Monday, 29 December 2014

I see dead people.



They’re flickering on the screen in the faded colours of an old polaroid, as real as you or me despite the shaky camera work and the muffled sound.  But then they are you and me.  You with your dandelion hair in a dark aura around your thin face, hardly recognisable from the man you are now, all padded and bearded and jowled.  You look more foreign somehow than I ever thought you were, finer featured, like and exotic girl with a too-big nose.  I gasp when I see myself.  Twenty years younger and twenty pounds thinner, my arms bare and defined, the flesh impossibly tight, and I’m so pretty.  So very, very, gaspingly pretty.  I never knew.  I have my hair up and seem to be wearing a dark lipstick though the seventies were long gone by then, and a top with roses round the neckline that I still remember buying in Portobello Green.  And the children are all there too, the oldest about 7 in a Laura Ashley dress that makes her look like a little shepherdess, The boys achingly beautiful, as was she, both still babies at 4 and 2, the youngest in a red velvet shorts and bib suit that his grandmother bought for him, and the elder smiling sweetly at the camera with not even the ghost of the tentative, guarded man he has since become, visible on his happy, infant face with the wide chocolate drop eyes brimming with happiness.

They seem to always be with you whenever the camera swings towards you, finding you in the same place, unspeaking, zoned out, separate from everyone else.  How did I not see this when I was younger.  How did I not notice you were withdrawn, awkward and antisocial?  And I’m funny, making jokes, laughing, grinning, when I’m not listening to my cousin George murder a country and western song, and quite rightly look bored out of my mind.

It tears my heart into little pieces like its no more than an old tissue stuck in the pocket of a rarely worn coat.  Those dead people, you and I, and our little babies.  Dead without a proper funeral to mourn them.

And as the camera pans around the room, I see the rest of the dead.

My mother, risen again to sing a Scottish song that I learned at her knee, her face animated, her arms joining in the chorus.  She’s in her element.  Gone several years now.

My father, singing One Enchanted Evening, his theme song, his every gesture so familiar to me that I feel him in my bones.  Gone two years before my mother.

My dear brother in law, my cousin Irene, her husband Peter, Arthur, Annie, Uncle Tom, the other Uncle Tom, Aunt Ella, their son Tom (don’t call Tom in heaven or you’ll be trampled in the stampede).  All gone.

We’re sitting watching dead people sing, smoke, get drunk and celebrate, recorded on grainy film so we can watch them briefly resurrected twenty odd years later.

My kids are delighted by their younger selves, enchanted by seeing themselves as babies.  But I can’t look for too long.  Those babies are dead and in their place are pretty nice adults who, to varying degrees, tolerate me, though the beautiful boy in the waistcoat whose eyes jump with devilment hasn’t been home for two years and hasn’t sent me as much as a birthday card in that time.  I preferred being the girl in the video to the woman I’ve become.  i knew my place then.  I was the centre of something.

It strikes me I know more dead people than those left alive.  And you and I will never celebrate another wedding anniversary with our family around us, at least not to each other.  We made it twenty five years, half of what my parents managed.

On the one hand it’s nice to see everyone again as they were in life, but on the other hand, watching these videos are like being put on the rack and tortured.



Sunday, 28 December 2014

Another first

First holiday in three years that nobody has googled 'I'm Lonely' and felt the need to reach out to me.  That's a good thing.  Not that I mind, if you happened to have done this.  You can write.  I'm always happy to hear from you.

Busy work

Ooh how I cried at the Golden Wedding video.  I got through most of it with only a slight biting of the lip until we reached the end and there was a tenor singing 'Time to Say Goodbye' over snapshots of my parents taken over the years, then I burst into painful tears.  It hurts.  Loss is unendurable, and yet endure is the only thing you can do with it.

