Thursday, 15 April 2010

£20+ hike in Car Tax just BEFORE a General Election!!!

I can't believe how stupid this government is.  There are millions like me who have just received their car tax reminder from the DVLA, except where it says £190 for a 12 month licence on paper, when you go online and come to pay for it it has jumped to £205.  Last year I paid £185 and that, in all my 27 years (so far) of driving I have never paid over £180, was the highest so far, thanks solely to New Labour and their idiotic 'green taxes.'  'Green' to me means naive, and that's what those of us who believe this claptrap are.  I know the size of the engine dictates the cost but why have I suddenly got to pay an extra £20 this year when I don't even drive 500 miles per year, for the most part my car sits on the drive as petrol is way too expensive under these governmental fools appeasing the 'green lot.'  How stupid some people are believing all this nonsense, all that money simply goes into government coffers, it never gets spent where it should, like on the roads.  This is a complete whitewash and a deliberate attempt to squeeze even more money out of the hardest hit motorists in the world for taxation.

Way to go Gordon, you've just lost my vote and those of the other beleaguered motorists whose taxes are due on 1 May, we won't forget you come polling day.  What a fool eh? an obvious case if ever there was one of shooting oneself in the foot.   See, while they are chauffered around in their gas guzzling Jags and Daimlers etc they don't actually pay any taxes or fees or petrol so they have no idea at all what their idiotic schemes to appease the greens actually costs in the RW (that's the Real World to you and me).

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

If you're sick and/or disabled DO NOT VOTE LABOUR

Here's why:-

Even harsher new ESA medical approved

13 April 2010

Tens of thousands of claimants facing losing their benefit on review, or on being transferred from incapacity benefit, as plans to make the employment and support allowance (ESA) medical much harder to pass are approved by the secretary of state for work and pensions, Yvette Cooper.

The shock plans for ‘simplifying’ the work capability assessment, drawn up by a DWP working group, include docking points from amputees who can lift and carry with their stumps. Claimants with speech problems who can write a sign saying, for example, ‘The office is on fire!’ will score no points for speech and deaf claimants who can read the sign will lose all their points for hearing.

Meanwhile, for ‘health and safety reasons’ all points scored for problems with bending and kneeling are to be abolished and claimants who have difficulty walking can be assessed using imaginary wheelchairs.

Claimants who have difficulty standing for any length of time will, under the plans, also have to show they have equal difficulty sitting, and vice versa, in order to score any points. And no matter how bad their problems with standing and sitting, they will not score enough points to be awarded ESA.

In addition, almost half of the 41 mental health descriptors for which points can be scored are being removed from the new ‘simpler’ test, greatly reducing the chances of being found incapable of work due to such things as poor memory, confusion, depression and anxiety.

There are some improvements to the test under the plans, including exemptions for people likely to be starting chemotherapy and more mental health grounds for being admitted to the support group. But the changes are overwhelmingly about pushing tens of thousands more people onto JSA.

If all this sounds like a sick and rather belated April Fools joke to you, we’re not surprised. But the proposals are genuine and have already been officially agreed by Yvette Cooper, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. They have not yet been passed into law, but given that both Labour and the Conservatives seem intent on driving as many people as possible off incapacity related benefits, they are likely to be pursued by whichever party wins the election.

We know that many people will find this news deeply upsetting and even frightening and we know that some people will condemn us for publicising the planned changes or for the language that we are using to do so. But we also believe that it’s not too late to stop these ugly plans in their tracks if claimants and the organisations that represent them act now.

With 1.5 million incapacity benefit claimants waiting to be assessed using the work capability assessment in the next few years and tens of thousands of people already on ESA and set to be reviewed annually, these changes will be of great concern to many voters – if they find out about them before polling day.

So, please spread the word in forums and blogs and to people you know who may be affected. Ask any disability charity you have a connection with to speak out now, before election day, against these plans. You might also want to contact local newspapers and radio to warn people about the proposals.

And above all, contact not just your MP, but the other candidates in your constituency, and let them know you will not be voting for anyone who does not loudly condemn this shameful attack on sick and disabled claimants.

These plans really are a potential seat loser, but only if enough people know about them.

