Day two – Sprinkling of sadness despite slip on shoes

January 2, 2012 at 11:15 pm (bipolar, Charity, Depression, Diet, Family, Friendship, Gifts, GP, Health care, Health food, Hoisery, Market Harborough, Medication, mental health, Movement to stop Uggs making the world ugly, Red, Smoking, Work) (, )

Despite having a lovely day with my brother and sister I am very aware that the beginnings of another depression are creeping up on me. As always I find myself trying to work out why it has come back. I am a dreadful scientist and although the Docs have told me time and time again that it has as much to do with a ‘chemical reaction in my brain due to a biological malfunction’ or some such thing I still look outward for the cause.

Perhaps I have been having too much fun of late, or maybe it is this cold that I can’t shake or the fact that I feel rather under pressure. I don’t know what it is but I find myself tearful and full of self loathing. My figure feels too full and my eyes too prone to water and generally it just kind of sucks.

I am trying to subscribe to the American way of being and think positive but it is hard and I am scared. My last high which started in October was pretty severe and according to my medical history and the famous law of what goes up must come down I cannot help but worry that this next low will be colossal.

The reason I acknowledge it here and now is that I do not want people to get the wrong idea about the nature of my illness. For those of you who are new to the blog I must admit that the lows can be quite significant and at times crippling to everything I do including friendships, work and life generally.

I am doing as far as I can see everything right. I am taking my tablets, getting plenty of sleep and seeing friends and family as often as I can. As well as having a new project to put my energy into I have even taken to eating healthily and having herbal teas, health supplements and warm baths. My only remaining vice, well more or less, is my temporary nicotine addiction and that will pass as it always does.

Fingers crossed I am just worrying without cause and tomorrow will be a brighter day. The shoes have helped in that those I have been wearing for the main part of the day are bright but comfortable without resorting to sweaty Ugg inspired slippers. I spent the most part of the day with my big sis who bought me them and according to her partner they were seen a few months ago on Dragons Den. Wearing them made a walk to the shops a hell of a lot easier but the outfit demanded heels and so they came out to play too although in the mood I’m in today the lower of the two seemed more appropriate.

Look out tomorrow for pictures of the pairs.

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Day 90 – A sad day for shoes

April 1, 2010 at 12:19 am (Addiction, America, Animals, bipolar, Business, Career choices, Charity, Children's stories, Clubbing, Diet, dresses, Employment, Fashion, Fine dining, Friendship, Gifts, Indie, Inspirational women, Live music, Manchester, Market Harborough, Mend and make do, mental health, Movement to stop Uggs making the world ugly, Music, Recycling, Relationships, Shoes, Smoking, Style, The boy, Uncategorized, Unemployment, Wedding) (, , , , )

Today has been a sad day for footwear.  Back when I was a a 23-year-old with the world at my feet and a job as an events manager which paid a tidy little sum my main outgoing other than restaurant bills and bar tabs was shoes,  I was obsessed with them.  For the first time in my life since I was 18 I was totally debt free.  Out of my monthly salary after all bills were paid I still had an indecent amount left over to spend on myself.  Though I smoked and had a fondness for Marks & Spencer sushi and sausage and onion cobs every Friday when I was too hangover to use the phone, I had no children, no mortgage and no monthly car insurance or pension payments.  I was young, free, practically single and absolutely loving the independence of it all.

The boy was living a hand to mouth existence as he was still studying for his music degree but I was free to fund our outings and as one of the girlfriend of Manchester’s hardest working band I got to play the part nearly every weekend; we would all hangout backstage drinking down the riders, dragging on rolled up cigarettes and generally just hanging out feeling ever so slightly like the cool kids.

At the time I guess I knew the life we were living would not last forever.  I was having a hell of a good time but work was taking its toll on my health and I’d dropped down to my smallest size since I’d had a minor eating disorder back when I was 18.  I remember looking at my bank statement and feeling sad at how little I had to show for all the brilliant nights out and evenings just spent drinking red wine round a rickety table listening to music and playing cards in between musing upon our dreams for the future.

Other than Sylvanian Families I had never really felt the desire to collect anything.  My sisters had their key-rings, their badges and even at one stage their dice and my brother had the monopoly on every phase and craze out there including Thomas The Tank Engines, Thunderbirds, Power Rangers and even at one stage care bears which was extraordinarily cute. It was when I realised I was spending much of my money on momentary pleasure products that I decided to start a collection and as I had no particular interest at the time in tea cups I decided I would collect shoes.  As my regular readers know I am a slave to Kurt Geiger.  The shoes they make are so well balanced you can stamp around in a pair of stilettos for sixteen hours straight without feeling an ache.  They are creative, original and considering how well they last lusciously priced.

This then brings us to today’s dilemma.  There is a man in Market Harborough, his name is Andy but I have always known him as the saviour of shoes.  Many times I have brought him a forlorn pair at the end of their life and he has carefully restored them to beauty.  One time he managed to restore my red or dead spike heeled stiletto ankle boots to spanking brand new in spite of me having ground the five inch heel to a mere three inches after a weekend in Liverpool visiting a friend where we danced till we dropped to sleep in his dorm just before dawn. Today Andy very kindly explained to me there was sadly nothing he could do for two of my favourite pairs.

One of them was the first pair of pricey shoes I had ever purchased.  Brought in my lunch break from Berties at Kendall they were soft white leather with five inch thick wooden heels.  Generally I believe white shoes should be saved till ones wedding day and even then they should be hidden and if possible cream but these were divine.  Unfortunately as I tend to run in heels as well as walk whilst racing to get the bus back to see the boy after an after work drink my heel snapped on Deansgate.  It was humiliating and I actually sat down and cried.  I hadn’t even had any hooch but I was just so sad for my poor innocent shoe. Andy said it could be saved in an expensive operation but the job would have to be sourced out and the operators may well break the wood in the process.

The other pair are of the Kurt Geiger variety.  I bought them foolishly after getting made redundant from Webb PR a month before Christmas.  I was a little heart broken about losing the job and in a fine example of someone who had temporarily given leave to their senses and indeed their financial situation I sneaked away on a Christmas shopping trip with the boy, and bought three pairs of shoes in the sale.  Admittedly they should have cost £400 and came to just £120 but still I had just been made redundant and with no job on the horizon it was a foolish mistake.  I guess I have never regretted it because today, 15 months after the fact, I still have the shoes and they are still stunning.  Unfortunately one of them, a pair of mustard yellow t-bar three inch heels was mortally injured back in May.  I was chasing a story at the time and as I tore down the road the pin snapped and I had to traipse around on tippy toes the rest of the day.  Andy says there is no hope for them and though I know I should consign them to the bin they are just too lovely, perhaps at some time in the future there will be better technology for such injured shoes?  I live in hope.

