tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-279524002024-02-20T07:14:27.389+00:00Writing stuff to clear my head(disclaimer, this blog will almost certainly involve swearing, religion/my faith, typos aplenty, more information than you might possibly want to know about me and a certain amount of the release of random thoughts that have been spluttering around my head for ages now)helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.comBlogger34125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-58774707121766477122014-07-26T22:52:00.001+01:002014-07-26T22:52:50.049+01:00Another moonlit nightI still miss him so much. It surprises me sometimes. <br/> <br/> Tonight there was a show, with the pub sign from the show he directed but never saw because he was in ICU, with the long storyteller's coat that he wanted to wear to our wedding, with songs recycled from previous shows he'd been involved in. The memories didn't hit as hard as they used to but, even so, I still left at the interval to go and find some space. <br/> <br/> I ended up eating chips on the quay by the river and even that brought back memories of sitting on the edge of the quayside in the harbour, in the exact same skirt, on what probably passed as our first real date eating ice cream and listening to the Storyteller tell my a story all of my very own. <br/> <br/> I'm fed up of being alone. It hurts too much. <br/> <br/> I'm trying to pluck up the courage at the moment to go in the pub behind me, get a drink and listen to the band properly, rather than sitting out here in the quay. I used to enjoy going and listening to random live music in pubs. I've never been brave enough to go by myself though. Of course, now I've said that, it sounds rather a lot like they're taking a break. So perhaps, I won't. <br/> helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-4997650430259013122014-06-13T00:46:00.000+01:002014-06-13T00:46:27.835+01:00By the light of the moon It's late; my brain is caffeine-addled. The moon is almost full. The night is clear and shadows fill the room with a peace, of sorts.<br />
<br />
The lack of shadow highlights the smoothness of one side of this bed. If I sit up, I can still identify the white lights of the hospital against the orange lights of the town. The view from this home has both comforted me and sickened me, in the past.<br />
<br />
This home won't be mine much longer. Four more days at the most. Soon, someone else will watch the weather come in from the Channel, hiding or revealing the islands. Someone else will watch the fireworks on the quay.<br />
<br />
Soon, there will be a new place for me. A new kitchen to feed people from. A new home for my books. A new home for my huge stripy blanket.<br />
<br />
The shadows move slowly across the walls. How many nights has their progress been tracked? How many mornings have been spent watching the sky lighten?<br />
<br />
This room hasn't known as many tears as perhaps it should have. Loneliness and sorrow are old friends but rarely given vent to, not here.<br />
<br />
Which life do I wish I was leading? Married but poor, a carer and childless? Married, with children but having compromised who I am to get there? Divorced with children, having made the decision too late? Or as I am, single, financially solvent and able to plan a complete change of career almost at the drop of a hat?<br />
<br />
The empty side of the bed looks emptier by this light. This wasn't what I wanted. On a different moonlit night, six years ago, I was all of a-flutter, did I have the time for him? If I knew then how it would end, would I still have made that choice? Would I still have said yes?helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-30101348396417784872014-03-31T22:16:00.001+01:002014-03-31T22:16:20.829+01:00Random updateJust so you know, I'm not ignoring this blog, I just don't need it so much any more. I'm leaving it up because I know I've linked to it in a few different places and I want to leave those posts available just in case anyone comes back here and needs to know that they're not alone, that they'll get through it.<div>
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Thoughts of a less private nature will be found over here when I finish writing the first post</div>
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http://helenmt81.blogspot.com</div>
helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-5964485665113548822013-12-23T13:48:00.003+00:002013-12-23T13:48:42.944+00:00Bleugh, wibble, etcChristmas.<br />
<br />
What joy.<br />
<br />
On one level, I like Christmas. I like the message of light in the darkness and all of that stuff.<br />
<br />
On another level, ouch, it's a recipe for nothing but heartache.<br />
<br />
I'm no longer going to go into all the details of *why* it's a recipe for nothing but heartache. That was my plan when I started writing. But then John 1:5 came into my head.<br />
<br />
And there is Hope.<br />
<br />
<i>The Light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it</i>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-13919522700805618812013-09-17T23:13:00.001+01:002013-09-17T23:13:38.423+01:00WibbleNot for any particular reason, just plain wibble.<br/> <br/> I'm feeling wibbly about going to Moorlands next year.<br/> <br/> I've been aware these past couple of days that I am single and that has actually been the word I've used to describe myself.<br/> <br/> I've felt mildly lost with longing when our new student, when desperately triangulating the various relationships at church, made the fairly reasonable assumption that the guy I was sat next to at the quiz last night was my husband. No, I do look similar to his wife but she wasn't there and I don't have a husband.<br/> <br/> I'm outright *craving* hugs and cuddles at the moment. I just want to cling on to someone so that the world disappears. <br/> <br/> I really want to come in from work after a long day occasionally and have someone look after me. Not to have to put the next load of laundry on. Not to have to work out what I want to eat for dinner.<br/> <br/> I miss the insanity of the Flat back in the days when I never knew who was going to be here when I walked in the door. I hated it at the time because Little Miss INTJ just couldn't cope after a long week at work but now I miss it.<br/> <br/> There's still more thoughts stuck in my brain, about hugs and friends and the smell of aftershave and the feel of their shirt and accountability and longing and mutually snuggling into each other's necks while hugging in a technical platonic fashion (using "platonic"as the adjective there amuses me because of how I know said friend and the different belief difference involved. Perhaps storge/phileo-ic would be a better description!)<br/> <br/> helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-2117722794026823522013-07-27T00:03:00.001+01:002013-07-27T00:03:49.319+01:00LonelinessLoneliness is a complete bitch and I really wish that it couldn't get it's claws into me in the way that it sometimes does.<br/> <br/> I really dislike coming home from a lovely sociable sort of day to realise that I'm a bit too tired and now my brain's going to grumble and crave cuddles and attention. Come on, how long before it realises that such things really aren't an option any more? I am single and will be for the foreseeable future. I have absolutely no interest whatsoever in laying myself open to that level of pain and heartache ever again.<br/> <br/> And that's my final word on the subject, tonight at least.<br/> <br/> helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-32273109279957414562013-06-18T23:47:00.001+01:002013-06-18T23:47:57.666+01:00A long day<p dir=ltr>Please note, it's been a long day today and I'm more than pretty sure that everything will look better in the morning.</p>
