Monday 15 April 2013

O is for Octopus

This is, in fact, a follow-up to 'I is for Infidelity' and nothing whatsoever to do with an octopus.

Sorry about that.


1999. April.
My name is Rachel and this is where my story starts. It starts in a pub toilet with the realization that the man waiting for me outside - my date, Sam - is the man I’m going to marry. It comes as something of a shock. I’m only 18 and this is our first date. I’m minding my own business, washing my hands and thinking about where we could go for food, when it hits me like a smack in the face. You’re going to marry him. Poor sod. I doubt he knows yet.
Technically he is already married to someone else (they’re separated, but still). And he’s ten years older than me. And we work together. Even without all of that, this just isn’t the right time.
This is my life plan: after I finish my gap year I go away to university and study journalism. I become a foreign correspondent reporting from the world’s most dangerous places. I wear a lot of Kevlar and camouflage. I look really good in green. I probably settle down in my forties, when I’ve had enough of the travel and flying bullets, and from then on I’ll work as a press secretary somewhere terribly interesting. I live by the sea with a man who, like me, doesn’t want children. He’s called Duncan, or Dougal, or Hugo or something. He paints, I write. I expect I convert to dogs at some point, after a lifetime as a cat lover.
I don’t know if I believe in soulmates, but I’m pretty sure you don’t meet them when you’re 18. I’ve only slept with two men. And one of those was called Ian, so that doesn’t count.
A pub toilet is hardly the place to be thinking about such things. I’ve been staring at the mirror for so long now he probably thinks I’ve been doing a shit. I need an excuse for being in here so long, one that doesn’t make me sound like a complete psycho. Well, I was considering how marrying you would fit in with my life plan and whether you’ll wait for me while I pursue my dreams. You like cats, right?
I don’t think so.
When I get back to the table he’s too polite to mention that I’ve been gone forever. I love that he thinks I’ve done a shit during our first date and still looks so pleased to see me.
We’re going to get married.
We go out for food and wind up at another pub and I just can’t get enough of talking to him. How do couples ever run out of things to say to one another? I can’t imagine. My previous boyfriends made me feel out of step, like I was waiting for them to catch up. They drifted, never very fussed about getting their lives started.  I’ve always been propelled forward, impatient to begin. Sam couldn’t be more different to those boys. He’s so grown up. He’s been to Hawaii. That’s so, like, far away. I’ve only been abroad twice, both times to France with school. Hawaii. Wow. He loves to travel. He enjoys his job. He’s got a car. Well, I’ve got a car. But his has got four doors! He’s charming and funny and confident. He’s grown-up enough to adore his parents, while people my age still vaguely resent theirs. For once it’s me running to catch up. He’s ahead. He’s done it.  
Even the fact that he’s been (still is) married doesn’t put me off. It’s like a badge of honour, a sign of how far he’s travelled in life when I’ve barely begun. It’s intoxicating. 
And he’s sweet too, frequently touching my hand or putting his arm around me. I like it. He’s very, very tall so when he puts his arm around me it’s like being tucked away under a ledge. It feels nice. Secure. Strangely sexy.  
It was definitely not love at first sight. I can’t even remember the first time I met him. It was months ago, I guess, when I first started at the company as a temp. I suppose we were introduced and said hello politely but I can’t recall a thing. There was no lightning, no thunder, no impact at all. It never occurred to me that he was handsome. I never really gave him much thought at all. He was just…there. Then we started working more closely together, and we socialised a bit in the same work gang - drinks after work, lunchtimes in the pub. He always made me laugh. When he asked me out I said yes thinking it would be nice, harmless fun.  I had no clue, that’s what’s weird. No idea he’d render me shaking in a toilet. Is it meant to go like that?
We’re the last to leave the pub and the date ends innocently at my parents’ front door. After that comes another date, and another, and we’re soon inseparable. We exchange “I love yous” after just a week, whispered in the dark of the cinema. I meet his parents and they’re delightful. He meets mine and they behave terribly. They’re wary, openly suspicious of this very tall, stubbly man-beast. My friends love him. His friends seem…well, old, but funny. And they’re very welcoming to this teenage girl who’s abducted their friend. That’s what it must seem like to them because he’s as swept up in me as I am in him. Work friends say they’ve never seen him like this, ever, not even when he was first married. That makes me feel weird. I’ve stopped thinking of him as ever being married. Why did he get married if he didn’t feel like this? He doesn’t like to talk about his marriage, only that it’s been over for a long time and that he knew on his wedding day he was making a huge mistake. I wonder if she knew. I still don’t really get it, why he went through with it, but I don’t push him. It doesn’t matter anyway, whatever happened. It’s different with me. Everyone says so. 
In our third week we go for dinner and he surprises me with a huge bunch of flowers. The card says how much he loves me. I accidentally leave the card where my mum can see and she’s horrified. She says I’m too young for a heavy relationship and if I “shack up with him” at 18, I’ll never achieve anything with my life. In a way she’s right, I already know I won’t be taking up my deferred university place in September. Instead I’ve started looking at universities closer to home. It means I won’t be able to do my journalism course, but I’m okay with that. The old life plan is dead, or rather, transformed into something more exciting. They have a good English programme at the local uni and I can easily follow that up somewhere else with a post-grad in journalism. After three years together I’m sure I can convince Sam to follow me.
If we’re still together. I know I’m supposed to say if we’re still together but it’s pointless. I know in my bones we’ll still be together. The toilet walls have spoken. We’re going to be married.  


