Saturday, July 31, 2010

The tectonic plates, they are a shifting: part 1 of ?

Today, the youngest of M's children (whom I still occasionally refer to as his chilblains) turned 28, which is the age that I was when I started going out with him. It's one of those days, essentially insignificant -- just another day, after all -- that give pause for thought, like the day I realised I was the same age that my mother was when she had me, or the day I realised I had been split from my Significant Ex for longer than we were together, or the day I realised that I'd been menstruating for more than half my life. (Shortly to be two thirds, and no sign of let-up yet. Marvellous.)

So I paused for thought. It's a difficult age, 28, and these are difficult times. I feel for her. But more importantly, I'm glad to know her well enough to be able to feel for her, as for a long time I didn't think that would happen. She (and her older siblings) are much better placed now to imagine what it might have been like for me, especially in the early days, and I think to some extent they have all done some of that imagining, Which can't have been easy, and I appreciate it. Equally, I have got much better at working out which boundaries need to be clearly defined, and which need to be porous. And at getting over stuff that essentially isn't personal.

I maintain some central reservations, but these are the things which differentiate me, to paraphrase Rebecca West, from a doormat. I have yet to find a woman who finds stepmotherhood a straightforward or 100% positive experience -- but a surprising number of us end up doing it, and I have had some excellent cathartic and/or hilarious conversations about it over the last 12 years. 

At the same time, M is about the same age my parents were when we got together, and I can see more clearly now how they might have found the prospect of their daughter going out with a not-yet-divorced man with three teenage children a bit of a challenge. 

The long game. A lot of it is about the long game. Vive la long game! 

joella

Monday, July 05, 2010

Power to the people!

Breaking news is that the BBC Trust has rejected the BBC's plans to close 6 Music. This is BRILLIANT, not just because the proposal to close it was a short-sighted, dumb, management by numbers one, but because thousands of people said so and they were heard. Well done us.

joella

Thursday, July 01, 2010

The smell of long ago and far away

I wouldn't really say I was bullied at school. Yes, there were some horrible days, some things which made me cry quietly in the toilets, some things that kept me awake at night. Overall though, in the scheme of things, in the Big Picture, I did all right. Better than many people.

But something comes back to me every time I eat a packet of prawn cocktail crisps. I like prawn cocktail crisps a lot, but I seldom eat them. Until I do, I wonder why, then when I do, I remember.

I was small when I started secondary school. I was the youngest person in the year (so for my first year I was the youngest person in the school) and I had bad hair and unfashionable shoes. I didn't start my periods until I was 14, which now sounds like a total blessing, but until the hormones kicked in I had a flat chest to go with my flat feet, and would rather have been reading a book, whatever the alternative was. I wore glasses, except I didn't, so I spent winter running in random circles round a hockey pitch and summer looking in the wrong direction for a rounders ball while people screamed 'CATCH!' at me*. I also generally came top of the class. You can imagine how popular I was.

They used to call me Keeno. One of them in particular. Secretly, I didn't see what was so bad about being keen, I was quite interested in glaciation and fractional distillation and the industrial revolution. Still am. But I knew it wasn't cool to be seen to be keen. So I tried not to be seen at all. Generally, this was a successful tactic - I wasn't ginger or fat, I had no extreme physical defects, and some of the more sensitive teachers were careful about not drawing attention to my precocious efforts. But some of them (the pupils, not the teachers, the teachers were ok, on the whole) could tell I was small and not cool and didn't have any friends, not really**, and was scared, and was trying not to be noticed. One of them in particular.

He was one of the cool ones. One of the scariest cool ones, because he was also clever... clever enough to get by without doing very much work, and clever enough to to look like he was doing no work at all. He was one of those who'd hang out with the drop outs, but never actually drop out. He had the quiffiest quiff, the skinniest tie, the pointiest shoes, went out with the blondest girl. Our last names were calamitously close together in the alphabet, so in the more regimented classes we often ended up sitting next to each other. But all I wanted was for him to ignore me. That would have suited me just fine.

And most of the time, it suited him too. I really wasn't worth bothering with. I did my homework in purple ink, underlining salient points in green, and always had the answer if anyone asked, but I learnt not to sit right at the front, got a brutalist haircut and made my mother buy me a pair of huge clumpy shoes and a second hand boys' blazer three sizes too big. Project Nothing To See Here was generally a success. Lunchtimes were always a risk though, especially in winter, when we were more or less confined to our form rooms, which were randomly inspected by unpredictably corrupt prefects.

It was a lunchtime in my third year, and we were in Room P. I had made a trip to the tuck shop to buy a packet of prawn cocktail crisps - KP, green and orange packet, my favourites - and was sitting at my desk reading a book and eating them as slowly as possible. Crisps were both a delicacy and a pastime in those days, and I used to eat them by crushing them into tiny pieces inside the bag with my left hand, then tipping them slowly into my right and eating them crumb by crumb with the tip of my tongue. This way, I could make a packet last half an hour, while I read my book and ignored the mayhem going on around me.

I'd done this before. But this time, when I'd finished and got up from my desk and headed for the bin with the empty packet in my left hand and a right hand full of oily, prawn cocktailly crisp crumbs, I found my way blocked by the Beautiful One.

He was sneering. I said 'Can I get to the bin?'. He said 'No'. I said 'Please?'. He said 'No'.

There was a pause. I considered my options. There weren't many. And then something sort of snapped inside me. I looked up at him, and said 'OK'. And then I rubbed my oily, prawn cocktailly, crisp-crumby right hand all over his face.

There was another pause. He stepped aside. There was one of those silences that can make your bowels move. I walked to the bin, dropped my crisp packet in it, rubbed the rest of the crumbs off my right hand and walked out of the room.

I didn't spend a lunch hour in my form room for the rest of that year. And I paid for that action, in little ways, here and there, for the rest of my school career.

Deep down, I think it was worth it, even though 25 years later I just need to smell prawn cocktail crisps and I am 13 years old again, with my heart thumping in my nylon socks.

After I finished my prawn cocktail crisps, I googled him. He's bald now.

joella

* To be honest, there was more than inadequate eyesight at play here, but it didn't help.
** Until the sixth form. I had real friends in the sixth form. Still my real friends, some of them.