  • Today’s dress is from the wonderful Rebecca Allison.  She sent this in a lovely package from the states and as well as a pair of earrings there was a beautifully written letter.  I realise the dress comes up a little short on me but I hope you will not take too much of a hump at me modifying it for the workplace by pairing it with the skin tight Lycra number from Zara sent by the lovely Clara, believe me it is to protect your eyes from a legging lovely sight.  Again if you do get the chance take a little look at her website.  It is a fabulous way to start ones day and has given me goosebumps in the past with the sheer poetry of her posts.  http://solsticetosolsticetosolstice.tumblr.com/

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Day 78 – The giant, the mountain and the ball gown

March 19, 2010 at 6:45 pm (Autumn/ Winter, bipolar, Budget airline, Dads, dresses, Fashion, Female solidarity, Fitness, Football, Holidays, Homelife, mental health, Motherhood, photography, Skiing, Smoking, Uncategorized) (, )

Though the giant and I have a terse relationship when we are skiing we somehow manage to put our differences aside and enjoy each others company.  When I was nine-years-old my father decided it was time to take me along on the O’Neill family annual skiing holiday.  My mother has never been a big fan of the sport so she tended to stay at home with whichever tot was too young to come along.  Although I was a daddy’s girl when I was younger by the time my first skiing trip came round my feet were planted firmly at my mother’s side and the idea of leaving her to go away with the giant seemed to me like an act of treason. In the end our darling Catherine managed to convince me that skiing was “really good fun” and I conceded to join her and the giant in a trip to Austria. I must admit I did not immediately take to the activity, it was freezing cold and no matter how many times I sucked on my gloves my fingers felt like icicles.  By the end of the holiday however I was hooked; I loved the way the wind whipped through my hair as I hurtled down the slopes, I loved how fast me and my sister could fly down the flat runs, pausing only to size up the best path for show jumps and I loved how well we all got along without the pressures of two other siblings, housework and homework.  My sister, my father and I would get up and out by half seven and stay out on the slopes till the last lift of the day. The flights back then used to cost a fortune so we would save our money by bringing Mars bars from home and the occasional slab of Milka to keep our energy levels up throughout the day.  My father would share it out between us on the chair lift and we would chomp it down before embarking upon another run.

The best holidays were always those where we split into ski school groups during the morning then met up at lunchtime to swap stories.  I do not know why it is we get along OK when we are skiing, perhaps like our shared love of football, having an activity which we both enjoy means we have something in common other than blood.  Whatever it is we always seem to have a good time up on the mountains and we have spent whole afternoons together tearing down The Alps, racing and seeking out new challenges, chasing the sun and attempting to escape the cloud and the mist.

I feel privileged that I have been able to go skiing from a young age, although me and my sister were taken out of school I do not think we missed out on any where near as much as we gained from going.  Some of my favourite and most traumatic childhood memories are from these holidays, such as all the times my sister and I used our sunglasses to check out hot men on the slopes or the time my father fell over the side of a cliff and we had to beg passing skiers to stop and help us drag him up. For some time my father and I were at a level with our ability but sadly he has now overtaken me and it makes me a little sad that we no longer ski in union.  We had a race today and for the first time in years he beat me leaving me with a burning desire to get my fitness back on track as soon as we get back to the UK to make sure this travesty never happens again, I mean for goodness sake he’s practically retired!

  • My sister kindly took the photos for today and we tried to get a backdrop of The Alps but the railway crossing got in the way a little as well as some rude drivers who seemed to think they had the rights over the road .  Today was supposed to be Little Black Dress Friday as started by The Uniform Project a couple of weeks ago to promote creativity and sustainability.  Unfortunately it has been postponed till next week but as dress supplies out here are as scarce as the snow in the valley I decided to wear my long black dinner dance dress regardless.  My mother bought it for my dinner dance when I was 16 and since then I have worn it on only five other occasions; four of these were to dinners and evening dos with different boyfriends, the last was for a visit to the opera in Verona with my father, my brother and my mother.  I love it to bits and even though I look rather different in it now to when I was a slender sixteen-year-old, I still think it is one of the most beautiful dresses I own.

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Day 77 – Falling off the wagon, French style

March 19, 2010 at 4:41 pm (Addiction, Autumn/ Winter, bipolar, Charity, Diet, dresses, Employment, Fashion, Fine dining, Fitness, Football, Holidays, Ireland, Medication, mental health, Motherhood, Mummys, Nature, photography, Skiing, Smoking, Style, The French are Revolting/ Protesting, Uncategorized, Wine) (, , , , , , )

Today I fell off the wagon rather dramatically.  In my defence I have been doing fairly well; other than a few drinks on a couple of special occasions over the past four weeks I have been surprisingly sober.  I can not deny that I haven’t missed the drink; I love the grape and the grain as I do a long overdue conversation with a good friend so being without it has left me feeling a little lonely at times, particularly when my society consists of the suitably sozzled.

Though I had decided to do my best to have a booze free holiday it turns out not drinking in France is nearly as depressing as not smoking.  When I tuck into a long lunch with a baby bubble beverage rather than one of their sweet stumpy beers I am looked at like a leper and feel like a right old bore.  After all I say to myself I am on holiday and after all surely occupation of a different country means one must adopt their laws and customs.  Surely I think by not drinking their delicious vino I am causing unintended offence.

After running through similarly logically sound arguments all day I finally fall well and truly off the wagon during dinner.  I manage to convince myself that holidays are technically a special occasion and after all I have cause for celebration and this is the first time I have shared a meal with my family after getting my good news.  It may be an excuse and I am perhaps kidding myself but it certainly feels like an occasion.  We go to our favourite restaurant in Chamonix.  Although The Hotel Eden do some of the most fanatic dishes in the whole of The Alps, their prices are pretty high and although I would love to go to their restaurant until I am employed it is just not realistic.  Our favourite restaurant is one of the best value in the whole of Le Praz, a small village just outside of central Chamonix.  It is only a five minute stroll from where we stay and their menu has I think stayed the same for the last five years.

It is one of those restaurants where as soon as you walk in you know who the owner is.  The family who own it are often eating there themselves when we come in and the television stays on the sports channel for their pleasure.  The y have not changed their menu or themselves to accommodate the influx of tourists into their village.  We order in our very best French, desperate not to seem like the atypical arrogant anglais who can not be bothered to stretch his tongue to please his hosts.  If we make a mistake she kindly corrects us and when there is an issue with translating the puddings she will switch to sign language and indulge us in our guessing games but she will not use the English tongue and for this I admire her.  Once when we had fondue there the lady who owns the place along with her sports fanatic husband took pity on our peasant ways and showed us herself how best to coat the futons in the melted pot of cheesy gold.

