1 year old
A year ago today I was woken by a phone call to say my sister had gone into labour. I was in Nottingham at the time, and a fair distance from the hospital, but I wasn't worried - after all, labour takes a long time. So I got up, had a shower and some breakfast, and headed down the...hell, I don't know, I just followed the satnav to Warwick Hospital.
An hour and a half later I pulled into the car park and tried to find the maternity ward. It was a bizarre experience. I kept wandering around deserted hospital corridors, following signs that kept leading to locked doors, then deciding I must have made a mistake and looping the whole thing. I somehow did this for twenty-five minutes, before finally heading over to the main building and asking at main reception. They sent me right back, but said I should use the intercoms, if and when I found any. I was moving fairly quickly, but wasn't too anxious - there was still plenty of time.
I finally talked a nurse into buzzing me into the maternity ward, and took a seat in the waiting area. I'd figured my Dad and I would be sitting around for quite a while, so I had books, food and general entertainments to last at least the morning.
At which point Dad appeared, said "It's all kicking off in there. Jane invited you in, but the midwife said no. Back in a bit..." and vanished. Fifteen minutes later, I met my niece.
I am the only person in my family who can happily believe it's been a year. Happy birthday Aimee.
Aimee’s Naming Day
Last Saturday we had a naming day for my 9 month-old niece, and my sister, being cool like she is, picked a Humanist ceremony.
It was a big family do in my parents' garden, and relatives came from far and wide. The weather was a bit variable, but we managed to grab the perfect half hour in the early afternoon, and we were all gathered in the shade of the apple tree by the obviously experienced Celebrant. I was at the front near the baby, as Jane had asked me to be an Honorary Parent, or as it became known, a Goodparent1. This was lovely of them, and I'm chuffed they thought of me. I am, along with Aimee's aunt and a family friend, tasked with being available if ever Aimee needs help, as well as generally checking things are going ok. I can do this, although it does conflict with my role as uncle, which traditionally involves giving sweets at inappropriate times and the teaching of rude words.
I'd figured being at the front would make it difficult to take photos, but after a few attempts to hand over my camera were met with frightened looks I decided to wing it, and it didn't matter at all. The whole event was actually pleasingly informal, but sincere with it.
I liked the tone of the Celebrant's script. It wasn't too cloying or false, and there was no mention of religion. It expressed, in my opinion, exactly the right sentiments:
As she grows older she will no doubt ask many questions and you will all do your best to answer them truthfully. She will also ask questions that no one can answer, and have to accept that there is a great deal of uncertainty in life because of our own basic fallibility. But whatever her age she will deserve the tender love and firm guidance, which only you as parents, grandparents, friends and teachers can give.
Moreover, children have a right to a faith in themselves, in the story of mankind and in their heritage. It is up to those around her to give her as good a start in life as possible; to provide her with the best example of the way humans should relate to all others around them; to surround her with the warmth of your affection and love, to support her through all the ups and downs of her life. In that way the cycle of human relationships can survive, sometimes against all the odds. Who knows what she may accomplish in her life with help and encouragement from those who will influence her.
I particularly liked that Aimee was always referred to as an individual. She was never implied to be the possession of her parents, but a unique person who would be brought up to think for herself. Stonking.
A few weeks ago I volunteered to read a poem, then agonized for ages. I found a few possibilities, but most were sickly sweet. Neil Gaiman had a couple of good ones, but they were a little dark, and I quite liked a Roman Dirge, er, dirge, before thankfully coming to my senses2. Dawkins has written some nice pieces for his children, but I didn't want to mention religion explicitly. I saw a suggestion of Kurt Vonnegut's:
Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies -- 'God damn it, you've got to be kind.'
which came close. But eventually I went with 'My Mom and Dad', by Bill Watterson. I prefaced it by saying I was reading in my role as uncle, and on behalf of Aimee, then looked down and hoped I wasn't going to ruin the whole day:
My Mom and Dad are not what they seem.
Their dull appearance is part of their scheme.
I know of their plans. I know their techniques.
My parents are outer space alien freaks!They landed on Earth in spaceships humongous.
Posing as grownups, they now walk among us.
My parents deny this, but I know the truth.
They're here to enslave me and spoil my youth.Early each morning, as the sun rises,
Mom and Dad put on their Earthling disguises.
I knew right away their masks weren't legit.
Their faces are lined - they sag and don't fit.The Earth's gravity makes them sluggish and slow.
They say not to run, wherever I go.
They live by the clock. They're slaves to routines.
They work the year 'round. They're almost machines.They deny that TV and fried food have much worth.
They cannot be human. They're not of this Earth.
I cannot escape their alien gaze,
and they're warping my mind with their alien ways.For sinister plots, this one is a gem.
They're bringing me up to turn me into them.
The poem was originally published in a Calvin and Hobbes cartoon. I'd run it by my parents beforehand, but was still pretty nervous. Thankfully it went down well, and everybody laughed. The Celebrant asked if she could keep a copy for recommending to others, too(!). Dad wrote his own poem and I think he was more nervous than me, but it was excellent and also got a good reaction.
We Goodparents promised to do our duties, during which Meg the Labrador celebrated by having a mad moment and sprinting through the crowd at full pelt, then Aimee was presented with a necklace and everyone raised their glasses to her.
I took a few hundred photos over the afternoon, and in every single one my sister has the biggest smile on her face. Which is lovely - it's great to see her so happy.
I had a chance to talk to the BHA Celebrant beforehand. I rarely encounter other BHA members, and it was nice to chat with somebody who's followed the ups-and-downs of secular humanism over the last year. We cheered about the abolition of the blasphemy law and rolled our eyes at the English rules on weddings. She's trained to perform wedding ceremonies, and in Scotland could be licensed to perform a legal ceremony, but England only allows places to be licensed. She also does multiple funerals per week and 7-8 naming ceremonies a year.