Saturday 13 April 2013

O is for... Overweight



I’m not normally that personal or confessional a writer, but when I looked through the dictionary searching for my “O”, this is the word that grabbed me. This is what I wanted to say.

I am a fat girl. Don’t rush to tell me I’m not. I am. Every item of clothing I buy is about minimising the damage of what I see in the mirror, and even if I wear the most flattering cut in the best lighting, I can still see that most awful of flaws. I think I’m the fattest person in any room I walk into. I won’t perch nonchalantly on a rickety stool because I think it will collapse, and I get the same anxiety going over bridges, even the ones built for cars. I won’t take an outstretched hand to help me get up a hill or a muddy slope because I can’t bear anyone knowing how heavy I am; the essential shame of them dropping me is worse than just falling on my own.
It is all too easy to point at magazines and movie stars and blame the media for this assumption, but the truth is it starts with us. If you laughed at all at Shallow Hal, where the only joke is “Gwyneth Paltrow is fat”, then you may not have made that movie but you’re part of it. If you’ve ever called someone a “skinny bitch” or a “fat cow”, you’re part of it too. If you’ve ever seen a boyfriend’s ex or someone you fell out with and thought with satisfaction that you’re thinner than her, then you’re also part of it. We know the images in the media aren’t real, but the snide look from a sales woman in a fashion shop, the offhand comments about how fat people just need to eat less and move around more; those epithets – whoever they’re directed at – of skinny bitch or fat cow, they’re all real. They’re all part of the way we speak and the lives we live.
People are built with different metabolisms. Some people can maintain a slender figure with minimum effort, others just have to think about a bar of Galaxy and they’ve gained two pounds. People with larger jeans than me run marathons, and people with smaller jeans than me only move from the TV in the ad breaks for soap operas. There is no reason to make a judgement on the type of person someone is because of the size they are. Some people are prone to spots and skin rashes and others aren’t. Some women are five foot two, others are six foot two. No one assumes this is their fault or that it conveys some essential truth about their character. It is because there is more attached to someone’s weight than just the number on those treacherous clothes labels that fat becomes not just a state of being, but a state of mind.
There is a view that fat people are essentially unlovable – if they don’t care for themselves, why should anyone else care for them? But I’ve been bigger than I am now and I’ve been smaller and it’s never had any correlation to whether I was happy or loved. Even knowing that, when I’m indulging in what Russell Kane calls the “kitchen floor reset” (weeping on the kitchen floor in abject misery) then I link the two as well – I’m lonely, no one will ever date me, why would they when I’m so fat and ugly… Now, of course that’s the extreme of self-pity talking when what I really need is not a boyfriend but a single malt and a good talking to, but it’s always the same issues rearing their head. I’ve never berated myself for being a size 6 in shoes – oh look at me, so bland and average, no wonder no one will ever love me with my run of the mill feet – or for not knowing more about current affairs – if only I’d watched more Newsnight and less Jason Statham movies… I never really examine beyond how I look in these moments, and within that how I look in terms of my clothes, make up or hair is irrelevant if I look fat. When I look in the mirror and see a fat girl and decide it’s all her fault I’m alone - that makes me part of it, too.
This isn’t meant to be a lecture, I’m just thinking out loud and I don’t have any answers. We live in a world where negative assumptions about weight and body shape – fat or thin – are the norm. Writing this down, I can see that it is those assumptions that weigh so heavily on me when I look in the mirror.
Don’t expect to see me wearing leggings in public any time soon, though.