I read Ruby Wax in a sort of half formed blog on Huffington about activity being her antidote, her escape almost from depression; her drive to do, do, do, to achieve.  I sympathise and recognise that.  Of course I don't have the big house in Notting Hill and the career in television to show for all that drive.  Instead I have kitchen cupboards with empty jars covered with chalboard labels, and painted furniture, and christmas plates with initials painted on them.  I'll wake up in the morning and think, 'yes, I must refinish the kitchen table' and get busy acquiring the kit (I do love kit) and start painting.  Currently I'm driven by the urge to change the world by tidying the study and organising all the kit for the various craft projects I undertake, then make a button box as a present for my bf's mother, and make paper flowers out of music scores for the husband's gf (why?).  But, unlike Ruby, I don't feel that this is necessarily a bad symptom of escaping from my problems and not facing up to my inner turmoil.  In fact, it calms my inner turmoil.  It's a natural tranquiliser for me, to do something with my hands and let my mind go into that 'flow' space, while at the same time creating something, albeit something frivolous, or even downright naff. 

I've been manic with it too, so I do understand the Wax frenzy.  I think I'm in a better place now and that my activity now tends to me more meditative, more nurturing, more therapeutic than juggling knives.  It's all about balance.  However, yes, it's still an escape.  But escape isn't necessarily a bad thing is it?  Hiding from danger is survival.  It's knowing when to hide, how to heal, and when you have to come out fighting.

She's also right about how depression is being not able to do anything.  To be frozen.  And this, when your identity is wrapped up in the things you do, that make you you, is a loss of self.  Who am I if I can't paint, or write, or clean a cupboard?  Just a bag of anxiety, fear and grief?  And if so, does that negate me further?  Of course it doesn't because it's what we do with our lives that makes us who we are, that colours our personalities - not in terms of achievements and goals, just in what makes us tick.  And what makes me tick is clearing out the craft cupboard, and making a box out of papier mache.  It makes me happy.

Blue Christmas

it's over.

Christmas and its overindulgent, overcrowded, overspent, overeaten glory.  I wish I could enjoy it more without the constant shadow of Christmas past looming over me.  Not only the bittersweet nostalgia of lost years and once happy memories with a sting in the tail, but with the resonance of the more recent events that clang in my ears, sometimes all too familiarly.
And then there's the family.  Real families, lest there be anyone, anywhere, still left in any doubt about it, are messier than their Hallmark Channel counterparts (and after my winter of madness when Christmas 24 kept me company through the wee small hours, I am something of an expert on this).  They are a blessing that takes you for granted, and seem to generate a Linus-like miasma of 'stuff' around them as they move through the house, sorry 'their' house, whilst still managing to make you feel like they'd rather be almost anywhere else in the world.

Despite, or possibly as the cause of my own stressful time, I still have this imagined rosy glow of Christmas with the family, where we all sit around toasting marshmallows and each others  like we're re-enacting Little Women, and I'm the beloved Marmee, but it never turns out like that.  It's still pretty marvellous, and an all too fleeting, precious, time that I know is borrowed from an uncertain future, but let no-one say it is easy.  Four, five, six personalities all crammed into two over-furnished, over-heated rooms, burdened by the idiosyncrasies of a lifetime of bickering and real and imagined slights, fanned by the undercurrents of the things nobody says to anyones faces (he always uses my mouthwash, she always wears my pants, she's nicer to the cat than me, the house smells of bum), and it's a wonder that I've only landed in the nuthouse once.