<p dir=ltr>I don't know how to start this post.  Do I start with what prompted it?  Do I start with how I felt?  With what reality looks like at the end of it?  With what I want reality to look like?</p>
<p dir=ltr>Today's reality is that I can smell my friend's aftershave on my hair after he hugged me and it's causing me to feel almost homesick.</p>
<p dir=ltr>At this moment I want someone to call my own so much it almost hurts.  I want to know that I can get in from the office at 7.15pm and that someone will be there to cuddle me.  I want someone who'll keep me safe when I'm feeling vulnerable.  I want to be able to be able to look after someone else when they're feeling vulnerable.  I want someone who can follow my tangents and ramblings and keep up with them and anticipate them.  I want in-jokes and laughter and made-up words and silliness and to follow someone else's tangents to the point that words and sentences are all mixed up and are tumbling over each other and that no one else can keep up. I want my hair to smell of their aftershave and to be able to smile because it's marked me as theirs, in the same way that a tan-line under a ring indelibly marks me as theirs. </p>
<p dir=ltr>I want all of the security of being in a long term relationship without the pain and scaredness and heartache and freedom of letting down the barriers that I've built up.  I know that's not going to happen.  I know, without a shadow of a doubt, that I've got to learn to put God first before He'll let me anywhere near a relationship that would be any good for me. I know that, as Paul says in one of his letters, it is better to be single so that you can devote your whole life to God rather than having to share time between God and your family. I definitely know that, if that is God's long-term plan for me, I'll go along with it without too much grumbling. </p>
helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-50567119764442293842013-01-17T23:49:00.001+00:002013-01-17T23:49:22.006+00:00The Helen version of broodinessIt's felt almost taboo at times discussing this here. It's felt almost taboo discussing it at all. I don't know why. It's easier to pretend that babies "scare me"; that I don't know anything about holding them; almost that I love my life too much to every want children of my own. Kids are lovely in small doses but it's so nice to give them back after Brownies or whatever. <br />
<br />
I've been talking complete bullshit for years.<br />
<br />
Once upon a time, when I was engaged to a guy galled Phil, we assumed that we'd end up having two, although more likely three, children. We split up when I was 23 (unless I'd just turned 24, June 2005 at any rate). (Wow, was I young! I didn't feel it at the time though.).<br />
<br />
I was 26 when I met Gav, 27 when we started going out and I assumed kids would happen at some point. That was before I realised the full repercussions of his kidney disease and the drugs he was on. There was a possible genetic element to some of what caused the kidney disease in the first place and there was no way that he wanted to pass anything on to any future children. Let alone any possibly side effects of all the drugs he was on and the potential reality for me of being both carer for husband and mother of toddler. By this time, I was willing to trade the chance of children for being married to Gavin. It took time to deal with but I had decided that happiness with Gavin was worth far more to me than the chance to have children.<br />
<br />
Then he passed away.<br />
<br />
And because of my choices and what life's thrown at me, I'm 31, unmarried and childless. Everyone I can think of that's my age is either married, has children or both.<br />
<br />
I'd be talking even more bullshit if I said that I've never considered what life would be like if I hadn't dumped Phil. I learnt a lot from that relationship but we were both still young and didn't have the experience to make it work properly. Reminding myself that, had we stayed together then, I could now be getting divorced (he would cheat on me during rough patches rather than talking to me) while working on a PhD at an overseas university and looking after a small child or two does help to put it all into perspective somewhat.<br />
<br />
I was sat with a couple of friends and the baby of one of them at lunch today. I've always taken a step back when the baby has been passed around for cuddles before. I've had a stinking cold and haven't wanted to pass it on. I've been just on my way to set something set up. Then their puddings came out before mine so it made sense that I'd end up holding him while they ate. And he was so happy on my lap that his mum asked if I'd mind watching him while she ran the other friend back to work. And he was still perfectly content to be bounced up and down while she was away and then the older ladies at café started on the age old "you do seem to have a way with babies, Helen". Even my Grandad who was there was also teasing me about it a bit. Ouch. Perhaps I've spent too long pretending that I'm happy being child-free that they don't realise that I consider myself to be child-less.<br />
<br />
I would <b>love</b> to have a child or two of my own to cuddle, tell stories to and to watch grow up. I just haven't got to that part of my journey through life yet. I still can't believe that I'm never supposed to have children of my own and I do wonder how I'm going to cope if God really wants me to be a children's worker. Yet, if that's the way God wants my life to be then that's what I'll live with. I'm sure that there's a psalm that says it perfectly but in the meantime, the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cprV3TZet0g" target="_blank">Rend Collective Experiment's "The Cost"</a> works perfectly as a prayer/answer/statement of why I'll get through it.<br />
<br />
<i>I'm saying "yes" to you,</i><br />
<i>And no to my desires.</i><br />
<i>I'll leave myself behind</i><br />
<i>And follow you.</i><br />
<br />
I'm counting up the cost, and He is worth it.helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-70559527541586865412012-12-03T22:15:00.001+00:002012-12-03T22:58:21.554+00:00Writing stuff down so then I can't get locked in an argument with myself again<p>Potentially, that sounds a smidgen odd as title but I've just reread Carpe Jugulum and I can kind of understand Agnes and Mightily Oats arguing with Perdita and "Bad" Oats.</p>
<p>You see, the thing is, when you're single and don't live with close friends or family and also lack close friends and have apparently acquired a whole host of trust issues along the way which don't combine well to make making close friends an easy task, you end up having to be ridiculously aware of what sort of mood you're in and you also have to be your own cheerleader to talk yourself out of one of those moods. And that, quite frankly, is frigging hard work! You end up stuck in this awful, horrible vicious circle where you try to talk yourself out of it; nearly succeed and so relax for a bit; decide that you're going to have a tantrum and sulk about whatever anyway; attempt to talk yourself out of it again; realise that you're bored and fed up of being your own cheerleader; sulk about (apparently) having no-one apart from your mum to offload onto; sulk and whine again because this is a stupid situation for a 31-year old to be in and generally exhaust yourself like an overtired child. And you know what was probably at the root of tonight's pity party? I had a busy day in what is still a new job. I forgot to factor in the usual crunch of mental gears when swapping from admin to kids' club. A minor thing really, and one I can easily learn from but for any number of reasons, I instead chose to make it the focus of a “you're crap, why are you doing this?" moment which lasted for about 5 hours, on and off this evening.</p>
