Friday 30 December 2011

Time To Be Resolute

I don’t believe in setting New Year’s resolutions. They have a tendency to be discarded along with the decaying stump of the Christmas tree on Twelfth Night. Some don’t even last that long as born-again tee-totallers top up their New Year hangover, or those who vow to have clean lungs for a new calendar promise they’ll quit smoking ‘as soon as I’ve finished this pack’.

Only once have I publically declared a resolution. A few years ago I, a life-long salad-dodging fat bloke, said that I would get of my sofa-filling backside and run a road race in aid of the British Heart Foundation. I found the necessary motivation by committing to do A Good Deed for others.
But this year is different. For once I’m setting some resolutions for me. I need to write – and I need to sell my writing – to pay my bills. So with that in mind I hereby resolve to…
·         Publish at least two books
·         Enter at least five short story competitions
·         Earn a set amount from my writing. I’m not going public with precisely how much that is, but I will let you know later in the year whether I achieve it or not
·         Continue to publish one free short story per month on my www.shaunfinnie.com website.
And while I’m at it, I may as well throw in another, more personal one. I’m still far too fat for fun, so how about if I pledge to lose at the very least two stones in 2012? That’s 28 pounds or almost 13 kilograms if you’re using a different set of scales to mine.
Back when I resolved to run that 10km for charity more than a few people were surprised that I kept my word and kept up a steady jog around the entire course. This time I might even surprise myself.
© Shaun Finnie 2011

Friday 23 December 2011

Wishing You a Happy… erm…

I’m guessing that it won’t have escaped your notice that this weekend is December 25th, and for many people around the world it’s a very special occasion. I don’t mean the overindulgence on dried fruits and eggnog (though be honest - have you ever even seen eggnog?) nor the excited kids severely depleting the world’s stock of gaudy wrapping paper and batteries.

Worldwide over two billion Christians will have a holy-day  for Christ’s-mass and celebrate the birthday of Jesus, or at least the date that sometime in the early 4th century the Roman Catholic church decided would be the day allocated to this feast. Research shows that dates in April and May would appear to be much more likely contenders for the birth date of the baby Jesus but the Roman church, like the British press, never let the truth get in the way of a good story. Nor did the first Christian Roman Emperor, Constantine the Great, who made the date official throughout his empire.

Of course, those ancient Romans loved a good mid-winter bash, so to them this time of year was already party time for the feast of Bacchus and the festival of the unconquered sun, or ‘Dies Natalis Solis Invicti’. The 25th of December also conveniently matched up to, and eventually assimilated, not only the end of their  festival week of Saturnalia, but also the Greek honouring of Dionysus , the old calendar Winter Solstice Brumalia celebrations  and the feast days for celebrating the birth of the Persian god Mithra, the Syrian feast of Elahgabal and Sol the Sun God. In this way the spread of Christianity meant that those who didn’t really fancy changing their favoured flavour of worship could still enjoy their old festivals at the darkest time of the year.

The Christians won’t be the only ones celebrating this weekend though. For the Taiwanese people December 25th is important as it’s their Constitution Day. The Vainakh people of the North Caucasus celebrate their Malkh festival on that date too, and Pakistanis will be partying as it’s the birthday of their country’s founder,  Quaid-e-Azam  Muhammad Ali Jinnah Baba-e-Qaum; the great leader Muhammad Ali Jinnah, father of the nation. Hindus too will be taking to the streets for the brilliant orange day of Pancha Ganapati, a celebration of Lord Ganesha.

Others prefer to go down more unconventional routes. Some may have no religion at all but still want to join in the mid-winter fun, so they’ve affiliated themselves with such unlikely holidays as Snowflake Day (from the ‘Clone High’ cartoon series), Wintersday (from the game Guild Wars), Feast of Winter Veil (World of Warcraft), Holiday Number 11 (TV series ‘Quark’) or Refrigerator Day (TV show ‘Dinosaurs’). And of course, all good Star Wars geeks will know that this is the time of year that the Wookies celebrate Life Day. Honest.

Non-believing humans who don’t want to be left out have invented alternative holidays such as Agnostica or Frostival too, but surely there’s no need for these? Don’t non-Christians have as much right to a celebration on Christmas Day as non-Norse folks have to enjoy every Wodensday and Thorsday?

As long as nobody gets hurt who doesn’t want to, then I’m not going to knock anybody’s beliefs or indeed complete lack of. Wouldn’t it be nice if we really could have peace on Earth and goodwill to all men at this time of year? Just a few days when the devout refrain from fatwas, jihads or crusades, and non-believers abstain from pointing out that anyone with a religious belief is probably a little too old to have an invisible friend?

However you spend it, have a fantastic weekend and for those of you still using the Julian Calendar, read this again in a couple of weeks. I hope you have a great celebration on January 7th.

© Shaun Finnie 2011

Friday 16 December 2011

The Deadline Before Christmas

It can’t have escaped your notice that it’s nearly Christmas. I didn’t realise until the start of October when I heard my first burst of Roy Wood in Debenhams. That was the time that I knew I should start writing a short story on the theme of Christmas for a woman’s magazine. I had a plot worked out that I thought would get me into the magazine’s Christmas Special with no problem. It’s about a boy who wakes up at precisely the wrong (or, for the sake of my story, precisely the right) moment and chats with Santa, telling him that the one thing he really wants this year is to help his ailing mother pay off the bailiffs. She’s dying of severe X Factor withdrawal and the only thing that can save her is to see her son make an incredible journey on Skating on Ice. Probably from the changing room to the recovery room. Something cloyingly sweet like that always goes down well at this time of year.

I rang around my list of potential buyers to find when they wanted subscriptions in by, and that’s when my spirits began to drop lower than a dachshund’s dangler.