There were a couple of religious people there, and I couldn't help feeling a bit nervous about the ceremony. Obviously Christenings are the usual default, but they're just creepy. Anyone who thinks babies are born sinful and need to be cleansed can stay the hell away from my niece (I can say that - it's my job). Thankfully the Humanist ceremony didn't disappoint. It wasn't stridently secular, nor too gushing, and was actually full of meaningful things. I thought it was an effective and appropriate ritual, and I'll certainly recommend it. All the pictures are here.
- a term I apparently dreamt, since I can't find it written anywhere [↩]
- from his wonderful Something at the Window is Scratching [↩]
Appalled
This is what happened when Aimee saw the coat I bought her for Christmas:
Apparently red's not her colour.
I has niece
Aimee West took four hours to make her way out. She's 3kg and most cute
I made it from Nottingham to Warwick Hospital ten minutes before she was born. Mother and baby are recuperating and doing fine. I'll update this with pics in a bit.
Update - as promised:
All hands battle stations; incoming baby!
Kid has good timing. Other than it being 6 in the morning.
Shall head over to the hospital shortly, with towels, hot water and a plunger.
Not yet an uncle. But soon.
The midwife today told my sister to expect the baby any minute. I'm hoping it'll hang on until the weekend.
Figuring out a new flashgun
I was a bit extravagant on Friday. After much umming and aahing, I treated myself to a new flashgun, and have been playing with it ever since. I have a whole list of justifications for this purchase, which I could only just afford, but nevertheless feel a little guilty about it. Things are still a little up in the air part-time-job-wise, but I'm hoping to have that sorted soon.
Obviously I'm going to experiment and learn how to use it well, but after such an expense I think it's doubly a duty to know it inside out. I'm keen to get an understanding of its Manual mode, but as it can interface with the camera's exposure system I'd obviously like to figure that out too - fast-moving events and I'm not going to have time to manually set the power and zoom level. I know what the camera and flash can theoretically do together, but needed specifics.
Unfortunately, the instruction manual is dreadful. It tells me what all the buttons do, but has little information on how the flash deals with the various priority modes on the camera. It's basic message is: "we'll handle all the exposure stuff, don't worry about it". Which is no good. It continually refers to 'foreground' and 'background' without giving any indication of how the camera decides which is which. 'Fill-in flash' is mentioned as a possibility (and one of the features I most want to use), but how do I ensure the camera is in this mode? What happens when the camera is in aperture priority? This made me realise that I never really understood the small built-in flash as well as I should have, which in turn made me even more determined to make proper use of one that can bounce / swivel / zoom etc.. In search of help, I googled for a site I vaguely remembered.
The Photonotes.org three-part Canon EOS Flash guide turned out to be fantastic. It's a comprehensive explanation of the various exposure systems, and has answered my every question. For example, the 'foreground' is the area around the active focus point, and the background everything else. Perfect.
The only remaining thing is to get it off the camera as I want to work through the Strobist lighting course, which requires an off-camera flash. I'd assumed a hotshoe extension cable would be cheap and easy to find, but I should have researched that more. Options are:
Cable - Canon's TTL sync cord. Means I can still use the camera's exposure system. But £45. For a 60cm cable. So: rubbish.- Cable - Jessops TTL sync cord. Again I can still get easy exposures. £35, and 1.2m long. Maybe.
- Cable - make your own PC connection. No exposure data so I'd have to do everything on manual, but that'd be good fun. I'd need two hotshoe adapters at £10 each but could then use any length PC cable I want. 5m would do it. Probably come to about £30. Definite possibility.
- Wireless - Canon's wireless-TTL setup. Transfers exposure data. Needs a £90 trigger and, I think, line of sight. Can't justify that.
- Wireless - "Pocket Wizards" - beloved of professional photographers, radio rather than optical, apparently 100% reliable, and £300. No exposure data. No chance.
- Wireless - eBay radio triggers memorably described as 'modified garage door openers'. Not completely reliable, but the new 'V2's are apparently Not Bad. No exposure data. But about £20. Possible.
I think I'll go with the make-your-own connection. I'd want a good few metres, and there's no way to do that including exposure data, which I can easily live without. The eBay triggers I may upgrade to at some point, once I've got some understanding of how off-camera flash works.
As it happened, some extra work unexpectedly turned up and took the edge off the expense. Still going to work hard, though. On the right is one of the first shots I took, of (my sister) Jane, (not actually being tortured) Meg and (due in 4 weeks but apparently already in position) vaguely-baby Guybrush/Bellatrix.
Men and babies
I like Helena Bonham Carter. I think she's a good actress. Unfortunately, since Harry Potter 5 she is Bellatrix Lestrange, and that's the end of it. I can't see her without thinking 'crazy wild-haired witch'. So it makes perfect sense that she's married to Tim Burton.
Ms Carter (?) is apparently pregnant with their second child. Said she of the first:
"It's like an explosion of heart, love, everything - and it's extraordinary.
"It's changed everything. Everybody told me it would, and, of course, I didn't really listen, and there's no real way of describing it."
While her husband:
Burton, who was in the delivery room, recalled: "It was like my own private Alien movie.
"I'll tell you, it was the weirdest thing I've ever seen. It was amazing."
Heh. That'd be me. I recently felt my sister's baby kick. It was both completely explicable and bloody weird.
Incidentally, I'm campaigning for Guybrush if it's a boy. A girl? Bellatrix. Who's with me?