We usually have the same, a special salad which has a poached egg on top as well as little bits of bacon and croutons drenched in oil.  It is delicious and if I was more of a fool I would ask her for the recipe.  The salads are followed by steaks, chips and more devilishly dressed salad, I do not want or care to know how many calories I consume in this meal but every squat, sit up or stair climb I have to do to burn it off will be totally worth it.  Even I, the ketchup queen, will happily go without red sauce because everything is cooked so well it would seem an insult to injure it by adding one’s own accompaniments.

Tonight, there was just a little bit of tension at the start of the meal and as I have been fearing a repeat of last years family feuding I turned to the drink as a distraction.  I find it hard to relax and just be and whether or not it is wrong or healthy having a drink just brings me down a level and loosens me up.  I am always on such a tightly wound string it is nice to lose a little control once in a while and as I had told myself earlier that day I am after all on my holidays.  Though I did my best to take it easy, technically speaking the tablets I am taking do not exactly advise alcohol.  Two glasses of delicious table wine later I was feeling fabulously free and when the owners decided after our drunken debate with a table of Irish men about who would win the rugby the next day we all drank to France’s victory with a liquor from 1946.  It totally finished us all and the walk back was hilarious.  I am standing in the photos but many did not work as I was swaying ever so slightly.

On the plus side on our return to the apartment rather than falling into the trap of desperately trying to keep the party going I got myself a glass of water, watched a bit of the football until I was forced to admit that all I could see was a red and green blur I slid under the duvet, typed a few words of my blog and slunk into the loveliest sleep I have had in days.  I may well have fell off the wagon, but at least I didn’t get hurt.

  • Today’s dress is a kaftan borrowed covertly from my mother whilst she was away in Chamonix.  Knowing the only way she would find out is if she read the blog I decided to chance it as she should be doing her essay so should certainly not be browsing through her daughters drones.  I know it is ridiculous but I wore it with a beret as when in Rome and all.  The green jumper was loaned to me, with permission and everything from my older sister.  I love it and am thinking of accidentally acquiring it during the course and the panic of our packing.  We are sharing a room at the moment and it is great fun.  The top is apparently from Asda and the shirt dress is from Marks & Spencer Autograph collection.  I think it is meant to be a top.  The pictures were taken by my sister’s boyfriend, James Cornish who is quite the amateur photographer and kept doing strange things like practice shots.

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Day 73 – A hippy dress or a cunning ploy to disguise myself as a fruit salad

March 16, 2010 at 8:39 pm (Addiction, bipolar, Catholicism, Charity, Children's stories, Counselling, Dads, Death, Depression, dresses, Fashion, Fashion Icons, Female solidarity, Feminism, Friendship, Gossip, Health care, Homelife, Immigration, Inspirational women, Ireland, Market Harborough, mental health, Motherhood, Mummys, NHS, photography, Pregnancy, Relationships, Smoking, Style, Terrorism, The ageing process, The Potato Famine, Uncategorized, Vintage, Wine) (, , , , , )

