Read Karlology Online

Authors: Karl Pilkington

Karlology (8 page)

BOOK: Karlology
2.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Fourteen minutes
l
ater t
h
e scan was over.
J
oe came in and pulled me out of the machine and removed the cage
f
rom around my head. I felt like a magician’s assistant who’d
b
een cut in
h
a
lf
an
d
t
h
en put
b
ac
k
toget
h
er again. He to
ld
me it wou
ld
ta
k
e a
f
ew
h
ours to
g
et t
h
e scans
d
eve
l
o
p
e
d
, so I use
d
t
h
is time to ta
lk
to Hu
g
o a
b
out t
h
e
b
rain. I
d
on’t
r
emember everything he said, apart from how the brain o
f
the elephant is the largest in size among the land mammals
(
e
l
e
ph
ants a
l
wa
y
s
l
oo
k
sa
d
, w
h
ic
h
p
roves m
y
p
oint a
b
out
h
ow inte
ll
i
g
ence an
d
l
au
gh
ter
d
on’t
l
i
k
e eac
h
ot
h
er) an
d
that telling lies is a complicated thing for the brain to do.
I
’m not very good at lying. The first lie that I remember te
ll
ing was to me mam w
h
en s
h
e
f
oun
d
an app
l
e in t
h
e
f
ruit
b
ow
l
t
h
at
h
a
d
b
een
b
itten an
d
put
b
ac
k
. I sai
d
t
h
e cat
d
i
d
it.
A
nother was when I bou
g
ht some knock-off
A
didas trai
n
ers from a mate at school for £10.

“Why are they so cheap?” me mam asked. “Is it cos they’re stolen?”


No. T
h
e
y
’re c
h
ea
p
cos t
h
e
l
a
d
’s
d
a
d
owns t
h
e com
p
an
y
”, I
l
ie
d
. I t
h
ou
gh
t it was
q
uite a
g
oo
d
one
.

“What’s his name?”


Simon
A
d
i
d
as”
,
I sai
d.

L
i
k
e I sa
y
, I’m not t
h
at
g
oo
d
at
l
ies
.

To
l
ie we
ll
,
y
ou
h
ave to
h
ave a rea
lly
g
oo
d
b
rain an
d
m
emory. JK
R
owling must be a right good liar to write all those Harry Potter books about a made-up wizard and keep them believable. The problem with that is, she’s so good at
ly
in
g
I wou
ld
n’t trust
h
er as
f
ar as I cou
ld
t
h
row
h
er.

Hu
g
o
b
rou
gh
t u
p
t
h
e ima
g
es o
f
m
y
b
rain on
h
is co
m
p
uter. It was weird to see it. It was like seeing someone
y
ou’ve spoken to a lot on the phone but never met face to
f
ace. I
k
new w
h
at it t
h
oug
h
t a
b
out stu
ff
,
b
ut I’
d
never seen it. I t
h
ou
gh
t it was
q
uite a
g
oo
d
-
l
oo
k
in
g
b
rain,
b
ut ma
yb
e
I
t
h
ou
gh
t t
h
is cos it
b
e
l
on
g
s to me. It’s
l
i
k
e w
h
en
p
eo
pl
e have a baby scan and the owners think it’s beautiful, when to other people it just looks like a frog
.

 

Hu
g
o to
ld
me it’s im
p
ortant to
k
ee
p
t
h
e
b
rain
h
ea
l
t
hy
by
keeping it active and eating well. “
O
mega-3 fats are good
f
or t
h
e
b
rain”,
h
e sai
d
. W
h
en I
g
ot
h
ome I
l
oo
k
e
d
on-
l
ine to see w
h
ic
h
f
oo
d
s contain t
h
is stu
ff
. I
f
oun
d
it’s in wa
l
nuts.
M
y brain doesn’t like walnuts.

Natural History Museum

IT’S
GOO
D
T
H
A
T
W
E E
VO
L
V
ED
f
rom some sort o
f
sea creature and grew a brain, but I think it’s a shame that
w
e couldn’t have grown a decent brain whilst at the same time sta
y
in
g
in t
h
e sea. I t
h
in
k
t
h
is is w
h
en evo
l
ution too
k
a
w
ron
g
turn and started
g
oin
g
downhill.
G
e
ttin
g
out of the sea was our bi
gg
est mistake.

E
a
rt
h
is
k
nown as t
h
e
bl
ue p
l
anet
f
or a reason, t
h
e reason
b
eing t
h
at it’s 70% water, an
d
t
h
at’s wit
h
out even countin
g
a
ll
t
h
e swimmin
g
p
oo
l
s.
E
ven swimmin
g
p
oo
l
s are
g
et
t
ing bigger and deeper than they used to be.
W
he
n I w
as
y
ounger, pools used to always have a bit of space around them, but now, due to the amount of water on the planet,
w
e
h
ave invente
d
in
fi
nit
y
p
oo
l
s w
h
ere t
h
ere is no
l
on
g
er
a gap. We’re running out of ways of using the water up. I t
h
in
k
t
h
is is w
hy
t
h
e
y
te
ll
us to
d
rin
k
at
l
east two
l
itres a
d
a
y
– not cos it’s
g
oo
d
f
or us,
b
ut
j
ust so t
h
e
pl
anet
d
oesn’t
d
r
o
wn i
tse
lf
.

