Jan 142013
 

28mm WW2 US paratrooper

The next Combat Stress Commemorative Miniature auction, raising money for the Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal, is now live and will end 24 Jan, 2013 20:11:25 GMT.

Visit http://r.ebay.com/CmdCyF

You can also view more photos on my Flickr feed at http://flic.kr/s/aHsjDBHcK9

I’m really hoping that this auction will take us beyond £11,000, which will be a significant landmark, so please bid if you can!

UPDATE

I’m delighted to report that the auction ended with a massive winning bid of £79.77.  This has already been donated to Combat Stress via eBay’s Missionfish system thanks to the prompt payment from the winning bidder, who lives in Italy. This means that our Combat Stress Appeal now stands at an impressive £11,046.59!

Nov 202012
 

After a few technical gremlins which prevented me from getting things underway yesterday as I intended, our Australian WWII infantryman, sculpted by the talented Mike Broadbent who is best known for his work with Eureka Miniatures and painted by veteran Andy MacDonald-Rice, begins its journey towards raising a chunk of funds for the Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal.

World War II Australian Infantryman Combat Stress Commemorative Miniature

The eBay auction will begin this evening at 20:04:39 GMT. I’ve scheduled it for a UK evening finish so that supporters around the world will also be able to bid at relatively civilised times of day.

Look for the following auction title:

28mm painted WW2 Australian infantryman for Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal” listed in category Toys & Games > Wargames & Role-Playing > Table Top/ Historical.

The Item Number is 150951426039.

The auction page on eBay is now live here.

Bidding opens at a measly £0.99 GBP to make sure that any of you can afford to bid, so please participate! Of course, we’re hoping to raise a great deal more than this by the end of the bidding, which lasts for 10 days.

100% of the proceeds of the auction will go to Combat Stress via eBay’s MissionFish system.

Jul 142012
 

Okay, the weather’s miserable and the economy is in a nose dive, but you’ve got to look on the bright side of life!

It’s Bastille Day, so what better way to commemorate La Révolution Française than with a whopping great discount on my Battlegames PDFs and Combat stress Commemorative Miniatures? (Okay, the logic is tenuous, I know, but what the heck, read on!)

So, until the end of MONDAY 16TH JULY, you can get a whopping 20% off ANY of the pre-Atlantic Editions Battlegames PDFs (that’s issues 1-26 and the Table Top Teasers Volume 1) or the Combat Stress Commemorative Miniatures by simply entering the discount code

BGBastilleSpecial2012

during the checkout process. And you can use this code as many times as you like, and for as many PDFs or miniatures as you like.

Go mad! Tell your friends! Get singin’ La Marseillaise in the rain!

Remember, the offer closes on Monday 16th July, so be quick!

P.S. This offer does not apply to any issues currently sold by Atlantic Editions so please don’t try to use this discount code on their site.

Aug 262008
 

I had an email from Jules of Figures in Comfort yesterday to tell me that on his own sponsored diet, he has managed to lose no less than 15lbs so far, so I offer my congratulations to him!

My effort has started slowly. When I stepped on the scales yesterday morning, the digits stopped whirring at 19st 13lbs (279lbs, 126.55Kg). That’s a loss of two pounds in my first week, which isn’t bad, but certainly isn’t anywhere near bragging territory yet.

I’ll be pleased if the rate of progress remains more or less at that level. Anyone with half a brain knows that it’s easy to go on a crash diet, lose an impressive amount of weight in a short time, only to see it pile back on again even quicker when the diet ends. The point is to actually make lifestyle changes so that what comes off, stays off.

Your Editor was one of the England Under 19s rugby squad

Your Editor was one of the England Under 19s rugby squad, pictured here at the Bisham Abbey training camp in 1977. A tight head prop, I was one of the youngest in the team, only 16 at the time. Older readers may remember England No. 8 star Roger Uttley, at the left rear of the group.