And so we return to women’s week.  Admittedly it has not gone exactly to plan and like all the best snow whites we have indeed drifted.  We have however returned to focus and I believe this little bit of chaos has done us good.  Today although it is terribly clichéd I wish to honour my mother.  I had originally planned to combine this post about her along with some of her best friends who have also had a huge influence in my life, but like me she is a bit of a diva and would probably throw a tantrum if she felt her space was being compromised.   Marita Mary Margaret Majella, my mummy was born in September 1953 to Liam and Bridget McDaid of St Finnian’s Park, Moville, Co Donegal.  A sleepy, scenic seaside town she was the eldest of four daughters and had four brothers, three younger.  She had a scholarship to attend an all girls school which was run by Nuns.  If you believe the stories, they were as cruel as some of the grainy old historical fiction feature-length films make them out to be.  They would use the ruler to punish the children if they were impertinent, talked too much or read ahead.  My mother was a fast reader just as am I and she constantly fell foul of a rap across the knuckles because of not being able to bear reading at the level of the class which was always just seven pages too slow.  One of her funniest but saddest memories is the fate of her panda bear toy when she was a little girl.  Being the kind, generous and caring person that she is whenever a child would get sick at her boarding school she would gift them her panda bear to cheer them up.  Unfortunately one of the nuns spotted the link between sick children and panda possession and stole the toy away throwing it on the incinerator as my mother watched with horror.  Perhaps it was this story which made me so fond of panda bears.  I used to have a ridiculous collection of knitted panda toys when I was younger and believe they are still in storage as neither me or my mother could bear to give them to an unworthy home.  I once went to see the panda at London Zoo after hassling my parents for months to take me and instead of russian dolls I have russian pandas.
After attaining an indecent number of As for her leaving certificate my Mummy travelled across the Irish Sea to study at a teaching college.  It was during the 70s, thus today’s dress, but free love did not extend to many of the pubs and rental agents round London who displayed an offensive sign in their windows which read; No Blacks, No Irish, No Dogs.  My mother was lucky to have friends and family to take her in but whilst she was studying she stayed in Coventry at a girls dormitory whilst studying to teach English to the boys who would soon be out patrolling the streets of her home town as the troubles escalated.  It was whilst at college that my mother met the giant.  I will save their story for another day but to cut a long, hilarious story short they got married within a year of meeting one another and lived a  terribly romantic hand to mouth existence until they were able to afford to move out of their first house which they had hated.  My mother fell pregnant with my eldest sister two years into their marriage and had my other sister a few years after.  She gave up work soon after she had Catherine but had planned to return to it once they were a little older.  They moved with both girls to Market Harborough to what would soon be my first home on Coventry Road
It was a wonderful house with two huge blossom trees at the front, a shed at the back where we would invent wildlife clubs and a swing on which I used to stand on so I could chat to the boy who lived two doors down.  Having had two beautiful children I believe my mother may well have thought her family was complete but just as she had put away the baby clothes, I came along.  There are some who might refer to me as a mistake, I prefer the term unexpected but extremely pleasant surprise.
Apparently my mother knew nearly straight away she was pregnant because she had to stop smoking as it would leave her sick, I like to think she would have stopped anyway for health reasons but I am not so sure as the minute we were all born she would return to the temptation and liberation of a packet of Malboro Lights.  I remember her smoking when I was younger, in the kitchen only ever at night with a glass of Chardonnay.  I would do my homework at the table in between chatting away to her about my day and hearing stories of her childhood and teenage years.  The smoke bothered my sister and my brother but I rather liked it and put up with smoke filled eyes because I loved just being in her company.  My mother has a warmth which surrounds her which draws everyone towards her.  One of her friends once got upset because after introducing my mother to her friend who had come to stay for the week, the friend became more attached to my mother than my mother’s friend.  It is not necessarily anything she does which makes her so popular with everyone she meets it is I think more to do with her presence. There are few people who are accepting of themselves, flaws and all, but my mother is one of them and it means she is great fun to be around.  She will never bitch herself but I believe she secretly enjoys it when I dish the dirt and providing I remember not to swear or be unkind I will avoid her tongue lashing and make her laugh no end.  
One of her biggest strengths which is also her biggest weakness is that she cannot tell a lie.  She will as they say do anything for her children but when it comes to lying she just can’t do that.  My mother has been an absolute rock whenever I have head troubles and will always welcome me home when I need a place to recuperate.  During one of my episodes the NHS doctors essentially told us that the waiting list was so long we would be advised to go privately if we could afford it.  My mother took on extra hours at work in order to help pay for me to see a CBT and after I was feeling up to it she paid for me to have weekly counselling sessions to help me deal with some of my issues.  Although she did once tell a lie for me when I was head poorly she felt so guilty about it afterwards I never asked her to do it again.  I did once beg her to call in sick for me when I was hung-over and although she did it the only way she was able to was to tell them I was sick from the drink but it might have been the burger.  The same day as I laid on the floor with my head near the loo she brought me through a blanket and a glass of water and though she didn’t hold my hair back she did give me a hair bobble to stop my long locks getting ruined.  I sometimes worry about her kindness as people have let her down in the past and though I am not a particularly confrontational person when it comes to my mother  I am fiercely protective and my claws have been known to come out quicker than Wolverines.
After she had my baby brother we moved away from our picturesque home to a bigger house with a huge back garden where we had a summer-house rather than a shed and endless blackberries, rhubarb, gooseberries and tomatoes as well as access to an Arboretum at the back of our home.  My mother didn’t start work again until we were older but she always kept up with teaching courses, French, and computing classes,  and even though she still draws like a seven-year old art lessons. My mummy now works in palliative care; giving people who care for a terminally ill loved ones a rest from their responsibilities if only for a few hours. I am in awe of what she does and even though I was against it from the beginning because I worried she wouldn’t be able to handle the loss which is a part of the job I am glad she took the job now.  Although it breaks her heart every time one of her patients dies, she is able to bring people who are sick and their carers and loved ones some comfort and warmth in what is an impossible period of their lives.  It is a testament to how good a person she is that after working at the job for years she has not hardened one bit and is still devastated when they die.
I have not always been a good daughter to her and we have had some phenomenal rows but I love her to pieces and don’t know how I would live without her.  She saved my life once when I was seven months old and she has been doing so ever since. I am extremely lucky to be able to call myself her daughter and I only wish I had been blessed with her flawless skin.
  • My sister reluctantly leant me this dress as she is rather keen on it and is saving it for the festivals.  I do love it but felt like a cross between a pregnant sunflower and a fat fruit salad sweet. I wore it most of the day with a polo-neck but wish it had been warmer so I could wear it with flip flops outside.  The photos were taken after a brilliant game of scrabble where we made the board wide open and where I got the highest scoring word of the night but still came fourth because I failed to get rid of my Z.  I do love Scrabble but wish I could win just once.

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Day 70 – Oh sweet friends; the sisters I had to seek

March 14, 2010 at 9:50 pm (Back Packing, bipolar, Canterbury Court, Charity, Clubbing, Coffee, Counselling, Depression, Designers, Dress making, dresses, Fashion, Fashion Icons, Female solidarity, Feminism, Fine dining, Fitness, Football, Friendship, Gifts, Gossip, Holidays, Homelife, Inspirational women, Leicester, Long distance relationships, Manchester, Market Harborough, mental health, Motherhood, Movement to stop Uggs making the world ugly, Music, photography, Pregnancy, Relationships, Shoes, Smoking, Social Media, Student, Style, The ageing process, The boy, Transport, Uncategorized, Unemployment, University life, Vintage, Walking, Wedding, Wine)

Today I was out and about in Leicester with three of the friends in this two-part post.  After having a girls sleepover last night where we all got teary eyed watching The Time Travellers Wife I was woken this morning by my friend’s son who decided that the best way to get his Auntie Ellie out of bed was to jump on top of her.   Thankfully my other friend who I had fallen asleep beside came to my rescue and took him into the kitchen to play until I managed to come round enough to mumble a morning.  I will never understand how people function without coffee or tea and do not take kindly to being woken up by anyone who is not carrying a pot of this liquid morning gold.  This then is my excuse for looking decidedly dishevelled and as pale as a ghost in today’s images.  I spent my day with my three lovely ladies feeling like quite the lady of lunches as we settled in to the sumptuous sofas at the slug and lettuce.

Monica Kenny: Monica has made an appearance in the posts in the past.  She has been a great friend ever since our sixth form days.  We can chat for hours on the phone and still have loads to say when we meet up for coffee ten minutes later. She is fiercely loyal and has stood by me through all of my episodes.   She once came up to Manchester for the weekend on a surprise visit just because I’d told her I was struggling to make friends and along with the two pals she dragged along with her they cheered me up no end.  During the weekend we somehow managed to knock a bottle of wine and a plant pot of soil into one of my drawers and it made me smile every time I went to wear something to find it smelled of Lambrini.  No matter how many times I end up breaking down she is always there to help me feel better and cracks me up with her sarcastic sense of humour. Whenever I’m feeling too blue to go out in public she’ll come round to my house with flowers and even put on a pot of tea for us.  She is a fabulous companion on a night out and is ever happy to join me in tearing it up on the dance floor and even puts up with my terrible parking and love of listening to hardcore gangs-ta rap in the car whilst I drive.  She has supported me no end with this project and I love that she lives just a hill away from me.  We have shared endless taxis home from Leicester after nights out when we were at college and somehow she always manages to bargain us the cheapest ride even when we spend the whole time singing and demanding the poor driver turns up the radio pretty please.  She always makes an effort to get along with my boyfriends, even the eejots.

