor unfortunates through, it was positively encouraged. The more NVQs the more money for El Crappo Training Enterprises.


The company selected the best students and made them into unpaid teaching assistants. They hired some, paying a shocking salary. Like the orchestra at Auschwitz, the former students played along, faking results, putting up with shoddy treatment. They were desperate and the company knew that.

I met decent people there. Some Nigerian former boy soldiers, an ex Civil Servant who had been jailed for dope possession and lost his job in Whitehall. An Irish girl who had come to England for an abortion. An ex Pop Star, who had blown his record company advance.


Training company’s do well in a recession. Who needs to know how to re-jig a CV or shine at an interview when jobs are plentiful? I’ve been sent on two such back-to-work courses by my jobcentre. And I play the game, and ask questions, and even write fake comments on their questionnaires. But most of the time, my minds back in EL Crappo Training Enterprises, in a different recession, on a different side of the classroom.

I drank a lot during my time at EL Crappo, drank at lunchtimes, and even taught a class half drunk. Now that was embarrassing. After work I would drink with the former Pop Star and Irish Girl, The Whitehall Dope Fiend and whoever else was around. I drank more as autumn became winter; I drank into the spring. At night I would talk to complete strangers outside Camden Town Tube, or fall asleep on the train and find myself in South London.

And when it wasn’t drink, it was drugs. Rave music was still quite fresh, Ecstasy plentiful and popular. I remember siphoning off drinks discarded by e-d up builders in our local pub, and going in search of an elusive club called The Love Lab. When we gate crashed a South London Poly student bash, I danced with the Nigerian boy soldiers to Rozalla’s Everybody's Free. It was Christmas and the training company closed down for a couple of weeks.


A blur is all I have of January through to March. But in April, things changed. Or rather I changed things. I stopped going to the pub and joined a gym. I had a trainer and drank protein shakes to bulk up. With my freshly cleared mind, I looked into PHD Scholarships, and fantasised about becoming an academic. Except my heart was not in teaching, and my enthusiasm took a nose dive. I soldiered on, faking NVQs, reading out of text books to my more able students.

On my birthday the director of El Crappo Enterprises called me in to his office. I was sacked on the spot. It was called redundancy.

He did me a great favour, set me free. And for a little while I felt the same about this redundancy. Except the current recession feels deeper, and my reserves are depleted, and I’m that much older, and Raves already been revived once since Rosella sang Everybody’s Free.

Friday 19 March 2010

Holidays in Cambodia

Congescor 1.25mg Tablets

Bisoprolol hemifumarate

Cardioselective B-blocker.
For treatment of stable chronic heart failure.





I have a vision of me, emptying out the plastic bag that contains my pills over the desk of my Dole Office tormentor . But in the vision, all I get in return is the blank stare of an idiot.

I read the obituary of Alex Clinton today . He died of a Heart Attack.

The object of life should be to live in peace. But there are people out there who gain pleasure from destruction. From inflicting pain. I’m certain the ignorant person, employed as a Civil Servant (he was neither civil or a servant) has never read the works of De Sade or the thoughts of Pol Pot (if they even exist) . But he has close fellowship with Dennis Nielson who worked in a job centre less than a mile away. He may not boil the heads of boys he has picked up for the evening. But he works in a job centre and has little empathy or humanity.

Well you'll work harder
With a gun in your back
For a bowl of rice a day
Slave for soldiers
Till you starve
Then your head is skewered on a stake

Now you can go where people are one
Now you can go where they get things done
What you need, my son:.

Is a holiday in Cambodia
Where people dress in black
A holiday in Cambodia
Where you'll kiss ass or crack

POL POT, POL POT , POL POT, POL POT, POL POT, POL POT…..POL POT.

Thursday 18 March 2010

jobseekers allowance


Take away this posters origin and look at the text and images. Somewhere at the back of that unemployment line you will see me. Too small to make out, yes. But I’m there in the dole queue.



I have to walk past people with dangerous dogs who smoke rank cigarettes outside my Jobcentre plus. Sit next to alcoholics and the mentally ill; and listen to different automata every visit offer me advice.



At my last interview I was harangued for reading a book while waiting for my interviewer to zip into action. I was supposed to be checking the job board machine, but the very same jobs are available on-line, and I have an internet connection.




Occasionally I encounter a human being, who is sympathetic and offers encouragement. Who knows how to converse and understands the difficulty of my situation. But mostly I’m ritually humiliated by an ignorant box ticking drone.





I am an unemployed man. Who’s never been out of work, until now. One of the thousands made redundant because of the credit crunch. With skills a plenty I earned way above the national average. I moved South from the North East in the Eighties, to find a job. Survived the last recession by the skin of my teeth. But now I’m broke, impecunious. The last of my reserves dwindled back in November. I can’t borrow money, because I can’t pay it back. I can’t support my child, and I can’t find work. Bankruptcy looms.





I suffered a heart attack the day after my redundancy was confirmed. I am a slim, healthy eating, non smoking, marathon runner (Berlin, Madrid, Chicago and even London). I’m not old, but I now have an old mans pill popping regime. Have a face that bleeds like a pig when I shave, and no prospect of ever running a 3.30 marathon again.




Unlike the people who took the train in front of me on 7/7; or those who come back from Afghanistan badly maimed. I only have a nodding acquaintance with death. And I recovered quickly, was at a job seminar three weeks after my attack and operation. I was back running after a month. I was also running with a new business idea, registering a domain, buying equipment, making plans. My mind had shifted. I was now walking the tightrope without a safety net, and I didn’t care about the consequences.




Yesterday I sat in front of a claims advisor. My story was irrelevant. What mattered was the last three weeks. What mattered was whether I had selected a job from their list, regardless of its suitability. He had a box to tick, and was not going to diverge from his simple minded script. He countered my arguments, with a threat of withdrawing my benefits for six months. He also sarcastically commented how easy this was to do, and how surprised he was someone could survive on nothing for six months.




A person with permanent damage to their heart (an attack kill’s cardiac muscle) often suffers from angina. Stress and excessive activity can bring on such an attack. As the claims advisor made his threats, I experienced mild angina. It’s a tightness in the chest and I have a spray that can alleviate the symptoms if pain persists. But it’s next to useless at removing the cause.




Removing myself quickly from the situation and from the jobcentre was my only choice. So I played the game, and accepted a print-out of a job, and walked home dejected and dispirited. I called the number on the print-out, and was told applications were closing in 30 minutes. I took down details of the company’s website and checked the full job description. It was totally unsuitable, and bore little resemblance to the jobcentres specification.





On the way home I had toyed with the idea of Incapacity Benefit. And for a minute or so it felt like a quick and dirty solution to the box ticking sessions. Incapacity Benefit would erase my claimant advisor for good, but in his place would step another. Rather like Duncan Jones’s film Moon, where every three years a fresh clone is woken-up to man the moon-base. The new box ticker, with a different set of questions, would sound strangely familiar.




I thought about winning the lottery and walking up to my claims adviser, tearing up all the crap they have passed on to me. Dropping the scraps like confetti over his desk. But even that fantasy was tempered by the fact that these people are always at lunch or off sick.
And then I thought about an old Patti Smith song, and recited a few of the words.



“I WILL GET OUT OF THIS PISS FACTORY”