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The new future – with apologies

“Why do you experts always think you are right?” I enquired coldly.

“Why do you think,” countered Sir Wally emotionally, “that the more inexpert you are, the more likely you are to be right?”

Yes Minister, ‘The Greasy Pole’, J. Lynn & A. Jay

(Really long tedious article ahead. Don’t worry – normal service resumes this weekend with some great photos of big developments in the garden)

I tried so hard. I kept out of all of the public rantings on both sides of the referendum campaign apart from one quick incursion into a local Facebook message stream, when the inaccuracy and lies got too much for me, with the only effect being that I unsubscribed from the group… I was repelled from engaging by the negativity and hatred that infused most of those shouting loudly in the build up to last week’s momentous vote. I was saddened by that and the seeming inability of people to understand and most importantly accept nuance and conflicting viewpoints, the almost playground atmosphere of seeing the world in black and white when almost every aspect of our lives is writ in shades of grey. But I have been playing ideas and thoughts back and forth in my head trying to understand what is likely to happen next and any possible ways of mending the divisions so evident across the UK. I don’t have any pretensions of changing anybody’s mind, or informing anybody. And on this platform my readership is in single figures anyway – this is more about self-reflection.

Why should I have anything useful to say? I worked for over ten years in the central government civil service and now work in a team analysing and forecasting global political risk. I don’t think that even comes close to making me an expert – but it shouldn’t be a problem; Michael Gove is highly unlikely to ever read this. (Incidentally that soundbite of his was up there with the most ridiculous claims of a vitriolic, pessimistic and bad-tempered pair of mainstream campaigns and should preclude him from holding any sort of public office for all time – may he just return alongside his wife to writing pieces of drivel in our national press). So here are a few thoughts. There isn’t any great vision of what the future holds. This really is a random stream of consciousness. I’d stop reading now…

So is it really going to happen? Probably yes. Almost certainly in fact. “But what about the second referendum?” Or the proposal to have a second referendum on the terms of any deal? There is no reason for a second referendum now, multi-million strong petition notwithstanding – you can’t change the rules after the effect. And there is no point in a second referendum on the terms of any deal. We are only going to get that deal after we enact Article 50 (an Article included in EU processes at the UK’s behest incidentally) giving two years notice to quit. And while that notice is not irreversible (despite much speculation to the contrary) it would require the unanimous approval of the remaining 27 countries to do so. So we could put a deal to the country in another referendum. But if the country turns it down – so what? The process would continue anyway.

And while it is probably true that any Prime Minister requires parliamentary approval to implement Article 50 (there is still some legal argument about whether the PM already has the authority to do this under prerogative powers – but the uncertainty means any PM worth their salt will ask parliament to avoid the unsavoury prospect of being dragged through the courts) and the vast majority of MPs were and are pro-EU membership, the vast, vast majority will respect the result of the referendum and vote to implement article 50 (SNP MPs will vote against – claiming, legitimately I think, they too are respecting the wishes of the voters who put them in parliament).

The only possible scenario that may derail this path is if there are pre-Article 50 negotiations (I know the EU have said no – but they are politicians and their public utterances are pretty meaningless) and that allows a proto-agreement to be declared that gives a clearer indication about what any settlement for the UK would look like before Article 50 implementation. The UK government could then arguably put that before the population. There are two problems with that though – one is that the question would probably have to be whether the UK thinks that forms an acceptable basis to enact Article 50 or not. It wouldn’t offer “staying in the EU” as an option. Voting against the proposal would only send the government back to the negotiating table to refine the offer.

Secondly, the difference here compared to previously re-run referendums in Holland and Ireland is that those were on proposals for a continued integration and enhancement of the EU. If any country had voted against them, the development of the EU project would have stopped. So there was an incentive in each case for the EU to make concessions. While the EU would have preferred a Remain vote, the UK leaving doesn’t jeopardise the EU project, as long as the EU doesn’t make the leaving process too smooth and advantageous for the UK. And to be honest there will be a lot of EU officials and members who will probably be glad to see the back of the UK as a generally negative and blocking force in the EU corridors of power. (And wouldn’t you do welcome any sort of course of action which saw the back of Nigel Farrage [I think we have to pronounce it ‘Farridge’ now we are leaving the EU] for good). So I do think a change of course is highly unlikely.

But why is there no certainty?  Why is there no “Plan”? Well the major problem is that no-one who voted leave knew what they were voting for. “Leave the EU” obviously. But that is just a corporate mission statement and like all such mission statements completely meaningless without anything to back it up. Now before anyone gets irate and in my face – I don’t mean that individuals didn’t know what they were voting for. Everyone who put their cross in leave had their own reason or reasons: stop immigration; reduce immigration; take control of our borders; take control of our laws; repeal EU laws; strike better trade deals; stick two fingers up at ‘the establishment’; some combination of the above; or a myriad other reasons. But there wasn’t and isn’t a vision on the part of those who have to deliver the new future – because they too didn’t have a unified reason for being in the “Leave” campaign – oh and for that group throw in personal ambition right up front as a core reason for voting as they did. That was always my biggest problem (and I had others) with the Leave option – I just didn’t know what it meant.