Limited capability for work
The biggest changes and cuts are to take place in the limited capability for work assessment which decides whether you are eligible for the work-related activity group of ESA. Claimants need to score fifteen points to be placed in this group unless they are exempt or covered by the exceptional circumstances rules.

Walking
The activity of walking has been replaced by the activity of ‘mobilising’, with the fifteen points for ‘Cannot walk at all’ to be removed. Instead of looking at how far you can walk with a walking stick or other aid if such aid is normally used, the test is now ‘Mobilising with or without a walking stick, manual wheelchair or other aid if such aid can reasonably be used’  In other words, even if you don’t use a wheelchair you can be assessed as if you did – an intention which is made clear in the body of the report. To score fifteen points you will need to show that you could neither walk nor wheel a wheelchair 50 metres without stopping in order to avoid significant discomfort or exhaustion. If you cannot do so repeatedly ‘within a reasonable timescale’ you will also score fifteen points.

Nine points are scored for 100 metres and 6 for 200 metres.

This means that many people who get the higher rate of the mobility component of DLA may not be awarded ESA at all. Even the fifteen points for being unable to walk up and down two steps is to be cut to nine points.

Standing and sitting
Points for these activities have also been slashed.  At the moment, you can score points if you can’t stand or if you can’t sit for given lengths of time. Under the revised test you will have to show that you can neither stand nor sit for more than 30 minutes at a ‘work station’ before having to ‘move away in order to avoid significant discomfort or exhaustion’. Even then you will only score 9 points, or 6 points if you can last for an hour, not enough to be awarded ESA.

Fifteen points are only available from this activity if you can’t move from one seated position to an adjacent one without help.

The chair has also been changed from an upright chair to an ‘adjustable chair’ even though the reality is that these are not readily provided in most workplaces, regardless of what the Disability Discrimination Act might say.

Bending and kneeling
The activity of ‘Bending and kneeling’, for which 30 points are currently available, is to be completely done away with. Bizarrely one of the reasons for doing so is ‘health and safety reasons’ as people should not ‘bend forward when lifting’.

Reaching
The fifteen point descriptor for not being able to put either arm behind your back is to be ditched.

Picking up
The panel have decided that the fact that you do not have two hands should not be a reason for scoring points for problems with moving a half litre or one litre carton or moving a light but bulky object. They argue that ‘an item may be transferred by wedging it against the body, or another limb’ and that many amputees who chose not to have a prosthetic limb ‘remain able to complete the task’. All references to using hands in this activity are therefore to be removed.

Manual dexterity
The nine scoring descriptors for manual dexterity are to be reduced to just four. Problems with just one hand and problems with pouring will no longer score points and references to a ‘conventional keyboard’ are to be changed to a ‘suitable keyboard’. Problems with pressing a button are to be added.

Speech, hearing and vision
The three activities speech, hearing and vision are to be replaced with three new activities.  Speech now becomes ‘Making self understood through speaking, writing, typing or other means normally used; unaided by another person’.

To score fifteen points a claimant will need either to show that they:

‘Cannot convey a simple message, such as the presence of a hazard.’ or that they have ‘significant difficulty conveying a simple message to strangers.’

So, the fact that your speech cannot be understood by other people will no longer score points if, instead, you are able to write, type or communicate by ‘other means’.

Hearing is replaced with: ‘Understanding communication by both verbal means (such as hearing or lip reading) and non-verbal means (such as reading 16 point print) using any aid if reasonably used; unaided by another person.’

To score fifteen points a claimant will have to show that they ‘Cannot understand a simple message due to sensory impairment, such as the location of a fire escape’ or that they have ‘significant difficulty understanding a simple message from a stranger’.

Being unable to hear someone talking will no longer score points.

Problems with vision have been turned into ‘Navigation and maintaining safety, using a guide dog or other aid if normally used.’

To score fifteen points you will need to be able to show that you are: ‘Unable to navigate around familiar surroundings, without being accompanied by another person, due to sensory impairment’ or that you cannot safely cross a road.

Being unable to see well enough to read large print or to recognise people will no longer score points.

Continence
This is one area where the descriptors do seem to have been improved. Previously there were three separate and highly complex activities. These have been reduced to just one where the issue is whether the loss of bowel or bladder control or the leakage from a collecting device is ‘sufficient to require the individual to clean themselves and change clothing.’ If this happens at least once a month, fifteen points are scored.