Suzanne Faulkner: Sue or Lady Susanna as I tend to call her is always able to crack me up.  It is thanks to Sue that we used to get served in pubs when we were 16, she had the self-assured presence that most sixteen year old girls lack and had no qualms about going to the bar and asking for eight bottles of orange reef.  Me, Monica and Sue used to hang out during free periods in the sixth form tuck shop and once when Monica had some rubbish news we shared a bottle of vodka and some chocolates before heading off to lessons where we eagerly got involved in debates about I’m still not quite sure what. When I went away to Cos with the girls, me and Sue decided we wanted to spend a day in Turkey haggling and hunting for fake designer finds; we even brought a bigger bag to help us smuggle them back from the mainland.  Unfortunately when we got to the shore at dawn it was to find our ship would not set to sail due to severe weather warnings.  After trying to convince random fishermen to stow us away on their ships we dug our bare feet into the sand and whilst we watched as the sun came up we decided to make the best of a bad situation.  After finding the only place in Cos which did an English breakfast with drinkable tea, Heinz baked beans and tomato sauce we got on a bus to the other side of the island where we found an array of fake Louis Vuitton bags and wallets and some great actual designer deals.  I brought a YSL skirt that was so tiny that whenever I wear it I have to put shorts on to protect my modesty and a rolex for my boyfriend as a treat.  Sue now has a baby and a husband but she is still an absolute riot and makes the meanest cup of tea in the Midlands.

KI: I am not sure when me and Kat became friends but all I know is that by the time university ended I had found the one girl capable of keeping up with me on a shopping trip.  Kat shares my love of beautiful indecently high heels, vintage finds and chocolate rich deserts.  We have spent many a day pouring over vintage bags and scarves and she has an eye for a find which means that every time I see her she surprises me with Primark finds which could very well be from Prada.   She is a great friend who is never afraid to voice her concern when I get on the wrong side of slim and never bothers to flattter me with nonsense.  She christened me crazy Ellie but has never once made me feel embarrassed about my “issues”, indeed she somehow manages to make my troubles seem more manageable by making me find the funny side of them.  No matter how long it has been since we have seen each other there is never need for apology or awkward silences and though I am sure we would be happy to sit in each others company without saying a word we rarely have time to try it out as we always have so much to gossip and gas about over our large glasses of white and red wine and the decadent deserts that we always share – 50 per-cent less fat don’t you know! Although she is a year younger than me she inspires me with her ability to save up her money for travelling, study and even home ownership.  She is the anchor who will tell me when I am being an eejot and will help to pull me back to earth when I am flying too high.  Shopping is never quite as good without her at my side.

EK: Whilst I was at Uni I was lucky enough to have some great course friends.  The ones who have remained a part of my life the most have been Kat, Elly and Marie.  Myself and Marie met in my first year and our ability to talk faster than anyone else on the planet meant we quickly became firm friends.  All three of them helped me to somehow get through my degree by reminding me of essay deadlines, helping me to study and even lending me lecture notes from the nine am lectures I so rarely managed to make it along to;  mornings have never been my forte.

The four of us together went on one of the most amazing holidays I have ever had to Venice after finishing our dissertations.  We had a fantastic time; drinking dry white wine on St Marks Square, trying on diamonds in the glass houses and imagining the futures that lay before us.

I met Elly in my final year through a mutual friend and it was love at first site for both of us.  Though we both often struggle to get on with girls on account of us usually getting on well with the guys the two of us clicked immediately.  We spent our first day with one another lounging on the lawn outside the union drinking beer and bearing our souls.  By the end of the day and indeed the end of a fairly booze fuelled registration week we were best buddies and she saw me through a year of heartache and hilarious affairs.  The tragedy of our friendship and probably the blessing of the male population is we have never been single at the same time.  She is the only girl I ever kissed and is the only reason I would ever consider moving to London town.  We once went on a huge night out there where we didn’t pay for one drink but somehow managed to get completely hammered.  At the end of the night whilst stumbling up the garden path we both managed to fall either side into the bushes.  After lying there in hysterics for what felt like hours I somehow managed to pull both of us from the hedges.  The next day we had to spend hours trying to locate wallets and phones in the undergrowth whilst nursing one of the worst hangovers of my life with a cold beer.  When she went travelling around the globe I missed her like crazy and whenever we see one another we always end up having a great giggle.

Niki Steele: Niki has appeared in the blog before, most recently in the series about the boy and I.  It is thanks to Niki that me and the boy got it together back in my final year at university. We met whilst I was working at a bar in Manchester and even after I quit we stayed in touch.  We used to get together for coffee and roll up liquorice cigarettes to have a break from uni work and would end up spending the evening boozing into the early hours.  Along with Ms Clayton she is my dance partner of the north and when she relocated down to London to start an apprenticeship in glass blowing I was heart-broken even though I was happy for her.  I am the fairy god mother of her gorgeous baby girl and some of the best nights out I’ve ever had have been in fifth Ave with her dancing at my side.  She is the girl who introduced me to Mac, the one who would always make sure I got home okay when I’d drank too much and would never bother to trouble me with the gory details if I’d acted the fool.  She is more skilled at table football and pool than any girl or guy I know and is an accomplished glass blower whose pieces are the ultimate ornament for every affluent home across the globe.

There are so many more girlfriends I want to include but even if I had a hundred posts I could not thank them enough for all they have done and all they continue to do to make my life a brighter place.  There is one quote I found whilst I was researching this piece which applies I imagine to almost every friendship I have ever had and to those who have stuck around in spite of my crazy I thank you a thousand times over.

“The statistics on sanity are that one out of every four Americans is suffering from some form of mental illness.  Think of your three best friends.  If they’re okay, then it’s you.” Rita Mae Brown 1944

And finally to every friend I was lucky enough to have had in my life: “You were the one who made things different, you were the one who took me in. You were the one thing I could count on, above all, you were my friend.” ~ Author unknown

  • Today’s dress is an absolute privilege to wear.  It is on loan from Belinda Smears and is designer.  I wore it with tan tights and Kurt Geiger statement heels because it is just too pretty to drown in opaques.   The photos were taken by the boy back in Withington after I got home from a long train journey and a lovely lunch with my Leicester ladies.

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Day 69 – Oh my sweet friends; the sisters I had to seek

March 14, 2010 at 3:32 pm (bipolar, Boyfriends who are just friends, Cancer, Charity, Cookery, Counselling, Depression, Designers, Diet, Dress making, dresses, Employment, Fashion, Female solidarity, Feminism, Friendship, Gossip, Grief, Holidays, Inspirational women, Leicester, Long distance relationships, make up, Manchester, Market Harborough, Medication, mental health, Movement to stop Uggs making the world ugly, Musical Theatre, photography, Pregnancy, Relationships, Skinny-dipping, Smoking, Student, Style, The boy, Uncategorized, University life, Wedding, Wine)

This post has been difficult to put together, not because I have too few friends but because I am blessed to have so many.  The only way I could think of to prevent this post turning into another never-ending essay was to try to decide which of my wonderful friends I would choose as bridesmaids if I was ever to get married.  Although I am sure this list will put the fear of God into my parents financial five-year plan I couldn’t help but include so many and would have included more if I had not been trying to stop this post becoming a bore.  Here in no particular order, other than the first who will always be my best friend, are the women in my life who have moved me to tears with their kindness, their generosity, their jokes and anecdotes and by always being there to clasp my hand tightly when everything around us has been falling apart.