I
t’s simple, we should have never left the sea. No fish is
h
ome
l
ess, no
fi
s
h
d
ies o
f
starvation or stress. But cos we got
o
ut o
f
t
h
e sea, we now
h
ave t
h
ese
p
ro
bl
ems. We
h
ave to
w
or
k
to
p
a
y
f
or a
h
ouse or a
fl
at to
l
ive in, we
h
ave to
p
a
y
f
or food, we have to pay for electric/gas to keep us warm. Then, if we’re lucky, if any money is left over, what do we
d
o? We use it to
g
o
f
or
h
o
l
i
d
a
y
s
b
ac
k
at t
h
e
pl
ace we s
h
ou
ld
n
ever
h
ave
l
e
f
t to
b
e
g
in wit
h
. T
h
e sea.

We’re panicking now cos they say the sea levels are rising and land will start disappearing, but if we’d stayed as
fi
s
h
t
h
at wou
ld
b
e goo
d
news, as we cou
ld
sprea
d
out a
b
it,
h
ave a
f
ew
d
i
ff
erent roc
k
s to
l
ive un
d
er in
d
i
ff
erent
p
arts o
f
t
h
e new exten
d
e
d
sea. T
h
e
y
a
l
so sa
y
we are runnin
g
out o
f
cod and that we should stop eating it, but I think we’re not
r
unning out – I think the cod is just harder to find with all t
h
is new water t
h
at’s
b
een a
dd
e
d
f
rom t
h
e me
l
tin
g
ice
b
er
g
s.
M
e Aunt
y
Nora is worrie
d
a
b
out t
h
e me
l
tin
g
ice
b
er
g
s, not cos of rising sea levels but cos she thinks that’s where we get
o
ur ice from, and she can’t drink whisky and coke without ice as it gives
h
er
h
eart
b
urn
.

A
nyway, problem is we can’t go back now – we’ve lost a
ll
t
h
em s
k
i
ll
s we wou
ld
h
ave
h
a
d
as
fi
s
h
. I can on
ly
d
o t
h
e
b
reaststro
k
e
f
or a
f
ew metres
b
e
f
ore I’m out o
f
b
reat
h
.

I
feel like we’ve messed up, like nature is no longer in charge of our destiny. Proof of this is the labradoodle. It’s a new
d
og we’ve
k
noc
k
e
d
up t
h
at’s a cross
b
etween a
l
a
b
r
a
d
or an
d
a
p
oo
dl
e. (It’s so new t
h
at t
h
e s
p
e
ll
c
h
ec
k
on m
y
com
p
uter is as
k
in
g
me to c
h
ec
k
t
h
e s
p
e
ll
in
g
as I t
yp
e t
h
is, as it’s never heard of a labradoodle.) It’s aimed at people
w
h
o
lik
e
t
h
e
c
h
a
r
acte
r
o
f
t
h
e
l
ab
r
ado
r
but
a
r
e
n’
t
k
ee
n
o
n i
ts
h
airst
yl
e
.

I
thought for this chapter, a trip to the Natural History
M
useum was in order to see what nature had put together
o
ver t
h
e years.

I
t was a
ll
g
oin
g
to
pl
an. I’
d
g
ot u
p
ear
ly
an
d
was at t
h
e museum
fif
teen minutes
b
e
f
ore o
p
enin
g
time. T
h
ere was me and twelve others waiting outside. “I’ll get in and out of the dinosaur section before all the kids on their school trips
e
ven
g
et o
ff
t
h
e
b
us”, is w
h
at I’
d
t
h
ou
gh
t. I
g
ot in t
h
ere an
d
l
oo
k
e
d
at t
h
e ma
p
. C
h
inese art,
gl
ass art, me
d
ieva
l
scu
lp
tures, fashion, photography
.

“Where have you put the dinosaurs?” I asked the old
security man
.


Dinosaurs? You won’t find any dinosaurs in here, you
w
ant t
h
e Natura
l
Histor
y
Museum.”

Turns out I was in t
h
e V&A. I
d
on’t
k
now w
hy
t
h
e
y
have all the museums so close together. The V&A, the
N
atural History Museum and the Science Museum are all
w
it
h
in
fi
ve minutes o
f
eac
h
ot
h
er. I
f
anot
h
er meteorite
h
its Eart
h
an
d
wi
p
es out a
ll
civi
l
ization, t
h
en in
b
i
ll
ions o
f
y
ears time, w
h
en
h
umans
g
row
b
ac
k
a
g
ain, some arc
h
aeo
l
o
g
ist is gonna be well confused when they start digging round here and find human bones
,
dinosaur bones
,
bits of old Chinese art, o
dd
f
as
h
ion,
p
o
l
ar
b
ears,
d
o
d
os,
fi
s
h
an
d
com
p
uters a
ll
w
it
h
in a 1-mi
l
e ra
d
ius
.

BOOK: Karlology
2.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Scent of Pine by Lara Vapnyar
Morning Glory by LaVyrle Spencer
Stormfuhrer by Everett, E. R.
Terra Dawning by Ben Winston
The Infinite Moment by John Wyndham