Monday, 8 June 2009

This is my life

Well, it’s been a while. A combination of things have prevented me sitting down at my PC for an uninterrupted length of time and blogging. I haven’t even found any time for any online shopping (pause to steady erratic heartbeat) because, all of a sudden, my life went a bit offline. I was thinking about all this yesterday whilst lying in a bath of Philosophy Green Apple bubbles and, by the time I finished, my bubbles were flat, my toes resembling prunes and my head bonging. And this song was going round and round my brain.

So, to make some sense of it all, I’ve written it all down….read on if you haven’t got a nervous twitch, an aversion to chaos and have half an hour to spare.

My boys
Mac is still progressing with his Terrible Twos three years late. He will no now longer eat anything green as he is convinced they will grow in his “belly and kill me”. I blame his father who has been spinning bedtime stories of aliens and other life forms. He has decided that he’s too old for kisses, cuddles, tummy tickles and being called Chocolate Muffin. He actually muttered the word “Mother” last week which brought me up short. My name is mummy!

David is working hard and surviving (just) the slings and arrows of misfortune. Two account directors have been given “extended gardening leave” which got us all worried until David revealed that they’ve been not only cooking the books but burning them to pieces. He’s continuing to keep his nose clean and has started to embrace homeopathic remedies for his headache, ably assisted by my beloved sister Bea who has shunned “Nurofen for nettles darling”.
My home life
Having successfully diverted a move to Tunbridge Wells things are settled in Nunhead. We’re still looking for a weekend cottage/caravan/shed (listen, I’m not fussy any more) and are also redecorating as we’ve decided, after a year, that we don’t like the hallway wall colour. I was back at work the week before half term for the whole week, 9 to 5 and it nearly killed me. Mac was taken to and from school by Flavia, Bea’s au pair and flourished on proper Italian homemade pasta. He now wants Flavia to move in with us.

Bea and Bea and Family
My sister has become all New Age and is wafting around the house in a caftan and smoking incense most days. Gone is the pill popping sister of old (purely medicinal you understand, she never did rattle when she walked) and, in her place, we have someone who find drinking boiled nettles “wonderfully refreshing”. She’s full of sage advice about stress-busting techniques, has instructed her housekeeper to keep the radio on in the kitchen “24/7 darling to stimulate the chi” and has acquired a small black kitten which she has yet to name as she’s waiting for the pussy cat to “tell her what she wishes to be called”. She’s only like this at home you understand, I rang her at work the other day and overheard her, well, bollocking (the only word that suits the diatribe) a delivery boy who’d messed up her wet decaff and organic biscuit order. She was snarling when she finally got round to me. How she lives a dual life, I’ll never know.

Stephen and the children are getting used to finding mummy draped in diaphanous silk, chanting ominously and distributing bonhomie and good cheer. Stephen is benefiting from all of the massage oil and essential oils and, when they’re not being worn, the children play tents with the caftans.

Lydia, Matthew and Freddie
Lydia is becoming, she says, one of those mothers that she used to despise. She’s struggling to cope with motherhood “at her time of life” and yo-yo’s between pity and admiration for that “old biddy who recently had twins”. She uses the television as a baby sitter, sings the Cbeebies jingles like she used to hum Beyonce and has taken to baby talking Matthew because she can’t quite get out of the habit. When I suggested that she talk to baby Freddie normally you’d have thought I had suggested she boil and eat baby Freddie. “He’s a baby!” she squealed, clutching her pride and joy to her chest and rocking him manically. “Aren’t oo de most booful boysie in da whole wide worldie?”

When I pointed out that baby Freddie is, even at this young age, fixing her with a puzzled look she sulked for a week.

Matthew feels she needs to get out and about a bit more and gets extremely exasperated with she recoils in horror at having to take her baby boy out in the horrible harsh world. “She’s not only wrapping him in cotton wool, she’s adding bubble wrap” he said gloomily on the phone to his father.

Freddie himself is blooming, a proper boy with an alarming habit of trying to fix onto the breasts of every woman who holds him. “Just like his father” Lydia says sourly. I get the impression that all is not well but don’t want to interfere. It’s a fine line, says David, between supporting and smothering. Amelia is beside herself, she does like a good meddle.