Consciousness
Points for losing consciousness at least once a month are to be reduced from nine to six and a six point descriptor for losing consciousness twice in six months is to be axed.

Mental, cognitive and intellectual function assessment

The mental health and learning difficulties section of the WCA has been slashed from 41 point scoring descriptors to just 21.

For example, one of the fifteen point and one of the nine point descriptors have been removed from the ‘Learning tasks’ activity, and a fifteen point descriptor has been removed from the ‘Getting about’ activity.

The three activities relating to ‘Memory and concentration’, ‘Execution of tasks’ and ‘Initiating and sustaining personal action’ are all rolled into a single activity called ‘Initiating and completing personal action’.

Currently claimants have 5 opportunities to score fifteen points outright from the three activities and many more opportunities to score fifteen points or more from a combination of points from the three activities.

Under the new test, however, there will be just one opportunity to score fifteen points. This is likely to greatly reduce the chances of being found incapable of work due to such things as poor memory, confusion and depression.

The three activities ‘Coping with social situations’, ‘Propriety of behaviour with other people’ and ‘Dealing with other people’ are to be reduced to two activities; ‘Coping with social engagement’ and ‘Appropriateness of behaviour with other people’. Again, the opportunities for scoring points have been considerably reduced.

Limited capability for work-related activity
The limited capability for work-related activity assessment decides who is eligible for the support group, based on any one of a range of descriptors applying to the claimant. These descriptors have largely been altered in line with changes to the work-related activity group.

However, there are some notable changes and even some improvements. For example, distance for being unable to what we must now call ‘mobilise’ has been increased from the original 30 metres to 50 metres.

In addition, there are now more ways to qualify for the support group on mental health and learning difficulties grounds. These include: ‘Awareness of hazard’, ‘Coping with change’, ‘Coping with social engagement’ and ‘Appropriateness of behaviour with other people’.

However, descriptors relating to ‘Maintaining personal hygiene’ and ‘Eating and drinking’ have been removed.

The exemptions relating to the support group are also to be widened to cover not just people who are receiving certain types of chemotherapy, but also people who ‘are likely to receive chemotherapy within the next six months’.

It could have been worse

In spite of some improvements in relation to the support group, overall the changes to the work capability assessment are likely to lead to many thousands more sick and disabled people being forced onto jobseekers allowance.

And yet, it could have been even worse. The original changes proposed by the working group were even harsher. It was only after their proposals were looked at by the Chief Medical Adviser at the DWP, following complaints by disability group representatives, that some were toned down and additional points attached to some descriptors. It was this final review, contained in the Addendum, that was approved by the secretary of state.

Participants
The participants in the review are listed at Annex B of the Internal Review as:

Individual Attendees:
Brigid Campbell, Social Security Advisory Committee
Dr Angela Graham, Atos Origin Medical Services
Dr David Henderson Slater, Consultant in Neurological Disability/Rehabilitation Medicine, Oxford Centre for Enablement
Dr Ed McDermott, Atos Origin Medical Services
Dr Gordon Parker, Consultant Occupational Physician
Professor Tom Sensky, Professor of Psychological Medicine at Imperial College, London

Represented organisations:
Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development
Citizens Advice Bureau
Disability Benefits Consortium
Disability Employment Advisory Council
Mencap
MIND
National Autistic Society
Parkinson’s Disease Society
Royal College of Psychiatrists
RNIB
RNID
RSI Action

Two issues about this list may be of concern.

The first is that two of the individual attendees are employed by Atos Origin Medical Services. Atos is the company that carries out benefits medicals on behalf of the DWP in return for hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers money. Some observers may be troubled that employees of a company which might gain a commercial advantage from the medicals becoming simpler and quicker to carry out should be involved in the process of reviewing how points are scored.

The second is the wide range of disability organisations whom the DWP has been able to name as having participated in this review. We have no doubt that most of them were against many of the changes proposed and that they even won concessions from the DWP. But the fact remains that, with the exception of MIND, we are not aware of any agencies speaking out against these proposals with the kind of outrage their clients might reasonably have expected.

If claimants manage to make their voices heard on this issue, it will only be with the genuine and vocal support of the disability charities listed above.

