What do you mean.
A phrase often employed to find out what, exactly, someone is referring to. But more recently a lyric, set to music, performed by a young Canadian laddy who has also taken to getting naked on balconies. Said Canadian has legions of followers on twitter, over 68 million, 73 million on facebook and his fansicles are called Beliebers. So I’m led to belieb.
What do you mean? Catchy huh?
Better make up your mind what do you mean.
The young man in question is struggling to work out what his girlfriend wants. Honestly, this is probably because he’s not making her feel at ease. If you feel comfortable with someone you’re more likely to just come out and say, ‘Oh yes, this is what I mean’. You wouldn't even start with indecision – you’d just be like, ‘oh I’m quite happy with dinner in tonight and Strictly: It Takes Two and then some Netflix. God Jay is good isn’t he’. (And he would recognise Jay is quite good as this is not an area where indecision is ever a factor.) Done.
It must be so difficult when you're a sexy young man and your girl is just causing problems by being alive.
I don’t know if you’re happy or complaining. RING THE ALARM! You can’t tell if she’s happy OR complaining? ARE YOU LOOKING AT HER? Oh god. Don't tell me this is a whatsapp relationship. COMMENCE MESSAGING: Girrrrrl you are so hot. Girrrrrrl I wanna see you. Bae bae bae. (three hours pass.) OH. I was napping. Sorry. You’re so hot… and it rolls on. The Canadian is so one of those boys that messages nice things and then takes a nap without wrapping up the chat politely.
You want to make a point but keep preaching. Well, maybe if you were patient she would get to her point. You’re all distracted aren’t you? Avoiding eye contact, skirting around the issue, turning away, murmuring and fidgeting. Pulling a hoody over your stupid quiff. Don’t get me started on your clothes young man.
You wanna argue all day and make-a love all night. UH YES. BECAUSE THERE HAS TO BE SOMETHING FUN TO DO WITH YOU, YOU NEVER LISTEN TO ME ANYWAY. Plus you stop whining when we do it.
K babes, there's room for us to be more straightforward (sexy reverb whisper at 3.05) with our communications. But chicken. Sometimes it starts with you? What do you mean? This inability to be straightforward is not one-sided and frankly you can be a wee monkey, acting up and generally being bloody annoying.
I have taken the bieliberty of applying your phrase in some simple dating situations. Don't say I'm not about equality. Maybe it does have an application after all.... what do you...?
‘I’m sorry I didn't make it over to yours I was having a nap’
What do you mean?
‘I just don’t think we want the same things, but I don’t know what to do about it’
What do you mean?
‘You’re really hot, but I like her too and want to see if it works out with her, it might not and I’ll call you? Ok?’
What DO you mean?
‘SORRY I WAS NAPPING’.
WHAT DO YOU MEAN?
‘I actually really like you and this is exciting and I think you’re really beautiful and would like to see you again.’
Wait. What? Eh? What do you mean?
Friday, 30 October 2015
Monday, 19 October 2015
A date is basically a series of lubricated lies - so lolz to playing the feminist card.
I am fully paid up feminist – and I am a
big fan of the term ‘equalitist’ too.
The thing I come back to all the time as a
feminist, is seeing it as a means to support other women. I find the fight
comes quite naturally to me – I want us all to have the same opportunities as
men without having to push for them but the fight is often required to avoid
blatant disadvantage. This is still the big split isn’t it? The ingrained
advantages that men are just born with and can chose to live by without having
to ask for anything different.
I have been writing about what dating is like as I go, navigating my generation's current identity stramash. And then I saw a comment is free, YES ACTUALLY, about dates with male feminists, UH HUH, and once I'd done being annoyed at how stupid it was and the death of journalism... well....