Janey, Darren, Scarlett and Blue
The other little family are “coming on a bundle” as Darren’s mum is wont to say. Scarlett is currently being touted round all of the modelling agencies with Blue bringing up the rear and Janey living in a world of child stars and stage school applications. Admittedly, Scarlett is a regular little poser but Auntie Ivy is spouting doom and gloom about the prospect of drug addiction for her favourite granddaughter. Janey is oblivious to her mothers worries and is imagining a double spread in Hello “when Darren signs to a proper club”. Darren’s prospects of signing for a “proper club” took a nose dive on the last game of the season when he scored two own goals and was then sent off for calling the referee “a bleeping, parping moron”. David went to the game and he said it was the funniest thing he’d ever seen.

Dad
My dad has rediscovered his carpentry hobby – you can’t move round his house for bits of wood stuck to other bits of wood that will fit in with that bit he’s just nailed to the other bit. He’s keen to get Mac interested in woodwork and has promised that, if Mac helps him build it, he can have a toy box with his name engraved on it. By the look of the plans we’ll need to move to a bigger house to accommodate it.

The animals
The three dogs are not impressed with this changeable weather. No sooner had all three moulted into their summer coat, the wind and the rain came back. All three insist on checking the weather report before they leave the house now.

Becks the rabbit is alive and well and, thankfully, hasn’t gone the same way as the school hamster. We managed to replace it for an almost identical one and nothing has been said yet. However, as Dawn pointed out, one hamster is pretty much like any other.

Amelia
What can I say about my mother in law. Devastated that we’re not moving five minutes away from her, miffed that we’re not allowing her to meddle in Matthew’s life, annoyed that she’s having to share a room with Jane Mablethorpe when they go off on their annual trip to Eastbourne and highly hacked off that Jack Next Door has refused to go with them. “I can’t understand what’s wrong with the man!” she ranted down to the phone to David the other evening “Any man worth his salt would jump at the chance to go on holiday with ten women!”. David managed not to point out that he’d be mad to go on holiday with ten women all demanding, nagging and moaning. I urged him to ring her back and point that out to her.

Charlie
My best friend has shunned the love merry go round. “I can’t be arsed to get tarted up, dressed up and then have to listen to some ar*ehole of a man pontificate about how frigging wonderful he is” she announced at the my birthday party. “As long as I’ve got my friends, heat magazine, Galaxy chocolate, Ashes to Ashes and erm, a little battery operated item then I’m happy”. The male guests at my intimate little gathering suddenly found something very interesting to do in the garden. David all but vaulted the coffee table.

Saskia
Is in love with a pilot called George. She’s still wearing orange and is loving her daily battle with passengers. “I just wish they’d bring the TV cameras back, I could be the next Jeremy Spake!” she trilled from a Gatwick check in desk. She’s thinking of applying to be a stewardess but, in her own words “doesn’t like heights…..do you think that would be an issue?”

Assorted Friends
Eliza and family have moved to Holborough Lakes in Snodland. Mac finds this word hilarious and also wants to move to Snodland, believing it to be a magical land of make believe. I have challenged David to make up a bedtime story saga involving the Snods of Snodland. I think we may have a best seller on our hands.

Andy and Adam are engaged to be married and are planning their civil ceremony with my help. “I want it to be all romantic and misty and ethereal” Andy breathed as he flicked through Brides magazine “Adam wants it to be manly” he added. “Manly?” Charlie queried as we watched Adam gaze in awe at pictures of the (doomed) wedding of Katie and Peter. We suspect that Adam’s crush on Mr Andre rages on.

Assorted Relatives
Auntie Ivy has decided to give up driving because “every time I go out in the car I get back to a nervous wreck of a husband”. Uncle Jim is quite pleased at this piece of news and now that “she” isn’t going to be driving it “is looking to upgrade to a newer model – of car that is, fnar, fnar!”. Little does he know that, if he does achieve this goal, Ivy will take up driving again.

Aunt Daisy is struggling with the notion of Adam and Andy getting married. “In my day you got married for love, not because one of the people has got a yoghurt maker and the other one hasn’t”. This misunderstanding came about because she overheard me tell Bea at Freddie’s christening that they’re pooling their resources.

