Posts Tagged ‘money’

Opryland – Nashville’s Giving Tree

12:51 on 13 August 2010

Ever read The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein?

It’s a classic, and it’s how I feel about Opryland USA. In one form or another, it has been with me throughout the stages of growing up.

When I was a kid, Opryland was a theme park in Nashville, Tennessee (very slightly north east of it, actually). Growing up in the midwest as I did, amusement parks were the pinnacle of entertainment. There was simply no better way to spend a day than riding roller coasters, watching Motown revues, and eating park food. After I moved away, I realised that some people grow up with mountains and kayaks and nature, but in Illinois, not so much.
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Scrapple [for] the Apple

14:23 on 29 May 2010

“But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thine mp3 player shalt surely be incompatible, and thy printer shall lose functionality.” (Genesis 2:17, King Jobs Version)

The ipad hit Britain yesterday, in a flurry of wall-sized ads at Underground stations and a wave of general lust. This seems like as good an excuse as any to weigh in on the minor religion that is Apple.
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How To Live Well On Nothing A Year

20:00 on 27 April 2010

Anyone who has read Vanity Fair might recognise the title, and realise that I’m about to wax lyrical about the role that the much maligned c-word, “credit”, plays in my life.

I am not a big spender. I am not, for example, a great lover of shoes. I shouldn’t even need a credit card. Unfortunately, given the nature of my work, I never know how much money I am going to make in a month before it has arrived in my account. Meanwhile food must still be purchased, and the Oyster must still be fed. So, often, I will put things like food and transportation on the credit card so that I’ll have cash left over to pay for things like rent and bills, expenses that can’t be taken care of on credit. My mother assures me that this is a sensible way to avoid being evicted.

But when I think about it, it is a bit surreal. If when I add the bank balance to the credit card balance the result is zero, that should mean the same as if I actually had zero money. But it doesn’t. I can continue to pay bills as a functioning member of society as long as there’s a positive somewhere, even if it’s (more than) cancelled out by a negative elsewhere.

So it’s less about the actual amounts in each account, and more about the gradient between the two. Like osmosis, and the ATM is a semi-permeable membrane, and as long as cash can flow from an area of higher concentration to lower, I can get to work and eat dinner.

Furthermore, because this is mostly happening in numbers on a computer screen, with sometimes a little bit of plastic and a chip and PIN reader involved, it hardly seems real. If I actually have no money when I add all the accounts together, and no actual cash in my wallet, yet I can still go around and do pretty much anything I want, then surely I am living in a Star Trek-esque money-free economy based on, I dunno, love and trust and Vulcans. And well, that’s pretty okay. And I’m going to remember that the next time I start to worry about money. Pointy ears, yeah.

(Though, come to think of it, living well on nothing a year didn’t turn out so well for Becky Sharp in Vanity Fair. Better for Reese Witherspoon, but only because liberties were taken with the film version. Must assess situation.)