All in all I actually realised I’m a bit shit at dating. I am generally unimpressed by men, oh, and anyone that isn’t a mate. AND I can’t hide what I am thinking from my face. #winning
All in all I actually realised I’m a bit shit at dating. I am generally unimpressed by men, oh, and anyone that isn’t a mate. AND I can’t hide what I am thinking from my face. #winning
The thing with guys playing the feminist
card on a date, is it’s the same as ANYTHING EVER anyone says when there’s sexual
tension or an expectation of sex. It becomes game-play. It’s all about bravado,
showing off, the display. Chatting feminism on a date has just become a new kind
of peacocking. It doesn’t mean nada. And this is the thing, (staying outside
the debate of whether men can actually be feminists) – any political movement
we sign up to, can only be demonstrated by our actions and the way we
treat the people around us and that we interact with day to day.
The funny things ‘feminist’ men have said
to me on dates, on sofas, in bars, beds, shoe-less walks home, line up exactly with the stupid things
men who have not declared an interest either way. And I’m sure the stupid
things I’ve said to try and get laid match up the other way round. (I DON'T LIKE TO CYCLE ON GRASS... I SAID THAT ONCE. Me either.) I’m sure
Swifty is working on a new single about this.
You can read the comment is free thing
here. I keep a note of the stupidest things I say on dates, and the oddest
things said to me. A date is basically a series of lubricated lies isn’t it? In
the same way tinder is kinda msn messenger but you’re not even chatting to
people you like.
I am a feminist – and I live by a code that
I like to think is about equality, and I get angry every day about how things work verses how they could and should work. But there is one sacred place for
lies and putting together sentences you would never dare say with a serious
face to anyone you actually trust. And that place is date-land. Let’s not
change that. How else am I going to gather stories to entertain all my friends?
Oh and guys, if I smile and flick my hair,
I wouldn’t rate it. I’m just trying to get in your pants. See, you play the
feminist card; I can play my feminine card. Natch.
Saturday, 11 July 2015
Amy, Amy, Amy.
I remember turning Tears Dry On Their Own up so loud the speakers almost broke in the old ford ka I used to traipse around in. Back to Black – we only said goodbye in words, I died a hundred times – a phrase I understood from my first one night stand. I knew what she was talking about – I don’t want to be with you, I don’t need you, but this is more than words – let’s respect each other and what happened here. Can you let me have that? I want to see this a new way.
I went to see Amy this week.
There’s something about Amy’s assumed strength that is galling in ALL THAT footage. Her loneliness was excused, her drug habit her own problem to pull herself out of, she’s gobby and witty and she can handle herself. So she CAN handle herself. What if she couldn’t? What if the loneliness and the need for a overruling strength was too much. The push pull with her husband, family and drugs definitely says that. It’s clear her girlfriends from school adored her and fought hard to rescue her.
I see why the family are upset by how they come across – I can’t imagine how they couldn’t be. But they come across ok. Dealing with a soul that strong isn’t straight forward, we are taught to respect strength and let it soldier on. My strength was batted back into a box – or you’re labeled as gobby, try hard, forward, bossy, alpha. It’s different for men. It is – we’re still taught to be scared of a strong women. Amy had strength in spades. That sings through the whole 90 minutes. An unfaltering honesty and magic that only the most brilliant people can pull off at seventeen.
When life hurts – and it does for us all in so many ways – when life is skipping from giddying highs to pathetic lows – when we don’t have a schedule that repeats repeats repeats, a structure, but rather when we know our friends are waiting at a distance to mop us up, we feel invincible. I’ve lost friendships to drugs. You just wait it out. Some you get back, some you can’t repair.
It’s very difficult not to be cynical about Amy. Or presume there’s a dark art in peeling back so much and showing so much very personal footage. A young woman off her face, out of her mind on crack and smack - downing Jack Daniels like JD have said there are only four barrels left and they need drinking today. But we all have our vices and our dark moments – we post only the good online. We aren’t supposed to share those dark moments with wit or honesty and a wry smile as we’re only supposed to be performing the right kind of role.
We’re not supposed to grow up behind a lens. We all do now, but we self-curate. Amy didn’t have the curate option. The force stronger than her in her life was the mob waiting for her, her management’s bank balance, her voice, her fierceness, her strength was also her most dangerous vice as everyone presumed she was ok.