The Neighbours
Frank and Marjorie Stewart are still bouncing round their bedroom nearly every night. How do I know? They tell me. It’s like True Confessions over the garden fence most mornings. They’ve still got this mad idea about arranging a beano outing for The Avenue. David fears this is playing fast and loose with the minds of the criminal fraternity (“they’ll see the street empty and have a field day”) so he has instructed me to decline any offers. I felt it necessary to point out that I decline ALL and EVERY offer I get from the Stewarts.

Jane and Bill Opposite are still enjoying their love-hate relationship. Jane went out and blew nearly two thousands pounds on haute couture dresses the other week just because Bill lost almost the exact same amount at a poker game. Bill is remarkably unconcerned about this and his comment of “small tits for tat” has propelled Jane to the plastic surgeons for another boob job.

Ruby Over the Road is moving to Selsey Bill to be closer to her elderly parents. It’ll be a wrench, she revealed, but promises us all that she won’t allow “just anybody” to move into our Avenue. There is talk of Jane Opposite setting up a vetting station.

Jack Next Door, when not dodging offers to join the geriatrics in Eastbourne, has become something of a local celebrity. Neighbours are lining up to ask him for advice on wilting petunias and rotting ivy. He does fact sheets now that I’ve shown him how to use the spell checker on the PC his daughter bought him for his birthday. And when I showed him how to surf the web, well……he said he got RSI in his mouse hand. I dread to think what he was looking at.

And me? Well, I’m keeping my head down, my eyes and ears open and things are (ssssh, fingers crossed) okay. I’m still trying (unsuccessfully) to cut down on my doughnut habit but am drawn, like a moth to a flame, to Ayres. I have started running a bit now, shamed by an incident in the park the other week when I was overtaken by one of those invalid carriages when I thought I was out on a brisk walk.

Although, that’s nothing to do with what happened to me at Pett Level……but that’s a whole other post.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Big Brother 10

Do I? Or don't I? I watched the launch night show last night in between reading my latest book. Bea has already threatened to disown me if I "so much as push the number four button on your remote control darling girl". But I can't help it. It's easy viewing and, in the current climate, doesn't cost anything to watch (if I don't vote, which I didn't last year) so.......oh, decisions, decisions.

So, I've been away a while.....how's everyone been?

Friday, 29 May 2009

Help!

Well, I'd just sat down at the computer to update you with what's happening in my life (we're not moving to Tunbridge Wells, more later about my victory) but I've just received a frantic phone call from Fellow Mum Dawn along these lines:

Me: "Hello?"
Dawn : "Hi, it's me, listen I need your help. In fact I don't need your help, I desperately want it"
Me: "Why, what's happened?"
Dawn: "I can't go into it all right now because Jonathan is here (this bit was whispered) but can you meet me at Blackheath Pets at Home at four-ish?"
Me: Erm, right, will have to get Mac ready first so......"
Dawn, interrupting, "Noooooooooooooooo! Don't bring Mac with you! Promise me you won't bring him!"
Me, fearing for her sanity and my son: "Okaaaaaaay, calm down. I'll see if.....someone can take him. Dawn, what's going on?"
Dawn, whispering again: "Woody is dead"

She didn't need to say any more. Woody is the class hamster that Jonathan was looking after over the school holiday. However, his death suggests that he wasn't doing it very well. And I don't think we're going to Pets At Home to buy a hamster coffin. I fear some subterfuge is afoot.

Monday, 18 May 2009

Disturbing times

David has found a house for us. In Tunbridge Wells. Five minutes (five minutes!) walk away from his mother's residential home It's perfect, apparently. Three bedrooms, two bathrooms, huge garden/paddock, in our price range "but I reckon the guy will be happy to take a cut", needs little or no work doing on it, has room in the driveway for both cars AND the man's wife is called Joanna so it's fate. Apparently. Oh, and David thinks that it would be better to move there permanently rather than just use it as a weekend place.

You can imagine my delight and joy, on returning from queuing for play off tickets for four hours, to be told this - it was ten minutes before I could formulate words other than "what?" and "huh?".

Whilst out buying an entire pig for his mothers freezer (and half a cow for ours) David said he was hit with a blinding thought: why not move out of London? This was half prompted by the glorious fresh air pouring in through the open car window and the fact that Steve At Work has just decamped his entire family to Sedlescombe and "commutes in, takes just twenty minutes more than it would from Swanley" where they used to live.

I could brain Steve At Work.

And of course, once he drove past The New House (he's taken to calling it this already) he saw the man from the estate agents putting up the For Sale sign and demanded a tour there and then. Amelia is delighted, naturally and is already looking for removal firms.

