Showing posts with label Scouting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scouting. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 December 2015

Things I've learnt in 2015

Greetings dear friends and Internet stalkers. It's coming to that time of year again where I look back and ponder what I even did with myself over the last twelve months. As ever, the answer is "not a lot".

Still, I seem to have learnt some things. So here are the top twenty pieces of  ~ahem~ "useful" "knowledge"* I've picked up in 2015. I hope some of them are helful to at least one person at some time in the future.
  1. According to my flatmate, food (specifically a kebab) is better than sex
  2. It's not the ringers that smell of the tower, it's the tower that smells of the ringers
  3. Vegan cooking can be super easy
  4. The German for "a really big yurt" is "Super Jurte"
  5. If you slice off the end of your thumb, it's probably not bad enough for you to need to go to hospital, just stem the blood flow
  6. Lock the door when you're in the bath
  7. If you don't know the words, just sing "tractor tractor tractor"
  8. Mike the Tiger is the mascot for Louisiana University. He is a real, live tiger
  9. Chicken fried chicken exists
  10. Tea and sympathy get you a long way
  11. If you get bitten by a Catholic, you become a Catholic
  12. If you get bitten by the Pope, you become Italian
  13. Vegan cheese doesn't melt
  14. If you reach the age of 30 in north Germany without getting married, you have to sweep the steps of the Rathaus until a young lady comes along and kisses you [SIDEBAR: This tradition is more common among men, I don't know who kisses women. Maybe Santa]
  15. "If it ends in 'e' it's probably 'die'" is a lie.
  16. Your housemates will think you're crazy if you try to make the house nicer
  17. Your housemates will think you're crazy if you try to use a slow cooker
  18. Your housemates will think you're crazy if you try to explain sausage rolls and Christmas Pudding
  19. If you lose one of your Beavers, they are probably in the tent
  20. You will get on better with your friends during a four day hike than you will ever in your life again. Ever.
Season's Greetings and a happy New Year!



*Some of these "facts" are true and some are utter garbage. I'll leave it to your personal judgement to decide which are which.


Thursday, 29 May 2014

The First Baloo

Hi again guys, you must feel truly blessed to be inundated with so many updates... My pondering this week looks at how great it is to be compared to a beloved childhood character.

One of the perks of being a Cub Leader has been choosing my own name, although it's not been made as public as it eventually will be. For those of you who don't know, the tradition for Cub leaders is for them to take the name of a character from the Jungle Book. There is a long history behind this, but basically it stems from the friendship between Rudyard Kipling (the author of the Jungle Book) and Lord Baden Powell (founder of Scouts.) The idea behind leaders having names is, I think, to create the distance between the leaders and the children which would be suitable in such a situation. This is a similar way of doing things to how teachers are only known by "Mr" or "Mrs" at school, except less formal.

As I think I said on this blog about two years ago, I decided upon Baloo. This is almost entirely because he's good at singing, and is loveable in the Disney film of The Jungle Book. However, when I started my Assistant Leader training about this time last year, I decided that I should read the Jungle Book (as in, the actual book), in order to properly educate myself as to what it was really all about. I'm assuming that most of you haven't actually read the Jungle Book; it's really weird. It's split into shorter stories - some are about Mowgli and his adventures in the jungle, there's one about a mongoose called Rikki Tikki Tavi, and one about a seal called Sea Catch (I think - there's lots of seals.) For a children's book, I wouldn't really recommend it for children, to be honest.

I'm just glad they don't call me Rikki Tikki Tavi.

Having read the book now, I do agree that I made the right choice with Baloo. He's not as fun-loving and easygoing as he is in the Disney film, and I like that. I like that there's two sides of the character which work together or separately. It makes it seem more real, more... Like me. Maybe.

The first time one of my Cubs called me Baloo was at camp the other weekend. It was one of the best feelings I've ever had. Like, for once, I was more than just another person; I had a specific role in this child's life and it made me feel important. It made me feel grown up.

I guess that must be what being a parent feels like.