A couple of years ago I was in Washington DC visiting friends. We had a merry enough time at first but then things took a turn – or rather I did.

I developed a griping pain in the stomach which, because I am a man, was agonising. I retreated to the loo where dark things happened that must never be spoken of. After a couple of days of my not being able to eat, my host drove me to Sibley Memorial Hospital whilst my wife held my hand and tried to stop me fading away.

The hospital was quiet and clean and, with a single exception, stunningly efficient. The exception was that, having been asked for and having delivered a “stool sample” they managed to lose it on its way to be tested. Goodness knows how you lose a cardboard tray of poo. Goodness knows what became of the person who eventually found it. Anyway, since there was plenty more where that came from it wasn’t really a problem.

Exceptionally cheerful nurses launched a sustained vampirous attack, siphoning off blood and returning (and this never happens in the UK) within the hour with a full set of results which I was allowed to keep. I have them on display in my home.

Anyone who has visited a British ER will appreciate the difference. I once managed to nearly hack off a finger getting out of the bath (it’s a long story) and was only permitted to talk to triage when the cleaners complained that my profuse bleeding was making the floors sticky.

The other difference I noticed a month later when a bill for $1078 arrived. I made a half-hearted attempt to get my UK insurers to pay but they just laughed at me down the phone. “Have you never read your policy?” they asked cackling like witches. It turned out that poor attention to detail on my part had meant that I had signed up to a policy that, boiling matters down to their essentials, required me to pay them money if I incurred medical expenses. I paid the hospital and abandoned my insurance claim.

Today I got a letter from a company called NCO Financial Systems Inc. It was two and a half pages of intemperate threats coupled with an invitation to call them and make payment immediately. They had acquired a “debt” from NES District of Columbia which, Google informed me, was the DC Emergency Health Service.

Several long phone calls to very charming people later it emerged that in addition to the $609 ER charge that had appeared on the original bill, I had been billed a further $241 by the ER Doctor herself (although that bill had never reached me). So the grand total (including payment charges) is $1327. That must surely be the most expensive shit anyone has had in all recorded human history.

Just to underscore the point: if I were to turn up with diarrhoea at a London hospital they would poke through my stool sample for nothing. That’s no pounds and no pence. Admittedly, they would take days and probably surgically remove my leg by accident once I had nodded off in the waiting room, but $1327 would leave me enough money to get a gold-tipped crutch and a physiotherapy massage from the Queen. I am amazed so many Americans are still alive. What is the break even point? How close to death do you have to be to make it worthwhile actually setting foot in a hospital?

On the subject of poo – this is one of the funniest things I have read in ages.

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I set off along the Embankment at dusk. The gaslight in the Temple and the white snow on the black railings made the world seem a poetic place.

“Hmm” I thought, “there’s a blog to be written here” and drifted into gentle contemplation, one gloved hand gently stroking my chin, the other held aloft as tribute to the Muse – acting as an inspiration receiver.

THUD. A ball of ice lightly dusted in snow hit the ground in front of me. It was a drive-by near miss. A particular sub-culture of lairy students and former school bullies doing shit-stacking jobs for minimum wage (I think they are known, formally, as Generation Y but I prefer to think of them as “the ***nts”) have recently taken to wringing a thrill from the grey by driving past people and throwing things at them.

They spot a likely candidate, pick up a little speed, dare each other like 5 year olds and then throw something at their victim’s beany-hatted head before, convulsed with laughter, the driver loses control and powers their crappy hatchback into the back of a petrol tanker. There is just a chance to see them flail their broken arms at the door latches before they erupt in an explosion that shatters windows as far south as Dover.

You see the problem. A minor infringement of my dignity and instead of thinking “Oo those scamps” my mind is foaming with extravagant and fantastical revenges that leave eyeballs and viscera scattered around like a toddler’s toys. I become, in an instant, a Hollywood serial killer.

“I’ll show them” I think. There are a number of problems with this. First, I have no idea who they are. Secondly, my chances of out-running their vehicle are slim. Thirdly, if I did catch them what exactly is it my sub-conscious is proposing that I should show them? I certainly wouldn’t have anything to hand likely to induce terror or respect if waved at them.

It amazes me that however much I bathe my soul in a balm of Chopin, Mommy-blogs and Woody Allen movies, those little ***ts can turn me into a caveman in an instant. Albeit a podgy caveman with glasses and a dodgy knee.

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Careful observation of our cat has revealed the following:

(1) Places our cat likes to have a pee

(a) The flower bed, nestled amongst the bulbs he has rooted up;

(b) On the duvet;

(c) In my work bag;

(d) In the bath;

(e) In the shoe cupboard;

(2) Places our cat does not like to take a pee

(a) The Deluxe Cat-shit-o-tron 2000 single storey detached cat lavatory with non-allergenic, organic, biodegradable, “EZE-arse” (TM), bottom-friendly litter that we bought for him.

Pack your cat toys in a tiny handkerchief, tie it to a stick and on your way Mr Catty and don’t think that that insolent look is going to melt my heart.

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