Sunday, 29 August 2010

That Was The Week That Blogged #22


Number 22! Good grief, that's a lot of awards I've handed out over the last year or so - because, despite my hiatus in the middle, I've been doing That Was The Week That Blogged since August 2009. Looking back now I really wish I hadn't taken that lengthy break in the middle because I still think it's the best blog award out there (even if the rules mean I can never win it). I'm particularly happy this week, because all the winners are writers who have never won the award before and it's always especially lovely when that happens.

Now, the next bit is going to read like a complaint. Virtually nobody has nominated any blogs to me this week. You know the drill, you know that I really want help from people and you know how to get involved because I say all that at the end of every TWTWTB post, every week. If you've all stayed silent because you think I'm doing a fabulous job then of course I'm very flattered (and I am doing a fabulous job, let's face it), but I can't get round to reading everything in the whole world and it can be more than a little discouraging. So don't feel you have to join in, but on the other hand if you don't, if nobody reads them, comments on them or nominates posts you can't feel too upset if eventually I get bored of persevering in the face of all that indifference and just give up.

Sorry, I've reread that and it is a complaint, isn't it? Never mind. I feel an awful lot better for getting it off my chest. So let's press on.

TWTWTB is my weekly award to the three best things I've read in blogland in the previous seven days. Here are this week's winners:

1. Dear old Fred by The stuff in between

"He inflicted another type of punishment onto my youngest sister when one day he decided to make her copy the entire textbook verbatim. When she finally completed it and presented the laboriously handwritten packet to him, he took it from her and with his typical French smirk and without even giving her the decency to admire the pages, he ripped them up in front of her face."

I read a blog post this week that said that writing was at its best when it exposed god or the devil. I have to say, I couldn't disagree more with that, but without coming out with a similarly sweeping statement I'll say something else. Writing involves an expert balance between telling too much and not telling enough, and good writing involves walking that tightrope with real skill. There are tons of blogs out there who tell too much; minute detail nobody needs, all that viscera, people sticking their heart on a screen and leaving it to pump away, squirting metaphorical blood all over you. And then there are blogs which look ever so clever but tell you nothing at all, pretty words and images and knobbing around with language but no end product. "What's is about?" you ask yourself. "I have no idea." you reply.

Jeannie's piece here is excellent in a lot of ways, but I think that the way she understands that balance is my favourite thing about it. It's a story, a lovely portrait, warts and all, of a funny little man who occupied a place in her childhood for a time teaching her and her sister French. But it's more than that; you get glimmers of the scene of unrest that sits behind it, you get a real sense of the stabilising part he and his lessons played but Jeannie is far too clever to beat you over the head with her family trauma. At the end of the post I feel like I can see him in my mind. It's only when I read it for the second or third time that I realised that she'd told me virtually nothing about his appearance at all. Clever writing, that.

2. Summertime and the living is, well, easy. Or at least, so it seems from here. by Brown. Paper. Bag.

"My little black car will be a hot box of steam. When I jump in it, my sunglasses will fog up from humidity. I’ll be able to wear bright colours for a full six months, instead of the customary winter blacks and greys. I'll be on my way to a lunch with the girls, we'll be drinking, eating and laughing - as we can only do under the big bright blue umbrella sky of summer."

Why wish the days away when you can write them away? I loved this post. The structure of it works like a charm, and in a short space of time Marbles (who writes the blog) takes us from anticipation to excitement to frustration to exhaustion. Lots of beautiful images and sentences in this one, a veritable feast; eating fruit over the sink, a nervous glance at a jumper, a jumpy and unshaven dog. This post has a lot in common with summer; bright, gorgeous and you could lose yourself in it, but unlike summer it doesn't outstay its welcome.

3. The Lady Who Hates Milk by Ordinary Art

"The phone rings, but she doesn’t pick it up. She doesn’t feel much like talking. Instead, she turns up the small radio she keeps on the kitchen counter. She finds a station that plays unstructured Jazz. She turns the volume up loud enough to wake the neighbors who are most likely sleeping off a hangover in the apartment next door."

This is a small and perfect piece, a superbly nuanced portrait of a lady. Again, that push and pull of what to tell and what to conceal is perfectly judged. After I read it, I wasn't sure if I liked her, or if the narrator liked her, or if I was meant to. And then I thought that I was probably meant to realise that. It's all very Inception how writers can put ideas in your mind, isn't it? This is like photography with words and (this is a high compliment, believe it or not) it almost made me feel like writing fiction of my own. I'm quite new to Kelly's blog but based on this I will definitely be back. This is a terrific, subtle piece and again, shows how much better things read when they have a clear beginning, middle and end. I really liked all three, here.

Here's what you can do to support That Was The Week That Blogged. First, pop by and check all the winners out in full. Feel free to tell them I sent you, in fact it's practically compulsory.

Secondly, if you read (or write) a blog post you think would be a worthy winner next week, either comment here, drop me a mail or Tweet at me with the hashtag #TWTWTB. The best ones will be announced on the blog and on Twitter every Sunday.

Last of all of course, if you won this week: congratulations! Feel free to take the rather fetching picture at the top and copy it onto your sidebar. Of course, I won't be offended if you don't.

Friday, 27 August 2010

MLS is elsewhere

My post today is over at fashion blog Style Sage. They have a great site writing about womenswear and menswear (the latter being much rarer on the blogosphere, I find) and have an excellent mix of opinion pieces, reviews and street photography. They contacted me a while back, saying "You write quite a lot about people's outfits. Would you like to do a guest post for us?"

With hindsight that's quite perceptive of them, and if the idea of me writing about men's style seems a bit incongruous I've got two things to say. First of all, I know! To be honest I couldn't agree more. Secondly, in my defence if I was thin I can assure you I would be impeccably dressed all the time. If I was thin I would make it my personal mission to make Cary Grant look like a tramp. I wouldn‘t succeed, of course, but that's beside the point; in any case I bet Cary Grant never had a KFC Boneless Banquet or enjoyed a Chicken Cottage Mountain Burger while trolleyed on a leatherette banquette at three in the morning, so the last laugh is undoubtedly mine.

Anyway, if you can get past the incongruity, or have simply begun to piss yourself laughing and are looking for further fuel for your hysterics, please pop over and read my post. Do leave nice comments on their site and any incredulous piss-taking ones here. Deal? I will put a slightly fuller version of the post up here next week as I’ve realised I have a few other things to say on this subject. You know, sort of a “director’s cut”. (See? I’ve been mingling with the fashion world for minutes and already I’m talking like a bell end).

Mr London Street for Style Sage

Oh, one more thing: I should add that Style Sage is currently in the running for “Best New Fashion Blogger” in the Cosmopolitan Awards, a title I think they would richly deserve even if they hadn’t buttered me up and got me to write something for their site. I’ve gone and voted for them (just once, mind, no hanging chads or deleted cookies here) and I hope you’ll pop over and do the same. The link for that is here.

And before you ask, because I just know you will, no there isn’t a category for "best faintly melancholy and occasionally filth-ridden unsung blog from an unfashionable English town". I know that for sure because I read the whole site several times just in case. Rats, overlooked again.

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Festival traffic

I have had company on my trips into town the last few mornings. Kelly’s car has broken down again and is at the garage, so instead she leaves the flat with me at quarter past eight and we wend our way through the streets together, heading for the train station. On that walk, I realise that the world looks different when you’re not on your own. I suppose that’s true in general, but I’m reminded of it as I pass, accompanied for once, through the sea of grumpy faces that washes over me every morning. I wonder if they notice that I’ve changed, or if they notice me at all. I don’t clock any incredulous looks from people discovering that I do in fact have a mate, which is some consolation. I know that for a fact, because I am checking extra hard.

The conversation on the way in is not something I’m used to; what meetings we have to look forward to that day, what calls we’re going to be on, who’s in the office and who’s not, minor intrigues. “My ginger wingman is back today” I tell Kelly, referring to Iain who has finally returned from two weeks of elsewhere, and as I say it I realise how much I’ve missed him. This low-level chatter is nice, it makes me realise we so rarely have those kinds of chats and I bet there are plenty of couples who do. If you set the words to music they wouldn’t make for much of a song, but I find them preferable to anything I’d ordinarily have pumping out through my headphones.