Sources

Building bridges to Work

Work Capability Assessment Internal Review

Addendum

If you are sick and/or disabled please do not vote Labour in again.  Not only have they agreed ALL of these things, they are keeping it all quiet until after the election.  Really nice, caring Labour government? No way!!!  They forget though that disabled people have a voice and they have a vote.  denying them access to this abhorrent policy is probably what you'd expect from this government, but since when did Labour become The Nasty Party?

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

© Benefits And Work.com

Friday, 9 April 2010

As If To Prove A Point - Someone is Barbecuing Old Socks!

Yes, it has happened.  Just a few hours after I wrote about Barbecue Season, some fool in the village is barbecuing sweaty socks; that's what it smells like.  You know the smell of a damp tea towel that's been left somewhere and the part of it that is still wet because it's rolled up somewhere and been forgotten - it's just like that; that and mouldy festering socks.  It is the most revolting smell I have ever come across, it is barbecue because there is a small waft of meat cooking on the top of this awful stink; perhaps those 'cooking' whatever it is can't smell their own stink but in this village they don't care about that.  In this village, it's the 'me first brigade' that has the upper hand, mainly because the powers that be usually have 'no-one available to help,' so knowing they can behave as they like; they carry on doing so.  It used to be the quaint, quintessential quiet Kentish country village.  How places can change practically overnight because of the mindless morons who think it is their right to inflict anti social behaviour on the quiet, law abiding majority.  Ten years ago (when we came here) this village had NO antisocial behaviour of any sort.  Now though it's going the way of the sink estate complete with all the anti-social idiots, their idiot offspring (the apple doesn't fall far from the tree etc) and the (owah owah anyone?) behaviour they bring. 

I want my village back the way it was before the mindless morons moved in but for now I have to contend with this foul stink (and it IS very foul) - Heaven alone knows what the meat is but that doesn't smell very appetising.  See, I told you that the VI''s would be out in droves, it's barely spring and they're out.  Betcha tomorrow we have even more, which reminds me of a certain family we have here who have barbecues in the pouring rain, even in thunderstorms!   Also tonight and tomorrow night we are blessed with the curse of the 2 local pubs, who are a fair way away, treating us to their 'live' caterwailing (sorry, music) which goes on until 2am and later as the idiots who have consumed their own body weight in alcohol pick a fight with a lamp post on their way home, lose the fight and then vomit all over the floor as if in protest.  Disgusted yet? Are you? Try living here with no means of getting out and you'll not only be disgusted, you'll be downright angry that these morons have no self respect and so have no respect for the rights of others to be fast asleep by 2am but can't because of these morons being so loud and raucous at that time of the morning.  Don't suggest getting the local council involved as they don't want to know, neither does my Conservative MP who did his level best to pass the buck in the hope that it would go away.  They don't want my vote in the local elections or the general election obviously because they're not getting it.  Neither are the lot that's in now, all they have done is let the country be over-run to the point that Britain is now full.  Rudy Guiliani where are you when we need you???

Quick!  Hurry up, get here now as the Fartbox is coming .. hurry up or you'll miss it ... actually, no, you're ok, take your time, you might just get up here as the rider leans forward over the handlebars in a vain attempt to make it go faster than it's lamentable 0.5mph.

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

My Thyroid Doctor is Just As Bad As All The Others

There was I thinking that my thyroid doctor was one of the better ones, tsk tsk, silly me.  She is just as bad as all the others.  You know I'd sent her that email and the secretary had said the doctor would deal with it herself?  Well by 'dealing with it herself' she actually meant ignoring me completely because that's what happened, lovely isn't it when you think of how serious underactive thyroid is.  I am so annoyed it is beyond words.  The doctor had quite casually said to the secretary, apparently, that if I called again (!) to tell me to go back to my GP and be re-referred (DONE) but what an appalling way to treat someone.  You can guarantee she will be told about her appalling actions when my appointment comes though, and when I get past this useless hospital's new 'Triage Assessment for Appointments' system.  I'm also going to raise a complaint with the hospital over it; something I didn't want to do as I thought this doctor was great, apparently not.  I will never, ever, as long as I live EVER trust a doctor again, no matter who they are, no matter how nice they appear, they are all the same.  I have said for a long time, that the hippocratic oath they all swear to should be very quickly renamed the HIPPOCRYTICAL OATH!!! because that's what my experience of 'doctors' has taught me.

