More Photographs [en]

Just a note to let you know that if you haven’t looked through my dumped photographs in a while, you should go and have a peek. I often add photos over there but don’t necessarily announce it here.

Start at the top of the list and work your way downwards. You’ll find photos of this week-end in Spiez, of my holidays touring the UK and Ireland, and Barcelona. Of course, expect the occasional cat picture and underexposed shot.

Lush Bathroom [en]

This afternoon, I cleared out my bathroom completely and filled it up again, discarding over half its contents in the process. I actually have free storage space now in my bathroom cupboards. I rewarded myself with a candle-lit bubble-bath from Lush.

I briefly encountered Lush in Birmingham, and explored it more seriously in Dublin. If you like baths and/or nice smells, don’t miss this shop. The smells might make you a bit dizzy after some time, though. Prepare a credit card and treat yourself.

I recently discovered that Lush was present in Switzerland! And of course, you can buy online… The product catalog is really very well done (try the Lush site nearest to you).

Soirée de famille [en]

Le sexe c’est de temps en temps, mais les genoux c’est à  chaque pas!

Brian Booth, sur les mérites respectifs du Viagra et de la cortisone

Keeping The Flat Clean: Living Space As User Interface [en]

How I applied what I have understood about designing user interfaces to organising my flat so that it too is ‘usable’ and remains clean.

One of my ongoing post-study projects is reorganising my flat from top to bottom, hopefully throwing out half my stuff in the process. I have been thinking a bit about the way I store things.

First of all, I tend to try to minimise waste of space. I will organise things into cupboards and drawers so that they occupy the less space possible. Second, I tend to organise things with taxonomy rather than function in mind. I will try to store objects of the same type together, regardless of their respective frequency of use.

The result is a perpetually messy flat, with whole areas that I never use (places I do not go, cupboards I never open).

I have therefore been rethinking my whole living environment in terms of function and process. What do I use this thing for, and when? How do I deal with common tasks like washing up or doing my mail? And most important, how does clutter arise? An environment where each thing has a place is not sufficient to prevent clutter. If clutter arises, it is not due to “laziness”. It is because the storage system is not usable enough. It was not designed with the user in mind.

I have switched to considering my living space as a user interface rather than as a library of categorised items.

If I catch myself dumping something on the table instead of putting it away, I’ll try to identify what is preventing me from putting it where it belongs. I’ll try to bring this “where it belongs” closer to where I am naturally tempted to put it. (Instead of thinking “ooh I’m a bad girl, I’m not putting things away as I should,” which we all agree does not help in the least.)

Here are a couple of examples of what I have been doing.

First, I identified the main sources of clutter in my flat: dirty kitchen things, clothes, papers and books. Then I tried to analyse how these things ended up lying about my whole flat. I know that I can clean my flat spotless, and that within a couple of weeks it will be messy again. So obviously, there are things I do mechanically which create clutter. Something which breaks the natural “keeping clean” flow.

Let’s take the dirty dishes to start with. (Not the most glamorous example, but I’m sure there are many of you out there who can relate.) Why do I leave cups, glasses, or even plates lying around in various places? A first reason for this, obviously, is that I do not only eat in my kitchen. That’s a fact we will just have to live with. But why don’t I bring things back to the kitchen? Well, more often than not, the kitchen is in such a state that there wouldn’t really be any place to put them. The sink, of course, is already full of dirty dishes. We have here are perfect example of how disorganisation in one area leads to clutter elsewhere.

One factor which helps stuff pile up in my sink (despite my “fool-proof” method for taming dirty dishes) is that I usually have to make space on the drainer before I start washing up. (I’m one of these people who don’t dry dishes but leave them on the drainer to put them away “later”.) And putting the dishes away is a pain because my cupboard is so crammed with stuff that I have to empty half of it before being able to put my plates were they belong. That is where the bottleneck is. Or the limiting factor, if you prefer.

I realised that out of my four kitchen cupboards, there are only two that I regularly open. I proceeded to empty all the junk out of the others and get rid of the most of it (if I never open the cupboards, then I can’t really need what’s inside them, can I?) I then reorganised the things I use on a regular basis in all the available cupboards, focusing on “how easy will it be to put it back there?” rather than “could I use less space for this?”

One significant result concerns plates. (Don’t worry, we’ll soon be done with the kitchen things.) I have big plates and small plates, four of each. I used to keep the small plates piled up on the big ones, which meant that each time I wanted to put a big plate back in the cupboard, I had to lift up all the small plates first (see what I mean?) That didn’t help prevent things from accumulating on the drainer. Now I have the small plates on one shelf, and big ones on another. I use up more storage space, but it’s easier to put things away. I have rearranged all my kitchen cupboards along the same principle, and the kitchen is now much more usable.

This post is getting much longer than what I expected. However, I don’t want to leave you without letting you know what I have come up with for dealing with my incoming mail. I have been using a tray-based system for sorting paperwork for a long time, but it has shown its limitations regularly over the past years. The new system still uses trays, that groups papers according to what I have to do with them instead of what they are. So now, this is what my trays look like; I’ll see as I use it if it needs any modifications:

  • to do (bills to pay, things to investigate or have a closer look at)
  • to do, ASAP (anything urgent)
  • to file, daily business (bank papers, medical papers, salary slips)
  • to file, important (tax stuff and other important things)
  • to look at (optional) before throwing out (various newspapers, information leaflets)
  • to throw out (envelopes and anything else I don’t keep; the bin is often not close at hand)
  • to sort (anything unopened; sometimes I fetch my mail and don’t deal with it straight away

In conclusion, here is my line of conduct:

  1. pay attention to cupboards that are never opened or shelves that are never reached at
  2. keep an eye on what I do automatically and try to adapt the environment
  3. think “actions”, “process”, and “frequency” instead of “categories” and “families”
  4. accept my limitations

The last point is important: there will always be clean washing waiting to be ironed, because no matter how hard I try, I’ll never get around to ironing and putting it away as soon as it’s dry. I therefore need to take this into account and explicitly plan a space for my huge pile of Clothes Waiting To Be Ironed, even if in an ideal world, Clothes Waiting To Be Ironed should not be around.

