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In My Life

August 20, 2008

One Season in 365 Days

People, my winter holiday is BACK ON. Even if I have to, I dunno, sell Rubin or something to pay for it. Because seriously, folks. SERIOUSLY. Enough with the rain already. I mean, people had to be rescued by boat from the town next door to ours last night because of all the rain/flooding, and other people had to be airlifted to the local hospital because of it. Which would really, really suck, you know?

Now, we live in Scotland, where it's pretty much all hills, all the time, so trust me: we just don't get that much flooding. I'm starting to feel like we're in The Bible or something. I'm also starting to think that if we don't get the hell out of Dodge, and soon, we'll grow webbed feet and have to learn how to breathe under water. And I know that sounds cool, but I just don't think it would be somehow.

The result of all of this apocalyptic weather? As I said, the winter holiday is a goer. It looks like we will just be going to the Canaries, which is exactly what I thought would happen, because there is seriously nowhere cheaper (that's within five hours of the UK and hot at that time of year), but at this point I really don't care because GIVE ME SUN. Please. I'm desperate here.

In slightly better news, my stint at the gym last Thursday turned out not to be an isolated event after all, and so far I have been every day this week (I know!), doing Body Pump, Body Combat and, today, Body Attack. So, yeah, I feel like my body really has been attacked now, for sure.

I also feel kind of like the new girl at high school, because the thing about all of these classes is that everyone else already seems to know each other. Now, I know people are always recommending the gym as a place to make new friends, but I just don't see how that can be done easily - and not just because people tend to take an instant dislike to me. (No, seriously, I think it's because my "resting face" is a frown. And maybe because if I don't have my contact lenses on, I will walk right past people without recognising them, and that tends to cause offence.) I mean, how do you make friends at the gym? Do you just walk up to people while they're on the treadmill and stand next to them shouting, "HI! WILL YOU BE MY FRIEND?" Because that would be weird.

Note: I don't actually go to the gym to make friends, by the way. I go to the gym because I like making myself look like someone who has only recently learned how to walk unaided, obviously. It's just that, when I walk into these classes, I always have a bit of a sinking feeling as I realise that everyone else is standing around in little cliques, and then I have to sit down on the floor by myself and pretend there is something super-interesting on my phone that I absolutely have to look at RIGHT NOW.

In conclusion: I suck at making friends with people. But I have been to the gym three times already this week so, you know, yay me!

August 12, 2008

Things I Have Not Being Doing Recently

Well, that was an unexpectedly long break from the blawg, wasn't it? And once again, while I'd love to say that my absence has made your hearts grow fonder been the result of various exciting events in my life, the truth is that I've been doing a whole lot of nothing. Here are some of the things I have NOT been doing this week:

1. Not Watching the Olympics

No, I have not been watching the Olympics. Because I just don't care about the Olympics. I know! Shocking, isn't it? I know from my friends at Twitter that I'm not quite the ONLY person in the world who struggles to give a damn about sports, but sometimes? Sometimes it really feels like I am.

I can't help it, though: sport just bores me rigid. Or most of it does, anyway. I like the equestrian stuff. And the ice skating. Oh, and that gymnastics thing where they throw a ball and a ribbon around for a while. That's pretty cool. In fact, when I was a kid, I used to harbour dreams of one day actually turning into my own version of International Velvet and competing in the Olympics myself, as an ace showjumper. (I wasn't quite deluded enough even then to think I'd ever be able to do the ball-and-ribbon-thing, or the ice skating, but I was quietly convinced that one day roller skating would be an Olympic sport, and that's when I would show everyone what I was made of. Only it turned out I wasn't so great at that either, and that's when I decided to turn to blogging instead. If blogging is ever an Olympic sport, I am totally there...)

Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah, the Olympics. Not watching it. Not caring. Am bad person. And I should probably point out before people shout at me that I have the utmost respect for the various athletes and what they do, because God knows, it's all I can do to get out of bed some mornings. I just don't have any interest in watching them do it. Or in hearing people talk about it incessantly. Sucks to be me, doesn't it?

2. Not watching The Dark Knight, Mamma Mia or Wall-E

Now, I'm pretty sure I AM the only person in the world who is not currently obsessed with one of these movies. Because I can't seem to exist for even a few hours at a time right now without hearing someone's account of how they had a near-religious experience while watching The Dark Knight, or being asked whether I've seen Mamma Mia yet. And I probably will see Mamma Mia at some point (the other two are like the Olympics to me), possibly years from now, when everyone else has long-since forgotten it, and that's when I will walk around sounding really old and tragic and out of touch, because that's what I do.

For some reason, I never seem to latch onto bandwagons until they're over. It's not a deliberate thing. It's not like I watch obscure, subtitled French films instead, and enjoy feeling all smug and superior about it, because I definitely don't. No, it's just that I seem to lack the "being interested in really popular things" gene. Like, totally. I mean, most of the time I don't have a CLUE what you crazy kids are talking about. This is why I spend most of my time at parties standing around awkwardly shifting from foot to foot while people go, "Have you seen X yet? Well, have you seen Y? Have you been watching the Olympics?" Note to self: get out more.

3. Not going to the gym

Yes, the gym and I parted ways several weeks ago now. It was very sudden. One minute Terry and I were taking classes three times a week, and were all, "Ra! Ra! The Gym!" and then the next? Not so much. And by that I mean "not at all". I don't even know WHY this happened, all I know is that we've booked several classes and then, when the alarm has gone off in the morning, we've just switched it off and gone back to sleep. When will we go back? Where is my motivation? Why can't I seem to just get off my ass and GO TO THE GYM ALREADY? Because I really can't. On the plus side, I have been going running. Just not very far. Or very fast. Or for very long. Another note to self: just go to the freaking gym already. Seriously.

4. Not booking a holiday

In fairness, I hadn't intended to book a winter holiday until much nearer the time, but seriously, it's more or less ALL I've thought of this week, and that would be because IT HAS NOT STOPPED RAINING. At all. I have run in the rain. I have walked the dog in the rain. I have had ENOUGH of the freaking rain. And I'm not going to even try and explain how much this is depressing me right now, because I know you'll all just comment and say, "Oh, you should be grateful it's not warm and sunny right now, because that would suck!" and those kind of comments would probably push me over the edge.

So I took up the search for a winter break with a huge amount of enthusiasm. And then slowly I realised that all of the places I wanted to go are too expensive, and that I will only get to visit them this winter if it turns out there actually is a money tree, and I get to shake it first. Turns out those two weeks in Florida in June really were the only sunshine/warmth on offer this year. Wah!

On a brighter note, though:

Fluff

Got Fluff? Because I sure have. Terry got it for me from the Internet, which meant that this afternoon there was a knock on the door and I got to take delivery of a big box o'fluff. Yay Terry! 

July 28, 2008

A Tale of Two Cities. That we didn't intend to visit.

So, the airplane that transported us from Edinburgh to Birmingham on Saturday morning? Was a toy plane. A tiny little 20-row thing, with little fragile wings and the look of a model aircraft about it. DAMN.

I first noticed the plane as we walked towards our gate. Like every other airport I've ever been to, the gates at Edinburgh have huge windows, through which you can see your aircraft sitting taunting you waiting for you to board it. Only, someone had clearly made a mistake with ours, because sitting next to our gate was a Tonka toy.

"God, I'd hate to be the person that has to travel in that thing," I thought, smugly. "Because that just doesn't look safe to me at all."

Yeah, it was our plane. OF COURSE it was our plane. And there was no way in hell I was getting on it, so a small scene broke out as I threw a hissy fit and Terry tried frantically to reassure me that no, that was NOT one of those planes that are always crashing all the time, and yes it was definitely a real aircraft. We finally arrived at a compromise whereby I agreed to get on the tonka toy on the condition that after this weekend, we never try to fly anywhere within the UK ever again. I still don't know quite how Terry managed to persuade me, and I kinda wish I'd held out for the Louboutins now, because I started to regret my decision as soon as we went to board and I realised the plane was so small there wasn't even a tunnel, or those roll-up steps to take you onto it. Instead, they just opened the door (of which there was only one) and we were dragged up climbed up the little steps that were inside it.

The steps took us right next to the cockpit (that word really doesn't look right to me), and the door happened to be open. I knew I shouldn't have, but I glanced in, and the pilot (there only seemed to be one pilot, by the way. I'm pretty sure they're not allowed to fly commercial flights without a co-pilot, so maybe there was one of those inflatable ones from Airplane, and I just didn't see it. That said, I was also pretty sure they weren't allowed to fly planes they bought at Toys-R-Us, either, which just shows what I know...) was sitting in the smallest space imaginable, with his knees up somewhere around his ears. I think I saw an XBox control pad in front of him, that he was presumably going to use to fly the thing, but I may have just imagined that.

So, that didn't reassure me much. I turned away from the cockpit (nope, still doesn't look right), and glanced right, into the cabin. I don't know why, but as we boarded the plane, I had somehow managed to convince myself that it was bigger than it looked. You know, like the Tardis. But it wasn't. No, inside were about twenty rows of  seats: one one side of the plane there were groups of two seats together, and on the other there was only enough room for one seat. ONE. SEAT.