This year, for the first time since we decided to get married, Christmas of too-long-ago to remember - 31, 31 years? - I did not spend the holiday season with my husband.  Instead, he and his new partner took their new baby off to introduce her to her non-Christmas celebrating Jewish relatives in New York where the little mite can be inducted into the schizophrenic world she has been born into; the world of rewritten history:
Husband:  Well we never really celebrated Christmas
We have celebrated Christmas enthusiastically with all the trimmings for the past thirty years and his mother, celebrated Christmas with more pomp than Mrs Claus, with a bigger tree than Harrods, a turkey and canned Cranberry sauce, despite being Muslim.
But, no, now we don't and never have really celebrated, he maintains as his new partner lights her Hanukkah minorah which, presumably, they're not really celebrating either.
And whoosh, thirty years of my life, conveniently forgotten to make way for the new reality.
So he didn't come.
And what a relief it was.
I'm not going to say I didn't miss him a little, for a fleeting moment, since he's been as much part of the tradition as the hijabi woman at the top of the tree, and the Mexican creche, both of which he outdoes in terms of silence, but I didn't miss the itching to get away, the suffering through the three, four, five hours as though it was some sort of ordeal to be endured, like dental surgery, and the false jollity of everyone else trying to make up for his unease.
On Christmas day we watched an old DVD of my parents Golden Wedding Anniversary, shot when my now thirty year old daughter was six, and her brothers four and two respectively.  And everytime the cine camera caught him, he was sitting in the same place, either by himself or with the children, talking to nobody.
How could I have been married to him for all those years and not notice he didn't interact?
Anyway, presumably he's off sitting in someone else's house not talking this holiday season, though the baby as the specialist subject du jour, at least provides a focal point - like a fire in a cold room.  She is adorable, and her every movement is commented on like a sign from an oracle.
We were probably like that too with our first little baby.  It seems odd that those days are long behind me now and he's reliving them all again with someone else at the ripe old ago of 65.  God.  Life is funny and full of unimaginable surprises.  What's scary is at my age, some of those unimaginable surprises are likely to be of the ominous variety!
So, we broke with tradition.  Halleluyah.  What a blessed, blessed relief.  Never, ever again will we spend Christmas together and it's okay.  It's fine.  It's better than fine.
Soon the kids will have families of their own and drift away - already one son has a quasi-wife and hasn't been home for two years, or incidentally sent a card or a present in that time either.  Next year the 'kids' as they still insist on behaving, may be scattered across the world.  Last year my other son was in Brazil.  My eldest daughter will run like the wind, the first time she finds a crack in the door to escape from.  It surely can't be long when it's me and the cats, the BBC, and I don't bother putting up the tree any more because there's no point, and I start volunteering for Crisis at Christmas to give myself something to do.
Doesn't sound that bad.
Glad it's over.
Bah Humbug.
But I'll still treasure the memories, and fold them all away in tissue paper and cotton wool with the tree decorations and store them carefully.
And throw out all the silly annoyances with the uneaten food in the tupperware at the back of the fridge.

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Please Release Me


I am an intelligent woman.  I’ve raised four kids, I manage the day to day of a small company, I run a house, a home, an office.  I’m efficient.  Okay, so why the hell can’t I make this damn diet work?

I know the principles.  I’ve done it before.  Twice.  And each time it worked.  But three weeks in - eating chicken, salad, low fat everything, no sugar everything else, in other words nothing with taste – I stand on the scales and the weight loss in all that time is four pounds.  Although I seem to have gained back one of those pounds, so grand total: three.

Three.

Three is a not-particularly bad bout of stomach flu.  It’s a diuretic.  It’s the difference between pre and post menstrual.  IT IS NOT THREE WEEKS OF RUDDY CHICKEN.

When I think of all the things I’ve denied myself:  the football mid-match potato wedges, the pre-match ice cream.  The toast in the morning.  The butter on the toast in the morning.  The crumpets, the scones, the tea and biscuits. The pasta.  The pastry.  I mean, I have no trouble knowing why I gain weight, but having cut all that crap out, why isn’t the fat dropping off me?

It’s not that the science of dieting is all 0% fat Greek yoghurt to me.  I know what to do – eat less, move more, cut out the carbs, check the fat and sugar content in foods.  I could do it as my specialist subject on Mastermind.  So I eat the dreary omelettes and walk an hour a day.  I cheer myself up (the term is relative) with a 10 cal jelly.  And yet.  The bum remains visible from space.  The muffin top continues to spill from the top of my ‘fat’ jeans, which in turn cling to my legs like they got a fright in the drawer.