We arrive at the train station to find it transformed. Barriers are up everywhere and the whole area outside is crawling with people. Then I remember; of course, it’s the festival this weekend. All human life is there, provided you live in some kind of Logan’s Run parallel universe where nobody makes it past twenty-five. Jubilant festival-goers happier than anybody has a right to be before midday, resplendent in giant loose jeans, band t-shirts and preposterous hats, mill around chirping to each other. I don’t even have to eavesdrop well to hear the word “like” featuring as often as five times in every sentence.

Kissing Kelly goodbye and wading through the crowds I pick up my coffee from Natanong in the tiny kiosk.

”Are you better today?” she asks me.

I was exhausted the previous morning, and I'd said so when she asked how I was. I’m surprised that I was honest. I’m equally touched that she remembers.

”Just about. Nearly the weekend! You’re on holiday next week, aren’t you?”

She nods, a huge bright smile in an otherwise dingy place.

“Are you going anywhere nice?” I say, painfully aware that I sound more than a bit like a hairdresser.

”No, just relaxing at home for a whole week. Away from here.” she says, waving in a miniscule gesture to mark out the cramped space which classes as her workplace. God knows how long she spends every day cooped up in there.

“When was the last time you had a holiday?”

“January.”

I proof-read a variety of possible responses in my head, find them all patronising.

The time it takes to pick my way through the crowds makes me late for my bus and I see the door close as I approach and it drifts into the stream of cars, too fast to catch but still in tantalising slow motion. It’s the festival traffic, you see. You have to leave early to have any chance of getting anywhere on time, something I had completely forgotten.

Deserted, I look back across the road at the party starting to happen outside the train station. You can almost feel the excitement in that group of disparate people, sense all the connections that are going to be made over the long weekend, all the legends and misdeeds that will leave their mark on these people for years to come – starting today, when I will be chained to a desk.

I never did anything like this when I was that age; just remembering that, the very act of using the phrase when I was that age, even if I‘m thinking it rather than saying it out loud, is a dispiriting thing. Confronted by the great unwashed, I feel simultaneously washed out and washed up. And I don’t know if it’s jealousy, irritation, or the smugness of knowing that I will get to have showers for the next few days and sleep in a comfy bed, but I wouldn’t want to trade places with them any more than they'd fancy swapping with me.

The throng opposite looks like a refugee camp for people seeking political asylum from any form of responsibility. I hate myself for saying that.

The parade of shops next to the bus stop is a tired, pathetic succession of establishments nobody ever wants to visit. The Persian delicatessen closed down months ago, and even when it was open nothing about its immediate surroundings screamed “come here and buy caviar”. Even the Cash Converters couldn’t make a go of it round here; people might be poor but they still have standards. All that remains is “Gregorys”, a fast food joint that has been there for as long as I can remember. After a night clubbing in town, my friends and I used to pile in there and get chicken doner and chips at three in the morning for the princely sum of three pounds fifty before braving the fights at the taxi rank and heading home to the shared houses and hangovers that didn’t feel that bad back then. I haven’t been to Gregorys since… since I was their age.

I shiver.

There’s nowhere to sit; the benches are damp with the rain from last night and the sky frowns with the threat of the rain which will happen later today. So instead I stand there with my fellow colleagues waiting for the nine o’clock bus. Technically, taking the later bus ought to be a cool thing to do, but looking around me it feels a bit like I’ve been put down a set in primary school. Around me are a bunch of contractors, almost nobody I recognise except the pretty blonde with the big nose who sometimes sits at the next table along at lunch. She is wearing a baby pink cardigan with no buttons, the sort with crinkly labial edges, and she conspicuously avoids recognising me.

Further along a woman is reading A Suitable Boy, a feat I previously thought wasn’t possible when standing up without the assistance of a lectern. I’m reading that book too, but I know that in this environment a shared experience is a million miles from a conversation starter. The front of her skirt is folded over like the wings of a beetle, but the look is ruined by huge clumpy Colgate-white trainers. I think better of making eye contact.

Half an hour in limbo is a hell of a long time, especially when you can feel the pitying gazes of the revellers over the road. Kill me before I get to that stage, they seem to say, save me from that. I suppose I could explain to them that we all start out feeling that way, and then with hindsight it embarrasses us like the wailing of a childhood diary. I could tell them that one day they'll wake up in their thirties to the uncomfortable surprise that it's someone else's turn. But I have neither the time nor the inclination to do that, and even if I did they don‘t want to hear it. I can’t really blame them. But I have to suppress the urge to cheer as the bus finally pulls up smoothly outside the grotty newsagent; I’ve never been so relieved to see it.

Taking my seat, looking out the window one final time, I see a pair of young guys slouching slowly along the pavement on their way to the campsite, sporting skinny jeans and gigantic rucksacks, hipster snails. And then we are off, out into the road, heading towards reality, merging seamlessly with the festival traffic. But I think about the crowd at the station, their tents and six-packs, their haircuts and gossip all the way to the office. It’s as if a past I never had has flashed before my eyes, and I‘m not sure I like that.

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Firsts

The first time I kissed a girl, I mean really kissed a girl, I was just short of nineteen years old. She and I had been spending time together for weeks. She would always stop by my room when the bar had closed and we would chat until the small hours about everything: our families, whether we understood them (the general consensus, hardly surprisingly, was that we didn’t), how Oxford University had made an enormous mistake letting us in. She’d made it crystal clear that nothing would happen between us—if your definition of doing so is wide enough to incorporate reading me extracts of her diary, which complained about me at great, repetitive length.

Why do I have to be attracted to him? He’s not even good looking, and he’s got such a terrible reputation.

What I didn’t realise then was that in the neurotic, highly-strung environment of an Oxford college—brainwaves and sexual frustration bouncing off ancient rooms and even older traditions—those lines were about as close to a come-on as I was ever going to get. What I did realise, however, was that it was the nicest thing a girl had ever said about me up to that point. I was stupid in a lot of ways, but even I wasn’t that stupid.

The first time I kissed a girl, it all happened—the way defining events sometimes do—at four in the morning. We were in a student room the size of a large packing crate facing on to what might have been Oxford’s most modern and least lovely quadrangle. We had talked all night (which was something I could do) and there was a bit of what was probably a rather pathetic parody of flirting or play-fighting (because those were things I could not do). We drifted closer and closer together and I knew that this was the legendary tipping point people had been telling me about for years. The one where you leaned in and kissed her, or you blew it and she dated somebody else.

Well, you know which of those two things I did because I revealed that right at the start; but that’s not what this is about. What this is about, sort of, is all the things that first kiss wasn’t. I did it, because that’s what you did; but, once I’d done it, I couldn’t help but feel there ought to have been more: fireworks, erogenous zones on the tongue, a rushing feeling like a sneeze, a string section in the background, something, anything. But instead I got option (e): none of the above. There was just a bit of squelching and a lot of awkwardness, and a big tick on the whiteboard of life as a rite of passage was done, dusted and found to be anticlimactic.

I lost my virginity in her parent’s house in France that summer; it was on my last night staying with her in her childhood room, before her family came back, squabbling icily, from their annual holiday to the Ile de Ré, an event that was ten percent jamboree and ninety percent feud.

Don’t worry, I’m not going to give you gory details. I’m not that kind of person.

Even if I wanted to, I can’t remember them anyway. What’s remained captured in my mind is like a photo in reverse – everything at the centre of the picture is blurry and all I recall is the minor details at the perimeter of the image, close to the faded white border: the condom wrapper, mint-green with French words on it like indecipherable sigils; the shuttered windows; how partway through our amateurish fumblings she banged her knee against the wall, breaking a scab she’d acquired during an especially vicious college football match some time before.

And I remember lying there afterward, in that single bed (when I was young enough to think that sharing a single bed with a woman was a luxury and not a form of torture) and wondering what I was missing about the whole thing. The suburban Parisian night breathed impatiently outside through the open window, as if it, too, felt cheated by how little had really transpired within. But never mind; I could always say I’d finally done it and best of all I could say I’d done it abroad, which at the time held some sort of glamorous appeal. It may have been a drab reality just like my house back home, but it was a French drab reality, and that made it all better.

Unfortunately, neither of those experiences turned out to be unique. The more I think about it, the more I realise that first times are often like that. I always think that I ought to have enjoyed them more or, worse still, only realise that I enjoyed them some time later when I’m having considerably less fun. My whole life is littered with disappointing firsts.

The first time I had wine, for instance, I couldn’t for the life of me see how anybody could drink it for enjoyment. I found it impossible to conceive of anything it could offer that couldn’t just as easily be provided by a glass of Ribena so strong that a straw could stand bolt upright in it without any discernible means of support. My first beer was, if anything, even worse. It tasted how I imagined fizzy, cold urine would, as if somebody had stuck his own piss in the fridge prior to running it through a soda stream. You’d never catch me drinking muck like that when I grew up, I promised myself. I knew better.