I wish there was a way I could tell the rest of this story in which I DON'T come out of it all looking like a crazy asshole, but I'm afraid to say I totally freaked out at this point. As I explained to Terry, it has always been one of my goals in life to never have to fly in a small plane. Now, during the rest of this flight, Terry gave me lots of reasons why this small plane was safe to fly in, and even tried to reassure me that, why, it really wasn't all that small at all. The thing was, though, it just did not feel safe to me. In fact, it felt a bit like a bus with wings, only slightly less secure than that. It felt like the smallest gust of wind would blow us away, and God knows, THAT wouldn't have been good . Also: little planes always seem to crash. You hear about it on the news and you think, "Oh, it was one of those small planes. I'll never travel in one of those, so I don't need to worry about that." But folks? You DO need to worry about it. Oh yes you do.

Anyway, somehow we got into our seats and the steward came over to ask what he could do to help the crazy lady. It is to Terry's great credit that he didn't just answer, "throw her out of the window", and it's to my great credit (I think) that I didn't just get up and make a run for it, because that's what I've always imagined myself doing every time I've freaked myself out by imagining myself in that exact scenario. Which I do quite a lot, actually. ( WHY?) The steward offered to let me sit in the back of the plane, next to him, but this would have entailed separating me from Terry, and also, I don't think they could have wrenched my hands off the armrests at that point, so I stayed where I was, and after someone on the ground had finished winding the plane up (presumably), we took off, sounding a bit like a car struggling to get up a hill.

I should probably admit at this point that the actual flight wasn't too bad. For one thing, it was only 45 minutes long, and for another, I am a freaking idiot who really shouldn't be allowed out in public. Terry did a stellar job of keeping me calm (seriously, he was brilliant - mad props to Terry, folks. Sorry you married a madwoman!) and we entertained ourselves by looking at the in-flight safety card, which had little diagrams showing the plane crashing onto the ground and lots of little stick people running away from it with their hands in the air. There was also one showing the plane crashing into water, but there weren't any little stick people in that picture, and that's because all the stick people DIED in that diagram.

I promise I'm not making this up.

Landing was fun - and by that I mean, landing was no fun at all, GOD. Even Terry admitted it was bumpier than in a real plane, with the aircraft accelerating noisily every time it dropped down a bit (I say "noisily" - it sounded a lot like my hairdryer, actually) and also, wobbling from side to side. Those little stick people popped into my head, and remained there,waving their stick arms in terror. And then we were down. And alive. Needless to say, I was one of the first off the plane. (I actually kind of wish I'd thought to take it with me, for the baby whose christening we were flying to, but you always think of these things too late, don't you?) I went straight to the airport rest room to try and calm myself down, and also wash the cold sweat off my hands, but unfortunately, I went into the mens by mistake, which succeeded only in frightening a bunch of my fellow passengers. Seriously, you never want to fly with me, you really don't. Sorry, Terry.

You would think that would be the worst thing that could've happened to us when flying this weekend, wouldn't you? And actually, you'd be right: it was the worst thing that happened. But another trial was to come, as we flew back from Luton last night. No, this entry is STILL not ever yet! In fact, in the words of the Carpenters, we've only just begun!

So, we flew back with Easyjet, who, despite having been the objects of a fair amount of criticism from me over the years (I'm not naming the other airline here because, aside from having purchased their aircraft in Toys-R-Us, they actually did nothing wrong) do at least have real aircraft. I know, because I made Terry phone them to check. Sorry, again, Terry! So as we boarded the plane, in the usual cattle truck fashion, with Terry having to sprint ahead to make sure we could get two seats together (my hero!) otherwise I would've freaked the hell out again, I was actually feeling fairly calm. See, this is my favourite size of plane: it's not so big that the idea of it getting off the ground at all is implausible (also, the roar of the engines on jumbos terrifies me) and it's not so small it looks like a clockwork toy. So I handled the takeoff, and the entire flight, almost like a normal person.

I was sitting there feeling rather smug, and preparing for landing, however, when the pilot spoke to us.

"We should be landing at Edinburgh," he said, "but there's mist there, so we're currently in a holding pattern over Peebles. Which is really quite pretty, you should take a look out of the window!"

OK. This was fine. Slightly puzzling, because yes, of course there was mist at Edinburgh. I mean, it's Edinburgh. It would be more surprising if he'd said the weather there was fine. But whatever. I continued to leaf through my magazine, and then the pilot spoke to us again.

"Yes," he said, "we're still in that holding pattern, and also, our equipment on the ground at Edinburgh is broken, so we're going to either land there in the fog with the broken equipment, or we're going to divert to Glasgow. Also: the view to left really is smashing. Bye!"

Okaaay. My vote was for not landing in fog with broken equipment. Because I'd already used up my entire stock of hysteria on the other flight, and I was all out of dramatics. So when he came back on the intercom, reminded us that the view was pretty and said we'd be diverting to Glasgow, I was sort of OK with that. They would bus us back to Edinburgh, it would take an hour, we'd still be home soon, and also, we'd not be landing in fog with broken equipment. So we resigned ourselves to a quick trip to Glasgow.

Sure enough, just a few minutes later, we were over Glasgow. We admired Glasgow from the air. For quite some time, actually. Then we turned round and started flying down the west coast, heading south.

"We're over the west coast," said the pilot. "It's really quite pretty, isn't it? Also, Glasgow won't let us land, so we're going to Prestwick now, kthnxbai."

Yes, Prestwick. It's in Ayrshire. Which is approximately nowhere near where we were meant to be. (It's also the only place in the UK to have been visited by Elvis, but that's beside the point.) The airport is called "Glasgow Prestwick", which has always puzzled me, because it's only close to Glasgow in the way that, say, Edinburgh is close to Glasgow. And they don't call it "Glasgow Edinburgh Airport", do they? But I digress. And actually, so did the plane, which landed at Prestwick and then sat on the runway for 40 minutes, with us all trapped inside, its helpless prisoners, while the staff at Pretwick entertained the novel idea that hey, there was a big white thing parked outside and they'd need stairs to get people off it.

In Prestwick Airport's defense, I think it was actually supposed to be closed at the time, which would explain why they didn't surrender our bags for another hour, by which time a further SIX flights had landed there, all diverted from Edinburgh. Really, it was no fun at all. On the plane, they'd told us that coaches had been ordered. From EDINBURGH. Because, you know, that makes sense? If you needed coaches in Ayr, you'd send for them from Edinburgh, not from the nearest large city, which would be Glasgow, wouldn't you? You'd also only order two coaches, for 300 people. And you'd not really bother to tell the stranded passengers much about any of this, so by the time those coaches turned up, at 12.45am, all of those 300 people would have to act like savages, all streaming out of the airport en masse, and biting and scratching their way to the front of the queue. Because that would be fun, no?

Also fun: the sight of Terry picking up our cow-print suitcase, slinging it onto his shoulder and then sprinting for the bus, like Tarzan. Well, as like Tarzan as a man with a cow-print suitcase can be, obviously. Yes, Terry was damn sure we were getting on that bus, and we did, although as I climbed the steps, I could feel the crowd all trying to pull me back down again, and it was a bit like being in 28 Days Later, with all the mad, rabid, infected people battering off the sides of the bus, as we drove away.

Not that we drove very far, though.

(No, the entry is STILL not over! Sorry.)

We drove as far as the turnstiles that let you our of the airport. There is a barrier. You need a ticket to get out of the barrier. There were two cars and a bus in front of us. The driver of the first car did not have a ticket. Rather than going to the ticket machine a few metres from the barrier, he elected to go back to the terminal building, leaving his car abandoned at the barrier, blocking the way. We all waited patiently while he did this.

Once he'd driven away, we realised the second car was also driver-less. Where was the driver? Why, in the terminal, of course, getting a ticket for the machine! So we waited again. (Actually, I have to say, everyone was really patient throughout all of this, as by now we were all survivors, pulling together by God!)

Then it was the turn of the bus to go through the barrier. Instead, it chose to wrap itself around a nearby pillar. "I knew he was going to do that," remarked our driver, who went on to assure us all that although the bus in front was good at going up hills, our bus could go really fast on the flat, so we would still beat it. Which was good, because obviously by now we all had but one objective in our minds: to beat the other bus. And we did, although by the time we ran into the sheer wall of fog that had, indeed, settled upon Edinburgh that night, the other bus had pulled ahead again. If you have never raced a bus through Glasgow at 1am, my advice to you is this: don't.

And so we made it to Edinburgh. The bus driver had told us the journey would take "an hour", which had terrified me as this would only have been possible had the bus sprouted wings, and as we'd already travelled on a bus with wings that weekend, there was no way I was going through THAT again. Instead, it took closer to two, and then we had to free the car from the short stay car park, and drive home in thick fog, arriving at 3am and realising that we could actually have flown to Florida in the time it had taken us to get home. Again, you only think of these things when it's too late...

So, that was our weekend, and I have told you absolutely nothing about our time in the Midlands, my reunion with my two best friends, the cuteness of the baby, the christening, the barbecue, the Chinese restaurant where I drank too much wine, the news that one of said friends (the one who isn't the mother of the baby who was christened) is pregnant, or the fact that I really DID take the iron with me to Hertfordshire.

That's a post for another day...

July 21, 2008

List-tastic, baby!

Has it really been five days since I last updated? Oops. There is no particular reason for this, I'm afraid. I mean, I'd like to say I was suddenly overwhelmed by inspiration and have spent the last five days frantically hammering out The Novel, or that I was whisked off to an exotic sun-drenched island or something, but no. I'm just lazy. So lazy, in fact, that I'm going to write you a list to bring you up to date with the not-very-interesting things I've been getting up to recently. Sorry.