When I regained the use of my mouth and brain function I pointed out to him (everso calmly I thought) that I would rather have my bits Brazilian waxed every day than move to Tunbridge Wells. He asked me why. I snorted in a very unladylike fashion and switched on the kettle before hitting him between the eyes with the following:

- I don't want to live permanently in Tunbridge Wells
- I don't want to move permanently anywhere
- I don't want to move anywhere near his mother
- I don't care if the "new" bathroom is painted sky blue, I'll go to B&Q tomorrow
- I don't understand where the HELL this has come from
- We can't take Mac out of school now he's settled
- The dogs are London dogs
- I'd miss Ayres too much (sad, but true)
- I would have to change the name of my blog and that's just plain wrong

Okay, so I didn't actually voice the last point out loud but I was thinking it very loudly in my head.

He answered with the following:

- Why?
- Why?
- I can see your point
- Okay, also see if they have a tile with a shell motif on it in toning colours
- It's a possibility we can talk about
- Better now he's not even a year in than later on when he's more established
- The dogs love the countryside (then turning to all three hounds and saying "don't oo?!" in a very irritating way)
- Don't be silly, there are bakers in Tunbridge Wells! (Blasphemy!)
- Why are you glaring at me?

We have left it somewhat up in the air. He hasn't actually said any more about it since Saturday evening when I sulked my way through the Eurovision Song Contest (I don't watch it as a rule but I was proving a point) and he pointed out that "that Turkish woman" looked a bit like the current owner of The New House. I glared at him for a full two minutes before he picked up his Dick Francis.

I have, of course, discussed it with my friends and family (all day Sunday spent on the phone and/or MSN Messenger) and their comments/suggestions are listed below:

Bea: "Darling, Tunbridge Wells? Don't do it. It's in Kent."
Saskia: "Convince him it'll be perfect as a weekend place only and that if you move out of London he won't be able to cope without all the pollution and he'll keel over"
Charlie: "You are kidding me? Five minutes from Amelia every day? Does he want to become an orphan?"
Janey: "Hah! Don't tell me mother, she'll be badgering you for your spare room"
Auntie Ivy: "Oooh, can I come and stay? My friend Elsie lives there but I can't stay at hers cos I'm allergic to her Foofy"
Janey, again: "Tell her the house is next to a cattery, she's allergic to cats"
Marjorie Stewart: "You can't move! Frank won't have anyone to flirt with"
Jack Next Door: "Good luck, let me know if you need any help in the garden"
Lydia: "Noooooooooooooooooooo, don't go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I need you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Jane Opposite: "Tell him to eff off! Tunbridge Wells? Eff me, is he having a laugh?"

You can see my quandry can't you? Whilst I want to support my husband and entertain all of his little ideas blah, blah, blah I don't actually want to do any of that. Selfish? Yes. I admit it. I'm bloody selfish and all I want to do is revert to my five year old self and scream "Don't Want To!" at the top of my voice until he sees reason.

But I know I have to play the long game (use my feminine wiles, as Marjorie put it this morning) and make him think it's a Terrible Idea whilst making him think that he thought it was a Terrible Idea. If you see what I mean. I'm sorry, I'm rambling now.

Tunbridge Wells Ramblings. No, can't see it to be honest.

Friday, 15 May 2009

Tomorrow

My fate has been sealed. I've drawn the (very) short straw and have been "nominated" by my friends and family to queue for the Millwall Play-Off Final tickets. They'll be joining me though. At some point. At around 9.30am when my position in the queue is secure and they can just stroll up to join me. And to be fair to David, he would have gone himself had he not been conscripted into helping his mother stock up her freezer. It's not that I mind that much but I'm having slight reservations about beginning my mission at around 7.30am. Yes, in the morning. Which means at least a 6am start because the dogs will know it's Saturday and therefore my first task will be to take them to the park. Will Peckham Rye park even be open at that hour of the day?

Still. Charlie is here to babysit for Mac (and may even bring him down to find me and my merry band of fellow nominees if I'm "still there at like, half eleven") and she's lending me her iPod for the lonely hours ahead of me. "If you get on with it" she said as she shuffled it effortlessly "you know what to tell David you want for your birthday!".

Listen, at this moment in time I'd settle for a ticket to watch the Lions at Wembley!

