01 July 2005 @ 11:09 pm
In Search Of...  
[possibly undeserving paranoia mode: on]

First off: has anybody heard from [livejournal.com profile] vermachtnis lately? Anybody at all heard anything? I haven't seen anything from her in a while and it's beginning to make me edgy. Silence worries me, not least of which because there's this thing called the Atlantic Ocean between myself and most of my online contacts and I can't do anything about it. I suspect the most likely explanation for any silence is the siren call of World of Warcraft or whatever that game was called, but all the same the mind tends to fill in the gaps with the more alarming possibilities first, only substituting perfectly normal explanations for silence like 'wrapped up in online gaming' or 'bored with the Internet' or 'on vacation' after things like 'house fire', 'rampaging herd of rather confused moose' and 'Freddie Kreuger'.

Besides, I miss hearing from her.

So yeah, has anyone heard from her, or of her, in the last week? This isn't a plea for emails or anything (It's my go anyway and that email should be out sometime soon) or any demand that she show herself - it's the Internet, nobody has to go online for any reason at all ever if they don't want to. I was simply wondering if anyone'd heard anything from her lately so I could stop wondering what was going on like the overtired paranoiac that I am.

kthxbai.


[possibly undeserving paranoia mode: off]

Update: Ah, the moose didn't get her after all! Hooray! Boy, talk about coincidental timing, though...

... on that note, I guess I might as well run with the theme of generally misplaced things for this update, simply because I can.

There is a duck living in the garden of the hospital I am on placement at. Yes, I really did say there was a duck there. It's living quite contentedly in the largely paved garden area of a busy teaching hospital in Central London (though the place does have quite a nice little pond in the middle ofthe grassy bit with a fountain in the middle of it, which is presumably what attracted the duck to the hospital garden in the first place). And it has just had nine ducklings.

No, I haven't been smoking anything.

No, we're not quite sure how it got here either. Best guess is it came from Regent's Park, which is pretty near the hospital I'm placed at. It seems perfectly content in the gardens, or it did when I headed down there on my tea break this evening in an attempt to get away from the constant Wimbledon coverage. Gah. Am I ever sick of Wimbledon, I'll be so glad when it's finished. The ducks were far more entertaining. Baby ducks are like anarchy. The mother was constantly losing them because they scattered all over the place every time she turned her back on them.

It took me ages to count them. I kept coming up with seven or eight because I kept losing them in the grass, or missing one of them because it had wandered off somewhere completely random I couldn't begin to have guessed at. Eventually I got nine twice and so I was content.

It's quite as mart place for a duck to stay, actually. Yeah, the pond is small, but there are no predators in a garden in the middle of a hospital. Nobody's gonna hurt those ducklings, people have even been leaving out food for them. The only problem is that the garden is going to be way too small when they get a bit bigger. They're tiny lil things right now, but when they grow slightly larger and become more like small ducks than ducklings, that pond is going to be far too small for them.

Maybe they'll have to call the RSPCA in.

Anyway. The other mislaid thing thing I have to talk about tonight is me.

Yup. Me. I was walking home this evening with heavy shopping and stopped at the top of the hill to rest before carrying on back to my home, when a total stranger pulled over and asked me if I was okay then offered me a lift. He seemed rather insulted when I turned him down. I feel kind of bad, retrospectively, because he was probably quite sincere. Probably he just wanted to help and my refulsal offended him because it implied I didn't trust him. Probably nothing would have happened save I would have got home marginally quicker and been slightly less tired.

But what if it wasn't? It's the 'probably' that was the problem, and it was why I turned him down.

Because it's probably going to be all right doesn't quite cut it with me when it comes to personal safety. I haven't survived for twenty-three years in this particular part of this particular planet by playing around with 'probably'. Yes, in all likelihood nothing would have happened to me, but I don't want to risk it when I could easily walk home by myself. Tired or not, five minutes' walk with heavy shopping is extremely unlikely to kill me. Getting into a car with a stranger is rather more likely to turn out to be dangerous than simply walking home could ever be. Simply and plainly, I didn't like the odds.

Why not? Well, I'm young, I'm in good general health, I'm reasonably strong. I have no real problems with carrying heavy shopping home - blame the combination of tiredness and the steep hill I had just climbed for my breathlessness. It's not like I was eightysomething and genuinely needed any help hauling home my groceries. And, being in good general health, I caught my breath within minutes and was well able to head off home again. I wasn't in any risk from carrying my shopping home. Even if it was only the desire to 'White Knight' that had this man stopping to help, was it really worth risking it when there was absolutely no need for me to put myself in such a dubious position?

Well, no. Of course not.

Whatever his motives may have been, there are guys out there who would see a woman in need of help as nothing other than an easy target. The guy looked respectable enough and I'm hardly Miss World, but there's no 'type' of man who does things like that, just as their targets don't have to be pretty and blonde. I didn't think it worth the risk. A couple minutes off a journey home versus possibly getting in deep? Hm. Yeah. Exactly.

And really, if the guy had been half as nice as he was trying to appear, he would have understood why I had no choice but to turn him down. That he didn't was perhaps a warning sign. Perhaps. You see, I don't know that either, and it's the 'I don't know' that's the whole problem.
 