Much the same thing happened the first time I watched a Woody Allen film. I remember not being unmoved, not even being bored but, worse still, being actively irritated by the whole experience. As far as the fifteen-year-old me was concerned, he was a whiny neurotic who desperately needed a decent haircut and to stop wallowing in angst. The appeal, if there was one, was completely lost on me; all he ever seemed to do was mope, self-obsess and spend all of his time dating – rather implausibly I thought – a range of increasingly beautiful women.

I didn’t have anywhere near enough common sense to see that actually that funny-looking stammering blend of nervous tics and spectacles was, in fact, signposting what would probably be my most promising route to romantic satisfaction. To put it into perspective, in those days, I didn’t have the common sense to use scissors or a cheese grater, so it was hardly an enormous surprise.

Becoming a grown up might have changed this problem with firsts.

I remember the first time I kissed the woman who became my wife, on a sunny Thursday afternoon in Reading. By then we had been speaking non-stop every day for almost a fortnight, initially in emails that filled my days with joy and purpose at a time when I’d forgotten what either felt like. Later, once I had ended things with my unsatisfactory girlfriend and moved temporarily in with my mother, those emails were supplemented by heroic phone conversations that simultaneously felt as if they lasted forever, but could never have been long enough.

That was all very well, but her visit to Reading was crucial because it was then, after she had seen me in the flesh for only the second time, that she was going to make the final decision about whether to leave her fiancé. She had only visited Reading once before, with him, to buy a sofa from a shop that was then called World of Leather, would subsequently be called Kingdom of Leather and in a couple of years’ time will probably go by the name of Fiefdom of Leather. Our conversations, in the run up to the big day, made it pretty clear that, although she was fairly certain that she wanted to be with me, she had to see me another time.

"I need to be sure," she said. "I know you understand."

She took the train down with her sister ostensibly for a shopping trip, the plan being that come half-five her sister would head for the train station and she would meet up with me. She told her fiancé she was meeting an old college friend. Technically that was true. Technically it was also a colossal lie.

It was a hot, restless, nerve-wracking day at work. I couldn’t concentrate on anything, knowing in the back of my mind the pressure that was weighing down on the evening ahead. I had invested so much in the decision of a woman I barely knew, who was also already the best friend I had ever had. Worst of all, as she wandered from clothes shop to clothes shop with her sister, equally distracted, she couldn’t even email me. That was the cruellest thing about the whole situation because, at the time, her words on a screen were the thing that somehow got me from the beginning of a day to the end in one piece.

We were due to meet in a pub called the 3Bs, a cellar bar which looked out just below ground level, across the town square. From where she was sitting waiting for me, she could see the statue of Queen Victoria looking exasperated with modern life in general and Reading in particular. In a few hours’ time, come nightfall, she would have been able to see the open air temporary urinal rising like a music hall organ out of the ground, a cylindrical column known to all Reading’s residents as "the Turdis". And, as it happened, at about five forty-five she saw me, nervously sloping towards the entrance of the pub.

The first time I kissed the woman who became my wife happened a couple of minutes later, so fast I oughtn’t be able to remember it, but I can. I wasn’t sure whether we would have an awkward kiss on the cheek once, twice or three times, or a quick hug, or a peck on the lips. I wasn’t sure whether to stoop down to her, seated on the chair, just as she wasn’t sure whether to stand up. All that indecision, all that jousting, all those nuances, wrapped up in less than a second of preamble. And then, somewhere between sitting and standing, somewhere between spotting and saying hello, somewhere between the past and forever that kiss magically happened, and I realised that there wasn’t necessarily anything wrong with me after all. When it’s important, you feel something.

Last Friday, I was at home during a day off work. The flat had been tidied, music was playing in the kitchen, I was frantically doing the washing up and the doorbell rang. I walked down the stairs, opened the big black front door and there she was on the other side, bag in hand, wheelie suitcase parked on the pavement, brown eyes squinting up at me in the sunshine.

"Hello."

"Hello."

"Get any sleep on the plane?"

"Not really. A couple of hours."

"You’d never know. Do you want me to take your bag up the stairs?"

"Not yet. First things first."

If the camera panned and zoomed out from us at that point, the scene wouldn’t look special to anyone else. All you would see would be a scruffy looking man and a tired looking woman trying to squeeze the life out of each other in front of a big black door, in front of a tall white house, surrounded by bags and luggage and unedified passers-by, all in the middle of something completely unconnected. But of course, it was special. It was the first time I’d seen her in four days, and first times are important.

[This piece was published in Hippocampus Magazine.]

Monday, 23 August 2010

That Was The Week That Blogged #21


First of all, sorry I wasn't around much last week. All that pining for an absent spouse takes its toll, and besides it's a busy week this week on the blog as I may be appearing in several other places at popular (well, popular with me anyway) request. So you may be clicking on some links later in the week if you want to read my stuff.

Anyway, not having posted much hasn't stopped me reading a lot and as always it's been a fascinating week in blogland. I've read about animal cemeteries full of pets named after prostitutes, awkward and not remotely sexually charged encounters on public transport and, in one case, a rather brave restaurant review by someone who actually spent good money eating in an Aberdeen Angus Steakhouse and lived to tell the tale (they are always packed but I've never met anyone who's actually been inside one, unless they are everybody's secret guilty pleasure). Truly, all human life is out there, blogging away, and the world feels a much better place for it. None the less, coming down off the fence at last I'm happy to say that I have finally been able to narrow it down to these three absolutely cracking posts.

TWTWTB is my weekly award to the three best things I've read in blogland in the previous seven days. Here are this week's winners:

1. Bang goes the baby's head by The Gravel Farm

"So, next week, we're going to go to a specially trained lady who knows how to cut childrens hair, including babies, and miraculously leave them with roughly the same number of ears they came in with. Having previously attempted the task myself, I now have no compunction against paying someone else to do it, because it's like trying to shave an angry cat on a roller coaster."

This is probably the funniest paragraph I've read in a very long time. Jules' blog is a great illustration that if somebody is a good enough writer they can get you to read about almost anything. As long-time readers will know I'm really not a fan of kids, don't plan to have any and don't generally enjoy reading about them (as if any illustration were needed, my best friend from university has a three year old boy, and in all those three years I've only met him once. It was a couple of months ago.) But then Jules comes along with his superb turn of phrase, deceptively easy narrative style and beautiful surreal images and forces me against my will to thoroughly enjoy his piece about having a hairy child. Damn him! By which I of course mean, "well done". Jules also has some excellent points to make about boobs, again not a subject I generally have an interest in.

Not convinced? Never mind.

2. Things I Like A Lot - #3 and 4 by The View From This End

"I like that the smell of rain on a hot summer pavement can carry me instantly to 1956-walking home on an evening after the cinema and coffee at Big Macs - the street lights closing one by one behind me, then before me, until only a half-moon lights my way."

Moannie, who writes The View From This End, is a wonderful writer with the power to transport you to a moment from years ago as clearly as if you were there. I am a huge fan. She is currently working through her own series of posts about seven things she likes (a meme which I'm proud to say has prompted dozens of fantastic posts from a number of writers) and I loved this one. My one disappointment about Moannie's posts is that I nearly always finish one wishing it had been twice or three times as long, which I think is one of the highest compliments I could pay. There is a lovely poetic quality to the piece about rain, and then its companion piece (about old movies) is more a manifesto for a glamour you don't see enough of nowadays. It is however more than present in the way Moannie writes.

3. Memory Glimpse - A Very Scared Little Boy by The Domesticated Bohemian

"There was no softness left in the world."

If Jules wrote the best paragraph I read last week, Philip wrote the knockout sentence. It's the only bit of his post I'm going to quote because I couldn't do it justice cutting and pasting a paragraph and crowbarring it, out of context, in here. What Philip has written is a towering piece. On the one hand, it's a harrowing and affecting account of a hugely significant episode in his early life so evocative that you are right there with him. On the other, it's also a fascinating meditation on memory and truth and whether what we remember is reality, or becomes our reality. To write something so good on either subject would be a colossal achievement but to weave them both together really takes some doing. This piece has already received plenty of plaudits and lots of comments, but it deserves all of them and I hope if you haven't read it already you go and have a look.

Here's what you can do to support That Was The Week That Blogged. First, pop by and check all the winners out in full. Feel free to tell them I sent you, in fact it's practically compulsory.