Friday 12 April 2013

J is for... Judgement - or, Screw You (and Your Book Club)


As you've probably gathered, this was inspired but a recent unfortunate experience whereby I tried to join a book club and was pretty much verbally escorted from the premises. How preposterous, that I should wish to join a book club! Maybe I'm too young (huh?) or didn't look the part - but by midway through the conversation I was despairing of the whole situation. This isn't exactly what happened, but elements are there (and yes, I was reading a book that changed their attitude to me, but by this point I didn't care anymore as I couldn't imagine anything worse than sitting through a book club meeting like that). I've never been interviewed to join a book club before - weird.

Screw You (and Your Book Club)

1.0.
(What do you think you’re doing here?
We didn’t invite you.) We’re full to overflowing.
(A Do Not Enter Sign at the door – didn’t you see it?)

2.0.
(It must have been hidden behind the Welcome
Sign reserved for paying customers. I brushed
Past it as I made my way to biographies –
I’ve a taste for life, you see. Anyone’s will do.)
That’s a shame.

1.0
You know, there’s a list. A waiting list.
Even people waiting to get on the waiting list!
It’s just not possible.
(And that’s that. She looks young, frivolous.
There’s a flower in her hair. Give me strength.)

1.1.
But. (We’re so old. Skewed out to retirement!)
Wouldn’t some young blood make it more interesting?
(Does it have to be you and your retired ladies’ network?
With me to pour the tea and bake the cakes?)

1.0.
(But we don’t want whelps who’ve just read The Help!
We're serious – we just read a book about the Holocaust, for Christ’s sake.)
It’s quite a challenging group – not for people who
Want to read The Help and drink wine.
We value commitment – so many people flake out like
Puppies on a long walk.
(You’re not – serious enough.)
Our last book was set during the Holocaust.

1.1.
That was a tough one!
In fact, I’ll be surprised if some people don’t
Take time out after that!
(Confidingly) Not everyone enjoyed it; understandable really.

2.0.
(Opportunity taps at my heels.)
In that case, could I leave my details – in case
Things change, and you can squeeze me in?
(Though it will be a monthly battle of wills, I fear.)
I’m looking for something challenging to read. (To do!)

1.1.
Sure, why not, we’ll help if we can –
(I mean, one person – why on earth not?)

1.0.
But don’t expect anything. (Pauses –
That foolish girl has opened our doors wide to the riff-raff!)
So we can understand if you’d even fit in,
What are the last three books you’ve read?