 
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[identity profile] vermachtnis.livejournal.com on July 2nd, 2005 02:35 am (UTC)
I'm here! I just kind of got swamped with work and then sort of fell ill [and, of course, I spend a lot of time playing World of Warcraft... it's really, really addicting. Someone please make me stop]. I actually signed in tonight for the first time in a week to post and comment and do all sorts of productive stuff and was highly amused that you chose to be paranoid about me the same day I chose to log on to assuage any paranoia...

On another topic, I would have done exactly the same thing in that sort of situation. Who knows what his motivations could have been? People label me as an untrusting sort of person, but I just think it's smart. I'd rather take my chances on the street in a familiar place where I've got plenty of space to run than in a car with someone I've never met before in my life who might be a nice guy. Chances are he's just as nice as I am- then again, I'd never offer a ride to someone I saw on the street. Who knows what kind of lunatic I might pick up?

Maybe I really am untrusting.
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[identity profile] sevendials.livejournal.com on July 3rd, 2005 08:16 pm (UTC)
Well, that's okay then. Apologies for the display of hopeless paranoia. Not my usual speed at all but one too many late nights and Ominous Silence (capital O, capital S) will do that for you... well, it does it for me anyway. God damn, and if I'd waited one more day I wouldn't have made myself look like a frantic and panicky idiot. Oh well, them's the breaks and at least I know what's going on now. Still, the coincidence was an amusing one, so maybe there's something to be said for spontaneous expressions of paranoia after all...

I hope you feel better now. And that your World of Warcraft character is looking all spiffy and well-developed. I have never played an online RPG, but I can sense the immense addicting potential that they have. Maybe when I get a decent computer and an Internet link of my own I will descend into the horror of online gaming... damn, sounds like a Lifetime movie. Save me from Lifetime.

Good to hear someone else would have done the same thing about the guy with the car, though. I always want help home when I'm walking back with my groceries, but I'd never accept it because yeah, who knows why he was offering? If that's untrusting behavior then let's hear it for being untrusting and safe. I wouldn't want to rely on that might. He seemed friendly enough but really, who knows? It's probably fine but I don't like probably when it comes to a little thing like safety, or in extreme cases staying alive. After all, I live in London. A nice, suburban part of London, true, but it's a big and dangerous city and the best way to stay safe somewhere like this is to be a little on the untrusting side.

Really, in a lot of cases, it's better to be untrusting. I can't trust someone I don't know from Adam, and it would be stupid to expect anyone to do so. At least this way I knew I'd stay safe. The other way, I wasn't sure. And I don't like 'not sure' under the circumstances, thank you.

... I love my kitty icon.
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[identity profile] vermachtnis.livejournal.com on July 5th, 2005 05:04 am (UTC)
No apologies needed, as it was all quite amusing. I was beginning to wonder what would happen if I was to fall off the face of the internet- now I know.

I feel much better, thank you. And my character does look quite spiffy. It's so amazingly addicting it's not even funny. And ack, Lifetime movies. They're just wrong. I've actually watched a few and... no. Someone save me from horrid day-time weekday programming.

Mmm, the same goes for me. I always think about how nice it would be if some trustworthy person offered a helping hand, but chances are I'd never take it. I've lived tons of different places and am quite experienced with the more dangerous sections of cities, and I'm not about to risk my safety just because some guy seems nice enough. Rule Number One for little children- never get in a car with a stranger.

And I'd much rather be untrusting than be too trusting.

...I love it too.
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[identity profile] sevendials.livejournal.com on July 5th, 2005 02:24 pm (UTC)
Oh good :) And at least now you know that if you fell off the face of the Internet you'd come back to some random English girl's babbling along the subject of where you were... freaky. Oh well, I promise to do better next time. Damn, I'm grinning like an idiot here. Can't deny it's fitting, though.

My only experience with Lifetime movies, thanks to the kind and soothing balm that is the ocean between myself and their headquarters, has been through their website (OMG NO I am dying of weepy oestrogen overload SAVE ME) and the occasional snarky review (http://www.somethingawful.com/articles.php?a=3006), but I know enough to know I wouldn't want to see them. The thing that really gets me about them is the idea that this is a women's channel. Because of course you can program for all women everywhere. Just like you can for all men... whoops, I think I have the seeds of today's Rant forming, so I'll cut this off here.

Good to hear I'm not alone in my paradoxicality (is that a word? It should be a word). I wouldn't accept help unless it was from someone I knew and trusted, though, because you just can't tell if Random Guy #341 is trustworthy or no until you've got in the car and found out the hard way. I remember coming up here and having to go house hunting on my own before I found this place and holy hell, it scared the life out of me. I had my cell phone in my hand constantly and must have been obviously dead freaked half the time. Next time, I swear I'm taking a friend, even if they're not a close one. I can't do that alone again. It scared the bejesus out of me.

Exactly. You tell little kids not to do it. By the time said kid is an adult the message should have sunk in so it was just second nature. I don't go out of an evening much, but if I did I would never accept a lift home from someone I'd met that night. That. Is. Stupid. I sometimes think, and I'll admit it's rather uncharitable but I think it anyway, that if people had a little more goddamn common sense then the crime rate would plummet right across the board...

Yay kitty icons! Hehe, I love it. I think I'm gonna break with tradition and use it again, because I love it so much. Kitties!
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