Sunday 26 August 2018

Target practice


Both TD and her brother are keen archers.  Our son has been involved with the ancient sport for the last four years, and TD's high school offers it as an extra mural, so she has been doing it for almost two years.  Often they enthuse to us about the art,  and so last weekend all four of us signed up for the afternoon practice at the Cape Town archery centre.  As Andrew and I were complete novices, we were placed in the group that needed to know everything (including for me, which way up the bow went!).  The other two were put in the group that shot at 20m and didn't need the constant supervision we did.

We are bitten.  It was such an extraordinary experience, and I enjoyed every minute of the two hour lesson.  It turns out Andrew is a bit of a natural, often hitting the yellow centre of the target - and this surprised me because his darts skills are, shall we say, a bit challenged.  I managed to miss the entire target once, landed  arrows on the outer rims a few times and, once I had figured out the skill of the correct posture, managed a few golds. Not bad for a fifty something novice (OK, it was only from 10m, but I was proud of my efforts!)

So if you are looking for something rather unusual to try, I would recommend archery!  Things I will bear in mind next time I go are that it is good to have a firm grasp of the basics - how to hold the bow (they are large - person height!), how to support the arrow in the nock correctly, how quickly to release the arrow once you have aimed.  That sort of thing.  You also need to take into account the surroundings - how many people are aiming at the same butt, the wind, sunlight in eyes,  and finally, especially for me, I need to find my confidence.  And to forgive myself for the occasional complete miss, and to keep trying.  Like all sports, I am sure practice is the key to good results....

...Not unlike diabetes care.  The target that is aimed at is optimum health, and the method is similar: have a firm grasp of the basics - knowledge up on the glucose/insulin relationship, know how best to support TD with all she is dealing with, know when to let go.  And take into account the whole picture - what's blinding us or sending us off direction and make sure we are all on the same page.  And then have the confidence to know that I am doing the very best that I am able to at any particular time.  Things go wrong, target levels are missed, and that's ok.  Keep trying and never give up.

 Aiming at a target is a good idea.  The concentration and focus archery instills, and the discipline it requires are excellent life skills.  Whatever the target is - life balance, happiness, health - the more you practise the easier it becomes.









Saturday 11 August 2018

Marketing magic

TD is a dedicated Harry Potter fan.  She has been "sorted" into the correct house for her personality, (Hufflepuff), and knows her Patronus (animal-spirit) thanks to the online quizzes available to help with these things.  Obviously, she has read all the books, seen the movies and follows the actors' careers.  Emma Watson holds a special place in her heart for her views on feminism.

So it goes without saying that when we were in the UK,  TD was keen to immerse herself in Potterish paraphernalia and places. One can book a tour designed to delight fans by taking them to the set, the Great Hall, Dumbledore's office, Diagon Alley and much much more.  Knowing the market well, the organisers of these tours charge an arm and a leg per person and effectively magic away many pounds from your wallet.  So we decided to do it the DIY way.

Platform 9 and three quarters is a piece of wall cordoned off at Kings Cross Railway station.  There was a long queue of young wizards and muggles waiting to have their photos taken at this particular piece of wall.  We offered to wait for TD if she wanted to join the queue, but she was happy to have her photo taken on the outer side of the cordon and use her time more wisely in the Harry Potter shop situated next door.  We wandered around, examined the expensive merchandise and marvelled at the power of marketing.

On another day we made the pilgrimage to the Oxford Street Primark.  There was a treasure trove of affordable  goodies, and TD splashed out with her carefully hoarded savings.

While I was in Cape Town, the travellers did a road trip to Scotland and stopped at the Harry Potter Bridge.  (Well, in real life it is the Glenfinnan Viaduct near Fort William.)  Andrew, weaving magic of the real kind, had looked up the train timetable, and timed their visit so that they could see the train crossing over the viaduct.  TD was most chuffed.

 I rejoined my family in Cambridge, and that for me  was like entering a magic world.  We were lucky enough to be allowed into Trinity (our son's college) and the magnificent dining hall outranks any film set Hogwarts hall.  Academics, with their gowns flowing behind them, briskly walking on cobbled streets, magically sends one's imagination into another world.  And yet, it is real.  This is how the students at Cambridge live - in a town with ancient, magnificent buildings, narrow cobbled streets, magical book shops and plenty of muggles taking photographs.



Marketing magic is a profitable business.  Every now and then an email pops in my inbox offering a cure for diabetes T1.  These range from ActoBio's cheese producing bacteria to extreme diets to social activities to acupuncture, and they all need elements of magic to work.  Mostly people look at ways of managing the sugar/insulin see saw, and the diet option, acupuncture, social activities are very important for keeping numbers level, but a cure?  Big pharmaceuticals are pouring money in to research.  The same companies that make millions from selling life sustaining insulin are hoping to offer a medicinal cure. There is obviously a mind boggling amount of profit to be made.  So while we wait for science to find a way to kick-start a pancreas into making insulin, I will save my magic for the worlds of Harry Potter and Cambridge, whilst still keeping an open mind about a cure for diabetes.
  

Harry Potter's author, JK Rowling, says it most eloquently: " We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better."