Katharine Ryland – Whilst I was at university myself and Katherine lost touch for some time.  It was inevitable in a way, although we had been the best of friends since we were 13 we both had such busy lives and it was hard to find the time to stay in touch.  If I’m honest I always felt it was my fault that we’d drifted apart, she had started going out with a guy who I struggled to get on with and though I tried to hide it I’m sure she sensed it and ultimately I’m sure it effected our friendship.  In spite of this we still saw each other from time to time and on my twenty-first-birthday she called me up to tell me she was pregnant.  I was delighted for her but I still had another year of study up North and it wasn’t until I moved back home that we got properly back in touch.

We went out with her beautiful baby boy to Cafe Bruxelles and ended up having such a great day that I remember feeling really rather sad about all I had missed sharing with her and I made a decision to make more of an effort to get on with her partner; she was too good a friend to lose and after all she loved him and he made her happy so how could I not.

Not long after this lunch she got engaged and I was so pleased I got to share in her happiness when she told me her news.  A few months later whilst out on a girls night in Leicester she turned to me and asked if I wanted to be her maid of honour.  I can honestly say that even if I ever get engaged this will remain the happiest moment in my life; we had made a promise to one another when we were 16 in a bar in Lanzarote over a jug of sangria to be each other’s bridesmaids.  I had assumed when she got engaged that she might ask someone else to take the job as we had been out of touch for so long so when she asked me I was ridiculously happy.

Although my dress ended up being made by her mother, when we first went shopping to find a dress I could wear she assured me I could pick anyone I wanted and whilst we were in the shop she tried on the dress she had chosen and I started to cry like a child at how beautiful she looked.  The night before the wedding I stayed the night at her parents house and we shared her bed together as we had done years ago when we were kids.  In the morning I helped her with her make up and getting dressed and did my best to soothe her little boy when he had a tantrum minutes before we were due to leave because he wanted to try on Mummy’s veil.   There is a picture of the two of us arm in arm leaving the church and it looks as though we have just emerged from a civil ceremony and still cracks me up when I see it.  She made a beautiful bride and I was inspired to give a speech after her husband and father had said their piece about what a wonderful woman she was and how truly lucky her husband was to have her by his side.

We have always shared everything with one another, although to begin with as an only child she did struggle with the concept of sharing clothing.  We once had a massive fall out because she refused to let me wear her top as she was convinced I was going to stretch it.  There was no secrecy or privacy between us when we were younger; after we got badly burnt on an overcast day in Devon after falling asleep together on the beach we got home and had to rub after-sun into each others ridiculous tan lines.  As we soothed each others skin with aloe vera and very gentle application we were simultaneously cracking up with laughter at how silly we both looked.

We found the results of all our exams together and when we were on holiday in Lanzarote we crammed into a telephone booth on the sea-walk of Lanzarote giggling in disbelief at the amount of As Katherine had got.  We also helped each other through the dark days; through heartbreak and troubles at home.  It was Katherine who held my hand on the way back to my home after my parents had rung hers to ask if they could bring me home straight away because my sister had gone downhill fast and the doctors were concerned that she wasn’t going to make it through the night. She is hilarious, intelligent and caring and even with a baby boy to care for she did so well in her degree that when she graduated she had two jobs waiting for her.  I will always be pleased we got back in touch, my life would be nowhere near as fun without her.  I will save sharing some of my favourite memories of our friendship as she has asked if she can write a post about her three favourite memories of us but I imagine they might include the time I went skinny dipping with my sister on my sweet sixteenth in Eastbourne at midnight.  Other than my sister it will be Katherine who I will tell if I ever find myself knocked up and it will be her who I will want by my side on the day of my wedding.

AC: When me and the boy first got together i always felt a little lonely when I was round at his house.  he lived with six other guys, nearly all of who had long-standing girlfriends and I felt a bit of a spare wheel.  The one girl who I immediately clicked with however was Anna.  She had dreams of being a musical theatre star and although she enjoyed singing as much as me, people actually enjoyed it when she sang.  This shared love of singing and a tendency to live our lives in a rather dramatic way means we have spent many a taxi ride home singing away even when the boys beg us to stop.  When I met her I remember speaking about her with one of my friends and concluding that she was a natural beauty and that we were actually really rather jealous of her perfectly shaped eyebrows, white teeth and dancers figure.  In the early days of our friendship I was rather worried that I might be a bit much for her, when I bumped into her in the library one day and started talking at her at a mile a minute about dissertations and exams and nights out I had been planning she appeared to be somewhat terrified.  We became firm friends however after the boys moved to a smaller house and I think it may have helped that I opened my entire wardrobe to her and did my very best to put aside my reservations about vegetarians and would happily make her hippy friendly food whenever we had a dinner party.

The time I realised I had a friend for life was when she agreed to join me in getting dressed up as a witch to go and queue outside Waterstones for the release of the last Harry Potter book in the series.  There are few friends who will partake in this kind of humiliation just to keep someone company but Anna came with me in spite of never having read any of the books.  We spent the next fortnight driving the boys mad by shutting ourselves away in one of their rooms and banning them entry until we had read at least another four chapters.  I think it was whilst we were lying on a bed repeating lines to one another which made us giggle that I realised I had got myself a friend for life who felt as much like a sister as my own blood.

Anna is one of those rare friends who will be by your side even when you have done everything in your power to try to hide away from the world.  Three nights after I’d had a nervous breakdown and ended up in hospital I went to the launch of the boy’s first single.  I was only able to do so because I had Anna with me the whole time, holding my hand reminding me that I wasn’t crazy and that everything was going to be OK even if it didn’t feel that way at the time.  She is able to make me laugh at life events which are otherwise tragic and when me and the boy were having a heap of troubles last year it was Anna who held me whilst I cried my heart out over loss and love still to raw to share.  We have both followed our dreams in life and I am sure I would not have had the guts to carry on going for mine if I hadn’t had her for inspiration.  She never once gave up on her dream of playing a role in a musical and now she is touring the country playing the part of Neil Sedaka’s wife in the hit play, Laughter In The Rain.  She is my Scrabble companion and the only one who is sweet enough not to tell me how dreadful a singer I really am.