1. My hair is still a freaking disaster. Seriously, it turned out to be my most hated haircut ever. I've been wearing it up every day since I had it cut, and on Saturday I had to go and buy a whole bunch of new hair clips and alice bands and stuff (because yes, it's not like I didn't have enough of those already) to try and fight it back. Gah.

2. I bought these items on the same shopping trip that was made necessary by the fact that I dyed all but one of my white knickers grey in the wash. Yes, I am writing about my underwear on the Internet now. Sorry, mum. People who know me in real life: please pretend you didn't read this entry next time you see me.

3. Seriously, though, about the knickers... This happens to me roughly once every six weeks, I would say. Do you have any idea how hard it is to buy plain white knickers? They all seem to come with some kind of black trim, which is where the dye comes from. The label says, "wash with similar colours". WHAT DOES IT MEAN? Are you supposed to wash them with dark colours or with white colours? Because either way, the knickers themselves would still turn grey. Am I supposed to hand wash them all? Who has time for that? Not me.

4. It's OK, that's me finished talking about my knickers now. It's safe to read on.

5. On Saturday, Terry borrowed Guitar Hero from one of his friends and we took it with us when we went to visit my parents that night. I liked it so much I made Terry stop at the all-night Tesco on the way home and buy us our own copy. Since then, it's more or less all I've thought about. Nirvana! Pearl Jam! Smashing Pumpkins! Oh, you rock bands of the 90s, how I love you! At night, when I try to sleep, I see those Guitar Hero dots floating in front of my eyes and hear "Even Flow" echoing around my head. In fact, I'm hearing it now...

6. On Thursday, when I was out walking Rubin, we met a man with three dogs, one of which was called "Lazy" and one of which was called "Fatty". I don't know what the third was called. Not sure I want to know.

7. This weekend, we're heading south, for the christening of my best friend's baby.  We'll be flying into Birmingham, spending a few hours there with Terry's brother, John (he of kidney-donating fame), and then driving down to Hertfordshire where we'll stay the night in a hotel before flying back from Luton on Sunday evening, after the christening. Am looking forward to this as I haven't seen Steph since my wedding, and I haven't met her little boy at all. Because that's the kind of bad friend I am. Weirdly, I haven't started worrying about the flights yet, other than a couple of times when I've woken up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat. This is definite progress for me!

8. I had wanted to have ten points in this list, just to make it an even number, but I can't think of any... oh no, wait!

9. Last night Terry and I watched The Ruins  It was one of those movies which I had to watch mostly through my fingers. Really gory. But at least it got the Guitar Hero dots out of my head for a little while that night, as I lay awake worrying about flesh-eating plants instead.

10. Speaking of Guitar Hero....

 

July 16, 2008

The Hammer House of Hairdressing Horrors

Yeah, I know, I'm totally running out of clever titles for posts in which I go to the hairdresser and return with a headfull of crazy layers that don't look any different AT ALL to anyone else but me. Sorry.

And I know what you're thinking. You're thinking: "The hell? Didn't we just do this not so long ago? Surely it can't be time for another disastrous haircut entry already? And also: what the hell is wrong with this woman? WILL SHE NEVER LEARN? What was she doing back at the hairdresser when she knows it always ends badly?"

Well, you see, it needed a trim. And I had this idea that if I keep getting the back trimmed, but not the sides (mullet), then the sides will surely catch up with the back quicker than they would if I just let sides AND back grow unrestrained. See, that made sense when I said it in my own fool head, but ... gah. You know the luck I have with the hairdresser. I should really just stay at home, and trust me, this time I really think I will. I think I'm just going to let it grow until people start shouting "Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair!" at me. I figure then, and only then will I be rid of these freaking choppy layers that, oh my God, make me want to PULL MY HAIR RIGHT OUT OF MY HEAD. Because GOD, this is getting old.

Anyway, so I went to the salon, and I asked, as usual, for a trim. To be fair, that's exactly what I would've got: I mean, the stylist had sympathised with me about the mullet job, had gently warned me that there was no quick fix for this, and that it was just going to have to take its own sweet time to grow out. He agreed with me that I was doing the best thing by keeping it trimmed, otherwise it would start looking even worse, and he took only the tiniest amount possible off the mullet part, so it wouldn't look any shorter.

So, it was all going pretty good, huh? I was sitting there silently congratulating myself on at last getting a good haircut, and then, all of a sudden, my mouth snapped open and I heard myself say, "Also, you could just cut in a fringe at the front." Seriously, it was like a scene out of The Exorcist or something - like some other, malevolent being had taken over my body and started asking for FRINGES. Because hell, it's not like THAT'S ever worked out before, is it?

I thought I'd got away with it at first. When I got home and looked in the mirror, I thought it was fine. I mean, it wasn't GREAT: my hair will never be "great" until  grow out these damn layers, but it certainly didn't look any worse than it had before, and I'm at the point now where "not looking any worse" counts as a good haircut for me.

Then I went downstairs to make coffee and let the dog out, and caught a glimpse of myself reflected in the glass on the back door.

And I hate it.

AGAIN.

It's a long fringe - in fact, it's really not so different from how it was before. But it IS different. It is shorter. It's too long to sit on my forehead, like a regular fringe, but too short to stick behind my ears, like I always wear my hair. And the introduction of yet another different length of hair on my head... well, let's just say it wasn't such a great idea, because it has only served to emphasise all the other layers, and this time I have only myself to blame, because the stylist did exactly what Evil Amber told him to do.

Thank God all those Blair-Waldorf-style headbands are in fashion right now, is all I can say. And at least I'll save money on haircuts for the rest of this year, because as God is my witness, I will not be going back until these stupid layers grow out. Not even for a trim, because clearly it's too dangerous. If I even mention the idea of getting another haircut here, or on Twitter, please feel free to reach through your computer screen and deliver a good, hard slap, because seriously.

Just to soothe my frazzled nerves, here is a picture of the new shoes I got this week, as a PR freebie. They are shiny. I will wear them when I'm off to see the wizard. To ask him to give me some hair, natch.

New_shoes

July 03, 2008

Eye'll Be Back. Probably.

I have to go to the opticians tomorrow, for my usual annual checkup. This worries me, for two reasons:

1. What if the optician looks into my eyes with his little light-stick thing, and spots a huge tumour growing in my brain? That can totally happen, you know, and the reason I know this is because I constantly get hits to this website from visitors who have Googled some variation of the phrase "OMG, opticians can totally spot brain tumours and that could happen to YOU, dude!"

Also, my optician has a tendency to make lots of sombre "Hmmmm" noises as he looks at my eyes, and my fevered brain tends to translate these sounds as "Hmmm, I wonder how I'm going to tell her about the massive brain tumour I've just spotted behind her left eye?" so by the time he tells me to "take a seat in the big chair" I always think the unspoken end of that sentence is "because you're going to want to be sitting down for what I'm about to tell you." So, lots of fun there, then.

2. When he switches off the lights in the room and gets out the little light stick thing, which he then waves about in front of me, I always think he looks like he's rave dancing. You know, like in the 90s? When people used to carry those day-glo sticks to raves and make "whooo! whoo!" sounds while waving them around? (* Has clearly never been to a rave in her life*) So that makes me want to laugh. Like, really, really badly.  Luckily, I'm usually able to prevent myself from laughing by thinking about the brain tumour, though, so we're all good.

Also, just while we're talking about the gym, (see that effortless transition there? That's why I am a writer.) today when Terry and I went to Body Pump, I happened to glance down at the pool, which you can see through one of the windows in the Body Pump studio, and noticed that it was surrounded by women in snazzy swimsuits who were all just lounging around reading novels. In the GYM. For an hour. So, they were basically pretending to be sunbathing, only without any sun (because they were indoors), or a pool bar, or a martini or anything.

Anyway, I mentioned to Terry that this seemed a bit strange to me (because it's a gym) and then he gave me that, "Oh my God, I have married a moron" look he does so well, and explained that no, it's me who is a bit strange, and that there is nothing more normal in the world than to head down to the gym with your beach towel and a paperback. Apparently this is what all the cool kids are doing now. And then I felt stupid, because I normally just read in bed, where there are no screaming children or judgmental redheads walking by, and now I realise that I've been missing out on a whole world of sunless sunbathing at the gym.  RELAXING: UR DOIN IT RONG!

Maybe I should give it a try?

June 30, 2008

Amber & Terry's Menagerie Now Open for Business

Ever wondered how long it might take to get three tortoises to stand in a straight line? I HAVE:

Tortoises

Oh, and "a long time" is the answer, just FYI. That whole "tortoises move slow" thing is just a rumour they put about to try and trick you. Trust me, as soon as their little feet hit the deck, those bad boys are off and running...

Anyway, the reason they're here, guest starring on the ole blawg today is because we have reached that part of the year when the in-laws take their annual five week trip to Greece and Terry and I take custody of Pepe & the Tortoises, which sounds like a 60s skiffle band, and actually, is almost as noisy as one, too.

Here is the lead vocalist of the group (the tortoises are on percussion, banging their food dishes against the glass of their tank. Yes, like prisoners.), Pepe le Parrot:

Pepe

Don't be fooled by the little smile he appears to be giving in this picture, folks: Pepe hates me with a vengeance (he hates everyone except Keith and Terry), and was probably thinking about how he's going to bite my finger first chance he gets. And to think mine is the hand that feeds him, too!

