Thursday 29 October 2009

Huge Handluggage

I read somewhere that having a big handbag creates the impression you are thinner. I am now the proud owner of the largest handbag in the universe. This is good news as it means I don't have to visit the scary lady at the diet club any more. It is doubly good news as I have lots of space for carrying the iced buns. It is hard to find things in it though and makes fishing for glasses or coins quite frustrating as most of my upper body has to dive into the deep recesses to retrieve them, which is embarrassing at checkouts.

I can't decide whether it's better to carry it over my shoulder (although the straps aren't quite long enough and tend to slide off), or with the straps in the crook of my arm. It's odd, but carrying a bag over my shoulder feels a bit trendy (like flinging a jacket over and being all cas (as in casual, but can't work out the spelling for the abbreviation), whereas carrying it over my arm feels a bit bossy and like I should have a diamonte broach on my lapel. So not only does this bag transform me into a tall, slim being, it has an effect on my personality. Being a bit self conscious of it at lunchtime today, I was swinging it back and forth like a satchel. Someone commented on how carefree I was - proving yet another personality transformation, I was impressed.

So, don't feel down, get out your handbag and take it for a walk and explore all your personality possibilities. Make sure it's packed full of goodies though, you never know when an emergency tea break might be called for.

Wednesday 28 October 2009

The Working Lunch

Sometimes it's hard to beat my job for fun. Granted, I did have a stressful morning which included a few minutes where I felt I had completely lost the plot, but a cup of tea and a glazed session of staring at the traffic stopping and starting outside my window sorted out most of the problem. The afternoon had an unpromising meeting scheduled. It started badly (it was that sort of a day) with me not realising the meeting was taking place off site, which explained why the other person hadn't turned up. So, a rather rushed band of us legged it to a local leisure centre to meet a caterer about an event. I hadn't realised this was a tasting session, which involved demonstration plates of food showing off the chef's skills. I felt a pang of guilt about the toasted panini I had already scoffed for lunch, as plate after plate of delicious dinners came out of the kitchen. 'No, no not more' we all cried as some sea bass, potato rosti and spring greens squeezed onto the table next to the stuffed chicken breasts and vegetable parcels. (And this was after some wonderful mushroom soup and warm goat's cheese salad starters). Then, just when we thought we couldn't eat any more, out came the biggest slab of rib-eye steak you could fit on a dinner plate, it was so big, it had to sit on top of the vegetables. As we groaned and clutched our stomachs, the caterer ominously said, 'I hope the bread and butter pudding is on it's way'. Sure enough, out came three different versions of the famous dessert, with chocolate ice cream and fruit. I never, ever drink at work, but the offer of brandy at lunchtime seemed too exotic to be true, so, as it came out despite my remonstrations, I had a little slug to keep me going. It seemed a shame to waste it, and while my back was turned, a colleague thoughtfully poured it into a water bottle, which fitted rather nicely into my handbag.

Tuesday 27 October 2009

Banking on Failure

It used to be so straightforward, you’d go into a bank, join a queue, and get sorted.

Now, when you go into a bank, there seem to be more people meeting and greeting than actually seeing to customers’ needs. One I came across was very good at pointing me in the direction of the nearest empty desk, and, when the employee finally appeared, they said I needed to be waiting in a queue upstairs. It must be a cushy number, smiling and pointing and getting paid. Bit like being a politician mounting the party conference platform. They’re trained to point and wave into the crowd, makes them look like they’ve got friends, apparently. Come to think of it, not a bad thing for bankers to start doing.