<p>FIVE HOURS?!?!?!?!</p>
<p>This is where the being alone thing is a complete liability because there's no one to call you out on such a silly waste of time and mental energy.</p>
<p>I'm not a perfectionist. Things don't generally have to be "just so". However, I am competitive and generally still guilty of holding myself to impossibly high standards at the same time ("I must be top of the class").</p>
<p>Moral of tonight's story? I need to learn to be much gentler on myself at times!</p>
helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-83859966254177174372012-11-10T05:07:00.001+00:002012-11-10T05:52:06.294+00:00Small steps and leaps and bounds<div><p>Oddly, despite posting this at dark o'clock, this isn't an insomnia-fueled post.  It's possibly still (even 8 hours later) a wine & cocktail infused post, but it's not insomnia based!</p>
<p>Yesterday was a bit of a big day for me for various reasons.  It was the last day of one of our annual week-long events which, while it represents the culmination of a lot of hard work on behalf of a lot of people, is also bloody hard work and we do celebrate a bit when it's all over.  It was my last day at work before my 4½ month long career break.  It was also nearly, but not quite, the day I asked a guy I like out.</p>
<p>I've had a bit of a soft spot for him pretty much ever since I started work in the admin department five years ago.  We've shared a goodly few laughs and moans over tea in the office kitchen or drinks in the pub and via email when we don't get chance to speak to each other that often.  I really enjoy the time I spend with him and so I decided that my last night before career break was the perfect time to get, well, drunk and flirtatious and to see what happened.  The trouble is that suddenly turning all touchy and huggy with him pretty much got lost in the noise of our colleagues being drunk and the hug-fest that ensued.  Somehow, in the ensuing madness of sorting out lifts and taxis and buses at the end of the night, he disappeared before I could could say anything outright.  So, what's a modern girl to do in these circumstances?  Why, when she gets home, she send the guy in question a message on Facebook, "I'm sorry I didn't get to say goodbye properly.  Keep in touch. Oh, by the way, I really like you but don't know if this is mutual".  Long story short, he likes me too but he's got stuff he wants to sort out in his head before getting into a relationship.  Which, from my point of view, is actually a fair comment to make.  While I was just using my career break as a fairly safe point to find our if he is interested, on the basis that, if I made a fool of myself, I wouldn't be in the office on Monday morning, in all honesty, I'm really not far enough away from losing Gavin to male it worth starting a new relationship.  If it was someone who'd just be up for a bit of fun then I'd risk it but he's not that type (which'll be why I like him in the first place ;o) )</p>
<p>So, still single but we'll see what happens over the coming months.</p>
</div>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-13294609873055378292012-09-25T23:29:00.000+01:002012-12-04T23:31:42.384+00:00So, my brain is still moderately elsewhereI'm not exactly sure quite what I mean by elsewhere but that's definitely where my brain is. Stuff with friend-who-I-had-an-unsuitable-crush-on is definitely and finally at a good solid point where nothing is wrong or just plain weird any more. M from work is quite lovely but I feel it would be forcing things to make anything more out of a good friendship. I say I'm not ready for a relationship at this point and I don't think I'm wrong there but, on the other hand, I do feel that I could certainly cope with someone who I could like be being interested in me.helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-53500199920904782102012-09-09T20:53:00.001+01:002012-09-09T20:53:23.381+01:00The latest updateDo you want to know what I miss the most? Lazy weekends when nothing's been planned and you just randomly decide to go out and do something or to stay in and watch DVDs. Being able to walk into a place and to leave it again with someone else rather than always walking in by yourself, even when you know you're meeting friends whereever it is that you're off to. Not having to come up with plans to amuse yourself all the time. Being able to have more than a superficial conversation with someone. Oh, being able to have more than a superficial conversation with someone! I don't know whether it's because I'm an INTP, whether it's because I'm a Gemini, whether it's because I'm generally crap at chit-chat, whether it's because I'm a squiggle, a Plant or a Specialist (I can't remember which I'm supposed to be), a Dreamer or any other of a hundred and one personality types or definitions depending on which criteria you use but this is a big one for me. I love silly conversations with everyone in the pub but I prefer talking to only a couple of people at a time. I miss my two best friends. One of them lives locally and is married with a 15 month old son and the other lives in London and is married with a 1 month old daughter. Strangely enough, family time always comes first for them these days and old friends end up on the outskirts.<br />
<br />
The thing is, I'm kind of stuck. I know that an "easy" solution would be just to pick up my phone and ring or text people to make plans of the sort that I can deal with but I can come up with so many reasons why that won't work, a major one being that I know that I'm generally never free at the same time as anyone else. (There are others but there's a limit to the amount of soul-baring I'm going to do in one post! ;o) )<br />
<br />
And you know what? This "writing to clear my head" thing really does work. Yes, there're times when I'm bitterly lonely but I do have friends who I should be at least texting when that happens. Yes, I really miss being in a relationship but my heart's not yet mended enough to cope with getting into a relationship again and I *know* this without even testing the idea. Yes, I'm scared stiff of ending up absolutely exhausted again as the autumn term ramps up but I'm now aware of how much spare time I've got and we're changing a lot of stuff at work so this season shouldn't be so manic. Yes, I'm also scared about the huge step of faith that is my 4 1/2 month career break to work-shadow our Children & Families Worker at church but it is going to be oh so EXCITING as well! And if it all goes wrong, I still get my job back at the end of it. When it comes down to it, my living arrangements are secure, I can pay all the bills, I have a job that I really enjoy on a good day and have the freedom to change the way I deal with the boring stuff, I have my family and my friends. I have a lot which I am very thankful for and, perhaps, I should think about this stuff more when the gloom comes down. In the past, I've used Nina Simone's "Ain't Got No/I Got Life" as a kind of checklist of all the things that I do have in my life that I'm thankful for, perhaps I should listen to it a bit more often!helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-34083328409949532472012-07-26T02:10:00.000+01:002012-12-04T23:29:38.652+00:00Hugs are tanglesome thingsWhen is a gentle hug just a hug and when does it turn into a cuddle? That last hug felt so sad and gentle and I only broke it off because everyone else could see and I didn't want them to start wondering. Which is a pretty pants reason now I come to think of it.