And, because he gets crazy jealous every time we so much as look as the other animals, here is Rubin, just before trying to eat what appeared to be a large pool of vomit which we encountered on our walk tonight:

Rubinman

Terry and I will now be subjected to a couple of days of Rubin acting out almost constantly, in a bid to divert our attention away from Pepe & the Tortoises, and to prove that he's still the most bad-ass pet in da house. (A mission he is doomed to fail in, by the way: Pepe is the most bad-ass pet, for sure.) Seriously, for the first couple of hours of their stay, he will generally follow me around, sometimes placing his paw on my knee appealingly and looking at me as if to say, "I'm still the number one pet, aren't I? Say I am the number one pet." Then he'll clamber up onto my knee (he can jump up perfectly well, but for some reason he's always preferred to climb, like a small child), and will sit there looking at Pepe smugly, thinking, "Hee! Lookit me sitting on Amber's knee! Not so smart now, huh?" Then Pepe will say "Hello, pretty boy!" and that'll freak Rubin out all over again.

You know what they say, people, never work with children or animals...

June 26, 2008

Stuff. And nonsense.

Hey folks, guess who's back? Back again? Shady's back! Tell your friends!

Whoops, no, sorry, I got carried away there: it's not Shady who's back at all, it's my old friend the RED WEALS. Yes, after a year-long absence, the red weals swung back into town a couple of days ago, taking up residence in the luggage under my eyes and making me look like I've been up crying all night. For a week.

So that's good.

I would imagine it's probably all the stress of being back on this rain-soaked little island (did I mention that it's been raining a LOT here?) and having to, you know, work for a living, rather than just lying by the pool all day eating that's caused the reappearance of my old enemies. Because that sucks.

So yes, I'm still depressed. Even more so now that I look like some crazy, red-eyed monster. In other news:

1. I am going to be on the radio again in a couple of weeks. Yes, BBC Radio Northampton (?) want to speak to me about blogging, and how I am such a great blogger and stuff. Hopefully the "and stuff" bit won't include anything about how to get rid of red weals under the eyes, or apply fake tan or anything, but, you know... This is happening on July 9th. I tell you about it now so you can all begin the necessary  preparations to move to Northampton and hear it. I'm sure those five minutes will be totally worth it!

2. We are heading south at the end of next month, to attend the christening of my best friend's baby. Yes, people actually trust me to be around their offspring, how about that? Because we haven't visited Terry's brother John in... ever... we're going to try and combine this with the christening. Yes, we will be meeting with John in the back of the church, can't wait! No, I jest... it's actually more complicated than that, and we will be flying into Birmingham, spending a few brief hours with John, and then being driven by him south to my friend's house, before flying out of Luton the next day.  So basically, two days, two flights. I'm sure I'll deal with that JUST FINE.

3. I'm still loving my new phone. Still haven't quite worked out how to moblog from it, which is probably a good thing, or you'd be having to put up with me constantly posting pictures of Rubin lying on his back and looking cute. Then maybe lying on his front and looking cute. Or standing up and looking cute. Or... you get the picture. Other than that, though, it's all good, and this morning my wake-up alarm was a long speech by Terry, telling me to get the hell up and make him some breakfast already. The fact that this message came from the phone just made it all the more surreal at 7.30am.

Other than that, it still sucks to be back. How's your week?

June 23, 2008

Not So Good to Be Back

Yeah, I'm still depressed.

I mean, look at the weather forecast for this week:

Weather

Now, clearly this only takes us up to Thursday, but for the rest of the week/summer I'm going to go out on a limb and guess 14 - 15 degrees. And raining.

This is depressing. Being back home? Depressing. Not knowing when I'll next see the sun? Also depressing.

Anyway, I've thought about this a lot over the past few days, and have come up with a cunning plan, which is as follows:

Stage 1: Find way to make lots of money.

Stage 2:  Make lots of money.

Stage 3: Buy house in Florida. With all the money.

Obviously this plan needs a bit of fleshing out - particularly stage 1 - but I'll get round to that, really. In the meantime, I'm stuck back at home, slowly working my way through all of the idiot comments and messages people decided to send me while I was gone. I knew this would happen. I knew that as soon as I tried to take a break, the readers of my blogs would be all, "Hey, Amber took her eye off the ball! Let's act like assholes!" but it's depressing all the same. A bit like the weather, you know?

Take this message, for instance, which came to me from a person known only as anyas@yahoo.co.uk. Anyas had these enlightening thoughts to share with me:

"I think gingers are so ugly. I have turned down dates with ginger men as they are so disgusting. I did get set up on a blind date once, he was ginger but I thought I would see how the date went. Halfway through I left as he was just to ugly to look at and he wanted to touch me. Vile. Ugly ugly gingers."

Umm, yeah. Thanks for that, Anyas! And I'm sure you're every bit as beautiful on the outside as you obviously are on the inside, which leaves you really well qualified to talk about other people like this! < /sarcasm>

This is the kind of intellect I'm dealing with here, folks. It makes me wish there was some kind of IQ test people had to pass before they were allowed to use the Internet, but sadly, no.

There was also the guy who wrote to me asking for a job as a writer, and typed his entire email in lower case. Because that's what professional writers do, you know? Gah.

It hasn't been all bad news, though. I mean, it's been mostly bad news, but I also returned home to this new toy:

New_phone

It's a phone that looks like a little dog, OMG! No, it's the Samsung SGH-F480. Samsung sent it to me to review because... no, I give up, I have no idea why. But I'm very glad they did though, because I heart it. It has a touch screen like the iPhone, and I wasn't sure how well I'd get on with that, but I actually really like it, and so far it's easy enough for even me to use. I mostly love it, though, because not long after I got it working, Terry disappeared with it into the other room, and now my morning wake-up alarm features Rubin's voice (yes, Rubin has a voice. D'uh!) shouting, "AMBLA! IT'S TIME TO GET UP!" And when Terry calls me? Rubins's voice shouts out "RING RING! RING RING!" My last phone just didn't do that.

I'm not sure what else Terry's done to this phone, but I totally wouldn't be surprised if I'm standing in the supermarket or somewhere one day and Rubin's voice shouts, "AMBLA! I NEED A PEE!" from my bag. Ya gotta love that, no?

May 21, 2008

Haircut from hell. Sort of.

"Just a quick trim," I said to the hairdresser, as I nervously eased myself into the torture chair this morning, Well, we all know the kind of luck I normally have with haircuts, and that's no luck at all, basically. But today was to be different.

"No problem," said the hairdresser, smiling reassuringly as she wrapped me in one of those massive cape things. "We'll just tidy it up a bit, shall we?" (Sidenote: why do hairdressers always speak to you in the plural? 'And what are we having done today, then?' is their usual opening gambit, which I guess is supposed to make you feel like the two of you are on a jolly escapade together, as opposed to what's actually happening, which is more like a trip to the dentist.)

Anyway, this hairdresser seemed to have no problem understanding just what it was I was after, so I relaxed back into the chair (well, I relaxed as much as it was possible to relax with a sink sticking into my neck, which wasn't very relaxing at all, come to think of it), and basked in the joy of having finally found a hairdresser who, like, really understood me. Then I decided to get a bit daring. This was my fatal mistake.

"Also," I said. "This fringe of mine. I'm trying to grow it out, but you couldn't just, I don't know, make it blend in a bit more with the rest of my hair, could you?"

Well, that's what I thought I said, anyway. What the hairdresser obviously heard was, "It's always been my dream to look like Farrah Fawcett, only with less hair, and a mullet. Make that dream a reality, hairdresser!"

That was how it came to pass that ten minutes later I found myself staring into the mirror aghast as the hairdresser chopped huge chunks off hair off the front of my head, apparently at random.

Now, you'd think I would have said something at this point, wouldn't you? Well, you would be wrong. Here's why:

1. It was instantly apparent to me that I was in the hands of a madwoman. A MADWOMAN, I tells ya. And she had scissors.

2. Once those first few chunks of hair have gone from the area around your face, ain't no goin' back.  It's not like she can just stick them back on for you, is it? So if she's just chopped four or five inches off one side of your head, there really isn't a possible scenario which doesn't result in the other side of your head getting the same treatment.

(Aside: actually, there is. When I was at university, there was a girl in my year who had one side of her head cut into a bob, and the other side cropped, so she looked like a different person depending on which side you were standing on. True story. It haunts me to this day.)

3. I am a complete and utter wuss.  And also: stupid.

So, rather than challenge the hairdresser, what I did was, I just sat there grinning inanely, then I drove home, played around with it a bit in front of the mirror, realised that from some angles it looked a lot like a MULLET, then threw myself onto the bed, screaming like a small child.

Then I looked at it again, and realised that, actually, it looks more or less EXACTLY THE SAME as it always has:

Haircut1000

Well, sort of. From the front, it looks the same as always, but that's only because I have cleverly pulled the hair from the back of my head onto my shoulders in this picture. If I pull that hair back, the front is all kind of shaggy. And choppy. And from the side, I'm definitely seeing a mullet. Terry's comment:

"Well, there's certainly a.... length difference... between the front and the back."

This didn't reassure me. Nor did Terry's later attempts at reassurance, which included the line, "Does your hair actually GROW? Because, really, it NEVER looks any different to me."

I think he may be right. I hope so. If not, looks like I'm spending the next few weeks with a MULLET on my head.   

May 12, 2008

Kitchen complete! Sanity lost!