So the uncertainty I am afraid is here to stay – through at least 2017 and 2018 and very probably longer. There has been lots made of the fact that negotiating trade deals in the EU will be ok for the UK as they have more to lose than we do. In its crudest, most basic form this argument is true, but we have to remember that the EU has to deter other countries from following the UK. They have to make it hard for us even at the cost of affecting their own trade figures. And we have to find the resources to negotiate those trade deals (and ones with other nations too). And we probably don’t have the experience available in the civil service. We have to find that expertise from elsewhere and quickly.

So we have a few tricky years now. But ultimately the world won’t end. The UK won’t disappear beneath the waves. Trade deals will be hammered out. Stock markets will rise and fall as will currency rates. Some companies will prosper and others will not do as well. I was on the losing side of last week’s referendum and I am still coming to terms with what I think was a wrong decision. But it was a decision and we have to move forward now. My fervent hope now is that we can move on and heal the wounds that have been caused by this bitter campaign. We have to be better than we have been for the last few months. We have to respect and honour each other. We have to dream of possibilities, not promote fears of doom and gloom. We have to remember how to look at multiple sides and views of an issue and debate and disagree logically, calmly, using facts and evidence with respect and receiving the same in return.

Let’s decide to do things better. Let’s choose respect and love over hatred and anger. It is up to us all.

Finally what now for Boris – once the knife wound between his shoulder blades heals? Oh – he is toast. I imagine his future involves him sitting between Messrs Hislop and Merton… Jeremy too is a goner – in the parliamentary system you can’t lead in the long term without your MPs and I cant imagine how personally demoralising it must be for him at the moment.

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Happy Birthday Dad

I had hoped to post a really exciting (well for us at least) update this weekend. Last week was the week for the floor to go in downstairs. Unfortunately, when they came to test the screed it still had too much moisture for them to guarantee the floor. So flooring has been postponed. Cue dehumidifiers running round the clock and a revisit on Wednesday this week. So while there have been a few changes dotted around the house recently, I am going to save them to accompany the, hopefully imminent, floor installation. 

In the meantime, something much more important. Last weekend we had a bit of a family get-together in the Midlands to celebrate my Dad’s 80th birthday. As you can imagine there were tonnes of photos taken – but rather than force them all on you here, I have posted the full display in The Gallery. We had a really fantastic weekend with dad’s twin brother and sister, Maurice and Elsie and their other halves, Brenda and Jack, my little sister Lyndsay and her hubby Iain with their two awesome kids, Cameron and Isabelle, me, Maddie, Becky and Charlotte, and of course not forgetting Mum and the birthday boy himself. Thank you to Lyndsay and Iain for donating their home on Saturday and Sunday, and to The Schoolhouse near Tamworth where we had a fantastic meal on the Saturday evening. I know my Dad had a great time with all of his nearest and dearest around him, and we all had a really lovely time celebrating his birthday with him.

Having said I wouldn’t inundate this post with all of the photographs, I had to put some up here.

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Creative thinking

Regular readers (I know – but there may be one or two??) will remember how hard we all worked a few weeks ago doing lots of decorating, especially finishing off the lounge, with lots of help from Becks and Phil. Well this weekend daughter number two came home. And she brought her creativity with her. So…

I’m a little worried because last week we painted the kitchen – Charlotte hasn’t got started there yet so maybe we have dodged a bullet there.

We actually had a request to do a post – our first request. YAY!!! But there was an ulterior motive – the post had to include the ‘Room of Shame’. Well its not really our fault – we are still waiting for the floors downstairs so haven’t put lots of furniture out and haven’t been able to put out lots of our possessions, books and photos…and we have to put it somewhere. 

 

Feature wall

Just a short post today to celebrate Maddie’s hard work this weekend. We finally got to pick up the paint for the lounge feature wall and Maddie has done two coats on the hearth wall. This also means that  we’ve been able to take the protective tape of the piece of oak we have for a mantel. I think the wall and the mantelpiece looks fantastic. And we’ve also been able to start to put some personal touches in some of the rooms – so welcome to our increasingly tropical bathroom.

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Taking a break

Maddie and I have been living with the build for over seven months now, and while the house is now more than habitable – and even approaching becoming a home again, the whole thing has been really exhausting. So last weekend, we took ourselves off for a weekend away at Lymington on the South Coast. We’ve been there before, staying in a pub called the Bosun’s Chair – largely because of the pies they serve for dinner!