<br />
<br />
Oh, I'm all caught up on a tide of nostalgia now. The campfire in my friends' garden led on to talk of camps we have known and loved which, for me, was definitely Camp Eagle Owl/Camp No Name in Sweden in July 1997. I was 16, I'd just done my GCSEs and my Ranger unit went off on an international trip to Sweden to visit a Scout troop we were friends with in Sundsvall. It was amazing. For several years after, I kept in touch with some of them and we met at several more camps over the years. I frequently wished one of them, Daniel, lived closer to home but it was never to be. Neither of us were ever single and on camp together at the same time. I often wondered whether we would ever had gone out with each other had life been completely different. Thinking about it, long hugs good-night were a feature of that non-relationship too but I don't remember thinking that they were odd, just that Danne was silly when it came to hugs.<br />
<br />
It's slightly odd to think that I could have stood there all night holding him. It was that sort of slow, companionable night which sitting around a fire often results in.helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-80719235206140209232012-05-09T14:04:00.000+01:002012-05-09T13:06:40.405+01:00All confusticatedI'm not 100% sure why I'm in quite such an odd mood today. Part of the reason will certainly be because I was up late last night reading instead of getting the early night that I desperately needed. Part of it will be because my new favourite songs are distinctly wistful and haunting and somewhat melancholy and I've been listening to them on repeat and their atmosphere has affected my brain. Part of it will also be because I'm unbearably lonely at times. People do live in the flat with me but I sometimes (and all to frequently recently) feel that I'm just the flat's owner rather than being a real person who lives there too. I have plenty of old friends at the moment but none that I could describe as a best friend. All of the people who have been best friends have moved away or moved on or both.
<br>
<br>Wow. Those are some cheerful thoughts. Never mind, they're where my head currently is and I'm just going to have to deal with them. I don't have a clue how but I'll save that as a problem for another day.
<br>
<br>Today, all I want to do is hibernate and pretend that the world doesn't exist.
<br>
<br>I may be more tired than I thought. I'm sure that normal service will return after a good night's sleep!helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-77073006974426849792012-03-29T20:29:00.001+01:002012-03-31T23:32:05.352+01:00Sending emails to myselfSo back in November, I found <a href="http://www.futureme.org/" target="_blank">FutureMe</a> and decided to write myself an email to be delivered today. By the time I logged onto my email today, I'd completely forgotten all about it so it was a nice surprise for me. Here's what I wrote to myself late one night in late November...<br />
<br />
<br />
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Dear FutureMe,</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
I'm sending this because, dear God!, is today likely to be an awful day.</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Remember the joy of doing the LPA course.</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Remember drinking champagne after working at Graduation and pointing A (and B!!) in the direction of food or champagne.</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Remember dancing in 60 at R's b'day and thinking that you'd actually walked into a Questionable Content strip.</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Remember the taste of that fine, fine mincemeat (I hope! It's still in the cupboard maturing at the moment).</div>
<div class="letter" style="background-color: white; border-bottom-color: initial; border-bottom-style: none; border-bottom-width: initial; color: #333333; font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; line-height: 15px; padding-bottom: 0px;">
Remember the solid bed rock of love and support that comes from home group.</div>
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Remember to go and get prayer if you hide yourself behind your barbed wire fence again.</div>
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Remember sitting drinking tea with M, D and An, keeping the chiminea going.</div>
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Remember the times spent talking rubbish with Mt and S.</div>
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Remember the one, truly unconstrained worship session at Soul Survivor.</div>
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Remember to feel ze burn!</div>
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Remember Tribute and the Day of Hugs.</div>
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Remember the feel of the dog's ears.</div>
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Remember the buzz from correctly anticipating worship team and the minister when you're trying to run AVP.</div>
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Remember gossiping with C while waiting for the Dominos order.</div>
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Remember the odd things like finally having cushions that match the rest of your bedroom.</div>
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Please do remember that if you're feeling physically rough, it constructively interferes with an mental rough feeling and it all spirals out of control. Take a couple of paracetamol, one large mug of tea or hot chocolate and go and watch the waves for a bit.</div>
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Remember that you're allowed to ask for help from others. Make sure you do. Work will almost certainly not be expecting you in today (although that'll depend on whether or not I chose to take some A/L around then). Even if you were silly and thought you could work through it all, K is sure to let you text in rather than phone, today of all days.</div>
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Remember to read psalm 116.</div>
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Please don't get stuck listening to any one song on repeat, pick a selection of songs and use shuffle.</div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Well, as it's turned out, today's been pretty much okay. Sunday was rough for a bit after the Rainbow sleepover just because of the timing of everything but, apart from that, all has been pretty good. The lovely weather and the fact that I've got a few days off of work have definitely helped. It has to be said, some of my advice to myself has definitely made me giggle! (To understand "feeling ze burn", go onto YouTube and look up Johannes von Lycra, he's a bit of an in joke from Soul Survivor)</span></div>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-56473073050730481872012-03-25T23:19:00.001+01:002012-03-25T23:19:11.483+01:00Quick updateI'm still here :o) I'm still functioning. I didn't get the job (poo!) but learnt quite a bit from the application process so that's all good. I might be posting properly again this week, it depends on how it all goes. I've got through the first hurdle this week (this Sunday last year was when I had to dial 999 for the first time in my life) and found that it was all a lot easier than I expected when I asked for help to deal with it.helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-41344227215018630832012-02-16T22:15:00.002+00:002012-02-16T22:15:27.456+00:00Eeek! (Not my normal posting topic)I've been in my current job for 4 years now. It's what I refer to as a "specialist administrator job". Filing and typing and stuff is minimal and much of my time is spent either setting up and auditing parts of our database or else providing helpdesk-type support for our users. It doesn't stretch me any more (and hasn't done for some time now) but it pays much more than anywhere else locally would pay me for a similar level of ability. I also happen to work in a fairly unique field and working anywhere else which actually needs my expertise would require a 50 mile round-trip commute every day just to get to the office. I do quite like my job though; it