In the bank I visited today, the person dealing with all enquiries other than straightforward withdrawls and deposits stood awkwardly at a shelf with a computer on it, with his backside up against the printer. As there was no desk as such, customers lingered in the ‘lounge’ area. No one dared sit on the sofas in case they lost their place and had to wait another eon. The loitering mass got a bit shifty and the lack of desk boundary meant you got too close and accidentally heard the financial traumas of the person in front. A toddler with his mother behind me expressed what we were all thinking, by lying on his back in the middle of the circulation area and yawning loudly. Eventually a bullet proof door painted bright red (possibly to camouflage the blood splatters I thought ruefully) was flung open and a harassed manager came out to assist the crowd. She helpfully told me that I could no longer do the transaction I had successfully done in the bank many times before, that I needed to use the card. ‘ I don’t have a card’, I helpfully interjected. She looked quite annoyed, took all my documents into a secret cave where bankers hide, like Bin Laden, and eventually came back saying she’d get into trouble, but she’d done it, in a tone that demanded my gratitude. Having spent most of my lunch hour in the queue there wasn’t much I could offer in the way of gratitude. Maybe she could be grateful she still had some customers, although it wouldn’t be for long judging by the comments they were making in the psuedo lounge, which had since taken on the feel of a party no one wanted to be at. They could start offering shorts, that would help. By the time we all got pressed up against the stressed man at the shelf, we’d be squiffy enough to sign up for anything and add extra noughts on our loans.

Monday 26 October 2009

Thirty Seven and a Half Minutes

The clock on the mantelpiece stopped this week, broken at 10.37. It struck a chord and after a while, I realised it was the time of one of the morning lesson bells at school. We had these really weird thirty seven and a half minute lessons. It's odd how watching the clock hands move round interminably slowly to 10.37 over a period of seven years, leaves an indelible mark. Break followed at 11.15am. The rich girls had sticky buns to eat, probably why I've spent a lifetime eating them whenever possible, to subconsciously join the elite. We used to sit in small groups on the desk tops, chatting away. There would be a lot of gossip about who had 'gone the furthest' with the boys. There was an air of shock and disbelief when one girl did bravely admit in the cloakroom that she had 'done it'. Apart from being gloriously horrified at her confession, the only other thing I remember about her is that she had hairy legs. Strange, the odd bits that stick in your mind.

Most of the classrooms were the Victorian type, high windows to stop anything distracting us outside, vaulted ceilings and wooden desks with lids and strange holes for long gone ink wells. The wood and chalk dust had a particular smell, not unpleasant, just a mustiness that became so familiar it felt friendly. There were some modern classrooms in the trendy, cuboid science block.

The chemistry lab always smelt of the strange potions in quaint, glass-stoppered jars, and all those puffs of conjurer's smoke in the fume cupboard. The physics lab was always warm and sunny, which helped make up for my dislike of the subject. The biology teacher relied heavily on Banda machine copies on which the writing was reproduced rather faintly, and with a distracting shininess. As it was her own, loopy handwriting it was quite hard to read, and I failed to fully 'digest' the life cycle of the tape worm and other intriguing facts. The maths teacher had a bad lisp and started each lesson with 'do shit down', which resulted in giggles.

We had a music teacher who looked so old she was almost fossilised in chalk dust. She played epic works on the school's grand piano with great gusto, arms flying into the air between stanzas, as if flicking cobwebs out of her blue rinse perm.

The PE teacher seemed determined to give detentions to any girl not wearing regulation blue knickers and, with hindsight, possibly took more interest than was appropriate in checking out our underwear for signs of anarchy.

It was a school where a roll-around blackboard was considered pretty hot technology. I might be exaggerating, but I do believe the lessons were so unutterably dull, even the use of coloured chalk by a teacher made them a bit more exciting.

Girls' secondary schools were moribund places indeed, I hope they've improved. At least I don't suppose anyone has thirty seven and a half minute lessons anymore.

Saturday 17 October 2009

The Train to Nowhere

I was on a train home from Oxford this evening. At the start of the journey, there was a group of lean young men with clever faces, studying books and jotting notes, ensuring a glittering future for themselves. Behind them was a grey suit with white hair, bags under his eyes and a lost expression. He must have been missing the buffet car, as he was meticulously scooping bogeys out of his nose and popping them into his mouth. He needn't have been so thoughtful, the floor was pretty bad and no one would have noticed if he'd dropped them. It was coated in the detritus of the day; a torn back page from a newspaper with a headline screaming bad news for a local club; a sweet wrapper, and a crushed can rolling past a dehydrating gobbit of phlegm.

There was very little relief to the monotony of the journey, apart from listening to the inappropriate intonation of the automated announcements. They made the prospect of arriving at Feltham so exciting, even the bacteria in the gobbit must have wanted to get off.