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All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

Barbecue Season starts this week - Don't Miss It!!!

Coming hot on the heels of the Village Idiot Season is the Barbecue Season where the whole of the village starts up with their old and battered, some new and lovely, barbecue systems.  The teeniest, tiniest hint of warm air and they're all out in their droves throwing fuel on the coals and creating that infernal stink of hot fuel which always precedes the smell of cooking.  I'm surprised there are not more accidents as those lazy souls in this village won't start their barbecue properly therby not infesting the air with their stink.  Cooking food is not a horrible smell you understand but that stink of fuel is!!!  Add to that, clouds and clouds of dense billowing white and grey smoke which you cannot get away from, and you start to get the picture.  Our house backs onto and is surrounded by other properties all with their barbecues out, it's like living in a smog infestsed city centre.  Those of us who like to breathe FRESH air can go whistle as far as the BS is upon u.  Trying to breathe with all your windows and doors shut against these infernal stinkmeisters is not appealing or conducive to breathing in the hot summer months.  Yes it does happen every night, it is ongoing as one ends another one starts up.  Once the stink of fuel is in the house it is impossible to remove as if you're not quick enough to smell it happening before it hits the house you've had it.  What a lovely village to live in eh? I can highly recommend it if you like VI and BS!

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author



VI Season (for the uninitiated that's Village Idiot Season)

Yes folks it's that time again.  That sunny, always funny time of year when the Idiots in the Village start flexing their idiot muscles and come out to play.  This year we have a new module in the season, that is the Village Idiot in Training or VI(i)T for short.  The VI(i)T's can be easily recognised by their antics which usually start at 11pm most evenings and continue at sporadic times throughout the night.  These VI(i)T's are usually younger than their peers and female, screaming and shouting for all they are worth, tottering up and down the street (yes they do sound like other 'ladies of the night' but to my knowledge, that doesn't go on here - least I don't think so) on ludicrously high heels before falling off into the gutter where more screaming, effing and blinding carries on.  Now add to the mix a couple of the male VI(i)T's and you have the heady mix of swearing, vomiting, loud music and the eventual 'Piece de Resistance' at every VI(i)T event: the fist fight; where they attempt to fight each other but are too drunk and incapable and end up swiping at their partner only to miss, spin round three times with the centrifugal force of the unlanded blow and join their female counterparts in the gutter, which, given the state of them is probably the best place for 'em.  I will be selling tickets to the events a week before they happen so you can get the best seats!

Add to this the annual sighting of the Fartbox - that's the Fartbox Motorbike which sounds as if it's running on a matchbox, an elastic band and a fart. The rider, usually a spotty faced teen with a crash helmet that doesn't fit so sits atop his head rather than covering (and therefore protecting) it, resplendent in tee shirt sleeves and shorts (these fully paid up members of the VI Society are so idiotic as to think they will never come off their precious farties and that 'it will never happen to me' until they end up in A&E (ER) with their skin hanging off after they've come off onto a road surface. Now you and I know that in an argument between human skin and a tarmaced road who'll come off worse, but these morons, well their skin isn't like ours, obviously, until they are sadly clogging up A&E because they are too stupid to realise just why professional motorcyclists wear leather and have crash helmets that fit. So, the Fartbox Riders are complete and utter VI's of the highest order so they deserve their place in the Village Idiot Blog).  Add to this the pre-requisite 'leaning forward over the handlebars' to ahem, make it go faster!  This sight can usually be seen up and down the length and breadth of my tiny road (a cul de sac) with the holy grail at the end of it (village hall car park) where he goes to meet his mates (who are never there so earning him the title of Billy No-Mates) all throughout the summer afternoons from 4pm onwards, up until he either can't see where he is going or he runs out of petrol and reluctantly goes home. 