Secondly, if you read (or write) a blog post you think would be a worthy winner next week, either comment here, drop me a mail or Tweet at me with the hashtag #TWTWTB. The best ones will be announced on the blog and on Twitter every Sunday.

Last of all of course, if you won this week: congratulations! Feel free to take the rather fetching picture at the top and copy it onto your sidebar. Of course, I won't be offended if you don't.

Wednesday, 18 August 2010

Table for one

I’m going to recommend something to you. I’m going to recommend dining alone.

I know that’s not something which instantly appeals and I understand the stigma as well as you do. I’m relatively new to this too. But bear with me, fight back your instinct and give it a whirl. It’s easier than it looks, you just need to be a bit more trusting. Take at face value, for instance, the smile of the woman who ushers you to your table. Why shouldn’t you? It’s not pity, I promise - she is glad you’re here.

Go on, take your seat. And while you’re at it, make the most of the fact that you largely go unnoticed; in fact, exploit it. Spend a moment properly taking in your surroundings, the way you rarely do the rest of the time. Listen. The table behind you is bursting with accents, people speaking French. If you use your imagination (and we both know you’ve got one) you could be in Paris. That feeling of otherness is everywhere this evening - because you never do this. This experience epitomises the essence of elsewhere. Enjoy it while you’re here; it doesn’t last and you can’t bottle it.

Between sips of your glass of red (did you notice that tastes like it’s one hundred per cent dreams, as if it contains nothing bad?) see if you can tune in to the conversation taking place over your left shoulder. This place is new, it only opened last week, and if you listen closely the manageress is giving tips to her staff. She is talking, as it happens, about you. Don’t feel bad, it’s only eavesdropping when you’re with someone else. On your own it’s just a logical extension of people-watching. Take it from me, people watching is acceptable now; nobody calls it voyeurism any more.

“The guy over there is about to finish the baba ganoush. Go and ask him if it’s okay and whether he’s ready for his main course.”

Hear that? It’s a split second pause, the sort you hear in conversations when somebody is deciding whether to add something or not. It passes, she does.

”And smile!”

The waitress approaches the table. What do you think of her smile? I’d give it a seven out of ten; you wouldn’t guess that she was obeying orders unless you happened to be in the know. You get that heightened awareness, you see, dining for one. With a blind spot at the seat opposite you, your other senses compensate.

When you tell her that you’re in no hurry (good for you!) that of course is true. There is no rush to return to the vacuum of the flat and get that unwanted reminder of how quiet everything can be. Instead, freed from the shackles of your headphones, this is your chance properly to realise just how much noise there is in the world.

Sitting outside, the evening still mild enough that you still can, take in the view. Take your time to drink it all in – the scene, not the wine, though I can hardly blame you for misinterpreting. The churchyard bustles with all manner of people; dog walkers, cigarette smokers, home returners. I don’t know about you, but in my time I’ve been all of those things. Some of them are more distant memories than others but the mind can play tricks, distort reality like a funfair mirror.

The last of them feels like it last happened years ago.

Your main course won’t arrive for ages, because that’s what you asked them to do. It’s a pleasant change, isn’t it? And this is what happens when you are at a table for one; nobody is going to zero in on you when you’re mid-mouthful or somebody else is caught in mid-anecdote. You are in complete control of this little scene.

I mentioned noise to you just now, and as if by magic the church bells start to ring. They clamour and clang in the thousand year old tower, biscuit-coloured in the sun, and a symphony of Englishness strikes up around you. Make a mental note of this moment; later on you’ll think it was the closest everything got to perfect. You can hear, upstage right, two waitresses complaining about the noise, as if this could even be compared to the screeching wail of the fire alarm test that sadists inflict on people in offices every week. Maybe if you heard this as often as they do it would feel as grating as that does - but in this spot, with this view, it’s difficult to imagine.

Just before finishing your meal, look what happens when a friend of the French table behind you turns up late a la mode - they all burst into spontaneous applause. Do you, like me, find that so lovely that it takes all your strength not to join in? I wonder whether that’s the pull of conformity or the power of belonging. Close your eyes and you could be in Saint Germain. Close your eyes and you could be anywhere.

While we’re on the subject, why is it that conversations in a foreign language always sound so passionate, so animated, can you tell me that? Maybe it’s just because you can’t understand them, perhaps that’s what lends them their glamour. Sitting right here now, at the vantage point of this table, on an evening like this I can’t help but wonder, if everything I didn’t understand was alluring, just how beautiful the world might be.

Right, enough of this. It’s time to go. Before I do, one more thing: have I persuaded you of the benefits of a table for one? I hope so. After all, I’ve ninety-five per cent persuaded myself. The shadow of doubt only intrudes right at the end; when I ask for the bill, it’s not the waitress’ voice I hear in my mind, but hers, a voice I haven’t heard all day. It congratulates me all the way home for passing up the opportunity for a dessert, just the way she would have done, and the spell is broken.

Monday, 16 August 2010

That Was The Week That Blogged #20


I never cease to be amazed by how much terrific writing is out there across all the blogs I read and the blogs people flag to me every week. The last seven days has been no exception; I've read the most unconventional ambulance training notes of all time, discovered how power cuts can be an effective method of time travel and learned that brass band music can be surprisingly affecting. I'm not sure you could find any magazine with quite such varied and impressive stories in it every week.

TWTWTB is my weekly award to the three best things I've read in blogland in the previous seven days. Here are this week's winners:

1. Seven things I like: Part five by Calling People Names

"There’s nothing remarkable about the room, really, other than the fact that that particular bed is where everyone gathers on Saturday mornings. From the smallest resident to the oldest, five in all, piled together in pajamas with steaming cups of coffee, laughing and talking about the day ahead, begging for breakfast, or just lying in a pool of early morning sunshine."

It takes a rare sort of ability to write a piece like this. Nothing happens, no dialogue, technically speaking no characters in it at all. And yet, through describing a succession of rooms and the objects in them, Alyson takes you through a house that's alive with people and memories and holds your attention from beginning to end. Could you do that? I'm not at all sure I could.

2. In praise of small things - part five - three little words by Resistant But Persistant

"The title of this post might well, all on its own, send you running for the hills. So let me apologise first for any inadvertent nausea caused by my feckless choice of words. Let me assure you that I have no intent to write a soppy elegy based on an overused germ of endearment and then, if you're still with me, let me clarify what I really mean."

What a brilliant beginning to a post. They're often so neglected in blogs, so to read a piece that starts so perfectly is a real joy. And of course, Sharon lives up to it by telling a tremendous, well-realised story which travels effortlessly from fiction to childhood to adulthood to memory and nostalgia and takes you with her every step of the way. You don't find out what the three little words Sharon is talking about actually are until the very end of the post, by which time she has you in the palm of her hand. I really loved this one; I've read it three times and it got me every single time.

3. Neil, the time traveller by The Eternal Worrier

"Later when we had finished, I unplugged the VHS player for probably the last time in its life. A technology that has gone, and is the past. As I lifted it and pushed it under the end of the bed in the spare room where it will live, until it takes its last trip to the dump, I noticed on the back a tiny label that proclaimed the price £300.00 It’s so old that it was bought even before the barcode existed. And how expensive was that? It must have been a month’s wages for my stepdad back then."

I know, he's won this an awful lot lately hasn't he? And I did wonder about that for a second, but the truth is that this is supposed to be about celebrating the best things I have read each week and if The Eternal Worrier keeps raising the bar for the rest of us then so be it. This is an absolutely magnificent piece of writing where the Eternal Worrier looks through a porthole into the past and comes out of it wondering about the present, and the future. It's superlative writing - both in terms of the sweep of the narrative and the little details here and there, some of which you only spot on a second or third reading ("his eyes hide something, between pain and the inevitable" is an absolute killer line, and you'll find many more if you go and have a look). Not just that, but even after you've finished it, have hit the "X" button in the top right of the screen and got on with something else, I wouldn't be surprised if you kept thinking about this one. Let me know if I'm right.

Here's what you can do to support That Was The Week That Blogged. First, pop by and check all the winners out in full. Feel free to tell them I sent you, in fact it's practically compulsory.

Secondly, if you read (or write) a blog post you think would be a worthy winner next week, either comment here, drop me a mail or Tweet at me with the hashtag #TWTWTB. The best ones will be announced on the blog and on Twitter every Sunday.

Last of all of course, if you won this week: congratulations! Feel free to take the rather fetching picture at the top and copy it onto your sidebar. Of course, I won't be offended if you don't.