I made the mistake of visiting the 'restroom'. The door didn't lock and necessitated an awkward sitting position with one foot wedged to prevent intruders entering. It was tricky to wash my hands as there was a beer bottle rolling around in the sink. It was all accompanied by the gagging smell of testosterone laden urine that covered most of the floor. I went back to my seat, past a couple of ticket inspectors bemoaning the drunkards that always came out with the same excuses for not having valid tickets, and how intimidating it was dealing with them. They were so engrossed in their conversation, they missed a youth swaying past them towards the 'bathroom' with one hand clamped round a half drunk bottle of Lambrini. I had to admire the sensitivity of his 'nose', that he felt he would be better able to appreciate the subtle blend of grapes over the stench of dried piss. It would make for an interesting conversation in the off licence, 'Could you suggest a cheeky little rose to compliment the aroma of a train toilet?'. Perhaps, I thought hopefully, he was going to the toilet to tip it away. No, a few moments later he came staggering back to kindly share the beverage among his friends, who I noticed were all too polite to remark on the lack of wine glasses.

My station was approaching, so I made for the perspex partitions that carried the greasy fingerprints of previous train travel victims. As I waited to get off, I heard one woman ask her friend, 'Where are we in then?'.

The friend replied, 'We're in nowhere. We're in Twickenham'.

Wednesday 14 October 2009

Model Behaviour

Most of us are aware of the vpl (visible panty line), but not much is written about the visible bra line. It is very annoying to get a bra wrong. Too small and you have deep lines etched across your chest, creating not two, but four wobbly sections which look unattractive. Too loose and everything moves around untethered and uncomfy. It is almost as important to your daily happiness as a well fitting pair of shoes. Get it wrong and you feel quite grumpy by the time you get home from work. And don't even mention going for a run without adequate upholstery. Fortunately I am not built to be a natural athlete, apart from a maybe weightlifting. I am hewn from stocky, solid genes which helpfully create a stable, low centre of gravity. Unlike Claudia Schiffer who I seriously doubt could haul a dingy out of the Thames with one hand. Could she even lift a 25kg bag of coal? Moving coal and dingies is obviously much more useful in real life than posing in high heels with shiny, blonde hair and a pout. Anyone can pout. Thinking about it, I could pout while I fill the coal scuttle up. I could wear high heels while I do the vacuuming (hang on, didn't I see somewhere that men pay good money to do that?).

So, I'm nearly there. I'm nearly a supermodel.

Oh, and if you would like to pay me lots to vacuum my house, I'll turn a blind eye to your attire.

Monday 12 October 2009

One in the Eye

When I got home last night after cycling back from work, I sat on the settee for a minute to catch my breath (and the end of Deal or No Deal) hurting nobody, when a tiny fly dive bombed my eyeball. It pinged as it tried to penetrate my lens, then wriggled a lot, cunningly avoiding my finger nail as I scraped it across that little ledge between my lash and eyeball. It's probably got a name, the ledge that is, not the fly. Well, perhaps the fly had a name.

I'm sure it's dead now. I can feel it, lodged under my eyelid, but eerily (or eyeily?) there is no movement.

It's rather unpleasant to have experienced death so 'in my face'. I'm also annoyed that out of all the cubic metres available to it in my sitting room, the fly chose to collide with my eye. I expect this is how astronauts feel when out of the infinite expanse of the universe, one of those pesky flakes of paint collide with their sensitive equipment (I'm talking about the outside of the space shuttle here - you're very naughty people sometimes).

Being an even minded sort of person, I can feel sorry for the little fly, and will spare a thought for it at intervals today. A little fly funeral maybe - I could hum a hymn on my bike this morning and say a little prayer for the fly soul as it makes the journey to join his mates who have been splattered across windscreens.

Sunday 11 October 2009

Remember My Name

We went to see Fame at the cinema yesterday - it looked like it might have been a bad idea by the time we were embedded in the queue for tickets among precocious pre-teens. It had a 'started so we'll finish' sort of feel to it, so we ended up in a reassuringly half empty auditorium, a long way away from any theatre school types (not that there's anything wrong with theatre school types, it's just I didn't want to sit near them). The film was OK, the plot even thinner than expected (not even the obligatory dancing competition), but the music was rather good. It was all interspersed by 11 year olds filing past us at regular intervals to go to the ladies to giggle and gossip. They were very polite and kept saying 'sorry' (with nicely rounded vowel sounds), but it did get a bit tiresome. In spite of all this, the film worked it's magic, and I found myself wondering why I hadn't yet written the most acclaimed monologue of the 21st century, or penned some 'keeping it real' rap lyrics. I think it might be quite fun to write some middle class, middle aged, middle management rap. I think I stand more chance of being a success with that, than donning a sparkling bowler and belting out 'Cabaret' for Simon Cowell.