Getting Less Welfare Because One is Homeless [en]

From The thoughts and opinions of a homeless girl: some insight into the financials of homelessness.

Crystal’s bio page will give you more information about her and how she came to be homeless. She doesn’t really fit the stereotype, does she?

To look at me, you wouldn’t expect me to be homeless. I’m clean. I dress nice. I’m educated. I’ve graduated high school and have 2 1/2 years of college education. I’m intelligent. I have 5 years of experience working in the medical field. But I am homeless. if you saw me walking down the street in the morning, you might wonder why I’m carrying a back pack and/or a duffle bag with me. But homeless? That’s probably not the first thing that would come to your mind if you saw me in a crowd of people. Homeless people are often stereotyped. I want to break society’s view of that. Being homeless doesn’t make one ‘less human’ than another. We are all equal.

Next Holidays: India [en]

Not to despair, let’s think about the future. Today I booked my flight for India: going out to Mumbai on January 17th, and coming back on February 18th. Sounds nice, doesn’t it?

Back Home [en]

End of holidays. They just sped by. East Midlands Aiport, waiting for boarding time. No wireless connection here, or so it seems.

I haven’t posted much, have I? Actually, I’ve just been too busy being on holiday. I spent time with people I love, went shopping, got dressed up, ate great Indian food, went on a date, watched lots of movies, tried various Internet connections, and flew around the British Isles. I even attended an archeology lecture at Birmingham University this morning.

My holidays were really nice, thank you, and I’ll make no mystery of the fact that I am not looking forward to going back to work. (Apart for seeing my dear collegues, of course, if any of you chance to be reading this…)

Carrying the laptop around was a nice idea, despite the weight. It allowed me to hijack my grandparents’ internet connection more than I decently should have. It also gave me the chance to have a (very) brief chat with Joi in Geneva Airport before taking off, and a “suprise-meet-up” with Antoin in Dublin. I tinkered some more with Movable Type, made progress with the website I’m preparing for my judo school, and kept in touch to some extent with my online world.

It’s a bit strange how I just can’t seem to totally relax in my life right now. I keep feeling this underlying guilt I’ve got used to living with all these last years: guilt about setting aside what I should be doing (my studies), instead of having fun.

So now that my studies are over, it’s interesting to note that the feeling has not yet completely gone away. I regularly realise (a pleasant surprise, actually) that I am on vacation the coming week-end. That there is nothing I should be doing apart from taking time off. That I am free to go over and meet people for the week-end, or just hang around at home doing nothing, or go and watch five movies in two days at the cinema.

I can feel this is a time of change. I’m looking forward to what is to come.

Conférence BlogTalk 2 [fr]

La Conférence Européenne sur le Weblogging BlogTalk 2 aura lieu début juillet à Vienne (Autriche). A mon avis, une occasion à côté de laquelle la blogosphère francophone ne devrait pas passer, une chance pour ceux qui ont quelque chose à apporter à la réflexion générale sur les weblogs de se faire entendre, indépendamment de leur célébrité médiatique.

Dernier délai pour soumettre vos propositions de présentations: 17 mars.

Papers to this conference should be concerned with blogs as an arena of exchange: the exchange of ideas, opinions and information as well as dreams, visions and knowledge. Addressing the topic of exchange contributors may consider strategies, consequences and benefits as well as rhetoric and aesthetics.

Holidays [en]

I’m on holidays! On the train, riding home, on my way to buy a digital camera (if my

photographer shop manages to sell me one in less than half an hour), un-pack my Barcelona suitcase,

iron a bunch of clothes (or not, Aleika has an iron in Birmingham), drive up to the cattery (40

minutes) and drop off the animal there for

his first fortnight at the “hotel”, clean up the flat a bit and pack my suitcase.

Two weeks of real holidays, Birmingham-Leeds-Dublin-Birmigham, the first real holidays I will

have had in ages. No dissertation to write, no courseworks left aside to steal a few days of guilty freedom, no

“other-things-I-should-be-doing-instead-of-this”. Real holidays.

I may or may not be online these next two weeks. Everything is possible. Time to read, spend time with Aleika,

Akirno, my Grandparents and Kitof, take photographs, and maybe play about with Movable Type. We’ll see as it goes.

I’ve taken a step to organising my next holidays, too. I’ll be going back to India for a month in February, and I’ve

already had my holiday sheet signed. I’ll be booking tickets soon.

As I tend to loose track of where people I know online live, don’t hesitate to let me know if

I’ll be coming around your place. I like going out for a coffee and a chat, and as I said recently,

the bit I prefer about the Internet is meeting people.

U-blog passe pro [en]

Si vous êtes hébergés par U-blog, jetez un coup d’oeil maintenant aux tarifs. Si vous passez “payants” d’ici au 31 décembre, c’est moins cher, et je pense que ça en vaut franchement la peine.