In spite of my efforts not to make this an essay I have noticed that all to quickly the word count has crept us and so I will save the other five for another day, I promise you they are worth the space.

  • Today’s dress has been donated by my Auntie Bridgeen.  It was originally from Primark and thankfully has a slip to preserve my modesty.  Katharine and my friend Monica took the photos and the reason I am cracking up in them is because Monica has just told me that I am in trouble with someone because of something I have said on the blog.  The gingerbread man was made by Katherine’s son.  Katherine gifted me another dress to wear whilst I was at her house, proof indeed that her issues with sharing have been resolved.

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Day 59 – In the beginning; the boy and I part two

February 28, 2010 at 9:31 pm (Addiction, bipolar, Boyfriends who are just friends, dresses, Fashion, Friendship, Live music, Loving, Manchester, Motherhood, Music, Musical snobbery, photography, Relationships, Smoking, Student, Style, The boy, Uncategorized, University life, Vintage, Wine) (, )

There is a photo from the night the boy and I first got it together.  It shows him in the foreground grinning in a grey jumper, which will soon become my favourite, and me in the background of the photo.  There is a Marlboro Medium balanced expertly between my middle fingers and I am looking down at the ground whilst talking to another guy.  I am  completely oblivious of the photo being taken or of the boy who is  standing mere meters away.

I near enough remember the moment because I was thinking about leaving to meet a guy I’d been on a few dates with who messaged me to ask him to join him in Fallowfield.  Whilst looking for my coat I bumped into two troublesome friends who insisted I join them in putting the world to rights by combining a small bottle of cola with a big bottle of Jack.

It turned out to be one of the best house parties I have ever been to.  Held above the One Stop Shop in a ten bedroom flat shared by seven lads who each had a love of the good life, people in Withington and far further afield still remember it fondly to this day.   The party featured two live performances from The Schmatte Kid and another band as well as a pretty incredible DJ set which carried us through till sunrise the next morning.  There were random rooms all over the house to chill out in, one of which had easy listening music and pretty fairy lights.  The toilets were communal, the floor was our ashtray and anyone who came to tell the lads to turn the music down just ended up joining in the fun.

At about 8am I remember turning to my friend who had invited me and begging her for a spot to sleep.  By this time we had completely run out of alcohol and though there was talk of trying to tunnel our way downstairs to get more drink the plan seemed a tad far-fetched and it was starting to feel as though it was time for bed.  Although my friend is a lot more hardcore than me, as only good friends do she took pity on me and directed me to a place of peace upstairs.  There was a couple of people passed out at the very end of the bed but being too tired to care I dived under the duvet and lay my head down.  Soon I had drifted off into a sweet disco dream. All of a sudden I jolted awake upon feeling the duvet mov as someone clambered into bed beside me.  Feeling more cross than cautious I turned over to find the musical Nazi looking back at me not at all anxious about his ungentlemanly behaviour.  ”What the hell do you think you are doing?”  I muttered murderously, “I am trying to sleep.”  He looked back at me rather bemused and said, “But this is my bed.”

Rather than get into a Goldilocks and the Three Bears style argument or worse still risk admitting I had been mistaken in where I had laid my hat (I hadn’t, this was my fiendish friends idea of matchmaking) I turned to face the wall and fell straight back to sleep. Before I did I remember grumbling incoherently about how he had better not try anything if he didn’t want to find out the full strength of a girl in her third week of self defence classes.  We fell asleep far apart but when I woke in the morning it was to find his arm wrapped around me and though I am not quite sure why I didn’t bother to remove it and fell back to sleep in his arms till nightfall that day.  When I woke up he was gone, as were the couple from the foot of the bed.  Feeling extremely confused, hungry and admittedly in need of some serious plonk plonk fizz action, I skulked down the stairs to find a host of people watching Black Adder.  Thankfully both my friend and the boy were still about, he was dressed in jeans, a t-shirt and a dressing gown and looked dishevelled but still rather dashing.  He offered me a coffee, his jumper and even let me join him in a mass Dominoes delivery order to the flat advising me on the most tasty of the options.  We spent the rest of the evening together, not really talking just sitting close to each other.  Though he never even tried to put his arm round me I remember wanting him too the whole time.  We watched reruns and rubbish Sunday night TV till it got to midnight and I managed to force myself to get up and leave.  Though he saw me to the door and waved me off down the street he didn’t kiss me goodbye nor say anything much about meeting again.  I jumped into a taxi cab home, a treat to myself and a rare nod to safety precautions and rode back home where my own boys were waiting to tease me relentlessly about being a dirty stop out.  It wasn’t until we both got into our separate beds that night that I realised I couldn’t stop thinking about him and he realised he had forgotten to ask for my number.

  • Today’s dress is on loan from my Mummy.  She used to wear it in the age of power dressing and the shoulder pads are terrifying but the cut is oddly feminine and the pockets placed in the side give it a tom-boy feel which I play up by pulling my hair back and wearing chunky statement Kurt Geiger heels which aren’t feminine but are the ultimate statement heel and hopefully stop me looking too twee.  My hair is terrible, but I am tired today and what with cooking crumbles, going out for Sunday lunch and trying to catch up with reviews and blogs which suffered during last week I just can’t find it in me to make it better.

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Day 54 – For richer for poorer in sickness and in health

February 24, 2010 at 1:12 am (Addiction, bipolar, Chemistry, Cookery, Depression, Destructive relationships, dresses, Employment, Friendship, Health care, Holidays, Homelife, Job hunting, Long distance relationships, Loving, Manchester, Market Harborough, Medication, mental health, Music, Musical Theatre, NHS, photography, Smoking, Student, Style, Uncategorized, Unemployment, University life, Walking, Wine) (, , , )

Come this Saturday me and the boy will have been going out four years.  In spite of me having a fair few up and downs and in all honesty a couple of quite serious breakdowns during this time, I think the reason we have come the distance; aside from the fact that he has the patience of a saint and we still quite fancy one another; is because we have always right from the start applied the basic vows of marriage to our relationship.  Now, I’m not one to say that marriage is essential to make a relationship work; I have plenty of friends who have got along quite nicely thank-you very much without ever feeling any urgent need to put a ring on it; but nevertheless I think that relationships work best when you apply principles such as “in sickness and in health”, “for richer for poorer”, and unless you have a really very cool/ liberal lover, “forsaking all others”.  