It's taken four weeks, a lot of cursing and the last remaining shreds of my sanity, but at last - at long, freaking last - we have a fully functional, shiny new kitchen. You know, like normal people.

New_kitchen

Kitchen

Photographing a really small kitchen = much harder than you'd think, which is why you get two pictures featuring more or less the same view. I promise we DID do the other half, too, it's just that I couldn't really get a decent picture of it without hovering somewhere near the ceiling. I did take a video of it too, but I'm going to take a wild guess that my kitchen isn't of so much interest to you that you'd want to watch it in glorious Technicolour, even although it has consumed Terry's every waking thought for the past four weeks. Mad props to Terry, by the way, for his kitchen fitting skillz, and to my dad, for giving up his Sunday to cut worktops: always a good way to spend a weekend, I find. (I went shopping while this went on, of course. So I can take no credit AT ALL for anything that's happened in the house this month, but I DO have a really nice new coat.)

As well as the kitchen, we also have shiny new floors throughout the house, and will be moving into the garden shed now, so we can keep them that way FOREVER. It's the only way, really. I mean, last night, for instance, after the final boards had gone down and I was lovingly cleaning the new kitchen, I happened to glance out of the window to see this:

Dirt

Clearly someone had been digging in our long plant pot thingy (which, actually, I have no idea why we even have that, or what's in it. That's the old flooring beside it by the way. We don't just have random bits of rubbish in our garden. Well, not ALL the time, anyway). Now, I knew the culprit couldn't be far away, and sure enough:

Guilty

Rubin then proceeded to walk around the shiny new kitchen, placing his dirty paws on the shiny new doors, and wiping his dirty face on... everything. And why had he been eating the dirt in the plant pot thingy? Because Terry put FISH OIL in it. It's testament to how stupid trusting I am that I have no idea why he did this, despite questioning him about it twice now:

CONVERSATION 1:

AMBER: Terry, Rubin seems to be eating dirt from the plant pot. WHY?

TERRY: Oh, that'll be because I poured fish oil into it.

AMBER: Okay!

CONVERSATION 2:

AMBER: Terry, Rubin's still eating dirt from that plant pot. Why did you say you poured fish oil into it again?

TERRY: Well, it was better than pouring it down the sink.

AMBER: Oh! Okay!

And this is why no plant or flower we've owned has ever lived for more than a few weeks. And why Rubin's been smelling of fish oil for the past few days, now I come to think of it.

Anyway, the house is now complete. And I promise that this is the last post you will have to read about my house decorating woes for ... oh, how about forever? Because that sounds good to me round about now...

May 02, 2008

How We're Living

So, it turns out we COULD actually fit more kitchen stuff into the living room after all:

Kitchen_in_livingroom

Kitchen sink: not even visible under all that MESS.

The rest of the kitchen stuff was delivered yesterday. The things in the picture above are the bits of the old kitchen that are currently sitting around in the living room before we turf them out into the back garden, where they will live in peace and harmony along with The Tree That Scratched Me. Or, at least, they will live there until the council come and take them away. IF, of course, the council agree to actually take them away, and that's not looking at all likely right now, let me tell you.

Conversation Terry had with the council:

Terry: Hi, I'd like to arrange a bulky uplift please. There's quite a lot of stuff because I'm putting in a new kitchen and throwing out the old one.

Council: No problem. What do you have for us?

Terry: Well, there's a cooker.

Council: Uh-huh, no problem.

Terry: A bunch of old worktops. They're pretty long.

Council: Sure!

Terry: There's laminate flooring that used to cover the floors of our entire house.

Council: No problem!

Terry: And the old kitchen units.

Council: Coolio!

Terry: A chair.

Council: Bring that chair on!

Terry: The kitchen sink.

Council: We love uplifting kitchen sinks!

Terry: Oh, and there's some small bits of wood that used to be the front of the kitchen drawers, but they're really small, so I don't know if they count.

Council: WHOA THERE, daddy-o! Did you say "small bits of wood?!"

Terry: Ummm, yes. Yes, I did. Old drawer fronts. Small, you know?

Council: We're not picking THEM up. They'll never fit into our van. And how will we carry them?

Terry: Well, I can pick them up in one hand, easily. They're small.

Council: Oh hell to the no. We're not taking them. What we'll need to do is send someone round to "assess" them, to see if there's the remotest possibility of us being able to uplift them for you. But I'll tell you now: there isn't.

Terry: Ummm. OK. But the cooker, worktops, large units, miles of laminate floor, office chair and kitchen sink: they're all OK?

Council: Oh yeah, they're no problem.

* headdesk *

So, once again we are faced with being "assessed" before the relevant authorities can help us. Great. And the beat goes on....

In other news, the more observant of you (and those not reading via RSS or email) may have noticed a fugly little doo-dah called "scribit" sitting in my sidebar. This is a new thing I am trying out, which basically allows you to ask me questions which I can then answer here on the blawg. Which means I don't actually have to think for myself, EVER. I am convinced this experiment will fail miserably, but until it does, if you have a burning question, or just something you would really, really like me to write about, ask away. (You just click the "What should I write about?" text to enter your suggestion.) All I ask is that you not make your questions:

a) rude

or

b) maths related. So none of that whole, "If a train leaves the station at 2pm travelling at 70mph...." nonsense, 'kay?

April 30, 2008

The First Cut Is the Deepest

People, we are fighting in a WAR. Yes, it's true, although by "we", of course, I mean "me". I am fighting in a war. My enemy? The garden. Yes, it is that time of year again: the time of year when I begin a relentless and monotonous cycle of fighting back the garden, only for it to grow like billy-o (Who IS Billy-O, by the way?), forcing me to fight it back AGAIN the very next week. * Deep sigh *

I hate our garden. I hate it with the kind of all-consuming hatred I generally reserve only for Crocs. It's not a very big garden, but despite not being very big, it somehow manages to be extremely high maintenance - which I guess makes it a lot like its owner, now I come to think about it.

Anyway, this year I put off that first important grass-cutting for as long as I could. As anyone who hates gardening will tell you, once you've given the grass that first cut, that's it, there's no going back. You will have to keep re-cutting it every few days now for the rest of the summer, in a boring and occasionally dangerous procedure that will give you absolutely no pleasure at all. It goes a little bit like this:

1. It rains all week
2. On Saturday morning, just as you're contemplating a long, leisurely lie in, the sky will clear for a few, brief hours, and the sun will come out.
3. While everyone else is enjoying this unexpected sunshine, you will have to rush to throw on your oldest clothes, and begin the backbreaking labour of GARDENING.
4. At some point during this hard labour you will burn your scalp. It will be painful to brush your hair for the next week. Despite this, you will forget to wear your hat again next week. Someone should slap you.
5. As you finish the aforementioned backbreaking labour, it will start to rain.
6. It will rain steadily for the next week, so you will not be able to actually use or appreciate the garden that you have so carefully tended.
7. Until the following Saturday, of course, at which point there will, once again, be a few precious hours of sunlight, all of which you will spend up to your knees in mud.

And the thing is, gardening is HARD WORK. On TV, they always make gardening look like a very genteel kind of activity, normally involving a pretty sun hat (gah) and one of those little pads which you kneel on while gently plucking some flowers, which you will later arrange tastefully around your beautiful home. Yes, Bree from Desperate Housewives, I am looking at you...

In real life, of course, gardening is nothing like that. NOTHING. Actually, gardening involves wearing your oldest clothes with a pair of wellies (mine have pink and orange flowers on them, but even so, people, EVEN SO!), and hauling a piece of machinery twice your weight over a piece of rain sodden ground until either it breaks or you do. Normally I am the one who breaks first. Then, this Sunday, as I roughened my hands and almost broke my back giving the garden that first tedious going over of the year, THIS happened:

Scar

Yes, that is my back: my battle scarred back, maimed by Public Enemy Number 1: the tree in our back garden. It reached out and maliciously scratched me as I bent down to work like a slave on the ground underneath it. It was the tree's fatal mistake, for if you are a tree, you really, really don't want to get on the wrong side of a woman who has an axe in her garden shed. I mean, I don't think I actually DO have an axe in my garden shed, but I could get one. And trust me, if these hostilities are ever repeated, I totally will. The flora and fauna are not my friends. The garden is not a green and pleasant place: it is the scene of my torment every single weekend in summer. Still, at least I didn't burn my head this time....

April 25, 2008

Oh, crap.

I really thought the whole kitchen situation couldn't get any worse. "It totally can't get any worse," said Terry, cheerfully wrenching a cabinet off the wall with his bare hands. And I believed him. Then last night I went downstairs and found this:

Worse

Which, really? Is WORSE.

And then there's this:

Also_worse

ALSO WORSE.

On the plus side, the whole no kitchen = no food thing means that a Chinese takeaway is on its way to us right now.  Even so: WORSE.

April 21, 2008

Egg On My Face

Well, the weekend = good, but every so slightly bizarre.

Saturday started out in in the usual way: with a chef throwing bits of egg at me and expecting me to catch them in my mouth. I really wish I was joking about this, but nope, I was a performing seal for the night, folks. My life's ambition has been realised!