This season starts in earnest when the evenings get lighter (so they can see where they are going) the weather is warmer (they don't like getting cold and/or wet depending on whether it is raining or snowing) and it's quiet, but not for long.  The long suffering folk who have never been inclined to take up the job title of Village Idiot hope constantly for freezing cold nights with rain and/or snow to keep the VI(i)T's indoors where they can annoy the older Village Idiots who spawned them.  Talking of which we have a juvenile VI(i)T who rides around the village on his bike making that 'owah owah' sound from the 1970's disco song 'Lets All Chant' yes, if you're of a certain age you'll know the one.  I am really hacked off with those idiots at the advertising company here in the UK who chose it for an ad campaign to sell house insurance as this little moron, sorry VI(i)T has adopted it as his signature call.  Try listening to that twenty five times plus a day and see if you are happy to listen to that abhorrent sound as it rides around infesting the air with his infernal racket,; his parents must be so proud!  Add to that all the other little morons who think it highly amusing to copy it - but all they are doing is making themselves stand out like a sore thumb and are getting up peoples backs into the process. Instead of sounding cool they sound like immature hyenas and are well deserving of the title Village Idiot in Training.

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

Saturday, 3 April 2010

Portrait of Grandpa Doc

Well, I did watch 'Portrait of Grandpa Doc' and it's just as good and as brilliantly acted as 'Peege.'  Bruce Davison as Greg (the grandson) reminisces about life with his grandpa, who encouraged him to be an artist.  Upon reaching adulthod and now a successful artist, Greg recalls moments from his early life and paints them.  He won't let his mother know what the subjects are, but she goes with him to the grand opening of his one man show.  When she gets to the gallery, she sees the works, all memories that she too has; she stands silent and still watching the moments in her life, so readily called to mind almost alive on the canvas in front of her.  The one masterpiece she cannot tear her gaze away from is that of her late father - Grandpa Doc (as he was to Greg).  When Greg eventually catches up with her, after being waylaid by well-wishers and the press, he can see in a moment the impact this one painting has had on his mother above all the others and he gently steers her away as the tears begin to well in her eyes.  As she leaves with Greg she gazes back at the painting and the tears fall.

It is such a powerfully acted piece, it is just as heart rending as 'Peege' and if you can get to see both of these movies then I hope you find them as honest and true to real life, raw emotion and feelings as I did.

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author

Thursday, 1 April 2010

Buying from Amazon.com is now prohibitive thanks to Royal Mail 'Fees'

As a regular buyer of movies from the States, I regularly buy DVDs and VHS direct from Amazon.com but it seems that our erstwhile post office will happily charge VAT at a reasonable price of around £4.50 but then, I can't believe they get away with this but they do, they slap on a further £8.00 in handling fees!  Handling fees, what the blue blazes can cost that much???  I don't mind paying the VAT but I do mind, very very much, having to pay this extortionate 'fee' to receive my goods.  Talk about having people over a barrel, it is disgusting.  I wouldn't mind if Royal Mail were consistent but they are not and I have found that DVD sets which are quite expensive will not be hauled out of the system for these punitive fees whereas one, yes one, small single DVD will kop for the lot.  This happened today, I've been trying to get the follow up to 'Peege' which is called 'Portrait of Grandpa Doc' and I was able to get it from Amazon.com at a price of $29.99 - for a 28 minute film.  Yes, it's hellishly expensive and some would say overpriced bearing in mind this is the cost of some full DVD sets, but these movies are quite rare and only produced on a 'demand' system.  These two mini movies are the early works of the wonderful Bruce Davison (amongst others) and as a sometime artist myself, was interested in the story line of Grandpa Doc, and as I say it is the follow up to the heart wrenching 'Peege' about a young man (Davison) spending time with his infirm grandmother (who has been left to her own devices in a care home) after the rest of the family has left.  They merely passed the time as families do, not really taking much notice of the old lady who is to all intents and purposes in a vegetative state but when the grandson really talks with the old lady instead of at her, the whole dynamic changes.  Such beautifully restrained and emotive perfomances, it is literally real life unfolding before the eyes.  Grandpa Doc is the follow on where the grandson wants to paint a picture of his beloved grandpa but cannot find the starting point.  He is preparing for a one man show of his work and wants this to be the centre piece.  Eventually, through reminiscing he manages to complete a painting he is happy with, and which portrays his grandpa the way he wants it to.  I'm just off to watch it now and shall return at some point to tell you how it was.

© silversapphire 2010
All rights reserved. No part of the publications, or of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means without the express prior written permission of the Author