‘August!!! You can’t have wanted them in that early! I was enjoying the sunshine then, not thinking about Santa, carols and sickly mothers on ice!’ As one magazine editor politely put it, she knew of several thousand other writers who hadn’t been sunning themselves over the summer.

I’ve now learned a valuable life lesson. If I want to support myself and my Beloved through my wordsmithery I’ll have to live my life several months in advance. So watch for the post: your Easter eggs may arrive any day now.

And while I’m on the subject of timings, I thought I’d share a story that my Beloved told me this week. She received yet another unwanted spam text message the other day, but this one was a little different. It wasn’t asking if she’d had an injury in the last twelve months or if she wanted to change her energy supplier. No, this text was reminding her of the great deliver service that a certain pizza company provide. The only problem was, they were in Basildon. I suspect that, as we live in Yorkshire, they wouldn’t make good on their promise of, ‘if we don’t deliver in half an hour you get your pizza for free’!


© Shaun Finnie 2011

Friday 9 December 2011

Down Down

I sat at my desk the other day, typing away as usual. There was the sound of the wind howling around, the tippet-tap of my fingers on the keyboard and the thundering of jackdaws clog dancing on my dormer roof. All quite normal sounds for here, even the world’s heaviest jackdaws.  However these were then unexpectedly joined by another noise: A ‘pffft’ sound almost exactly the same as that made by the air escaping from a Scotch egg when you bite into it.

Sadly though the noise wasn’t accompanied by the Scotchy’s delicious salty meatiness and rough texture on my tongue, rather by a slow but inexorable sinking feeling. The compressed air cylinder in my chair had given up the ghost and I slid ever so slowly towards the floor.

I suppose I should be grateful that it hadn’t exploded, catapulting me though my attic office window and launching me into the twinkling night over the grim ex-mining towns like a portly Billy Elliot. Only I’d be the version without the aid of an Elton John tune or stagehands struggling with heavy duty flying cables, obviously.

So it now seems like I needed a new office chair. That would be about £150, which is money that I simply don’t have to spend, especially at this time of year. There’s no way that I can afford it. The cash I’d saved for Christmas had already gone to Santa’s financial services (at only slightly better rates than Wonga.com) and I’d already blown my recently awarded ‘Twenty years’ service’ money on setting up my home office. So like most of the western world I’m officially skint. And of course it’s not my fault, oh no.

I blame the government. That’s usually the correct thing to do when you have no money isn’t it?
And a large portion of fault has to be apportioned to the previous government too. Like the BBC, I have to be seen to offend all political persuasions equally.
And the Greeks / Irish / Italians / whoever’s in the worst Eurozone trouble by the time you read this. I can’t keep up.
And of course the bankers can be accused of anything. They’re a popular scapegoat. I think they were behind 9-11, the faked moon landings and Kennedy’s assassination too.
And while I’m at it I’ll also point the finger at Jeremy Clarkson. He won’t mind.


Or I could just be insolvent because I spent too much on beer and pizza?

Despite my financial embarrassment I still needed something to sit on, so I did what I usually do in these circumstances: I looked in the Argos catalogue. Glory be, they had the perfect  black (fake) leather number. I couldn’t afford it, but what the heck, it’s Christmas.

Just before I set off I had one final fiddle underneath the chair, and guess what? I found another lever, a teensie weensie one that I hadn’t noticed before. And guess further what? It was a locking bar, and it had worked loose. Once I slid it into the correct position the chair worked perfectly again. It went up. It went down. It went boing-boing when I bounced happily on it – an action which may, if I’m being honest, have contributed to it failing in the first place. You can imagine how foolish I felt.

But looking on the bright side, I’ve now got £150 to play with!

Did I mention that I failed my A level economics?


© Shaun Finnie 2011

Friday 2 December 2011

Christmas is Coming

‘What do you want for Christmas, love?’  It was a little early but my Beloved likes to plan. So she asked the question straight after I’d finished unwrapping my birthday presents in July. I know from experience that it’s easiest to just go with the flow, but I don’t think that she expected my truthful answer.

‘I’d really love a huge encyclopaedia of criminal pathology please.’ It’s true, it’s what I really want, much more than the usual annual underwear upgrade, and as an author I’m all set. I’ve got a desk, paper and pens, a shiny new laptop and a printer. What else does someone who writes for a living really need? Apart from talent and a really good proffredder, obviously.
As I’m in the middle of a crime novel at the moment then a book about the criminal mind-set would be just the thing. I know that I could just trot down to my local nick and ask to interview some bad lads and lasses, but I don’t thing that would be tax deductible.
I’ve always been told by accountants that if, as a new business, you don’t make a sizeable loss in your first couple of years then you’re not trying hard enough. If my projected income for next year is as low as I suspect it will be then there will be no problems on that front .
But what would I legitimately be able to claim for as a business expense? I know that it’s a bad idea to say this publicly (as the tax man may be reading) but I don’t have any real expenses. I’m never required to travel anywhere for my work; I can email everything off, so there won’t be any delivery charges. All of my saleable stock comes from my imagination; it’s not as if I have to buy stories in and then sell them on. And I certainly don’t want the restriction of allocating a room in my house as a dedicated office. I like the idea that, if needs be, it can become a bedroom again at very short notice. All I have to do is unfold my sofa bed if the Beloved and I have a quarrel about something like stupid Christmas gift ideas. And when the time comes for us to sell, I really can’t be bothered with the business of working out capital gains tax on the one room, as would be required if I declared it as a designated work space.
So I’ll be self-employed with (initially at least) very little income and just about the same amount of outgoings. At least there won’t be many transaction charges on my bank account.

© Shaun Finnie 2011