also pays the bills and the people I work with are amazing so it's really much better than it sounds. Coming up for two years ago, I went on secondment to another team but ended up returning earlier than expected to my normal role. With hindsight, it was a very silly idea to start a new job while Gav was still in ICU and only two weeks after my nan had passed away. I could have done with staying put in my normal job that summer! Anyway, stuff happened that I couldn't cope with, I was making mistakes left, right and centre and became convinced that I was a complete failure. After Gav got discharged from hospital and then promptly readmitted with an infection only a week or two later, I ended up going on sick leave with "low mood" for 3 1/2 weeks and HR recommended that I go back to my old job. People were surprised that I was willing to go back at <b>the</b> busiest time of year but I'd started in the office as a temp at that time 3 years earlier and the chaos was what I was used to! I knew that I could do all those dull and repetitive admin jobs (like alphabetising 12,000 labelled envelopes) without a problem. I've tried my hardest to work on my confidence since then but it hasn't always been easy. One of the biggest helps has been to completely ignore things like Failblog and all the other places on the internet where the word "fail" is horribly misused. I've decided that failure should only be used of measurable outcomes. I could fail an exam; I could fail to pot the red in pool and instead pot the black; I could fail to cook the meat enough. Putting cheese in the omelette that I'm cooking for myself instead of the ham that I wanted <b>isn't</b> a failure. It might not be a ham omelette but is it still a tasty dinner? If the answer's yes then I've succeeded, not failed.<br />
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So, we've established what happened the last time I tried to apply for a new job. I've also been told by our section leader that I "could go far". I think the rough idea was that my secondment would go amazingly well and it'd allow me to start zigzagging up our job ladder and the one where I did my secondment and I'd eventually end up pretty much at her level. A fantastic idea, had everything worked out as we expected! But I came back sorely lacking in confidence and with far too much going on at home to cope with more than the normal routine of audits and set-up. Recently though, I've been starting to get bored with my usual work, particularly when I found out that the requested promotion to a senior administrator wasn't going to happen. I fully admit to having kept an eye out for other jobs locally but those that I could do didn't pay me enough and those that I could afford to do required a completely different skill set.<br />
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There's been a draft job advert sat in our printing tray for most of the week so far but I hadn't really read it. It looked halfway interesting but the pay grade was "TBC" as was the duration of the contract. I happened to check our intranet this afternoon and saw that the jobs page had just been updated. Oddly enough, I scrolled through the whole list today. Normally, I just scroll through the ones at the top until I find one I remember being posted earlier on in the week as I've always assumed that they're sorted by date posted. It turns out that they've changed the system and now sort them by closing date and one of the jobs in the middle of the list was for this post where I'd seen the draft advert. Unlike the others posted today which all have a month until the closing date, this one only has 1 1/2 weeks so appears in the middle of the list. Essentially, it's for a data analyst post. It's got a complicated job title to it but that's perfectly standard with public sector posts. It's two grades up from where I am now but everything listed in the job description and person specification is all stuff that I've done before. Perhaps I haven't worked on some of the stuff listed for nearly 10 years but, even so, it's something that I've always been pretty good at and it shouldn't take me to long to get back in the swing of things. It's not going to be easy to work out which examples I'm going to be using to prove that I meet the person specification as they're all going to be scattered between just about every single job or voluntary position I've ever held in my entire adult life. The other good thing about the job is that it's internal applicants only. Certainly from our office, there's only likely to be one other applicant and, should I lose out to him, I'd consider that perfectly fair. I suspect that I'd win in comparison to him on the intrapersonal stuff although he'd easily win on database queries. The only trouble is that I have <b>absolutely</b> no idea who else across our entire organisation would also be interested in applying for it. I think that everyone I know who'd be a likely suspect is already grade 5 or above but I have no idea whether there's anyone else out there. I can't be the only person who's working in a completely different area at the moment who wants to change so I haven't got a chance of guessing who else I might be up against. That is, if anyone else noticed that it was on the jobs page!helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-20376042317645911722012-02-13T23:49:00.000+00:002012-02-13T23:49:43.588+00:00My head's clearer todayDespite saying that the mood had lifted just by talking about it, it pretty much settled for the rest of the weekend. There were some random and scattered good moments and I've discovered that one of the ladies from church is actually worse than I am at having days where dealing with People is just plain impossible. I was supposed to sit with her at lunch yesterday but, by the time I came back to sit at the table with her, another family who I don't know so well were also there and I just couldn't face putting on a any sort of mask, even though I know that they're all lovely people. Instead, I ended up sitting with our placement student and one of his friends who's in my home group and listened to a highly improvised little ditty in praise of Mississippi mud pie and then joined in a highly geeky conversation about measuring the speed of light by taking the turntable out of a microwave and putting a large block of chocolate in there instead. Much more fun to talk about nothing in particular than to have polite conversation and people asking how I'm doing. According to some random scale of conversation topics, technically, speed-of-light and chocolate would be a Level 0 conversation and "How are you coping with stuff?" would be something like a Level 3. Lower level conversations aren't supposed to be any good for useful human interaction (I may be wildly over-simplifying things here though). However, I honestly feel that, in terms of "team" bonding and stuff, random conversations like that are just as important in their own way as anything supposedly more meaningful.<div>
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So yeah, spent much of the weekend feeling crap. The birthday party on Saturday was good but I do need to explaing to my mum to stop pestering me with questions at times! I'm both shy and an introvert at heart (although the world should probably be forgiven for thinking that I'm neither of these things!) and it can take me a little while to assemble the right mask to use at each individual social event. Unfortunately, Mum can generally see straight through the mask-building process, pesters me with questions that I'm trying not to think about the answers to and generally, winds me up so much that it takes me forever to be able to reassemble the mask again. I knew enough people there that I didn't need much of a mask and didn't need to wear it for that long but I still needed time to work that out. "Normal" people would probably just use alcohol but a) I couldn't because I was driving and b) I wouldn't because of the promise to myself that I'm sure I've mentioned earlier.</div>