Saturday, 9 May 2009

Cold front

Is it me or is it getting progressively colder again? I mean, considering that this time last week I was dressed only in jeans and a T-shirt wandering around Lewisham trying desperately to find a Christening present that wasn't twee. Even Bank Holiday Monday gave us sunshine.....but since then I've got the chills.

Bea is very concerned and keeps asking me questions straight from the Swine Flu Symptom Book:

"are you shivering?"
"Yes"
"are you spending, erm, longer in the lavatory than usual?"
"No"
"Well, it's not that then"

Thank God for the Royal Mail who yesterday delivered my Slanket. It's heavenly and has barely left my body since it's arrival at quarter past eleven. I've even mastered walking in it, no mean feat as it's huge. David wants to know why I didn't get him one as he watched me snuggle up on the sofa with it last night. This from a man who complains of being hot in the middle of winter and doubles up as my hot water bottle on those cold wintery nights. Mac informs me that it's "got the same skin as Dino", waving his motheaten dinosaur at me. I noted the glint in his eye and lovingly took my Slanket to bed with me last night. It's lovely and warm and cuddly and just so......cosy.

Janey has got Slanket-envy and is thinking of buying one for Uncle Jim's "significant birthday" - she took the order details with her when she left this morning to go to "Bluewater for a dander" - she lives in hope that she'll spot Victoria Beckham/Daniella Westbrooke/Jude Law one day and instantly grab herself a celebrity friend. "Michelle, y'know, the goalkeepers wife, she knows that bloke off Eastenders, you know, the one who went into the jungle and all because she bumped into him outside the lavs". She tried to take it with her when she left "y'know, just to try it". I pointed out that if she ordered it before 3pm today, she could have her own Slanket by Monday. She sensed the reluctance to remove my cosy wrapping but only after a half hearted attempt to mug me for it on my doorstep.

Anyway, must dash because, although I'm wearing my Slanket as I type, I feel the need to snuggle up on the sofa. Combined with a steaming cup of tea and a custard cream, it's the perfect way to spend an evening.

Go on.....get your own Slanket at ShinyShack.com.

Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Once the party's over

I'm typing this as I munch my way through my "square" of Christening cake. I don't wish to be unkind but it's taken me ten minutes to get rid of a strip of icing sugar. Lydia actually apologised when she dropped our cake boxes off this morning "Don't eat it if you value your sugar intake or your fillings" she said wearily.

Saint Kate had had the cake made by a "WI friend" - two tiers of rich fruit cake topped by a hideous looking blue iced bonnet. I was quite chuffed when I saw people actively spitting it out.

It actually wasn't that bad. My outfit didn't clash with Saint Kate, Amelia spent the duration of the day sitting so close to Saint Kate that she more or less ignored me, my hair and nails looked fabulous (if I say so myself) and my darling child behaved impeccably. Even when he, Caitlin and Ian decided to hide behind a gravestone to see "who they could scare" they screeched very politely. However, Lydia's Great Aunt Alice had to be taken home early for a "lie down".

David woke up on the Sunday morning pulling worrying at his hair "It's too short" he moaned as he noticed the three inch gap between his hair and his shirt collar. I merely sniffed in a ladylike fashion and raised a newly plucked eyebrow. "If ever I tell you I'm going to the barbers" he whispered to me in the church "remind me not to let him get carried away talking about Arsenal in Europe."

The party went very well, the food was lovely (Bea got very excited when she saw langoustines in garlic and herb butter and sent Stephen up for "a platter") and the DJ played the room like a pro. He even had David up and dancing (see pic above, apologies for this, Mac took it, is very proud of it and "wants to show everybubody mummy") and even Amelia took to the floor for "New York New York".

Baby Freddie behaved extremely well (apart from throwing up in the font but the vicar thinks it was the "shock of the cold water") and a lovely day was had by all.

AND.......Amelia spent Saturday and Sunday night in a hotel paid for by Saint Kate. Hoorah!

All about me

My photo
Nunhead, London, United Kingdom
I'm a mum of one, wife of one and owner to several dogs, a variety of breeds and sizes. I live in the up and coming area (or so they say) of Nunhead and have mad neighbours, strange friends and certifiable relatives. I shop locally, although I do defect to Sainsburys once a week - shoot me now local shopkeepers.