You see, when we were in Florida last year, Terry and I went to a teppanyaki  restaurant with my parents. It was great, and there was no catching of eggs in mouths AT ALL, which I find is usually a good sign when choosing where to eat of an evening, so when we discovered that a similar restaurant had opened in Edinburgh, naturally we decided to go along, and to take four of our friends with us. What we DIDN'T realise, of course, was that two of those friends would be forced to don chef's hats and spend part of their evening throwing uncooked eggs into the air and attempting to catch them ON THEIR HEADS, but hey, we're sure those friends will start speaking to us again soon.

And it could have been worse. It could have been ME who was forced to try and catch the eggs on my head, and as these were RAW eggs, that could've been messy. Like, really messy. Messier than the mess I actually made, when the chef went round the table and threw bits of cooked egg at us all, expecting us to catch them IN OUR MOUTHS.

Terry went first with this and, having spent a good chunk of his childhood practicing for just such an eventuality (And to think some people said that time was wasted!), managed to catch the piece of egg in his mouth first time. I really hope no one's eating while they're reading this, by the way. Especially not egg.

Then it was my turn.

Now, I should preface this story with the fact that I cannot catch at all. AT ALL. Not even with my hands. I spent a large part of my childhood pretending to have forgotten my gym kit, so that I wouldn't have to do sports at school, and when they DID force me to play basketball, I managed to perfect the fine art of running round the court looking like I was doing something, but actually keeping as far away from the ball as was humanly possible. Seriously, I was a MASTER at it.  (Interestingly, you'd think this would make me really good at dodgeball, but nope, if I try to play dodgeball I will get hit every time. Every. Time.)

So, what I'm basically trying to say here is that I can't catch. Or, indeed, throw. I was that kid that was always picked last for all the teams. If you try and throw something to me, nine times out of ten, I will totally miss it. The other time, I will be so surprised to have caught the thing, that I will instantly drop it in shock, often emitting a stupid, girlie squeak as I do it. So no, the "catching eggs in my mouth" thing was never going to work out. Nevertheless, I gave it a shot and managed to bat the first egg sideways with my head, sending it all over our friend Gillian's coat. Sorry about that, Gillian, if you're reading this.

The second egg burst spectacularly on my left eyeball, in a scene which still makes Terry laugh even now when he remembers it. Luckily for me, the egg was cooked. Unluckily for Gillian, the third one I tried to catch hit me square in the middle of the forehead, and only just missed falling into her open handbag. (A word to the wise: never sit next to Amber at dinner.)

After that, the chef gave up on trying to turn me into an egg-catching sensation, and moved onto his other victims, all of whom managed to acquit themselves much better than I did.

That was just the start of the night, though.

After dinner, we went for drinks, and then at some point during the drinks, Ewen and Gillian announced that they had been invited to a birthday party later that night, and were willing to risk social embarrassment by taking Terry and I along with them. And we were really glad they did, because as we pulled into the street where the party was being held, there was a HIGHLAND COW standing in the middle of it. A highland cow.

Highland_cow

A Highland Cow, yesterday
(Note: our cow didn't have the massive scary horns. It was a lady cow.)

And do you know,that highland cow trotted before our car up the hill, leading the way (almost) to the party we were headed to, and making me wonder what the HELL was in that egg I had eaten that was making me hallucinate being guided through the night by a COW. Then the cow turned into a nearby field and trotted off, presumably to go and tuck itself into its Highland Cow Home, wherever that may be. I sometimes still think of it now.

So, that was our Saturday, cows, eggs and all. How was your weekend?

April 18, 2008

A list I'm not even going to apologise for

I'm exhausted. No, seriously: EXHAUSTED. So, remember I told you about how I'm going to Florida in June? And how that's going to be lovely and relaxing and I can't wait? Well, that all may be true, but as it turns out, I will REALLY NEED THAT HOLIDAY because when you work for yourself, and particularly when your work involves churning out a ridiculous number of blog posts ever weekday, the run-up to any break is not so relaxing, really.

I, you see, am currently less than a quarter of the way through writing advance posts to cover the period I will be away on holiday. IN JUNE. I started doing this at the start of this month (APRIL! I started preparing for my June holiday in APRIL!) and let me tell you, that writing-my-posts-in-advance thing is getting pretty old already. My hope is that by the next time I decide to take a holiday, I will be rich enough to be able to just pay someone else to cover for me, but in the meantime, it's a case of all work and no play makes Forever Amber a pretty dull blog. Which is why today, my friends, you are getting a list. A list which is a follow up to my previous Five Things You Didn't Want to Know About Me post. I call it 'Five More Things You Didn't Want to Know About Me'. Here it is:

Five More Totally Random Things You Didn't Want to Know About Me

1. My fingernails grow freakishly quickly. Seriously, if I didn’t trim those bad boys every couple of days, I’d be like one of those old women with the long, gnarled nails that look like tree branches before a month was out:

How_i_would_look

This would be a good thing, obviously, if I was one of those women who enjoys carefully tending to her nails and looking after them like they were precious babies, but, er, I'm not one of those women. I am lazy. And I can't stand the feel of long nails on the keyboard, so I'm currently working a "hands-that-could-easily-belong-to-a-man" look instead.  And speaking of keyboards...



2. I can type very fast, but with no accuracy whatsoever. My most used key is the "back" button. Seriously, I used it about ten times in this bullet point alone. Gah.



3. I hardly ever watch TV. OK, that’s a lie: I watch Neighbours religiously, and I'd urge every last one of you to do the same, and I love me some Lost. The rest I can take or leave, and I will mostly leave. I have never been one of those people who is obsessed with TV shows, which sometimes makes social occasions difficult for me, because I just have to stand there dumbly while the people around me go, "Did you see Heroes? Did you see The Apprentice? Did you see Insert-TV-Show-of-Your-Choice*?" Me, I’d rather read a book. Speaking of which…



4. I read anything from 2 – 5 books every week. I’m a fast reader, and I’m also a compulsive reader: it’s pretty much my default activity, so if I’m at home and I’m not working or doing chores, I’ll be reading. When I go on holiday, my suitcase is weighed down with the number of books I have to take with me. Because of the volume of my reading, though, I tend to read a lot of rubbish: I can’t afford to buy a bunch of new books every single week, even at Amazon’s prices, so I’m forced to rely on the meager stock of our local library, which has pretty slim pickings indeed. This is why I sometimes end up with books I’m too embarrassed to be seen in public with…



5. If there was some kind of freaky disaster, and the only food left in the world was bread, I'd be OK with that. I could happily live on toast for the rest of my life if I absolutely had to. In fact, I could really fancy some now...

* Not an actual show. Although it wouldn't surprise me if it was, to be honest.

April 16, 2008

House project: going suspiciously smoothly

Now, I realise I've probably just jinxed not only our current "redecorating the house/making our lives temporarily unbearable" project, but all of the future ones we embark upon too, with the use of the above headline, but seriously, we're good. So far. I mean, I realise most of you probably expected Terry and I to drop through the floor, or blow the roof off or something like that in our continuing quest to own a House that Doesn't Suck, but really, we're totally blase about this now. It's like, "Kitchen sink in the living room? What kitchen sink in the livingroom? Be careful you don't trip over the cooker in the hall on your way out, now!"

That's not to say that the kitchen sink ISN'T still in the livingroom, obviously, because, well, it is. And the cooker, actually. But the upper level of the house now has a complete set of new floors, and we didn't even break anything to get them:

New_floors

I'm now pretty much living upstairs full time, like some kind of mad old hermit lady, venturing downstairs only to watch Neighbours and go to the gym, and actually, not really to go to the gym because... meh. After that whole "running for 49 minutes and then almost dying" stunt, I kinda lost my mojo a bit. OK, a lot. There's only so much time you can spend running on the spot before you suddenly realise that hey, this is actually pretty damn boring, and it would appear that, for me, that time was 49 minutes. And two seconds. 

Anyway, Terry is downstairs banging at the kitchen ceiling with one of my old hairbrushes (I wish I was joking about that, but I'm not) so I must go and investigate. Wish me luck...

March 17, 2008

Nice day for a white wedding

This weekend, Terry and I went to a wedding:

Wedding

This is what I have to deal with all the time. Although, given that he has to put up with me basically growing out of his back, I guess he has good reason to drink... Actually, Terry was the designated driver for the day, so that's someone else's drink he's holding. No, I have no idea whose. NEVER PICK UP STRANGE DRINKS, kids, no matter how inviting they look. Lookit what happens to you!

Anyway, a good time was had by all, even although it did make me sad to think that it's now just under a year since our wedding, and unless I divorce Terry and re-marry, I will never again get to dress like a princess for the day. Other than in the privacy of my own home, obviously.

There is, however, one thought that's keeping me going throughout this long winter that doesn't have a wedding at the end of it for me to look forward to, and it is this: WE ARE GOING TO FLORIDA IN JUNE.  Yay! Now, I know what you're thinking. You're thinking our plane is totally going to crash, and that we will all DIE I'm going to Florida for my own, selfish reasons, which will probably involve buying a lot of shoes and shopping at Sephora. Well you are WRONG. Well, I mean, I WILL probably buy shoes, and I will definitely do a lot of shopping at Sephora, but I am actually going to the Sunshine State for the purely altruistic reason of helping to re-invigorate the American economy by injecting cash into it. DON'T WORRY, AMERICA - I'M COMING. If you could just have Bloomingdales gift-wrapped for me, that would be great, thanks.

So, yes, we're off on June 2nd, and it can't come soon enough for me because ohmygod, are we all agreed that this winter needs to just END, already? Naturally, the nightmares about the flight have already started, with last night's extravaganza involving us all flying to Florida in a four-seater plane. And I mean, there are four of us going, so WHO WAS DRIVING? Scary stuff. Note to self: get Valium this time... 

