Happy new year to you all! I wish you all the very best for 2013 and I hope that you enjoy celebrating the coming of yet another year.
All the very best,
Kevin
Happy new year to you all! I wish you all the very best for 2013 and I hope that you enjoy celebrating the coming of yet another year.
All the very best,
Kevin
Three Men In A Boat is one of my all time favourite humorous books so I was delighted to come across the below clip on Youtube. The story recounts the humourous and, occasionally sad adventures of three men and their fox terrier as they traverse the Thames in a boat. The video is here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Asm7iXjLHCQ
I am on Twitter. For my profile page please visit https://twitter.com/drewdog2060_. I mainly use Twitter to promote my blog, however I also tweet on other issues which interest me, for example artificial intelligence. I will reciprocate follows by following you in return.
I am pleased to announce that my second collection of short stories, The First Time, can be purchased from Barnes and Noble as a Nook Book (http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-first-time-kevin-morris/1113994183). The first story in this collection, “The First Time” explores why Becky, a young graduate enters the world’s oldest profession as an escort. Other stories look at what happens when machines attain true artificial intelligence. In “Hemlock” we are introduced to a beautiful robot woman capable of reciting Keats, however does she truly understand poetry? For further information about “The First Time” by Kevin Morris please visit the above link.
I am registered blind and live alone in London. I frequently shop independently (the shop assistants locate the items I require and I pay using either card or cash). I am, almost always unaccompanied on shopping trips, consequently the interaction is purely between myself and the shop assistant.
I spent the Christmas festivities visiting my mum and her partner in Liverpool. While there I visited a branch of W H Smiths and purchased a book, as a Christmas present for my sister. I paid for the item using my debit card and given that the transaction was between myself and the sales assistant I was surprised when she attempted to hand my receipt to my mum! My mum is non-disabled so I can only assume that the assistant felt more comfortable interacting with a non-disabled rather than a disabled person. The incident was resolved with the assistant handing the receipt to me (my mum refused to take it and I continued to hold out my hand)!
Having experienced similar incidents I’m able to see the funny side and my mum and I laughed about it afterwards. Had I been alone the assistant would have had no alternative other than to hand the receipt to me, however due to the presence of a non-disabled individual she automatically attempted to pass the paperwork to that person rather than the rightful recipient, yours truly!
On the whole attitudes towards people with disabilities have (and continue) to improve in the UK. In 1995 the Disability Discrimination Act came into force outlawing discrimination against people with disabilities in the fields of employment and service provision. The legislation has been strengthened since 1995 and has been superceeded by the Equalities Act. However despite the implementation of legislation and greatly improved social attitudes people with disabilities such as myself continue to encounter misunderstanding and, on occasions prejudice as is exemplified by my experience in purchasing a book in W H Smiths. What is the solution? Greater integration of disabled people into mainstream society is vital. As a child I attended several schools for visually impaired children and it was only on attending university that I entered mainstream education. Today greater numbers of children with disabilities are being educated with their non-disabled peers. The exposure of non-disabled children to those who are disabled is to be welcomed and will assist in enhancing understanding, however the incident in Smiths demonstrates that more education is required.
(Kevin Morris is a writer. For his latest book, The First Time” please visit https://newauthoronline.wordpress.com/2012/12/29/the-first-time-by-kevin-morris-availible-at-waterstones-for-only-0-98/).
As the author of “The First Time” I would love to hear the views of my readers. Please either leave a comment on this post or, alternatively by going to Amazon’s customer discussion forum on my book which can be accessed here http://www.amazon.co.uk/First-Time-Kevin-Morris/forum/Fx2SED6KSY0FJIE/Tx1BEAOPB0SWCBD/1/ref=cm_cd_dp_ef_tft_tp?_encoding=UTF8&asin=B00AIK0DD6. To purchase “The First Time” on Amazon please visit http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-First-Time-ebook/dp/B00AIK0DD6.
My collection of short stories, The First Time, is available for £0.98 as a download from the Waterstone’s website http://www.waterstones.com/waterstonesweb/products/kevin+morris/the+first+time+28ebook29/9553853/. This compares favourably to Amazon where The First Time can be purchased for £1.53.
In this collection of short stories I explore why young women enter the world of prostitution. In “The First Time”, the first story in this collection, we meet Becky a young graduate who enters the world of professional escorting to clear her debts. The story looks at the effects of prostitution on Becky and her fellow escort and friend Julie. Other stories explore what happens when the worlds of sex and technology collide. In “Hemlock” I explore what occurs when machines in the form of a beautiful young robot woman attain the capacity to appreciate high culture. For “The First Time” please visit http://www.waterstones.com/waterstonesweb/products/kevin+morris/the+first+time+28ebook29/9553853/
Last night the wind buffetted my windows drowning out all other sound. Lying in bed I felt the raw power of nature – not the sanatised picture of nature with lambs gambling in sunlit fields, a gentle summer breeze carrying the scent of new mown hay – rather a feeling of desolation, of the insignificance of man filled my soul. Lying warm in my bed my thoughts where cold like the great wind battering my window panes.
Now sitting at my computer in this familiar room, a warm blue carpet under my bare feet and surrounded by books I feel cacooned in the warm embrace of what we call civilisation. We cling to the solid, to material things but forever on the periphery nature stands laughing at our pretenciousness. She was here before we came and when we go she will remain.
As I stroked my labrador comfortably ensconced in his basket I pondered whether it is better to live in the moment with no conception of mortality as he does or if it is preferable to feel and think as we humans do. It is an interesting question but, ultimately an unanswerable one. We are what we are and my four legged friend is what nature, evolution or god (take your pick) designed.
I will be taking a break from blogging for a week or so while visiting family in Liverpool. I’d like to wish all my followers and visitors to my blog a great Christmas and a very happy new year. All the very best, Kevin