2.0.
(You smug condescending bitch. Trying – to – remain – civilised… oh dear –)
You know, I did read The Help recently – it was an enjoyable read,
(Even if the story became a little ludicrous at times. But I’m not telling you that.)
I don’t think it did me any damage. I also read ____

1.1.
Oooh! You loved that one –
Right up your street!

1.0.
Yes! (Taken aback. Show off!) Indeed.
Anything else?

2.0.
I read a lot. Anything, really. I’m also ploughing my way
Through the __________ series.
They’re a great read. (I don’t think they
Sapped my ability to read about
The Holocaust either.)
I think it’s important to read as widely as possible.

1.1.
This sounds great – we’ll let you know,
I’m sure you’ll fit right in.
I hope we can welcome you soon!

2.0.
Wouldn’t that mean you had to lose
People first though? If you're full?
(Darn it. Not her fault I’m being 
Blackballed on sight.
Must do better.)

1.1.
I’m sure we can do something –
Numbers are fluid. People come and go.

1.0.
We’ll see. No promises.
We’ll let you know.
Have a nice day.
(Please leave. Now.)

2.0.
(I should have worn my glasses.)

Monday 1 April 2013

N is for... Nightmare



Hey Kerry,
Thanks for the email, glad to know things are going well in the new job. Those photos of your weekend away look amazing, sounds like just the break you needed.
I am OK; the only odd thing is that I’ve been having this recurring dream – a nightmare – about my flat being haunted. You know me, I’ve never believed in ghosts and I’m not about to start now, but the way this dream is insinuating itself into my mind is starting to wear on me. I say recurring, but it’s more of a soap opera of a dream, each incidence moving things along a little. I’ve lived alone long enough not to jump at every bump in the night, or cower under the duvet in the darkness but as the dream has been developing I’ve got less and less sleep.
It started a while ago. I think I mentioned ending that confusing situation with a chap. It was the same old argument, the same accusation – you’re too independent, you never show any need or vulnerability, those male friends of yours – which could have made it any one of a number of confusing situations with chaps in recent years. I’m sure you’re as bored of reading it as I am of writing it. I don’t know what happened in the world of dating, either the world changed or I did, but it seems a girl who doesn’t squeal at horror movies or wait for someone else to dispatch the spiders from the shower is in no way a keeper and deemed profoundly unattractive. But, independence is a hard habit to break, it appears. So anyway, this chap – let’s call him Jack (Jack of all lays, maybe) - had embarked on the usual pattern. It starts with initial enthusiasm, moves into a dickish lack of communication, ends with an accusation of why it’s all my fault and that same old display of faux sensitivity…. Have I any idea how hard it is to be a man? Of course I don’t know for sure, but I’m willing to bet it’s not as hard for these man-children as it is for a single woman in her thirties, steeling her spine every time she swipes on the mascara and steps into a new pair of heels. But enough of that.
“There’s something wrong with you,” he spat as I calmly held out his jacket, determined to stop the tears from falling until he was out of sight. (Never let them see you sweat, right?!) “Most people, their biggest fear is being alone, but for you, the worst thing is to have someone always there. You just can’t bear to think you might need someone in your life, or that their presence might mess up this perfect world of yours.”
“I’ve been with men who make me feel more alone than if I’m on my own – that feeling scares me more than a few nights in front of the TV with no one to make tea during the adverts.”
“You need to be a bit more afraid of being alone, that’s your problem.”
“Yep, I’m sure it is. Bye now.” The flat echoed with the slam of the door as he left and I stood for a moment in the following silence before I went to run a bath. Pyjamas, book, bed. That’s what was called for, and that’s exactly what I did, but then that night the dreams started.
Anyway, better go, I’m out seeing a band tonight and I’m meant to be painting my nails.
Take care,
Zx
*             *             *
Hey again,