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Tall women

There have been an awful lot of tall women in town today. I notice one, looming behind me as I stand watching the samba drummers joyously giving it their all outside Marks and Spencers. Resplendent in their paunchy purple t-shirts they probably couldn’t look any less Brazilian, but their smiles outshine anything the southern hemisphere might have to offer.

The tall woman moves off to one side and looks on, shifting from foot to foot, awkwardly, not in time to the music. She is really tall - properly tall, six-feet-six-inches-everybody-turns-to-look tall. I rather suspect she catches me doing exactly that as I take my eye off the drummers for a fatal second too long, and she moves on shortly afterwards, long thin unnatural legs making great strides.

I could tell you about her thin straight hair, her garish spectacles, her shoulder bag in the shape of a ghetto blaster, but why would I do that? All you need to know is that she is six foot six, and now she’s gone.

I spot another tall woman later on in the queue for the tills as I drift through M&S in a fruitless search for a coat that will suit the season that’s just about to pass. It’s fruitless mainly because the shop only has coats to suit the season that’s not here yet. This tall woman slouches towards the counter, self-conscious, as if her frumpy shoulder bag is packed full of bricks. She doesn’t want to be noticed; the cruellest irony of all, because at six foot three she has hardly any say in the matter.

I like to think I know something about the hesitancy of tall women.

Part of that is down to a sense of kinship with the awkward, because all my life I have been one of them. I have always walked as if I am apologising for something I haven’t even done yet, always stood like I am on the verge of making a break for it. As a child my family dubbed me Crazylegs Crane, named after the spindly sidekick who filled the unfunny middle third of the Pink Panther cartoons on TV, and the nickname stuck. My father is known to use it even now, when I’ve thickened out and would kill for a build like his.

Of course, what I know about tall women isn’t only down to that, it’s also because I am married to one. Six foot one in her odd-socked feet, even more in the heels she feels she can wear these days. I am deemed, at a mere six foot nothing, to be just tall enough for that. It runs in the genes, because she is the daughter of a tall woman too.

“How tall would you say your mother is?”

“Is? Well, she was five foot ten, once.”

That’s it in a nutshell; she was but she isn’t any more. My mother-in-law stands, walks, as if she is doing everything in her power to become three inches shorter than she really is. She walks, bent over, neck poking forward as if emerging from a shell. Hesitancy, you see, and like I said I know a bit about that.

That hesitancy was there too when I met my wife. Before I came along, she was engaged to a short and balding man. She could stand over him - never in heels, mind you, those were not allowed - and see the top of his head, and know that there was nothing growing there. It wasn’t the only place where things had ceased to grow.

When I met her she was painfully aware that she was tall, too tall, but she had forgotten that she was beautiful. She had forgotten so many things. And I know a thing or too about forgetting, too, because when I met her I was really a shell. I had forgotten things everybody should always know; that someone wants to see your smile, that in the right light, in the right pub, at the right moment you can still be captivating. My luckiest day was the day I sat with her, in the right pub, in the right light, at the right moment, and we began our adventure, remembering all those things together.

Some of my favourite moments are the moments, in train stations, in shopping malls and supermarkets, when I see her and she doesn’t yet know that I am there. It’s the closest I'll ever get - the closest I ever want to get - to seeing her the way a stranger might do. When I do, when I catch sight of her marching through the aisles, eyes flicking here and there, I don’t see the hesitancy of a tall woman, not any more. Instead I see the confident woman I started to fall in love with seven years ago. Even if she still plays with her hair without realising it.

I’m not for a second saying that that transformation is thanks to me, it’s not. It’s completely down to her; she did it, the credit is hers alone. But I was there throughout, all the time that it happened, and that is good enough for me.

Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Intira

Funny what can jog the memory; we were talking last week at work about voice recognition software, of all things, and it got me thinking about Intira from Cashiers. Before that she hadn’t crossed my mind for many years.

I moved home after university in the summer of 1996. I had a degree, but I had well and truly missed the boat in terms of finding something to do with it. My contemporaries were on the fast track to becoming solicitors, accountants, management consultants – adults, in short. Either that or, bankrolled by mummy and daddy in leafy North London, they were ensconced in the family home working as interns for newspapers or runners for TV channels. I could just about make out the soles of their feet far above me on the career ladder as I stood on terra firma, scared of heights. By contrast, going back home and moving in with my mother and my brother was an admission of defeat, one that was remarkably easy.

My life settled into a comfortable routine back home of living rent-free, watching daytime television and trekking along to the Siberian horror of the Jobcentre every fortnight. My main daily outing was a wander to the off licence on the roundabout around three in the afternoon to buy a packet of Rothmans Royals and twinkle at the girl behind the counter. She was, of course, out of my league – mainly by virtue of her being in gainful employment.

I strung this cushy arrangement out for as long as I could but it soon became apparent that it couldn’t last. The household dynamic didn’t adjust well to my nearest and dearest coming home from a hard day at work to find me lying on the sofa watching television, dirty dishes piled up by the sink. If they’d ever noticed the gigantic pyramid of dog ends tossed on the flat roof outside my bedroom window god only knows what kind of hell would have broken loose. After a family summit it was made clear to me that I had to find a job. If I couldn’t, one would be found for me. That is how I ended up working in the cashiers’ department of the insurance company that had offered a position to my brother, not long after he left school under a cloud.

If anything, I at twenty-two might have qualified as an even more hopeless case than him at seventeen.

For the first time since graduation, I threw on my nasty shiny double-breasted suit, knotted the only tie I owned and went for an interview. I’m not sure what was bigger, my interviewer’s hair or my shoulder pads, but all went well and I was deemed up to the demanding task of data entry, filing and filling out paperwork at the sum of four pounds an hour, starting Monday. That was the start of what was supposed to be my life as a grown up. Before I knew it, that nasty suit had become a regular occurrence along with alarm clocks, laundry, ironing, shaving, luncheon vouchers and the Sunday night slump when you realise you have had all your fun and the tedium is about to begin again. Welcome to adulthood, said the metaphorical sign, you’re going to be here for forty years. If you’re lucky.

I can’t convey the culture shock of life in a big company when you’ve left a university where the main social intercourse consisted of having precious (if not twee) conversations until two in the morning. By contrast, most of the conversations around the bank of desks involved what had happened in the previous night’s episode of EastEnders. The way my colleagues talked about them, it was as if the characters in the soap opera were mutual friends. I soon realised that, to all intents and purposes, they might as well have been. Later on came another realisation, that watching it was the only way I would ever have anything in common with most of the people in my open plan prison, so I started watching it too. That was another admission of defeat, but by no means the last.

The demographic in that office was a strange one. You had the wide boys who dealt with the insurance brokers; almost all school leavers, all flashy suits and spiky hair. My brother was in that group, but he didn’t hang around with me. It was just like being a kid on his first day at big school, and I was far too embarrassing. They worked hard and played hard, which is just another way of saying that they could fit in three pints at lunchtime down the Corn Stores, the nearest pub. I didn’t realise at the time that my brother might well have drunk three pints at lunchtime on his own if it came to it, but as it turned out they were very effective camouflage for him.

Then you had the graduates and management types. On paper, I should have belonged in that camp but I was the wrong kind of graduate. I wasn’t on a management scheme, I was just the hopelessly overqualified temp. They avoided me, just as they avoided anybody who wasn’t one of them. A few years later one of the graduate trainees told me she had spoken to the branch manager who had described the non-graduates this way: “By all means look at the monkeys and laugh, but when they get on the table and dance, whatever you do don’t join in.” If I had known that at the time, it would have explained a lot. I was a metaphorical man in a monkey suit, and every bit as ridiculous as a real one.

I was stranded with my own makeshift tribe, the good ladies of the cashiers’ department, and of course I didn’t fit in there either. Our bit of the third floor was right in the corner. You had to pass through all the areas of the open-plan office full of young people having fun before you got there, which made the walk to your desk even more agonising every morning. Once there, you were in the lifeless dark heart of the company, surrounded by filing cabinets and old women which had much in common. They were all grey, stocky and immobile. Like the filing cabinets the women had been there for years, like the filing cabinets they were full of information nobody needed or wanted and like the filing cabinets you wouldn’t have wanted to go through their drawers for fear of finding something that had lain unused for a very long time.