As someone who used to be super-fit as a young man, my ever-growing waistline has been a source of embarrassment to me for many years. For quite a long time, I was a heavy smoker, too. I picked up the dreaded habit at university in late 1979, and only managed to finally quit for good about 11 years ago. For a while, I was up to a couple of packs a day, perhaps even 50 at times of greatest stress. I must have stunk like a chimney and of course a great deal of money quite literally went up in smoke. But the remarkable thing is that just before Christmas of 1997, I quit, cold turkey, and I’ve never smoked a fag since — I’ve not even had any craving.

If only, I have said to myself many, many times, I could flick that same switch in my brain in connection with my weight as I did with the smoking. It’s not quite so straightforward, of course, because the body can live without cigarettes, but it certainly can’t live without food! One of the terrible things the human body does is evolve, over quite a short space of time, to live without the levels of exercise one used to have as a young man, but it still keeps telling the brain that it needs the same amount of fuel. If we leave our car in the driveway for days on end, the petrol we bought on Monday will still be there in the tank on Friday (well, unless you live in certain high crime areas, that is!) But if we sit in front of a computer doing little else for weeks at a time, our body still processes what we eat and demands more at regular intervals. It makes little distinction about whether we’re surfing in Hawaii all day, or just surfing the Web.

One of the serious problems that this can cause is diabetes. It’s estimated that perhaps 10% of the UK population — even more in the United States — have undiagnosed Type 2 diabetes, or Syndrome X which can be a precursor to full diabetes. The source of the problem is the pancreas, which secretes insulin to deal with sugars in our blood. And our poor pancreases have been overloaded with excess sugars for years, whether those we consume overtly in the form of sweet foods; unwittingly in the form of refined flours, white bread, burger buns and so on; or even covertly, in the sugars added even to so-called ‘health’ or even ‘slimming’ foods. Oh, and in booze, of course: maltose, the natural sugar occurring in beers, has a shocking effect on our body (hence the ‘beer belly’) and many liqueurs and spirits are extremely high in sugars.

Henry at his absolute fighting fittest, when attending the Royal Commissions Board in 1981. It's all been downhill since then!

Yellow 25: Henry at his absolute fighting fittest, when attending the Royal Commissions Board in 1981. It's all been downhill since then!

This preamble is by way of an introduction, for those interested, into the method I am using to lose weight. In general terms, it’s a GI (Glycaemic Index) diet. Various forms have been proposed over the years, most famously pioneered by Frenchman Michel Montignac whose famous first book “Dine Out and Lose Weight” delivered a well-deserved slap in the face to the calorie-counting establishment; Fedon Alexander Lindberg’s “The Greek Doctor’s Diet“; and TV chef Antony Worrall Thompson’s “GI Diet”. Put GI into Amazon’s search and you’ll be bombarded with titles, but all those by Michel Montignac stand head and shoulders above the rest.

What’s GI? Unlike calories, which measure of how much energy is derived when foodstuffs are burned, as though we should all take up eating flammable fare like machines, GI is a much more accurate indicator of the effect that foods have on our blood sugar level, and the amount of insulin that our pancreas needs to secrete to then return our blood sugar levels to normal. An even more accurate measure that is being developed is Glycaemic Load, which helps to highlight the fact that some foods that may have a great deal of naturally-occurring sugars in them and therefore have a comparatively high GI score (such as carrots), but they aren’t necessarily bad for you, because you’d have to eat an awful lot of them before you approached anything like the insulin spike produced by, say, a Mars bar! It also notes that the GI of foods can change when they are cooked, and according to how they are cooked. A raw carrot, for example, has a much lower GI than a boiled one, because the act of cooking makes the sugars more readily available to the body.

Incidentally, that insulin spike is something I bet you’ve experienced before, even if you didn’t know what it was. Ever had a typical, on-the-go office lunch of white bread sandwich, packet of crisps and a chocolate bar? And about 30-45 minutes later, did you suddenly feel really tired, exhausted even? Add a lunchtime pint to this, and I bet you were struggling to keep your eyes open, until your energy gradually returned an hour or two later. That, my friends, is the effect of gorging on high-GI food and drink. With all those sugars, both natural and artificial, suddenly hitting your system, your poor pancreas goes into overdrive, pumping out insulin into your blood like there’s no tomorrow.