It’s not the worst thing in the world to be overweight.  I can still go outside without having to hire a marquee to cover my bulk.  My wrinkles are nicely padded, and the second chin is only visible when I slump on the sofa with the laptop on my stomachs.  I look, to a kind person, comfortably chubby,  and to the hater like a Hallowe’en pumpkin (cos I’m wearing an orange dress), but I can suck that up, and my belly in at the same time.  I’m not hiding away in the Obese Witness Protection Program.  I’m out in the world, large and proud.  I can live with this.  But I’d rather not.  And so having taken the measures to eradicate a bit of blubber, why the hell isn’t it leaving?

Everything else has (kids, husband, youth, thigh-gap. memory, natural hair colour, my credit rating), so what is wrong with the fat?  Why doesn’t it go?

I would give up in a heartbeat, and embrace my curves, but there are two problems with this.  One:  due to my appetite for saturated fat, let’s face it – I won’t stay at my current size.  While it’s hard to persuade the chubb to go, like that last guest at the party who hangs around in the doorway, chatting, it’s easy peasy to gain more weight.   Fat is like the people who never invite you to dinner but are only too happy to turn up to your place when you issue an invitation, and who don’t bring a bottle.  So, if I can’t lose the weight when I’m dieting it stands to reason (reason?  Where is reason in all this craziness?) that if I begin eating like a ‘normal’ American Mid-Westerner again, it’ll pile back on.

But the second reason is the real one behind my search for a waist.  Clothes.

I have loads of them.  And I love them.  They’re hanging on the rail in my walk-in closet saying; ‘wear me, wear me…’ and I can’t because they don’t ruddy fit.

So I have this picture in my head of  myself wearing the ‘pumpkin’ dress and looking more like, say a squash or a speciality courgette,  with thinnish legs sprouting from the bottom.  Maybe some ankles even.  I don’t care about health, particularly.  I don’t care about having my arse look big in jeans.  What I care about is simply being able to wear my frocks and look… - well I’d settle for nice.

It’s not too much to ask is it?

So please.  Fat.  Just Flab Off.


Wednesday, 20 August 2014

Malice in Chunderland

I am not real.  I am a fantasy.  My own fantasy, admittedly - I think, let's be frank, nobody with a real, interesting life, would dream up someone as banal as me.  Even the fantasy of myself is pretty lame.  And this is it:  I collect objects that correspond to a spurious alternative universe where I have dinner parties, appreciative family meals, friends even, and grandchildren.  I may well have written here before about the wardrobe; the wardrobe that exists for a life I do not and never will lead, in which I have opera coats for the opera I go to once every two years (and don't enjoy), and evening wraps to wear with the evening dresses I don't own at the gala dinners etc that I never attend.  I have a drawer full of lingerie for the sex life I no longer even aspire to, and nighties for nights in which I will never wear them.  I have gardening clothes - and yes, I do garden, but I do that in the nightie that I don't wear at night, but slip on in the morning.  I have decorating clothes, but tend to paint in whatever I happen to be wearing at the time that the notion to redecorate hits, and then once they're splattered in paint (along with my hair, skin, and all surrounding surfaces - because I never put the old sheets down that I keep in the 'decorating' cupboard for this purpose) I either keep going until they're ruined and become 'new' decorating clothes that I'll never wear, or take them off and do it naked.  Yep.  I admit it.  I am a naked decorator.  I also have DIY clothes.  But I don't ever do DIY.  I have aprons.  They hang on a peg unworn.  In fact the only garment from my speciality wardrobe that I do actually use is my 'football' gear - leather trousers and longjohns that keep me snug on the terraces.

So that's the reason for one walk in wardrobe, four storage boxes and three chest of drawers.  Oh and because I'm at the top of my weight spectrum none of the 'normal' clothes fit me either.