There was Maureen – impassive, grumpy, perpetually disappointed. She always had an expression which brought to mind Queen Victoria after she’d just been told a filthy joke. Maureen was the sort of person who was appalled if she got passed a piece of work full of errors but even more appalled if she couldn’t find any fault at all. I made so many mistakes that I suppose, in a funny sort of way, she might have described me as a pleasure to work with, if that word had even featured in her dictionary.

There was Alison, the team leader. She was the only person approaching my age in the team, but because we were the broken biscuits of the corporate barrel she had something wrong with her hip and walked as if her whole life was spent on the verge of a pratfall. She lived for the weekends, when she would go to the pub she called “Yatesies” and get obliterated on Hooch alcoholic lemonade (it was all the rage back then). I always wondered whether, if she got drunk enough, her walk might right itself. Perhaps that was why she did it.

She had a Forever Friends cuddly bear at her desk, sinister narrow eyes peering out at me whenever I approached her to ask for advice. I found it difficult to take orders from somebody who hadn’t mastered joined up writing, let alone spelling or grammar. Her letter ‘i’ had a childlike heart over it instead of a dot; it was her all over, meant to be endearing but instead just downright irritating.

Then there was Aileen, my favourite: chirpy, mothering, almost glamorous in her way and the only one who talked to me like we were in it together. Like so many good people who stick out like a sore thumb in horrible offices, she was afflicted with serious health problems. She left a little while after I joined to fight cancer. My memory, normally so good at this sort of thing, fails me when I try to recall who won, but I have a horrible feeling it wasn’t her. After that there was just an empty chair and some Aileen-shaped silence competing with all the other silences in that miserable coagulation of desks.

Autumn slid into winter, the air got sharp and thin and the Rothmans Royals started to give me an evil cough that would persist well into spring. Every morning my brother, my mother and I would pile into her beige Renault 5 and chug down the hill, the radio pumping through the speakers, the cars backed up in the fog and the frost as far as the eye could see. The Beautiful South would come on the tinny car stereo singing This could be Rotterdam or anywhere, Liverpool or Rome. ‘Cause Rotterdam is anywhere, anywhere alone. I could see my breath in the air, or it might have been the Rothmans Royals, and I was certain they were wrong. Reading wasn’t Rotterdam, Liverpool or anywhere; Reading was nowhere, and by then I was already depressed, although I didn’t know that yet.

I’m not sure I can do justice to what an awful place it was to spend eight hours every day. If working in an ad agency in the 1960s was Mad Men, working in an insurance company in the 1990s was Sad Men. It’s hard to imagine now, but this isn’t just in the days before email. This was in the days before personal computers at every desk. There was some internal equivalent of email you could use to send messages to other people in the office, but I was too low-grade to get access to that. This was the last hurrah of filing cabinets, carbon paper, triplicate and microfiches. My day consisted of filling out forms, filing forms, processing forms, checking forms and – on rare occasions to break up the monotony – writing cheques (another throwback, that) settling insurance claims. They were nearly always for more money than I would earn between then and Christmas Day.

There were next to no ways to waste time, at a time when my time was less valuable than it would ever be again. The only one I ever found was listening to Intira talking on the telephone to insurance brokers.

Intira was the other member of our little team. She was an aggressive little middle-aged Thai lady who specialised in the kind of chunky patterned cardigans no grandmother, no matter how sadistic, would knit. The look was completed with crinkly greying hair and giant thick spectacles which appeared to cover her entire face. Her eyes swum behind them like fish in a tank as she squinted with suspicion at everything she ever came into contact with: humans, numbers, books, doors.

Intira predated the popular stereotype of nubile young Thai ladies being imported to Britain to marry awkward blazered balding men with more money than social skills, she was from an altogether earlier vintage. Nobody asked when she arrived in the country, but it was hard to imagine she had ever been nubile. It was harder still to imagine she had ever been young. The stories about her were legendary; she was renowned throughout the office as an excruciatingly slow and cautious driver, peering with terror at the road from behind the double windscreen of her glasses, struggling to top ten miles per hour. A colleague of my brother’s once got stuck behind her trying to exit one of those multi-storey car parks with a curved concrete ramp between every single floor. It was over an hour before he saw daylight again.

The real draw, though, was hearing Intira yelling on the phone in an unintelligible accent which prolonged exposure to her didn’t render any easier to decipher. Most English people, when confronted with a foreigner, choose to speak English louder and louder. In an interesting reversal Intira had taken to doing exactly that when dealing with people who could not understand her, which was most people, even though both of them were speaking English. This meant that several times a day we were treated to Intira bellowing at some spiv in another office who, I expect, had no idea what had hit him.

I wonder what Intira would have made of voice recognition software. Perhaps more to the point, I wonder what it would have made of her.

For example, if Intira had said the words “bank account” into a microphone, here’s what the software would have spat out: bang a cow. Intira worked in Cashiers so she had to talk about bank accounts a lot, pretty much every day. It was a joke which never got old. Not just that, but Intira also couldn’t pronounce the letter x, which always came out as a k. Maximum became “makimum”, next became “nekt”. Most of the time you almost got used to it. However, all of Intira’s telephone foibles built to a glorious conclusion one uneventful spring afternoon when I noticed her getting more and more agitated with a broker who couldn’t understand a word she was saying. She kept raising her voice the way kids turn up a stereo just to see how loud it will get, which meant that everyone on the entire floor heard the culmination of her tirade into the melting receiver, to their baffled shock:

“No. Is not in my bang a cow! No! Not in bang a cow. You fack me. You fack me in bang a cow. You fack me, we have a good look.”

As a result Intira become one of those almost mythical people, like some celebrities, that everyone thinks they can do an impersonation of. And by everyone, I mean me. I was also the person responsible for that story doing the rounds in the first place. I milked that car-crash moment for all it was worth – for attention, for popularity, for belonging. And it sort of worked; the gel-haired spivs used to love my impression of Intira. On the occasions when I managed to wangle an invite to the Corn Stores it seemed like a fair exchange; cheap pints in return for cheap laughs. It’s easy, after all, laughing at people who are different.

I left Cashiers a few months later and headed across the floor to a job which was much the same but where I was surrounded by people forty years younger. In my book that classed as going up in the world, yet another admission of defeat. My replacement, a spotty school leaver called Rob, was even more obnoxious than me and when he turned up on his first day I remember the chilly smile he got from Maureen. I had a distinct feeling that she would be even more unpleasant to him than she had been to me, but by that stage I didn’t much care. After all, I was headed for better things.

I don’t recall what happened to Intira. I hope for her sake that she was close to retirement, because she and her colleagues were part of a workforce which the passage of time and the development of technology were about to render obsolete. Intira would never have survived team away days, or learning to use spreadsheets, or being forced to reapply for your own job. She would have been broken on the wheel of assessment centres or psychometric testing. I can’t see her finding her way round the brave new world of the Internet. Putting Intira, or any of her team-mates, through that would have been the cruellest thing of all. They were lucky to be ending their careers when the world was changing; the 1990s were a kinder time in so many ways than all the bullshit we all have to go through now. Stuck shivering in my mum’s Renault 5, spending my evenings drinking lager in the Bull and Chequers with my friends, listening to What’s The Story, Morning Glory on the jukebox for the five thousandth time, I could never have appreciated that. I wouldn’t for a very long time.

It’s only now, when I look back, that I see things as they really were. Being an immigrant in England back in those less enlightened times must have been an awful fate. For every woman like Intira who got in her car and went to work (admittedly at a snail’s pace with a tailback of apoplectic motorists behind her) I bet there were ten like my friend Ivor’s mum, who came over fleeing the Prague Spring, and stayed at home. She hid behind the net curtains while her husband went out to work, making no friends, speaking little English and devoting her time to her children, her frightening-looking evening meals, and to making tapestries.

This isn’t about false sentiment. Intira wasn’t a nice woman and she and I would never have been friends, that would have been unthinkable. If I close my eyes and ignore the television blaring in the corner, I can almost still hear her barking down the phone at someone (though I’d be lying if I pretended I could make out any specific words), or cross-examining me with suspicion when I asked her whether she wanted something from the coffee machine. But sitting here now, with the benefit of fifteen years of hindsight, I can’t help but find it all a little sad to think of all that time I wasted, ridiculing the only person I knew who fitted in even less than me.

Sunday, 8 August 2010

That Was The Week That Blogged #19


Sitting down this evening, scratching my head, I realised that I had a shortlist of nine absolutely fantastic blog posts to choose from. Not only that, but any three of them could easily have been the winners - this or any other week. I've read so many terrific stories in the past seven days, from a meditation on the power of fiction to an almost unbearably touching depiction of the relationship between a father and daughter. I read an amazing lament for a friend who killed himself, a wonderful story of self-discovery on the holiday from hell and one particularly interesting dissertation on eating cotton balls as a dietary aid. It's been an education all round, and almost impossible to choose.