When myself and the boy first met I was flat broke and though I was not looking for anything serious as tends to be the case we accidentally went and fell in love.  At the time I was spending all my spare pennies on cigarettes and alcohol and because he was a sweetie and probably because he didn’t want to see me lose my rather curvaceous figure he kept feeding me fry ups and insisting on cooking me dinner.  I remember one day when I was about to set off for home he slipped me a tenner to go and buy food.  Ten minutes, 20 Marlborough mediums and a bottle of red later I came to the conclusion that yes 12p chicken noodles were a suitable source of nutrition.    

Although he was the provider at the start of our relationship by the time I graduated I was making a tidy enough package so that if he was skint we could dip into my privy purse to pay for cinema outings, bottles of wine, nights on the tiles and steak.

The boy graduated two years after me, not because I am seeing a toy boy you understand but because he was rather more keen in being the drummer in every Mancunian band around the way than getting all academic.  It was because he was still a student that when our one year anniversary came round, I ended up treating us to a holiday to Rome and when we were too lazy to cook it was me who paid for us to eat out in West Didsbury, Manchester’s one stop haven of heavenly cuisine.

When I lost my job though, both times, it was the boy who helped me pick up the pieces, kept me financially afloat when I was too proud to go to the job centre and who even helped me search through the rubbish to find a new role.

Although most of our relationship has been spent just below the poverty line we have always found ways to entertain ourselves; games of Scrabble where JB, Onions lead singer always wins; games of monopoly where I always win; tea and music; my ever more elaborate attempts at dinner parties for ten even when we have no table; gigs; walks in the woods; running (failed after one attempt when he smoked throughout whilst I had a series of small heart failings) tennis, technically not necessarily legally sound movies and more gigs.  Although we loved it when I was making a tidy package money never brings happiness and as Neil Sedaka’s wife says to him in Laughter In The Rain, “Sometimes I miss the cold days.” Struggling together is terribly romantic and there’s nothing quite like playing cards through the night with nothing to fuel you but a pot of decaf tea.

The other issue is of course the sickness and the health.  Luckily the boy is fine and dandy other than the occasional sulk and the dreaded man flu, according to the boy he has single handedly fought off swine flu and is a pillar of strength in the face of modern medicine most of which he views as being in some way linked to a conspiracy of making us weak. Maybe because of this, when we first met I waited till June to come clean with him about my crazy.  I didn’t want to scare him away and if I’m honest I thought I had completely recovered, love does wonderful things for your brain and your body; eating becomes a chore and your entire mind turns to mush.  if you don’t watch out you end up boring all of your friends to sleep by talking about how fabulous your lover is.  Luckily however, by the time me and the boy got together I was a cynic about love and when he etched the words “I love you” on my back I told him to, “Get a grip”.

When I told him about my poorly head it was because I had decided to come off the anti-depressants I’d been taking for two years.  Buoyed up by love and the wonderful newness of it all I didn’t think I needed them.   With his approval and no advice from any medical practitioner I came off the drugs. Within a month I crashed so hard and so fast that some days I couldn’t even look in the mirror because I felt so ugly and frustrated with what I saw.  I put on weight and because getting out of bed was so hard I would sleep for hours and rather than looking for work I would watch West Wing episodes convinced there was no point trying because I was useless.  In the end I had to move home so I could survive.  The boy did try to support me but he was still a student and one part-time job shared between two people equals not a lot left to live on.

With the help of some friends in the know, my family and the boy I managed to pick myself back up but it wasn’t easy.  Every time I go down hill it is always the boy who has been there over these last few years who is there straight away to drag me back up again.  Every time I get poorly he’s there to wipe away my tears, calm me and convince me that the world is a good place and that things will get better.

On one poorly head occasion when we somehow found ourselves at A and E after a particularly bad reaction to Sertraline, (the name still gives me the shudders), we came face to face with a psychiatrist who had obviously decided he was not a fan of women.  After deciding, from looking at me rather than my notes you understand, that I was anorexic with father issues he banned the boy from hugging me, told me there was nothing wrong with me and then finished by telling me I should just go ahead and give up then and live in a mental health ward.  Thankfully both the boy and the psychiatrists assistant realised I was just extremely anxious in a very scary place and needed to get some sleep and the boy got me the hell away from him before had a chance to lock me up and throw away the key.

I have never forgotten what he did that day and acknowledge that what ever happens with us in the future, without him being by my side that day I could still to this day be living in a closed ward, misdiagnosed and miserable overseen by the most tyrannical mentally unstable medical professional I have ever come across.

We never signed any contract when we got together but both of us always find a way to work it out, scream it out or just forgive regardless.  I like to think that its because he like me knows that whatever our problems with us when its good it’s so very good, though at times we can of course both be wicked.

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Day 39 – The vices of a polka dot vixen

February 10, 2010 at 12:53 am (Addiction, Autumn/ Winter, bipolar, Catholicism, catwalk, Charity, Coffee, Depression, Diet, dresses, Fashion, Fitness, Gambling, Homelife, Leicester, Loving, photography, Recession, Religion, Smoking, Style, Uncategorized, University life, Wine) (, )

 

Today I am wearing a dress from Marks and Spencer which I wore to my graduation.  I was a tad tubbier back then so it feels lovely and loose over my skin and I wish it was the summer so tights could be a thing of the past.  I am also wearing a hat and some velvet gloves from accessorize which make me feel both french and a bit of an idiot at the same time.

I decided today; or maybe it was when I crawled into bed feeling rather tipsy la-la;  that the time has come to challenge myself over my drinking.  I am not as the kind young gentleman previously suggested an alcoholic, but of late I seem to be having a glass of wine too often and seeing as these tablets are ripping into my liver as it is it may not be a good idea to combine the two.  I drink too much usually when I am low, to give me a lick of confidence its silly because it inevitably has a negative effect on my mood the next day and yet I love alcohol; particularly wine and Belgian beers.  I love having it with dinner, I revel in locating a good wine on offer, and I especially love the warmth I get from Krupnik and blackberry vodka distilled by the boy’s mother at Christmas and the taste of rum on hot chocolate when I have had a life threatening fall on the slopes in the alps.

 I love these things but I am trying to love myself and my family and friends more and I need to keep a check on my drinking.  My personality has always been of extremes and so I find it easy to become hooked on things.  This is why I stay away from gambling all together and why when I took up smoking at 21 I went straight to 20 Marlborough mediums a day with little trouble.  I don’t do things by halves.

Partly because of how I got carried away and had a glass too much this evening, partly because of health and poor finance and also just because I need to prove to myself I can, I am thinking of giving up alcohol over lent.  I may make an exception for our anniversary and the boy’s birthday but other than that I think it will do me good to give something up and with cigarettes a thing of the past alcohol, coffee and loving are the only vices I have left, and no one is taking away my coffee.

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