You are way too superstitious for me!! I wasn’t scared to tell you my dream, I thought the lack of sleep was the more salient point, but if you want to know it’s like this - I am asleep in my bed and I hear a noise from the living room which wakes me up. When I walk in, a vase of flowers has been knocked from the book case, water all over the floor and CDs scattered in the puddle. I pad to the kitchen, wincing as I touch the cold floor with my bare feet. I refill the vase, wipe the CDs and return them to their places. Then I wake up. Each night for a week the dream continued, always the same – although the flowers changed according to what I put in the vase and what CDs had been on the stereo that day. It didn’t really scare me, I was more just tired from the broken sleep. After a week of it, it’s now Sunday and I spent hours at the gym – trudging on the treadmill, lifting weights, swimming lap after lap in the pool until every muscle in my body ached. That should get rid of the ghouls in my head – I’ve always found sport more horrific!
Zx
*             *             *
Well, hello there Miss Kerry,
Lovely to hear from you. No, sadly no better on the sleep front. Maybe you’re right and I should see a doctor, but it feels daft when there’s nothing actually wrong with me. What was the last thing I told you? So Sunday, post-gym; my limbs felt heavy when I went to bed that night and I welcomed the blank oblivion of a dreamless sleep. I hear a noise from the living room which wakes me up. When I walk in, a vase of flowers has been knocked from the book case, water all over the floor and CDs scattered in the puddle. I pad to the kitchen, wincing as I touch the cold floor with my bare feet. I refill the vase, wipe the CDs and return them to their places. I wait to wake, but when that doesn’t happen I turn, a tight heat in my neck and shoulders from all that time the gym (yes, I know, warm up and cool down…) and catch the glimpse of a face, both familiar and unknown to me. He nods down to the damp on the carpet. I shiver under his gaze, and then I wake up.
It took a long time to get back to sleep after that and I felt as if trapped under a weighted duvet the next morning when the alarm went off but I dragged myself to work. I watched the people on the train, the faces in the office, trying to pick out the person I’d seen in my dream. It was an irritation to me, niggling away like when you see a familiar actor in a film and spend hours trying to remember what you saw them in last. I got through the day and headed home for an early night, hoping to have the dream again so that I could place the person who appeared in it and finally stop thinking about the whole thing. The dream came again and again, night after night – the fall of the vase, the glimpse of the face – lingering longer each time it seemed. After five nights, it seemed like I was just close to placing him when my phone cut through the dream and my sleep and I was startled awake. A text from “Jack”, obviously wondering if my independent ways extended to lax rules on booty calls from people who had insulted me. I turned off the phone and turned over, dragging all the duvet over to my side of the bed and holding it close, hoping to resume the dream again, but I remember nothing until the alarm in the morning.
Bloody man, the nerve of him. I’m starting to wonder what I ever saw in him.
Zx
*             *             *
Hello,
I am so sorry I’ve been out of touch. I had some time owing from work and decided to take some leave – a whole fortnight to myself. I’ve not been anywhere, just off the grid a bit. I’m not sure yet whether it’s been as good for me as I hoped. I’ve been to the gym each day, met various friends for lunches and coffees – Laura says hello! - watched film after film in the cinema; you know how I love the anonymity of the dark. It was nice not being me for a while. The flowers died in the vase and I decided it was time to try again with a plant – you know my track record with these things but it’s been years since I’d tried to keep one alive. The funny thing is, the dream changed, too. I hear a noise from the living room which wakes me up. When I walk in, the plant which replaced the vase of flowers has been knocked from the book case, soil all over the floor and CDs scattered in the mess. I scoop up the earth and pad to the kitchen, wincing as I touch the cold floor with my bare feet. I add some water to the plant, rinse the CDs and return them to their places. I wait for the face, and it appears. I wait to wake, but still the face remains and a rangy form emerges from the dark. A man with authority, long legs and broad shoulders standing tall in front of me; his eyes follow me as I move around the room, returning CDs to their cases.
“I don’t know your name,” I say. I wake up.
The next night, the same dream – noise, mess on the floor, the tacky cold of the kitchen tiles, waiting to wake, speaking, waiting again to wake. This time, he replies to my question by casually knocking a stack of files from my desk and surveying the jumble of papers on the floor. I wake up.
