I had my first proper meal tonight and enjoyed it. I didn't eat as much as I used to but that is a good thing and perhaps I can lose weight by one of the easiest ways possible, eat smaller portions off a smaller plate. I am already feeling the weight going back on.
It has been a cold and wet day and miserable for it. Although the temperature is above freezing point it feels colder than the day before when it was below.
I have been preparing work for the masters degree as much as I can at this point.
I have a new module coming up in January and have enquired about it at the student information zone and have been told that I am on my second choice. If this is true it suits me fine as my first choice no longer interests me. The wheels turn slowly and I have to watch my timetable to see for sure that I am on it and when my day of attendance will be.
I went so far as to order the Essays of Virginia Woolf on Amazon as this is required reading. If for any reason I have got the module wrong then I will be quite happy with the reading material anyway and these essays are supposedly some of her best writing. I enjoyed her address to Cambridge's Newnham and Girton Colleges published later as an extended essay entitled A Room of One's Own where she spoke about the impediment to women and writing was not having a room of their own in which to do it and like the Brontés and Austen and Eliot and all those before them, women wrote in secret in the drawing room surrounded by others with the paper camouflaged under a piece of embroidery. Woolf's essay was written in 1928. Women were only just beginning to get some rights and recognition. It is hardly surprising that we are still in the quagmire of misogynism as have really only just moved into any acceptable freedom for women and we still have way to go. Why it was only in 1975 that men only bars and rooms disappeared in the pubs of the North East (pubs, incidentally, I was talking about only yesterday) and no doubt elsewhere.
My module is ludic writing, from the Latin ludus, humorous, satirical. fun, and parody. I am also reading Kafka and Joyce for the same module.


Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.