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And so to the evening service on Sunday. I went because I knew that I needed prayer which I hadn't been able to receive in the morning because it was a big baptism service which was being run with people from our sister church. Worship and communion were both okay and then it came to the talk. The focus for the past three weeks has been on healing. Part of me has been really quite impressed that I'd kept going through all the services so far without a problem but last night was different. The woman who was speaking used an example of a miraculous healing that involved someone who was in ICU and was brain-dead. I'm guessing that the story turned out well but I didn't get to hear that bit of the talk. I got to the point where the husband and random-friend-who-happened-to-work-at-the-hospital were praying for her and stuff happened at which point, I just couldn't sit there any more and ran out of the room in complete and utter floods of tears and shouting, "It doesn't work like that!". I'm not entirely sure if I went cannoning through the double doors into the foyer or whether my friend who was on the sound desk opened them for me. I'm not sure that I could see properly at that point. I know I sank to the floor sobbing for ages (by my standards) and there were three people sat with me, praying, when I "surfaced". It had just all hit far too close to home. I've stood in ICU with my hand on a leg because it was the only part without any tubes or wires attached. I've both stood and sat in ICU praying that mad, desperate prayer, "Just heal him, Lord". I know that feeling of nothing whatsoever happening. I really <b>didn't</b> need to hear a story where the prayer was answered. Our minister had said something about giving all our burdens to the Lord at the start of the service and I realised that my heart was too heavy to lift everything to the Lord so I told Him that He'd have to pick them up from where they were. In doing so, it looks like He made me deal with some of them at the same time.</div>
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Anyway, the main outcome of the biggest sobbing fit that I've had in ages is that I feel quite a bit better for it. I'm still going to keep an eye on how I'm feeling generally, just in case, but I think I really will be all right.</div>
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(ps. For those who may be mildly curious as to why I only seem to cry at church. It feels safe. There's always someone around to help me and throw boxes of tissues my way. There's always someone to dispense hugs as required. The flat frequently lacks all of those (although it does contain a bearded dragon who's clearly been put on this Earth for comedy purposes only). I've spent too long in previous lives crying by myself in my bedroom and outright avoiding walking into my room if at all possible because all that will greet me is tears and insomnia. I'm not at uni now though so I can't sleep late and struggle to get up in the same way that I did back then. I still do both of those but I generally still make it into work before 9am whereas in my uni days, I'd have been skipping lectures left, right and centre at various points by now!)</div>
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(pps. Ow! Tension headache approaching! Right, I'm definitely calling it a night now. Redbush tea, paracetamol, ibuprofen and a Bagpuss heatpack on my shoulder and I'll hopefully feel fine in the morning.)</div>
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(ppps. There was something else I was going to say, now what was it???? Ah yes! I can't remember what the last update was on friend-who-I-have-an-unsuitable-crush-on but everything seems to be a lot more ... suitable at the moment. Hugs are in pure friendship, there's no warning signs flashing wildly any more. I think we might be okay there now.)</div>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-62654775158708149232012-02-11T11:44:00.000+00:002012-02-11T11:44:05.500+00:00Good days and bad daysAnd that's all that there really is to the matter.<br />
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Last weekend was a good weekend, this one isn't shaping up to be so yet. The answer is to go out and be sociable but when I feel like this, it's the last thing that I want to do.<br />
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Don't even want to write a blog post at the moment even though I'm sure that it'll help me sort my brain out.<br />
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I'm fed up of always ending up on my own again. Our icebreaker at home group was to think of one memory that we would like to preserve forever. Most of mine have turned bittersweet over the years as life has moved on and relationships have ended and stuff. I had to go back to when I broke my leg to find one that time could never turn bittersweet. (God, please don't ever put me in a situation where even that one could turn bittersweet!). I'm fed up of having to grab moments of happiness where I find them. I'm fed up of always having to look for the silver lining in every storm cloud because it's the only way I can stay sane. Is it really too much to ask for my life to stay stable and sane for more than three years at a time?<br />
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I feel better now I've said all of that! :o)<br />
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Wednesday evening was when I started feeling rough like this and I put it down to having done far too much work during my week "off". Given that it seems to be lingering for much longer than I expected, I'm going to give myself a deadline of Wednesday 22nd February. If I'm still feeling particularly bleugh by then with no major let-up in between, then first thing on Thursday morning, I'll be ringing up either my doctor's surgery or the local self-referral mental health team. I strongly suspect that I'll be okay in the end and won't need any extra help of any shape or form but I also remember from that first summer & autumn that it's very easy to not realise just how bad you've been feeling and for just how long you've been feeling that way. Setting myself a deadline in public like this is probably going to be the only way that works for me at the moment. If you're wondering why I've given myself a fortnight before doing anything, it's because this sort of feeling rough only starts counting as a problem when it's lasted for more than 2 weeks. As it hasn't yet, but I can see that I wouldn't be aware of how long it'd dragged on for, I'm trying to be proactive about making sure I sort myself out properly if I need to.<br />
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With all that said and a plan in place, I already feel distinctly less bleugh about things and can already cope with the idea of going out to my friends' mum's birthday tonight. (That was a difficult sentence to write, it had too many apostrophes to keep track of! :o) ) Earlier on this morning, I was all ready to wuss out and hide at home. I really am my own worst enemy at times.helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-28436277617534200782012-01-13T21:13:00.000+00:002012-01-13T21:13:45.975+00:00Living in your home after a death | Offbeat Home<div>Oh look, I have a guest post! :oD</div><div><br /></div><a href="http://offbeathome.com/2012/01/dealing-with-bereavement">Living in your home after a death | Offbeat Home</a>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-23108581517089081022012-01-11T22:58:00.000+00:002012-01-12T20:24:18.196+00:00Slowly starting to feel more normalWell, that's pretty much it at the moment. I'm slowly getting back to a normal that I'd forgotten was my normal state. I'm not feeling constantly worn out. I have energy to do stuff in the evenings. I have the brain power to be creative at work even when I'm bored stiff and working on audits. I can go out socialising 4 nights in a row. I will confess to having a completely switched off day on the Sunday immediately after all this but that's not bad given that it wasn't that long ago when I struggled to leave the house to be sociable more than once a week!<br />