So we did our bit to live up to the idea of the mad English and headed down to the beach. Not too sunny and very bracing, but incredibly refreshing, relaxing, peaceful, and absolutely lovely to spend some quality time together away from the pressure of the house.

So we had a night in the pub watching a not-at-all tense game of rugby against the French, eating pie and drinking beer. Then after a hearty and thoroughly deserved (no honest) breakfast, we headed off to the nearby Exbury Gardens. They are probably much more colourful later in the year when things start to bloom, but a day strolling  about beautiful woodland away from the crowds did the two of us the world of good.

And there were some splashes of colour around – lucky I discovered a close-up mode on the camera.

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Decorating – a catch up

It’s been a long time since I posted here – as I said last time, essentially the build is finished and we are down to finishing touches – there are just a lot of them. We haven’t touched what used to be our garden – so there is a fair amount of landscaping to be done. But the biggest change left to happen is the wooden floor which will go throughout the open plan space downstairs. Once we have done that we can empty the storage units and make the house feel even more like our home. In the mean time we are spending a fair amount of free time decorating. The girls have been home over the past few weekends, so Charlotte and Chris mucked in as we decorated our old bedroom.

Then Becks and Phil have been home over Easter and have gone mad with the white paint. Between the four of us we have pretty much covered all of downstairs. Just the kitchen to paint downstairs – it needs too much careful taping and dust sheeting to protect all the work surfaces so that will be a job in itself. But the downstairs looks amazing. Much, much lighter.

And we’ve stolen an idea we saw on the TV during the week and painted the surround of the roof lantern a different shade – and what do you know, it looks fantastic.

And for those of you who have seen Maddie and I decorate previously, will not be surprised to hear that we have had a bit of a match pot frenzy – unlike us however, we made a decision in a single day and so won’t be living with patchwork walls for months on end as we have in the past. 

 

Saving our Soles

The pace of change and hence our posting frequency has definitely slowed now. The builders are focussing on their snagging list and we are left with only a few tasks left to complete. Inside, these are mainly decorating and flooring (sounds simple when you say it like that…). We also have the deck to complete out the back and the driveway to finish off.

Last week though we did have a big day when the carpets were fitted upstairs to the three bedrooms and landing. The main impact is on how the upstairs looks (and feels on our poor feet) now, but it will also help to bring down the dust which is definitely less pervasive than it used to be.

Maddie and I had a lovely weekend – her old boss and his wife came round for dinner on Saturday and then we had a lazy day in the lounge on Sunday. All ends next weekend though – the paint brushes and rollers are coming back out.

Heavenly staircase

No post last weekend  – it was birthday weekend at Westcroft. The girls were home for Maddie & Becky’s birthdays – and it was also my wonderful mum’s birthday over the weekend as well. But this last week has been a great week – our oak staircase was delivered and installed (over the course of the week) and looks magnificent. As you’ll probably guess by the number of photos of the staircase we are possibly over-excited about it.

Couple of other finishing touches this week, courtesy of Mark and the guys from ODS Electrical Services. So all of the downlighters are flush with the ceilings and the cabinet has been installed in the main bathroom finishing off that room.

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Its a whitewash.

Second post this weekend and back on the house project. After a pretty quiet week, the week just gone has been anything but. The biggest change has been the second fix of electrics downstairs. So we now have lights downstairs and working electrical sockets. No more extension cables or temporary lights hanging from any convenient surface. And it makes such a difference.

The tiling is all done in the new bathroom, just waiting for the grouting to be finished before the shower and the heated towel rail are plumbed in. But we are really really pleased with how the wall and floor tiles look.

And Maddie and I have been able to do something . So we’ve spent this weekend painting. Partly so that all of the downlights can be finished off, partly in advance of the new staircase going in, which we hope will happen this week, but also so that we can achieve something ourselves in our new home. At the moment we are painting everything white – ultimately we’ll be adding some colour, but until the house has finished and we have lived with it for a while we aren’t going to know what colours will work where.

And as you can see, we’ve had the bifold doors open today. Its hot and smelly work painting. The cats however seem a bit confused as to whether they can use the big 5 metre hole in the wall to come in and out rather than the cat flap. Bless.

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Going viral

A few weeks ago I wrote a post about Becky’s first science-related blog article. You can find that post here. I said back then that she was really keen on writing about science for a wider audience. Well she has since left her post-doc position at Imperial College and last Monday started a new role as a medical writer for a company called Synergy Vision. She’s had a great first week and on Wednesday was asked to write her first piece. That piece, explaining the Zika virus, which the World Health Organisation have declared Public Health Emergency of International Concern, in more detail went live on the Synergy Vision blog on Thursday. Not a bad achievement in her first week at a company that prides itself on its simple, effective and informative writing style. Becky’s blog article on the Zika virus can be found here.