I think this is why many blog award schemes list tons of winners each week, because it's so hard to make a choice. And it is, but I think for these things to have any value you eventually have to come off the fence and make a decision. So I have. In doing so, I've realised that it's not necessarily about picking three separate winners so much as picking a set of winners. So each of these marvellous posts has something which the others don't, and I think they're as good a set of winners as any I've picked. But really, you should have seen the ones that didn't quite make it, because they would have been too. If your favourite from last week isn't in here, don't get cross at me because I'm cross enough myself at all the riches I had to leave out. Oh, and next time you read something you think is brilliant, tell me - it's the best way of giving it a fighting chance.

TWTWTB is my weekly award to the three best things I've read in blogland in the previous week. Here are this week's winners:

1. Seven people or things that changed my life (2) Mr Brooks by Jane Is The One

"For girls of course it happens more quickly than it does for boys - at twelve I was a child and at thirteen I was being followed in the street by men and whistled at by lorry drivers - but for most people puberty is not a moment. It was for me. It happened that week. And I don't mean my first period. That happened months later."

Jane is currently writing her own series of seven posts about people who were a powerful influence on her life. This one is just magnificent, a wonderful piece about a turning point in her life that happened on a family holiday in the Sixties. I love all the little details, from the "flare of cigarette lighters" to the forensic description of Jane's physics teacher, "perhaps as happy then and there... as she would ever be in her life". But really, it's about Jane becoming a woman, with a lot of help from Simone de Beauvoir and a little help from the eponymous Mr Brooks who, as it turns out, is somewhat of a cypher. I really liked this - highly recommended.

2. My Dad's Enforced Silence by Striving For Symmetry

"Adolf Hitler and my Dad both developed a growth on their vocal chords which had to be removed. In around 1940 in the case of Adolf Hitler, about 2 months ago in the case of my Dad."

I'm glad I'm not the only blogger who has at some point compared his dad to Hitler. This is a perfect little sketch which gives you some idea of the man, with a beautiful pay-off at the end. Striving For Symmetry is a relatively new blog to me, and it nearly won TWTWTB a couple of weeks back - all of the posts are well worth a look.

3. The gymnast, high above the ground by Bag Lady

"The clouds are almost brown now, with patches of grey and white, as far as the eye can see. The wind whips the trees and a few pieces of litter spin and whirl in the road like dancers."

Writing can do so many things. We've had the story in the first winner, the cartoon in the second winner, and here we get the painting in this final winner. There's a beautiful, Turner-esque quality about this post which captures a moment completely. You feel as if you are there in the office block looking out across the landscape or peering up to see the shape twisting in the sky above the slowly-moving traffic. Baglady, who writes this blog, is a close personal friend of mine - I feel I ought to disclose that - but that means she has a real hill to climb to win TWTWTB and I wouldn't have picked this piece of writing if I didn't think it was good enough. I hope when you hop across to look at it you find you agree with me.

Here's what you can do to support That Was The Week That Blogged. First, pop by and check all the winners out in full. Feel free to tell them I sent you, in fact it's practically compulsory.

Secondly, if you read (or write) a blog post you think would be a worthy winner next week, either comment here, drop me a mail or Tweet at me with the hashtag #TWTWTB. The best ones will be announced on the blog and on Twitter every Sunday.

Last of all of course, if you won this week: congratulations! Feel free to take the rather fetching picture at the top and copy it onto your sidebar. Of course, I won't be offended if you don't.

Saturday, 7 August 2010

100 Words: New leaf

“I’m turning over a new leaf.” I tell Sarah proudly at lunch between tortilla chips.

“What?”

“It’s become apparent that people at work can’t take me seriously. Because of the smut.”

Iain’s heard this before, rolls his eyes. The conversation moves on to filth, so naturally I refuse to join in.

Sarah rises up to her full height and adopts a bizarre expression.

“What’s that?”

“It’s the 'Look at me, I’m turning over a new leaf' face you keep making.”

“You must be kidding! I look like a meerkat wearing a butt plug.”

“Congratulations.” she says. “You lasted five minutes.”

Thursday, 5 August 2010

The appliance of science

I was vividly reminded last week of just how useful technology can be. Unfortunately, I was also reminded that just because it can be useful, there is no guarantee that it’s going to be used to make the world a better place. Far from it, in fact.

It all began one afternoon on the funbus after a supremely humdrum day at work. I settled into my usual seat next to Mikey and rather than the usual how-was-your-day preamble he removed his headphones, turned to me and said “I’ve got something to show you”. Whenever Mikey does this, it’s always technology based. He likes introducing me to new gadgets and apps and whenever he does, regardless of his usual carefully calculated and cultivated aura of mod cool, he invariably looks up at me with the excited expression of a cat that’s just deposited a dead bird on the floor of your kitchen.

“Look at this app! It’s brilliant - you speak into the microphone and it turns it into text.”

I perked up at this point. With my RSI, the prospect of using voice recognition software is a very real one and it would be fantastic to find something that could do the job and save my poor arms from further pain.

"Is it good?”

"It’s better than good."

I could feel my spirits lifting. But then Mikey continued.

"It’s hilarious. Look at this text message it sent Rebecca when I said I was going to be home late because I was having a pint after work.”

I squinted at the screen. I could see a scramble of words and each of them individually had a clear definition, but taken together they were worse than meaningless. It was less the sum of its parts than the England football team, and that was saying something. If English was your second language and you had been speaking it for less than a month you could probably have done better. I scanned the paragraph one more time looking for some consolation but none was to be found. I sighed. Perhaps voice recognition software wouldn’t work for me after all.

“Fancy sending Rebecca a text now saying you’re going to be home late?”

“Allied Arms?”

“Why not.”

“Yeh, all right.”

The full benefits of owning an iPhone became even clearer on Friday afternoon, when Phil proudly brought his new one in. He’s never had one before, always insisting instead on owning one of those poor substitutes that is nowhere near as good but which crucially enables you to boast that you aren’t a clone like everybody else. Now he has bowed to the inevitable and presumably Phil’s old phone will go to that special section of the charity shop reserved for Betamax video recorders, MiniDisc players and chunky rubberised MP3 players the size of a small paperback.

They should have a Museum Of Losers for that kind of thing, manned by geeks who irately yell “but the picture quality was so much better!” at the slightest provocation and spend their afternoons half-asleep, drooling onto a comic and dreaming that the gramophone is going to make a comeback any day now. Except of course some day soon soon somebody from the Museum Of Losers will turn up in a Transit van to collect all my CDs, my film cameras and my photo albums, and I'm nowhere near ready for that yet.

We all nodded indulgently as Phil talked about his iPhone and all the exciting things it could do, as if he was the first person ever to own one. And none of us took the piss out of him, because we were all vividly reminded of the moment when we bought an iPhone and went around saying exactly the same thing. Say what you like about conformity, but sometimes there is nothing quite so comforting. Nothing, that is, except perhaps a wank and a muffin (though not at the same time. That would be madness).

We muddled through to the end of the day, and as we were packing up ready to begin our long overdue weekends Iain decided to give Phil some helpful advice about his new toy.

“So, will you be checking out Spankwire this weekend?”

“What’s Spankwire?”

“It’s porn for your iPhone, it’s bloody superb.”

Phil looked at him for a second, clearly trying to gauge how likely Iain was to be playing a practical joke. When he realised that Iain was deadly serious, his expression changed from amused suspicion to rapt wonderment.

“But don’t I have to give them my credit card details, or my email address?”

Good old Phil, always looking for the downside. I could identify with that.

“Not at all, nothing like that. They don‘t ask for anything.”

In a previous life, Iain used to be Phil’s boss and some of that relationship still survives even though they are team-mates now. It may have been an unconventional master and servant arrangement – I remember an especially chilling photograph of a team night out where Phil is wearing a pink stetson and trying to coerce Iain into licking his exposed nipple – but it was a master and servant arrangement none the less. Phil gave a seedy little smile and I could tell that, to his mind, Iain had effectively given him express instructions to look at iPhone porn that weekend as a kind of homework. Old habits die hard, especially when they are legitimising masturbation and the exploitation of women.

With that said, I hardly expected him to start his homework almost immediately, on the back row of the funbus, with me sitting next to him. But start he did.