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At least, that's what today's been like. I don't know what tomorrow may bring. I have even less idea what I might think of life in the next few weeks when I start getting thoroughly fed up of January and darkness and stuff. Quite what it's going to be like by the time I get to February and then March, I really don't have a clue. I've booked lots of time off work around then so I've got plenty of space to do my own thing, whatever that may be. It won't all be time for wallowing either as I've volunteered to help at the church kids' week before Easter so there will be lots of stuff going on as well.<br />
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I want to say that time's making everything look brighter but I might be horribly wrong. I'm really not sure yet where I've currently got to in the whole grieving process. I'm pretty sure I'm through with anger which is a very good thing. I don't think I'm depressed although that might have much more to do with me trying my hardest not to be completely flattened by the normal greyness and darkness of January. Meh, I'm just in a fairly bland sort of mood. Life is blissfully normal in most ways and what more could I ask for?<br />
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(Yes, if you read this post last night, it did end completely differently. In the cold light of day, I decided to edit it all!)helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-87801274859734775202011-12-31T02:01:00.000+00:002011-12-31T02:02:51.714+00:00Ramblings about drama and stuffI have come to the conclusion that there are far too many emotions tied up into one show for me to deal with at once. <br />
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To start with, you have the buzz of the show that amplifies everything in the first place.<br />
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- I met Gav at one theatre group</div>
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- He founded another</div>
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- Being at a show thus feels weird because show + Gav = normality</div>
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- I really miss being able to do drama. I don't sing so well and although they're currently doing a play, rehearsal clashes with my home group night.<br />
- I really miss the atmosphere backstage during a show.</div>
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- I really, really miss Gav if I go and watch a show. It just feels wrong without his commentary on what's going on technicals/back-stage-wise.</div>
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- The last time I walked into a full auditorium that had the proper pre-"show"-type of buzz, I walked straight back out again, out through the main doors and down to the beach to watch the waves for 10 minutes by myself. I found it all more upsetting than I expected. The fact that I was desperately lacking in sleep and had been working 50 hour weeks during the lead-in would also have been a contributory factor.</div>
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- Being almost on tenterhooks because I'm trying to process all of the above means that my idiot filter has a hair trigger.</div>
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- My mum is capable of setting my idiot filter off without even being aware of it if I'm not concentrating.</div>
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- My mum also appears to insist on asking stupid-sounding questions (in the name of polite conversation and small talk) that would be just as easily answered by reading the programme properly or sitting and watching the show for 5 minutes.</div>
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- I mean, for fuck's sake, NO I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S GOING ON WITH ANY SUBSTITUTIONS, YOU READ THAT FACEBOOK UPDATE THE SAME AS ME, THAT'S ALL I KNOW!!!!! I NO LONGER HAVE ANY <b>FUCKING</b> LINK TO THE INSIDE INFORMATION ABOUT THE SHOW!!!!!</div>
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(and breathe!)</div>
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(all caps was deliberate then, as was swearing and bold and the five exclamation marks, clearly the sign of a deranged mind ;o) )<br />
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So, yeah, that's why I was watching tonight's show from the corridor rather than from my seat.</div>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-45768825202395406962011-12-21T22:32:00.000+00:002011-12-21T22:32:17.816+00:00Feeling better tonight<span style="font-family: inherit;">I ended up taking today off of work and did my usual trick of going to the cafe/deli on the local high street for lunch where the food is amazing. Freshly cooked, local ham, egg and chips is a pretty good medicine for heartache it appears.</span><div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">I've realised that I need to learn to tell the difference between what seems to be making me upset and what's really making me upset. I thought I was getting into a confusion because of <span style="background-color: white; font-size: 15px; line-height: 21px;">the-friend-who-I-have-an-unsuitable-crush-on but I wasn't. That was an e<span style="font-family: inherit;">asy thing to focus on and prevented me from realising that, actually, I just really miss Gav and there's a part of me that's not looking forwards to Christmas because he won't be around. I don't have an enormously large crush on </span></span></span><span style="background-color: white; font-size: 15px; line-height: 21px;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">the-friend-who-I-have-an-unsuitable-crush-on, just a tiny one and I've dealt with that before, in the past, so I can do it again. As far as I can tell, my relationship and the way I act around him never goes into inappropriate territory; I'm the one pulling back from a hug if it feels wrong. His relationship with me isn't really my problem, that's something he needs to sort out himself.</span></span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-size: 15px; line-height: 21px;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">I've also decided that it would be a good use of my time to randomly take a day off midweek every couple of months or so. While I probably appear quite articulate (if longwinded) on this blog, in real life, it can take me a really long time to work out what I really think or feel about something. Sometimes, I can come up with answers instantly. Sometimes, I don't even realise that part of my brain is telling me that something is wrong until I end up over-reacting to something completely unrelated. Taking the occasional day off here and there to do nothing but try to get my head around wherever I've got to at that point can only be a good thing.</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-size: 15px; line-height: 21px;">First thing to do tomorrow at work - check the annual leave chart and work out when my next random day off will be! :o)</span></div>helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-35470651726856531292011-12-20T23:47:00.001+00:002011-12-21T00:37:44.795+00:00Full of large amounts of melancholy right now<br />
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Not for any particular reason that I can think of, just "cuz
for" (Family variant of "because" when asked "why?" of
something)<o:p></o:p></div>
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Today is obviously
a day for using long and archaic words<o:p></o:p></div>
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(on an unrelated
note, wasn't there some indie-ish band in the mid/early 90s which had a name
along the lines of X and the Melancholic Ys or was there an album called
Melancholia or something, Melon Kolly? I think it was probably during my Take
That-hating, Let Loose-loving days of early teenagerhood (why yes, my iPod does
have untold seams of cheesy, apparently crap pop music that I still
love anyway ;o) )) {too many brackets again!}<o:p></o:p></div>
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Ah, said iPod has
just started playing the song that has probably caused my melancholy this
evening. Lana del Rey's Video Games. The strange thing is, it
reminds me much more of my relationship with an ex-boyfriend than it does mine
with Gav. (Apart from that line about "he holds me in his big arms"
which makes me think of the-friend-who-I-have-an-unsuitable-crush-on!).