Henry in his current, ummm, 'cuddly' condition, next to the very fit and svelte Roger Smith

Henry in his current, ummm, 'cuddly' condition, snapped at the Woolwich show by Steve Dix whilst celebrating a Zulu victory with Roger Smith, our Fantasy and Sci-Fi Editor who has, on the contrary, kept himself very trim over the years. So, this is the 'before' picture...!

One of the effects of insulin is soporific — it makes you feel sleepy. That’s perfectly natural; after all, your average lion takes a nap after snacking on a gazelle, which is an entirely organic, sugar-free meal. If gazelles were candy-coated, the lion would probably sleep for a week!

The other effect of high-GI foods is that they provide so much energy, so quickly, that your body says, “hey, all this other stuff that came with the roast potatoes/white bread/milk chocolate, I don’t need it for energy right now, so I’ll store it as — you guessed it — fat”.

Enough from me. The food and pharmaceutical industry cartels here in the UK have done a great job in brainwashing everyone into accepting calories as the indicator. After all, they’ve invested billions in all that low-calorie cr*p that costs twice as much as ordinary food to buy, everything from low-cal drinks to breakfast cereals to soups to microwave meals. On the other side of the world, however, the Aussies should be proud of taking a lead at the University of Sydney, which has set up the International GI Database website, free of charge for you to read and digest. I’ll end with a quote form their site based on what the World health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) recommend:

Terms such as complex carbohydrates and sugars, which commonly appear on food labels, are now recognised as having little nutritional or physiological significance. The WHO/FAO recommend that these terms be removed and replaced with the total carbohydrate content of the food and its GI value.

Incidentally, for those of you who imagine that I will be living an ascetic lifestyle for the next few weeks, let me tell you that two of my favourite things are allowed, in moderation: good red wine and very dark (70%+ cocoa) chocolate, both of which have a low GI!

Okay, the next post will be about wargaming, I promise!

Aug 192008
 

You will see this appeal explained in full in the forthcoming issue 14 of Battlegames which goes to press on Friday, but since the mechanism used for raising funds is already in place, the Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal web page already open and the first donations have arrived.

When I was a small boy, I can remember my father, who served in the Fleet Air Arm during WWII, suffering great distress when he recalled incidents from his wartime experience. Only comparatively recently have the armed services begun to properly understand the long-term psychological effects of active duty, instituting ‘decompression’ either in, or close to, the theatre of operations for personnel about to end their tours or duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Many thousands of our service men and women from less recent conflicts have been effectively left to fend for themselves, relying overwhelmingly on the voluntary help offered by charities like Combat Stress. Please help them to help the men and women who have served on our behalf in dangerous places and situations, often in extremely difficult and harrowing peacekeeping operations such as Bosnia, whatever their rank, job or arm of the services.

Inspired by Jules of Figures in Comfort, who suffers from PTSD himself, and Charles Grant, who is now Vice President of the Combat Stress charity, I have decided to get off my sedentary arse and do something for this unglamorous but extremely worthy cause. I’m going to be working to shed a stone in weight (14lbs, 6.35kg) by Monday 20th October, in time for issue 15, so please sponsor me now! (You can, however, continue giving, or encouraging others to give, to this Appeal for up to six months if you wish.) Visit the Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal web page for full details and to donate.

You can also send a cheque made payable to Combat Stress to the following address:

The Battlegames Combat Stress Appeal
17 Granville Road
Hove BN3 1TG
East Sussex
United Kingdom

Please do not make cheques for this appeal payable to Battlegames.

Please help to spread the word: donations are welcome even from people who don’t read (or even like!) Battlegames, and from non-wargaming friends or family. Every penny will go towards helping those who have put themselves in the line of fire on our behalf.

Your support is hugely appreciated.

Henry

P.S. You can find out more about Combat Stress here.