I've just checked the lyrics for 'Come to the Cabaret' and was surprised to read the line, 'Put down that knittin?...that book and the broom'.

Sounds dangerously middle England to me.

Thursday 8 October 2009

Tapping into my Potential

A plumber's van went past at the traffic lights this morning. I'd seen the lights go through their cycle twice already, so was feeling a bit dull around the edges. The plumber's van had a rather uninspiring decoration on the side. Although it was a large box van, only the back end was decorated with a monochrome photograph of a 'trendy' sink (although it reminded me of the ones at school that were demolished many years ago). Perched on one corner was a woman clad in a style which can only be politely described as, 'up for it'. A slip dress, with the strap falling off one shoulder and high heeled, sparkly sandals. One hand roamed casually through her fashionably messy hair as she gave as coy a look as her heavily made up eyes would allow.

I'm going to try it tomorrow morning. I'll dig out those shoes I bought for lying down, and I'll clean my teeth with my back to the sink while practicing my come hither look at the laundry basket.

You'll know if I'm any good because I'll be coming in a plumber's van near you soon!

Wednesday 7 October 2009

Salad - why can't it be more filling?

I've just eaten some very tasty rocket and spinach, with a pleasant dressing, some tomatoes and parmesan. I think it's a design fault that the rocket or spinach leaf don't actually fill you up though. You munch your way through, enjoying the little explosions of flavour as they bounce off your palate, feel virtuous that you are not resorting to the pastry encrusted sausage roll or doughy bun, but the plate is empty, and so is your stomach. I've come to realise that the amount of leaves you need to constitute a hearty meal wouldn't actually fit on a normal sized plate. So, my latest invention is the salad trough. Forget dainty tableware and think volume and quantity.

Either that, or serve the salad with a chunk of dead animal that you can really sink your teeth into. Yes, it might have frolicked through the spring time fields of daffodils, or clucked across to the village pond in the late afternoon sunshine followed by appealing, Disney-eyed offspring, but all it really wanted to do, was to relax on your plate surrounded by lettuce.

Thank you, small furry or feathered creatures, for your generous sacrifice to hungry people everywhere.

Monday 5 October 2009

A Sign of the Times

I keep buying the Sunday paper week on week. It's become a habit I'm not sure I can break. I enjoy the property pages despite the smug couples standing in front of bijou cottages with straplines declaring how much money they've made, and minimalist interiors only the seriously depressed could enjoy (It's got to be tidy! It's got to be clean!). I like the review of the week even though my favourite coloumnist stopped being funny quite a long time ago. I keep reading in hope that the cutting edge humour re-emerges from the grumpiness. The main news is always interesting and so is the colour supplement. This still leaves quite a lot of dross. I once tried to dispose of this at the bin outside the newsagent, but wrestling with the polythene packets and leaflets, advertising fitted library furnishings, in a strong wind turned into a muddle like that party game you used to play putting the pages back in order (still don't quite get where the fun was in that). So as soon as I get back home and settled onto the settee - cup of tea at the ready - I fling onto the floor the what-to-do-with-all-your-money pages (too depressing if you haven't got any), the job ads (I don't want to be the CEO of a multinational - possibly why I don't need to read the money management section), the what's on guide (I'll only end up wanting to watch something on a channel the aerial last picked up two storms ago), the petrol head pages, the geeky techy news and the travel advice (more smug people, only this time tanned, thin, and in white bikinis). I would like sections on travel featuring more 'comfortably' proportioned people with cellulite, someone featuring a house that looks really loved and lived in, jobs you can apply for without a perma-tan and a Jag, and money advice for the financially disadvantaged. Oh, I'd like the colour supplement to demonstrate gender equality, and every time there is an 'arty' photo of a woman with few or no clothes on, they feature a man in the same satorial state. It's not a lot to ask is it?