March 06, 2008

Haircut 101

First: after reading all of your comments on my entry about phobias, I realised that actually, I have WAY more phobias than I had written about, and, indeed, that I had completely omitted some of my biggest, and most all-consuming phobias. Maybe I was trying to suppress the thought of them or something?

Well, because the thought of leaving an entry unfinished makes me break out in hives, I went back and edited it to add them in, and to make the entry in question only slightly shorter than my University Dissertation (On the Road: the American dream as seen by Jack Kerouac, JD Salinger and someone else who I totally can't remember anymore. So that was a worthwhile exercise, no?). So, yes, you can go back and read the bits you missed if you have a burning desire to delve even further into my psyche. Death! Cancer! People who kind of rumble sweets around their mouths before crunching them loudly! Fun times, people, fun times...

Anyway, this post isn't actually about phobias. No, this post is about my hair, and how I went all the way to Edinburgh yesterday to have it cut, at great expense, I might add, in a salon that actually dries your hair after they've cut it and everything. Fancy! Round these here parts they just kick you out with your hair still wet, and I'm not even joking. Well, I mean, I am partly joking, because they will blow dry your hair if you really want them to, but they will also charge you extra for that service, and will mostly just not bother to do it.

I'm still not 100% sure what it was that possessed me to haul ass into the city and get a super-expensive haircut when, actually, I could just have driven the two minutes to the Little Hairdressing Shop of Horrors and have it cut for less than half the price, even if I decided to get all high falutin' on them and ask for a blow dry as well as a cut. Well, actually, I kind of do know, to be honest. I think I did it because I'm always reading articles in women's magazines which are all, "Spend lots of money on haircuts! Haircuts are an investment! You wear your hair everyday, so a haircut is the one thing you should not hesitate to spend a small fortune on!" So, I read these articles, and apparently I also lost my mind and forgot that I've had lots of expensive haircuts in my time, and they haven't been any different AT ALL from the really cheap haircuts I've had, too, because yesterday afternoon found me paying the aforementioned sum of money in order to end up looking exactly the same as I did before:

Nodifferent
Hi! I am exactly the same as before! I'm also really rubbish at the "taking a photo of yourself in the mirror" thing, I wonder how other people manage to do that?

My advice to you, then, would be this: if you are the kind of person who always seems to end up with exactly the same haircut, no matter how hard you try to change it, don't spend lots of money on haircuts. Spend a lot of money on shoes, instead. No one will know the difference with your hair, and at least you'll have lots of nice shoes.  < /wiseoldsage>

I did have a good day, though, even although I managed to perform my usual trick of "spending all my money but not actually having very much to show for it", and will now have to live off water and gruel for the rest of the month. Because I am a workaholic, you see, it's not often that I get to spend an entire day walking around the shops, and as I walk around shoe shops in the same way other, more cultured people, walk around art galleries, this was a nice little break for me.

The salon I had my hair cut in is located inside Harvey Nichols, so I got there early and amused/tortured myself by spending some time winding up the shop assistants by inserting my poverty-stricken and clearly unworthy self amongst the merchandise and making as if I was actually going to reach out and touch something with my grubby, proletariat hands every so often. By the time I left for my hair appointment, I had a whole little gaggle of them following me around the store at a disdainful distance, and when I made my usual pilgrimage to the Christian Louboutin section and actually dared to pick up a shoe, I swear they all gave a collective little gasp and tottered backwards in shock. So that was fun.

Of course, today on the way to the gym, my car (Terry's is still in the garage, being held at ransom) started to make a funny whirring noise, which was different from all of the other funny whirring noises it has made, and which probably means that as soon as we have liberated Terry's car, mine will be incarcerated in its place, and yet more money will be sucked from me. It's not true that you can't get blood from a stone, you know - the folks at our local garage manage it just fine.

Back to the Little Hairdressing Shop of Horrors for me next time, then.

March 04, 2008

Blogophobia: the fear of having nothing to blog about

Inspired by Toni's post yesterday about phobias, I thought to myself: hey! I have me some phobias too! In fact, my mind, it is a strange, creepy town riddled with dark, twisting alleyways which I bet the Forever Amber readers would just love to explore. In other words: I'm a bit strange, me, and unless you'd like to hear about the brief snowfall we had yesterday, I got nothing for you here, so I'm just going to copy Toni take a leaf out of Toni's book and tell you all about all the things that keep me awake at night.

So here we go - a quick tour through my troubled psyche, or "the things I have phobias about".

1. Crabs and other crustaceans. But mostly crabs. ('kabourophobia')

I've touched on this before, but as Terry will tell you, I've never been one to shy away from the idea of repeating myself - I said, I've never been one to shy away from the idea of repeating myself - so let the record show that by far the biggest phobia in my life is the fear of crabs, lobsters, and anything else that lives in the sea, has a shell, and operates more than four legs, some of which contain pincers. So bad is this phobia, in fact, that I wasn't able to copy Toni and show you little pictures of the things I'm scared of, because that would involve looking at pictures of crabs, and would then mean that I wasn't able to view my own blog for as long as it takes for this post to drop off the front page. Yeah, I hate those suckers.

The phobia is so severe, you see, that I can't even look at pictures of crustaceans, and when we're in Florida, and we go to Publix, which has live lobsters in a tank (so that people can just pick them up! With their HANDS! AAAAAARRRRRGH!) I have to close my eyes so that my mum can guide me past it. If I do happen to see a crab, or a picture of a crab, I will generally drop any object I happen to be holding at the time, and I wake up a few times every month standing screaming next to the bed, having just leapt from it in terror, convinced that there are crabs in it. Because, you know how that's always happening?

Despite this, as I noted on my last entry about this, fear of crustaceans is actually quite a good phobia to have, if you're going to have a phobia, because the feckers don't generally travel inland, so unless you live by the sea, you're good. So, yes, 'kabourophobia': recommended. Only, not really.

2. Flying

Like Toni, my fear of flying arrived one day out of a clear blue sky, with absolutely no prior warning. Up until that point I had been flying through the skies with the greatest of ease, and without a single clutching-of-the-armrest moment. Then one day when I was kid, as the plane taxied along the runway, I sat bolt upright in my seat and started screaming, "I WANT TO GET OFF! I WANT TO GET OFF! AAAARGH!" Which I would imagine was probably a little disconcerting for my fellow nervous fliers. I mean, if I was on a plane and a kid started doing that, I'd be the one struggling to free myself from my seat belt  and shouting, "THE LITTLE GIRL KNOWS SOMETHING! TURN THE PLANE AROUND"

As it was, I obviously didn't "know something", but every time I fly, I am burdened with the thought that I do. Every single time I get onto a plane I am overwhelmed with the certain knowledge that THIS IS HOW I AM GOING TO DIE, and I then get to pass an uncomfortable few hours wondering if I should, perhaps, tell someone about my "feeling", my instinct that the flight is DOOMED, DOOMED I TELLS YA!

Incidentally, the fact that I have never yet been in a plane crash (or, indeed, had a particularly turbulent flight) does nothing to assuage my fears: all it proves is that it hasn't happened yet, and by "it" I mean "the crash that will kill me." It's coming. I know it.

3. People who rub their feet together while wearing socks

I don't think this one has a proper "phobia" name, so maybe it's not a "proper" phobia, who knows. All I can tell you is that while the sight of someone rubbing their feet together while wearing socks doesn't frighten me, the way crustaceans do, it does make me want to run out of the room screaming "STOP RUBBING YOUR FEET TOGETHER!" And sometimes I actually do. Sorry, dad. There's just something about that "cotton on cotton" thing that just sets my teeth on edge (See also: wet towels, touching of) although, to be honest, bare feet rubbing together is almost as bad. Yeuch.

4. Actually, just socks in general, really

I hate almost everything about them. I will wear them when I absolutely have to (unlike crustaceans, unfortunately, they're pretty hard to avoid), but I hate the look of them, and, more importantly, hate the feel of them on my feet. Just thinking about them makes me feel ill. This phobia has been ongoing for most of my life, and dates back to my early childhood, when I would reluctantly wear the socks my mum forced upon me, but would pull the toes off them away from my feet so that the socks ended up about 20 feet long, but at least didn't come into contact with my toes.  Urgh.

5. Being beheaded

Again, I'm not sure this counts as a "proper" phobia, because let's face it - no one really enjoys a beheading, do they? Well, no one except Henry VIII, who doesn't really count, on account of being dead and all. I do, however, have a horror of decapitation that makes me unable to read about it, see it in a movie or otherwise think about it without being seriously disturbed for quite a long time afterwards. In fact, I'm pretty sure I think about being beheaded far more than is really healthy. (Is there a particular amount of "thinking about being beheaded" time that IS healthy, though, I wonder?) Luckily this is not a scenario I'm ever likely to face, but as I type this, I've kind of tucked my neck down into my shoulders, tortoise style, and am contemplating having a stiff drink to get the horrible images out of my head...

6. Very deep water

Not just because it could contain crabs and other crustaceans, but because... well, because who knows WHAT it might contain? It's also dark, creepy, and very far away from an environment in which we could actually survive, which is probably why I'm sitting here struggling for breath as I write this, with the thought of sinking ships and bodies of Very Deep Water at the forefront of my mind. It's also the reason why flying across the Atlantic is a particularly mind bending experience for me...