In all fairness, Pumped Up Kicks by Foster the People probably hasn't
overly helped either. Xfm is currently radio station of choice when I've
got access to either internet or a DAB radio.<o:p></o:p></div>
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I find myself
listening to a lot more music now than I used to. <b>And</b>, and this is
the impressive bit, I've finally stopped turning my music right down so that no
one can hear and comment on whatever I'm listening to. I realised that I
got into this habit way, way back, probably when I was still in 6th form,
when my then-best-friend-and-guy-I'd-fancied-for-far-too-long was a complete
and utter music "snob". It wasn't worth listening to unless it
was played by, ideally, John Peel or, at a push, Steve Lamacq. On the
other hand, he was also first to ask to borrow "Performance and
Cocktails" when that came out. Part of me still misses how simple
6th Form was, even if it really didn't feel it at the time. I don't miss
the stress of having a mum who seemed to believe that an "A" stood
for Average instead of being the top grade, but then-best-friend-etc had a mum
who was just as bad.<o:p></o:p></div>
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Hello again.
My brain's just come back from a tangent where I was contemplating my
favourite memories of then-best-friend-etc (who, for simplicity, I shall refer
to as Tim, that having been his name!). They are good memories. He
was a complete sweetie when he wasn't being an arrogant git. The good
thing about writing all this down, is that you aren't aware of the huge gaps in
my writing while I go off into another reverie as another memory floats into my
brain. I can't believe how young I really was at 17 either. I was
still a complete kid in some ways. But, then again, it's stuff like that
that has shaped the me that's sat on the sofa now. [Cheesy pop alert! One
Direction - What makes you beautiful, I am no longer to be ashamed by such
crap!]<o:p></o:p></div>
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When I started
this blog, I was full of anger at God. That's not there so much at the
moment. In all honesty, I haven't been thinking of Him so much recently,
I've been generally distracted and can't connect with God at all. That
probably, almost certainly in fact, means that I need to make a concerted
effort to sit down for some prayer time by myself. Hmmm. <o:p></o:p></div>
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Oh how I wish that
my life was easy and simple at the moment. I really don't want to be
wondering about the-friend-who-I-have-an-unsuitable-crush-on and how he
didn't appear to speak to his wife all night at a group Christmas dinner but he
searched me out and came up at the end to give me a hug and said either
"Happy Christmas, gorgeous" or "Happy Christmas, you look
gorgeous". I can't really remember which it was that he said, I was
more floored by being called gorgeous. I admit, I was looking good, for
reasons that I explained last night, but I hadn't dressed up to go fishing for
compliments, well, not beyond the normal, girly, preening compliments that all
women share when they're more than usually dressed up! Random thought, at
least I've grown well out of the stage of memorising every single thing that a
crush says to me so that I can replay the conversation later and extract every
single (imagined) nuance. If I hadn't, I'd have perfect recall of what he
said.<o:p></o:p></div>
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Complete detour,
it turns out that, by the end of that previous paragraph, I'd got to 749 words.
What are the chances of managing to continue wittering onwards until I
hit 1000 words?<o:p></o:p></div>
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Oh yeah,
Christmas. That's what I think I originally meant to blog about in the
first place, but I got distracted by memories of standing out on the terrace at
school before A-levels and thinking that I'd never feel so connected to another
human in my entire life.<o:p></o:p><br />
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...</div>
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There is going to
be such a fucking hole in this house over Christmas, it's untrue! <o:p></o:p></div>
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And, in essence,
that's all that I really want to say or think about the matter.<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to wake up
next to in the morning<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to co-host
Christmas lunch with.<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to tell
silly, exaggerated stories that no one is quite sure whether or not to believe
but there's always the chance that it really did happen just like that (if
you've ever seen Big Fish, you'll know precisely the sort of thing that I
mean!)<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to enjoy
that companionable silence with after everyone's gone and you can finally get
away with sprawling on the sofa and enjoying all the new books you got.<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to drag to
the midnight service.<o:p></o:p></div>
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No one to cause me
to remember to watch the Dr Who Christmas special (I'm assuming that, as
normal, there'll be one this Christmas. I really don't know though, as I
never normally bother to watch the TV. Books or the internet will always
win in my opinion.)<o:p></o:p></div>
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I'm now trying to
second-guess myself. Do I want a glass of Bailey's because it tastes good
or because a shot will stop my brain caring about all this stuff I've just
typed out. You, my imaginary reader, may well be telling me that I surely
deserve a glass of Baileys after all of this but, after a break-up with my
first proper boyfriend while I was at uni in London (a city which I really do
hate living in), I realised how easy it would be to turn to alcohol to fix
everything and I promised myself that I would never drink alcohol when I was in
a bad mood. In the past 11 years, I've broken that promise to myself only
once and that was shortly after being told that my contract at work would not
be up for renewal and later finding out that they'd taken someone else who was
barely more qualified than me on at<span class="apple-converted-space"> </span><b>twice</b> what
I'd been on. I think I was only allowed one single vodka/orange juice before my
friends decided that I was in a thoroughly out of character mood and was not
allowed to drink any more alcohol and certainly not at that speed.<o:p></o:p></div>
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In conclusion, I'm
going to have hot chocolate without Baileys as I think I'm after the alcohol
purely to calm my brain down enough to get to sleep quickly and that is a bad
reason to drink if there's no one else around to keep an eye on you.<o:p></o:p></div>
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(1268 words, if you're curious, not including this final line)helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27952400.post-78528838503243176942011-12-19T18:37:00.001+00:002011-12-19T18:37:47.111+00:00And a carer I was, too.29 years old is far too young to be changing your fiancé's dressings and being complimented on your bandaging skills by the district nurses because none of them are quite as good as you.<br />
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That "in sickness and in health" bit - I would have meant every word if I'd have had chance to say it properly in the church.<br />
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(Okay, no more Twitter style updates unless I manage to plug Twitter into this blog! :o) )helenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15687472291031549806noreply@blogger.com0