Regular blog posts on management, communication & cars
The end of the affair… Chapter 5: American excess - Route 66
If you ever plan to motor west, Travel my way, Take the highway that is best. Get your kicks on route sixty-six. After 6 weeks of selling ice cream on the Boardwalk, we’re heading west, pushing out our own new frontier…
The end of the affair… Chapter 4: American Excess in Atlantic City
It’s 1975 and I’d begun studying English & American Literature at the University of East Anglia. A subject chosen with the hope of spending a year abroad at a US university. I love american culture and the American car is a huge part of that mythology. I can’t wait.
The end of the affair… Chapter 3: Born to stall
1974, I’m 17 and my provisional driving licence has arrived. But I didn’t rush at learning to drive. It was like getting the chance to meet your hero. You just know it’s bound to be a disappointment. And with learning to drive you have to face a real test at the end – that most people fail, at least once.
The end of the affair… Chapter 2: Teenage dreams
If you read the last chapter of my ‘auto biography’, you’ll know I can’t remember a life before loving cars. Childhood over, let’s start this chapter in my early teenage years. Not old enough to drive a car, but really too old to play with toy cars anymore…
The end of the affair… Chapter 1: Love at first sight
To welcome the New Year, here is the start of a series of posts chronicaling my love affair with cars. If you also had a childhood full of Corgi models and Airfix kits you’ll understand…
Zooming might just save your life…
…. I feel as though I’m surfacing slowly from a deep sleep. I can hear Luisa talking about me in an urgent voice. I slowly open my eyes to find myself lying on the floor by the fire. Oh, and the zoom is still happening, but I seem to be the subject of the conversation. What the hell…?
And I always thought Zoom was just an ice lolly!
Zoom isn’t an ice lolly anymore, but an application allowing us all to fly out into cyberspace to meet up; fighting coronavirus and saving our social lives in lockdown.. And it doesn’t even cost six new pence -it’s free.