By this point, I’ve started seeing the face everywhere I go. His reflection flashed in the mirror of the gym while I puffed and sweated on the treadmill; I wiped the sweat from my eyes and he was gone. I would catch a glimpse of something familiar from the dark of the cinema but when the lights went up there would be no one there. I was at the supermarket and something about the sure tread of a shopper in front of me made me follow him. I rounded the corner to the next aisle and there was nothing but a woman desperately trying to placate two screaming toddlers with a punnet of grapes. I don’t know what I was expecting – George Clooney with a bunch of flowers from the half off bin? Get a grip, Zoe. Next time I’ll take your advice and go away on holiday, so something improving and meet some new people.
Zx
*             *             *
Hey there – you know, I think we both need to stop talking about this dream thing, it’s turning into an obsession. It’s the same, but it keeps changing - I watch as he calmly moves around the flat, this easy poltergeist with his beautiful, fluid limbs knocking over the plant, smiling as the files come tumbling down from the desk, moving on to remove pictures gently from their hangers before dropping them with violence to the floor, sweeping pots and pans from their tidy row of hooks, a taunting of knives glittering on the floor, upended shampoo poured on the bath mat, a slick of face mask smeared across the mirror. Each night a little more destruction, and each night I sit enthralled by the dream as he watches me. His gaze is more intimate than a kiss and has the same effect. Over and over I ask his name and he smiles, sending a warm tingle down my spine at the tantalising flash of teeth.
If I’m honest, I think the dream was becoming more vivid to me than the real world. I looked forward to each night, desperate to know the name of this creature whose gaze turned me inside out. I know, Poltergeist meets Twilight, right? Pathetic. On Friday night, only one last weekend to enjoy before going back to the order of the office, I enjoyed a glass of wine in the bath and smothered myself in that lovely scented body cream you bought me for my birthday before going to bed. He comes again, stealing into my dreams, crashing my world of tidy things to the floor. He turns away and I cry out for the loss of his gaze, but he looks back over one broad shoulder and as he moves I follow him into my bedroom. He is already tearing clothes from the wardrobe and cupboards, scattering cashmere jumpers and silk underwear as if they were rags. He looks at me, and I take off my pyjamas and throw them onto the growing pile on the floor. I walk towards him and he ranges his hands over every curve of my body, takes his time, pushes me onto the bed. The jasmine scent of my body cream fills the air and I arch my back. Just before he is about to sink himself inside me I whisper, “Your name, tell me your name.” I feel the short bristle of hair from his chin on my face and the heat from his breath in my ear, “My name would mean your death, do you want to know?” I gasp as he enters me, close my eyes in acquiescence. I wake up, feeling like my limbs have been fresh fitted and squirming with unfinished business.
So, ahem, I think we can conclude that what this all means is probably that I need a boyfriend, right? I certainly do now, there’s only so many cold showers a girl can take.
Take care,
Zx
*             *             *
Hello again – lovely to hear from you, love the new haircut. 
No, the dream hasn’t come back. I went back to work after the weekend. The plant died as I think deep down I had always known it would and so I’m back to fresh flowers. I’m sleeping soundly again. I flirted with a man on the train who has the same commute although I still can’t work out if he’s straight or gay – oh! And I gave my number to a nice boy in a bar who was probably too young, really, but you’re always telling me to give these things a chance so I’ll let you know if he calls. Already that tempting, handsome face faded in my memory and now I can’t even remember the name he told me. Still, fun while it lasted.
Speaking of fun, we need to organise a visit, I am sure I can get up to you for a long weekend, it would be so nice to catch up. Let me know when’s good for you.
See you soon,
Zx
*             *             *
The night before she is due to visit Kerry, Zoe hears a noise from the living room which wakes her up. When she walks in, a vase of flowers has been knocked from the book case, water all over the floor and CDs scattered in the puddle. She pads to the kitchen, wincing as her bare feet touch the cold floor. She refills the vase, wipes the CDs and returns them to their places.
She is waiting to wake up.