ETA... Having written this a couple of days ago, I suddenly realised I'd missed out some of my biggest phobias completely. Because I am stupid, obviously. So, er, here they are...

Continue reading "Blogophobia: the fear of having nothing to blog about " »

March 02, 2008

Oh my holy God, it's another freaking list...

Hi! Hello! Yes, it's me, I'm still alive! It would be great if I had an actual, honest to God reason why I haven't updated here for almost a week now, but, um, yeah, not so much, really. I mean, I'd love to be able to tell you that it's because I was inundated with offers after my appearance on the Vanessa Feltz show, but clearly that's just crazy talk, because actually last week looked a bit like this:

  • Work - well, d'uh!
    I've not particularly been enjoying work this week, because a) there's been a lot of it and b) I've been working for a long time now, I'd kind of like to be able to just lie around the house now, eating Haribo Mix and reading trashy novels all day. Could someone maybe sort that out for me, please? Also, this week was Oscars Week, which meant that I spent an awful lot of it writing about what people were wearing, and there are only so many different ways you can say "red was popular this year" before your vision starts to glaze over and you find yourself thinking about the Haribo sweets and the trashy novels. You know?
  • The Gym - at which I managed to pick up a "sports injury"
    Yes, I did, I got me a "sports injury". I was actually quite proud of this because if any of the people who were at high school with me are reading this at the moment, they're probably falling around laughing and saying, "Amber? Sports? No way!" (Well, obviously they'll not be saying it exactly like that because, you know, they all used to call me "Spamhead McNaught" in those days. Yes.)
  • Oh yeah, my sports injury!
    It was a sore knee. I got it on the treadmill. I think I must have "pulled" something. I did it on Tuesday, and even although I knew it was stupid, I went back on Wednesday and ran on the treadmill again, and after that I couldn't walk no more, the end.
  • Taking Terry's car to the garage. Yes, AGAIN.
    It's still making that whining noise, and to be honest, the frequent trips to the garage stopped being amusing about, ooooh, five trips ago, and now we just feel like we live there. Guess where we're going tomorrow, for instance? Did you guess, "the garage"? Clever you!
  • Listening to the crazy-ass weather throw the rubbish bins around the street
    England had an earthquake, but up here, well, we just freakishly high winds, and all of the rubbish bins in the street ganged up and started doing the rounds of everyone's gardens, blown by the crazy winds. It sucked.  It's March, you know: in like a lion, probably out like a lion too.
  • Feeling grateful that my new dress actually fits me
    So, yeah, that dress I was having made? Arrived. And fits like a glove. You know, with four fingers and a thumb on each side. No, I jest. It fits like a dress, which reassured me a little because, whew, turns out my waist is EXACTLY WHERE I THOUGHT IT WAS all along. The joy!
  • Feeling depressed about it being March already.
    Because the time, oh how it flies. And you know, last March, Terry and I got married. This March? Kind of sucks in comparison.

February 20, 2008

I Love Lists

It's been a while since we had a good ole list-fest round here, and because I'm not ashamed to fall back on bullet points when I'm feeling lazy, let's welcome with open arms the first Forever Amber Bulleted List of 2008!

  • I have some kind of lurgy. It's kind of disappointing, actually, because it's not a proper lurgy. If it was, I'd be lying in bed right now, eating grapes and demanding that Terry drive down to the supermarket to buy me Lemsip and chicken soup. As it is, I'm just sitting here trying to work with a slightly sore throat, a slightly runny nose and a slight feeling of lurgy.
  • I know beyond doubt, though, that while I am currently not ill enough to retire to bed until I'm feeling better, by the time the weekend comes, and there's absolutely no chance of getting some guilt-free time off work, it will develop into a full-blown flu. Gah.
  • I'm thinking of getting a fringe/bangs. Yes, again. Because that last fringe I got cut? Wasn't actually a fringe. As soon as I finished uploading those pictures of it, I just swept it to one side, and my hair looked exactly the same as it had looked for the past twenty years. This time, though? Will be different. Oh yes. Well, maybe...
  • As soon as my weird, possibly mythical, car problem resolved itself (by which I mean, "It hasn't happened since, so we're just not going to think too hard about that right now, thanks") Terry's car started making a weird whining noise, so today we took it to the garage to have it fixed, and they charged us £110 for the privilege.
  • We decided to walk to the garage to pick the car up.
  • We thought it would be, you know, nice.
  • It wasn't nice.
  • Actually? It was pouring.
  • Because that's what it does in February, dumbass Amber-and-Terry.
  • I had to stand outside the garage in the rain for ten minutes with the dog, while Terry paid for the repair work/whatever it was they did to the car.
  • And while I was standing there, some guy came out, got into his van and did a SARCASTIC WOLF WHISTLE at me. MEN! WHY?!
  • I know it was sarcastic because I was wearing Ugg boots at the time.
  • Before you all judge me on that, let me just remind you: February. Scotland. And let me just say, "Walk a mile in my Ugg boots before you try and tell me I shouldn't own such things."
  • The car is still making the squeaking noise, though.

So, basically you're all up to date.  It exciting being me, it really is. Now, back to my regularly scheduled lurgy...

February 18, 2008

Fait accompli. At freaking last.

It's done. Yes, folks, I know most of you probably assumed that we finished redecorating the bathroom weeks ago, and just forgot to mention it (as if!), but no, it really has taken us THIS LONG to get it done. Given that I started writing about this on January 8th, and the bathroom, hall, living room, kitchen and spare bedroom have been like building sites ever since, you can only begin to imagine the torment I have been through with this.

There has been blood (no, really - Terry cut his hand and bled all over the wall. If the next people to buy the house ever remove those tiles, they'll think they've bought a House of Horrors). There was sweat. There were tears. There was an entire weekend when I had to drive to the gym just to shower (literally just to shower - well, you didn't think I'd actually work out while I was there, did you?). And now, there is a shiny new bathroom to show for it all. A bathroom which isn't actually totally finished yet, but let's just pretend it is, mm'kay?

Anyway, it was only as Terry put the finishing touches to said bathroom last night that it occurred to me that, hey, we totally should have taken some "before" and "after" shots to be able to compare it. Then I could have called this entry A Tale of Two Bathrooms. But we didn't, and so you'll just have to make do with the crappy title I did give it, plus this silent movie I took earlier today, the bathroom being too small for me to take actual photos in it. Watch out for a special guest appearance by The Radiator-Come-Towel-Rail.

Props to Terry for his mad bathroom redecorating skillz. We'd like to thank all our family and friends for their support during this very difficult time. Next month, join us on another crazy journey as we attempt to replace the kitchen without losing our minds or breaking the house again. No, I'm really not joking...

February 12, 2008

Wake Up, Smell the Coffee, Still Don't Get Out of Bed

Well, it turns out that what I actually need in my quest to become A Morning Person is a "Teasmade". Do you see what they did there? It's like a "maid" that makes tea, and also, the tea is "made". Isn't that clever? Also: Hi, I'm Amber, and I'm actually 92. That's why I'm considering either buying one of these, or just traveling back in time to the 1950s, which is when people seem to have actually used them.

(And, you know, I don't even drink tea. I know that, as a British person, that's almost sacrilegious to admit, but I just don't see the point of it. It's coffee all the way here. Mmmm, coffee. Where are all the "Coffemades"? WHERE?)

Anyway, having decided that one of these contraptions really would help me to get out of bed in the morning, and also being quite stingy, really, I looked on eBay and discovered that almost all 'Teasmades' units are made by a company called "Goblin" (I don't know why that makes me laugh, but it surely does), and really do date from the 1950s. See, I didn't just make that up, I did my research. Are you enjoying this impromptu history lesson, by the way? Because I could also tell you a fair bit about radiators, too, if you like? No? You're sure? OK, well, moving on...

As I was saying, most of the "Teasmades" on eBay are described as either "retro" or "vintage" and I quickly discovered that what THAT means is basically, "ain't no way in hell this is going to work, sucker!"  Also, these things seem to be verging on becoming collectors items: there's a whole breed of people out there earnestly discussing the merits of the 1977 Philips Tea for Two versus the Goblin 860. I'm not sure I'm ready to become part of that community, so I got to thinking: I could just buy an ordinary coffee maker, and I could put it in the bedroom and switch it on my very own self in the morning, possibly without even leaving the bed. Then what I could do is, I could set the alarm for thirty minutes earlier than I actually needed to get up, and then sit back and enjoy a leisurely cup of coffee IN MY BED, while maybe flicking through the morning paper, which, in this scenario, would be magically delivered, not just to the house, but RIGHT TO MY BED every morning.

And then I thought, "Screw that, I could just bring the kettle upstairs."

Which is how I came to spend last night sleeping with a kettle next to my bed. I'm such a student, no? "And did it work?" I hear you ask, breathless in your excitement. Well, no, obviously not. It'll take more than THAT to get me out of bed in the morning, I'll tell you: because when 7am came and the alarm went off, I looked at that kettle, sitting peacefully on the floor next to the bed, and I thought, "Yeah, screw you kettle - I don't even WANT your coffee. It's freaking 7am!" Then I rolled over and went back to sleep.

The next step in journey towards becoming a morning person: taking your advice and trying to bring my time down gradually. I WILL DO THIS! I WILL NOT BE DEFEATED BY MORNING! Or, you know, I probably won't do it, but I will try. Wish me luck...