But this isn't about frocks and costumes.  This is about props.  This is about 'Eric' the foot high bunny cookie jar that in my imaginary universe, one of the unborn as yet, imaginary grandchildren will at a future date, reach their chubby little hand into, and remove a homemade cookie from, and love me that little bit more.  This is about the collection of fruit shaped jam jars, that the same imaginary grandchild, or one of its siblings, will demand to have on the table when I'm making them breakfast from scratch when they come to stay in Granny's non-existent house in the country, and have a boiled egg from Granny's non-existent chickens.    This is about the ice-cream sandwich maker that the self-same grandchildren will crow over when I give them the star shaped one, made with my own home made ice cream from the ice-cream maker, and...  well you get the picture.  And if you don't, I have them all on facebook.

None of my children even want kids.  And you can guarantee when they do, those chubby little grandchildren will not be allowed sugar, and probably not allowed anywhere near evil granny.

And still I dream.  I can immediately envisage the dinner party where I take the lid off the new cheese plate that I bought this week on Columbia Road.  Who eats cheese any more?  Who isn't lactose intolerant, or gluten-free (which puts paid to the sweet Indonesian bread baskets with the net cloche lids)?  Who has dinner parties?  Who has friends?  I don't.  I can't even get my children to have dinner with me, without watching them pick over the food like it's impregnated with americium-241.  But, nevertheless the cheese plate is bought.  As well as a jelly mould (ground up bones anyone - oh you're a vegetarian?)   Big daughter is leaving for a couple of months to travel to Japan to acquaint herself with real radiation, and in my innocence I decide, well I'll cook her a farewell dinner.  Who needs friends when you have family?

Of course, it's all a ploy to use the cheese plate.  The meal has a centre piece, and it's green with a mouse on top and cats frolicking around the side.  (In life as well as ceramic.)  So I go to Waitrose and buy a nice hunk of something Italian.  I buy a jar of pickled pears to go with it.  I get some asparagus (I have an asparagus dish too - but in the end I forget to use it - another of the casualties of the kitsch collector is memory) and I make a pie.

It's to be torta da porro.  Leek pie - a Tuscan dish according to google.  Big daughter is a vegetarian so there can be no meat.  Bf is also a vegetarian but will eat sand if you assure him no animal has died in it.  Small daughter is just picky and doesn't eat anything.  But I'm inspired.  Leek pie it will be, except neither Waitrose nor Marks and Spencer have leeks.  Tesco is out too.  Okay so torta dei zucchini then, because everyone has courgettes.

Courgettes, however, are mostly water.  Water that keeps on coming.  I am surprised they don't export them to arid countries as an alternative to digging a well.  I add eggs.  I add a bit of cheese.  I think it's going to be like spanakopitta, but courgettapitta.  I lay out the filo pastry and scatter toasted almonds between the sheets, spoon in the filling, bake and voila - 35 minutes later it is ready to flip.  This method has worked well with chicken twice over the past week, but today - no siree.  It looks good until I turn it over and sauce oozes out, all over the bottom of the oven.  The eggs have not done their job and bound the pie together.  Rather the eggs have gone off on holiday and left the filling to run amok - home alone.  It's a pie in three parts.  Pastry.  Filling.  Liquid.

It tastes okay.  It does.  The daughters poke it with a fork and leave it on their plate.

This was not part of the fantasy ladies and gentleman.  This is not the stuff dreams are made of, neither culinary nor maternal.   In none of my alternate universes do crap meals made by mother feature high on the aspirational list of things to do before I die.  I know there are things more soul destroying that having your kids exchange knowing glances over the kitchen table, before they run out to the corner shop and buy the ingredients for brownies, which they have for supper instead (and don't bloody offer round), while one can only imagine glumly what they are saying about your cooking to your detriment.

Bf ate it.  He said it tasted nice.  I ate it.  It was ok.  Just ok.  Not horrible.  Bf wouldn't know a good meal from a three-legged donkey unless it comes curried, but he did like it.

Still, I did get to use the cheese plate.  Though now it's tainted with memories of inadequacy and failure.

That's the thing about imaginary lives.  They are just that.  Made up.
delicious tomatoes from the greenhouse on the revamped tea tray for the imaginary tea parties

bad pie

cheese cloche

good pie

fantasy summer dinner parties will have these troughs full of ice and cold beers

oh granny, what lovely jam jars you have