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December 2008

( Monthly archive )

Moving & a grooving

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After a hectic couple of days I've now helped my girlfriend move home four times. The moves have ranged from the simply traumatic to the downright disastrous.

Here follows some helpful tips from my experience for those moving home.

Make sure you have contact with your new landlord/lady/letting agent

In these days of mobile phones, satellite communications, high speed broadband, easily accessible free email providers & such like, communication is becoming increasingly impossible. There is no end to what can go wrong. In days gone by communication was easy, you'd meet & talk. Now though too many people rely on noo-fangled techno wizardry which in reality is simply a number of answering machines playing recorded messages at each other creating a positive feedback loop. Then you spend an entire day sitting on a partially dismantled sofa staring at a load of crates waiting for the phone to ring.

Make sure you get at least one landline number as well as a mobile phone number (I know I'm an Opera zealot but mobile phones really are completely rubbish). Make sure they are written down on a notepad & stored on your phone.

Opera users should copy important phone numbers & other information to notes & use Opera Link to make sure you can access them from any internet connection (& any browser).

Don't move at Christmas time

Christmas is a pretty rubbish time to do anything other than celebrate Christmas. The roads & pavements are busier, everywhere has a car parked in it & your letting agent will have seemingly ceased to exist (although in many cases this will be an improvement in service).

Also in the UK it seems that a large number of charity shops & services where you can donate unwanted items for resale are Christian charities (something us atheists need to remember when we think the world would be a better place without religion), & funnily enough most Christian charities close down for Christmas!

Make sure the essentials are on hand

Kettle, mugs, teabags, milk, teaspoon. 'nuff said.

Have breakfast

Moving is tiring, make sure you get some breakfast down you.

Get a van

If you've got a friend with a van ask them very nicely if they would be able to help you out. If this fails offer love, booze, money &/or sex. You could hire a professional removal company but another option available in the current economic down turn if you know any builders, chances are they will be having a bit of a slack time at the moment & would be glad of some extra work. Ferrying stuff back & forth in cars is massively inefficient in both time & money & increases overall stress. Vans are also much easier to lift things into & out of so you are less likely to hurt yourself.

Good boxes are a must

I was sceptical when Nix told me she had hired a dozen plastic collapsible crates from Easistore, the less than exemplary service we got from the work experience students who apparently had the run of the complex when we picked them up wasn't great, but in the end they were really useful & far easier to handle than awkward & flimsy cardboard boxes. They were big, strong, stacked securely & collapsed down really neatly. Most importantly they had strong carrying handles, if something is easy to grab hold of, you can comfortably carry considerably more weight.

Only move what you actually need

In our ridiculous consumer driven world you will have tons of stuff that you don't want or need. But please make every effort not to turn my planet into one big landfill.

Charity shops are very grateful for saleable items such as books, CDS, DVDs & clothes (although some seem to be getting pickier with what they'll take, as more people downsize into cheaper homes, they are getting rid of more stuff).

If you don't already know about it Freecycle is ace. Get in quick to avoid people coming to pick stuff up mid move, if you are trying to get rid of big items like furniture include dimensions in your offered message plus take some pics upload them somewhere (MyOpera provides plenty of free storage space & has a really good photo album system if you didn't already know) & remember to include a link to the gallery. This will help reduce failure-to-collects if it turns out to not be what the freecycler wants.

Try to be creative, I spent a happy half hour demolishing Nicky's old bed. The fabric & mattress had to be dumped unfortunately, but the cardboard was recycled & the draws & frame will be raised seed beds in the garden this coming year.

Pack things one room at a time

Once you've got all the big things dismantled start on the clutter. Get in a room, close the door, pack things into boxes & don't stop until everything is packed away. Stick everything on the van or in one big room near the door. Once a room is completed close the door & don't go back in until you've finished the whole house. Don't waste time flitting in between half packed rooms.

When it gets to unloading at the other end take boxes straight to the corresponding room in your new place & leave it there until you've finished unloading. Don't start arranging furniture & flowers until all the boxes are in your new place.

Just bloody get on with it

By the time you've carefully planned the optimal method to do something you could probably have finished & had time for an extra cup of tea.

So how are we all doing?

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Everything ok? How are we all coping with the downturn?

I've lost approx £4000, from my savings, plus I don't know what from my pension. I am in the fortunate position that I had the money to lose in the first place. I also know that had I continued as I was a few years ago I wouldn't have lost a thing, but I allowed myself to be talked around into investing in shares through off the shelf investment packages by people who probably knew as much about investing as I did, even though I knew this slump was coming. I've no one to blame but my own stupidity & greed.

Employment wise I was one of the very early casualties as I lost my job when my company that sold windows to the new build housing market went under in April this year. I was out of work for just under 3 months before starting work for the Department for Work & Pensions at Jobcentre Plus which is the UK's government run employment agency & social security benefit office (a cynic would say that I left one growth industry as it was dying for another). I now get to review people's job search activity to check for compliance, find vacancies for people to apply to & encourage them to do anything & everything to better their employment prospects.

It's an ok job, one that I didn't think I would enjoy as much as I have & it is infinitely better on my side of the desk than the other. Getting used to a 50% salary drop has been a real eye opener though. Money never used to be an issue for me, I never used to check my bank statements to see if I had been paid, I never looked at the price of anything as I entered my PIN & cost never stopped me from going out. Now though I keep track of my spending on a spreadsheet (well worth the effort), I can tell you the price of unleaded at 6 different petrol stations & if Tunbridge Wells would just cancel the farmer's market I'd be financially laughing.

One sad side effect of my new job is that several times now I have wanted to really rant on my blog but because I am now a 'civil servant' I can't, which I think is the main reason my posting frequency here has gone the way of the stock market.

There are still plenty of other things I could be posting about though. At the very least someone needs to document some of the bizarre events that occurred at Abbott Group Ltd.

Bah humbug everyone!
December 2008
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