“Look at this mate, it’s amazing.” said Phil, waving the screen at me. It’s a wonder his heavy-framed glasses hadn’t already steamed up as began scrolling, swift-fingered, through the cinematic treats on offer. Even the thought of Phil’s fingers being swift was making me distinctly queasy.

“That one looks like Simone, our receptionist.” I said. It was meant to just be a conversational observation but with hindsight it was about the worst thing I could possibly have said. Everyone twinkles at Simone as they arrive at and leave the office every day, Phil not least. He leered at the screen with a frightening intensity and I found myself desperately hoping that he could wait until he got home before getting his cock out.

I was also extremely worried that, if she looked as much like Simone in the clip as she did in the screenshot, he might have a crack at using my hand.

“Kids today.” said Phil breathlessly, flicking through the thumbnail snapshots of pornographic paradise, “They don’t know they’re born.”

“I know.” I said. “We had to make do with an Etch-a-Sketch, and you couldn’t have drawn anything on one of those that justified rubbing one out.”

It's good to know that my talent for killing the magic by saying the wrong thing isn't limited to the confines of matrimony. Like that, the spell was broken. Goodness knows what it was about the image of a blocky pair of square norks crudely fashioned on a childhood toy that seemed to calm Phil down, but luckily for me it did, and the rest of the journey passed in relatively uneventful semi-silence.

In the back of my mind though, I had a horrible feeling that it probably wasn’t the only semi on that bus.

Tuesday, 3 August 2010

Taking notes

I like being in meetings when they aren’t my meeting. Not having any vested interest in what happens makes it feel like a little holiday.

In such meetings, I am a taker of notes.

It means I look busy, as if I am paying attention. But really, I’m paying attention to other, more important things. I might be noticing that only the very junior people round the table wear ties. I might be noticing the man at three o’clock to me, who clearly has even less idea than me why he’s in the room. He nods in the right places but his expression is blank; if you asked him a question he’d be completely thrown. Fortunately for him, that won’t happen because nobody has paid him the slightest attention but me. He will say three words right at the end, “Nothing from me”, no more and no less.

The man at ten o’clock is talking a lot. Being an expert is clearly very important to him. But he gives too much away because it’s pretty clear that it’s all he has going for him, that and too much hair gel. The most damning thing I can say about his patter is to describe it as exactly that, never a word you’d associate with genuine charm. Besides, if I were him, I wouldn’t have left quite that many shirt buttons undone, and someone should tell him that a short sleeved shirt never looks quite right under a suit jacket.

It occurs to me that for some people their whole job might consist of this, travelling from meeting to meeting with little or no idea of what is really being discussed. Being parachuted into threadbare rooms and conference calls, horrendously briefed but trying your hardest to look useful and engaged. Stopping by your desk, wolfing down a sandwich from the canteen, barking “I can’t, I’m in back to backs all day” to anyone who has the temerity to phone you. The man at two o’clock might be one of these, sitting there aloof and impassive. It’s interesting how people who say virtually nothing in meetings are either very important or of no importance at all, tie wearers. Having noticed that his trousers are several inches too short, I arbitrarily pigeonhole him as the latter. It feels like a fantastic thing to do - and who cares whether he really is or not; in my reality he always will be now.

I wonder if there are meeting crashers. Maybe. But I have to say, this is not a meeting I would personally crash, were I in the habit of doing so.

The man at the head of the table is talking; he is one of those unfortunates whose accent makes everything he says sound stupid. It’s just not fair how people – people like me – judge people like that, and I say that well aware that I am the beneficiary of exactly that sort of prejudice. I manage to sound like I know what I’m talking about even when I have no idea, which is frequently. If the very thought of bluffing didn’t bring me out in a cold sweat, who knows how far I could have got? I was in another meeting with that man a couple of weeks ago in a hot glass room, watching him fighting hard to stay awake. “This project is taking over my life.” he’ll probably say to his wife tonight as she tunes him out and tries to watch Holby City. I've not quite decided whether he deserves better.

The man at eight o’clock is hawklike in profile. His charcoal grey tie is the same colour as his shirt, an elementary mistake which makes him look like a cheap hood. But that doesn’t stop me admiring the reckless disregard with which he peels and eats a career-limiting banana, there at the table.

There are three women in here. Two of them are roughly the same age, in roughly the same monochrome outfits, with roughly the same monochrome hair the colour of cigarette ash – the colour hair magically becomes when you hit a certain age. The other woman has a shocking pink cardigan, but she’s new round here. Give it time and she’ll eventually conform.

Nobody hears a peep from the two men who have dialled in. They might not even be there at all; they could be on mute, bunking off, down the shops or in the pub. They in turn probably have no idea that there are women in the room, because the women aren’t saying anything either. Come on. I would say to them, if I cared more about them, more about this meeting, less about my future job prospects, Surely you can do better than this lot? Speak up!

The men who’ve dialled in could be in their living rooms in nothing but their underpants for all I know. I find myself half-hoping that they are.

When the meeting wraps up there are awkward pleasantries as the empty cups are collected up and the projector is packed away, popped back in its polyester prison. I pick up my pad and prepare to leave, convinced that nobody else got quite as much out of this as I have.

My favourite bit was an especially heated discussion shortly before the end.

“I expect more slippage.” said the man at ten o’clock. “Let’s get it out, get it on the table and work on it together.”

Because I am a grown-up, I didn’t smirk. But because I’m not a grown up, I made a note.

Sunday, 1 August 2010

That Was The Week That Blogged #18


I've changed my mind dozens of times about who to choose from a very impressive crop of blog posts this week, but eventually I've had to come off the fence and pick only three, so here goes. Thanks so much to everybody who has emailed, Tweeted or commented with a recommendation this week. I have read them all, and in some cases feel awful that they didn't quite make the final cut. Please don't let that discourage you next week or any subsequent week - I rely on recommendations, because between you you all read far more blogs than I possibly could.

Oh, and I don't know what kind of seven days it's been out there in the wider world but I should warn you that it's not an especially happy crop this week. Sorry about that, but great writing is great writing.

TWTWTB is my weekly award to the three best things I've read in blogland in the previous week. Here are this week's winners:

1. The Wonder Years by Living With Bob

"As a child I received many lessons. I was taught to be ashamed of who I was and of my life circumstances. I was taught that my value could only be measured by what others thought. I was taught to be silent. To never trust others. To fear judgement. I was taught at an early age that I would never be good enough."

I think it's safe to say that Michelle has never written a blog post like this before. I am no fan of misery memoirs, but I picked this because it couldn't be any further from that. Yes, at the end of it you want to give her a big hug, but immediately after that you want to congratulate her on such a superb, clear-eyed exposition of the damage families can cause and how - despite that - subsequent generations can redeem maybe not everything, but a lot of things, through love. I admired this one an awful lot, and I think you might too.

2. The Film That Waited Down The Road by The Kid In The Front Row

"The film was just three roads away. It sat on top of the TV in a girl's house, there in its DVD case. The film was in many other places too. It was on a DVD rack in France, on an old VHS tape in Japan and being downloaded by a pensioner in Tennessee."

What The Kid does here is take a beautiful idea for a walk, just as far as it will go and not a step further. He writes a really interesting blog, partly about films and partly about positive thinking. Both are subjects I know very little about - but I hope I know a piece of quality writing when I see one, and this is certainly it.

3. The Grace Of God by Tooting Squared

"He looked at me and asked how old I was. I was still 21 then. He continued to look at me, clearly considering whether to speak the words he was thinking. After a long pause, he said, 'his life and yours were practically the same. It could have been you instead.'"

This one gave me the shivers. We all spend so much time - well, I do anyway - regretting the things we never were and the stuff that never happened. This piece of writing is a chilling demonstration that it works both ways; very, very sad indeed. Amid all of the tragedy in here the detail I found saddest is possibly the tiniest, hidden in the narrative, the "note which only half of them ever acknowledged". It's superbly done and very affecting.

Here's what you can do to support That Was The Week That Blogged. First, pop by and check all the winners out in full. Feel free to tell them I sent you, in fact it's practically compulsory.

Secondly, if you read (or write) a blog post you think would be a worthy winner next week, either comment here, drop me a mail or Tweet at me with the hashtag #TWTWTB. The best ones will be announced on the blog and on Twitter every Sunday.

Last of all of course, if you won this week: congratulations! Feel free to take the rather fetching picture at the top and copy it onto your sidebar. Of course, I won't be offended if you don't.