
The Lanark Academy is well and truly riddled with cretins. They are now campaigning for Boris bloody Johnson as rector. We only got rid of Prince Philip a couple of years ago. No, I’m not joking. This is very bad news for my eye-twitching. Started yesterday morning and hasn’t stopped yet, with more news like this I haven’t a hope in hell of recovery. Retired doctor in one of my Scandowegian classes suggests whiskey, however I fear a Christmas pudding style suicide would be too tempting if I even got close to a bottle.
Meanwhile, in the world outside my cell, single mum bashing appears to have come back into vogue, (not sure that it ever really went away but it looks set to be spot on trend for spring.) The government’s latest ruse to improve the lot of lone parents (“lone parents” yeah right, sorry but if you’re a lone dad and not a widower you must have done something pretty florganing awful…but now I’m getting sidetracked…) is to force them into cleaning, caring, routine manual tasks and so forth, i.e. all the stuff they get lumped with routinely, before being ordered to do some more in return for minimum wage- and often a slap on the arse to boot. Even better, they then get to pay for their kids to be packed off to a stranger while they empty someone’s wastepaper basket/bowels. Thus their earnings are cancelled out (Duh! Mr Brown) and the result is double shifts without pay and extra homework on weekends. Not to worry though, Middle England has acquiesced and gone back to the Telegraph crossword, and the unemployment figures suddenly seem a little cheerier. Ah yes the kids, well doesn’t matter if mum’s not around, they’ve always got a playstation and a box of Micro-chips.
What about parent number two? Well he’s most likely to be found cowering under the stone from which he first emerged and clutching a copy of Steve Davies’ The Divorced Dads' Handbook: Practical Help and Reassurance for All Fathers Made Absent by Divorce or Separation, a sizeable chunk of which is devoted to wriggling out of child support payments. Fiddled pension contributions, offshore bank accounts and staying away from overtime for a bit are all options. My favourite comment on this book comes from a zealous reader review on the British amazon site: “Women would learn a lot be reading it too.”
Of course some mothers do manage to get the reluctant father to pay a bit of maintanence, write the odd birthday card, perhaps even take the kids for a few ours of playstation round his place, but they’d better beware the flak they’ll take for it. Beverly Macfarlane for instance, who wanted her fair share of the family assets after 20 odd years of marriage and the unpaid childcare which allowed hubby to create a £131 million fortune selling insurance, 63% of which has been awarded to him in a settlement that he is currently challenging. Judge described him as a man of “extraordinary talent and energy” - I’d love to see him rack up quite so much cash, even half as much, while rushing home to collect the kids from the childminder every night. Tediously, Ms Macfarlane has been branded the Phyllis Dietrichson type.
Now time to make the vital journey from laptop to bed again. Dear God please let me have no more nightmares about typos and red pen that says 69%.
Good Night and Good Luck
Olga Whim Signing Off.