I spoke to an ex-paparazzi friend of mine about the film this weekend. He said ‘we stopped sending people to Amy, or selling Amy pix, the scrum was so big they weren’t exclusives and only worth £50’ – he was genuinely saddened by the whole thing.
It’s tough being a strong woman. It’s tough being a woman. It’s tough being in a world where all anything counts for is money. I would love to hear what Amy was going to write next, we all would. But I think as a log of her tenacity and talent, Amy goes a long way to sharing what she had achieved in too few years. And I’m pretty sure she would fucking hate it. Which makes me smile. RIP lil’ lady.
The title of this blog is a reference to a Frank album track, Amy, Amy, Amy.
I went to see Amy this week.
There’s something about Amy’s assumed strength that is galling in ALL THAT footage. Her loneliness was excused, her drug habit her own problem to pull herself out of, she’s gobby and witty and she can handle herself. So she CAN handle herself. What if she couldn’t? What if the loneliness and the need for a overruling strength was too much. The push pull with her husband, family and drugs definitely says that. It’s clear her girlfriends from school adored her and fought hard to rescue her.
I see why the family are upset by how they come across – I can’t imagine how they couldn’t be. But they come across ok. Dealing with a soul that strong isn’t straight forward, we are taught to respect strength and let it soldier on. My strength was batted back into a box – or you’re labeled as gobby, try hard, forward, bossy, alpha. It’s different for men. It is – we’re still taught to be scared of a strong women. Amy had strength in spades. That sings through the whole 90 minutes. An unfaltering honesty and magic that only the most brilliant people can pull off at seventeen.
When life hurts – and it does for us all in so many ways – when life is skipping from giddying highs to pathetic lows – when we don’t have a schedule that repeats repeats repeats, a structure, but rather when we know our friends are waiting at a distance to mop us up, we feel invincible. I’ve lost friendships to drugs. You just wait it out. Some you get back, some you can’t repair.
It’s very difficult not to be cynical about Amy. Or presume there’s a dark art in peeling back so much and showing so much very personal footage. A young woman off her face, out of her mind on crack and smack - downing Jack Daniels like JD have said there are only four barrels left and they need drinking today. But we all have our vices and our dark moments – we post only the good online. We aren’t supposed to share those dark moments with wit or honesty and a wry smile as we’re only supposed to be performing the right kind of role.
We’re not supposed to grow up behind a lens. We all do now, but we self-curate. Amy didn’t have the curate option. The force stronger than her in her life was the mob waiting for her, her management’s bank balance, her voice, her fierceness, her strength was also her most dangerous vice as everyone presumed she was ok.
I spoke to an ex-paparazzi friend of mine about the film this weekend. He said ‘we stopped sending people to Amy, or selling Amy pix, the scrum was so big they weren’t exclusives and only worth £50’ – he was genuinely saddened by the whole thing.
It’s tough being a strong woman. It’s tough being a woman. It’s tough being in a world where all anything counts for is money. I would love to hear what Amy was going to write next, we all would. But I think as a log of her tenacity and talent, Amy goes a long way to sharing what she had achieved in too few years. And I’m pretty sure she would fucking hate it. Which makes me smile. RIP lil’ lady.
The title of this blog is a reference to a Frank album track, Amy, Amy, Amy.
Monday, 9 March 2015
Being a bad feminist
Being a bad feminist.
Writing those four words made me
smile. I was scared of feminism
when I was turning 20 – and had no excuse as I was on a uni
course where we talked about everything and studied cultural movements and
literary theory over beers and curly fries.
I think I probably did say ‘I
don’t need feminism’ – not realizing that I was the most bolshie ‘women can do
shit too’ defender I’d ever met. But it’s tough being someone who doesn’t take
no for an answer, who when she fails just dusts herself down and goes ‘ach
well, something cooler will come out of this’, someone who’s not afraid to
accept failure but as equally uninterested in being told how to do anything. It
just happens I am a guuuurl and I fudging love it. It has meant I’m obstinate about
feminism and presume everyone has that experience.
I once said to my wisest feminist
friends Lauren and Hana ‘I’m not scared of sexual harassment as I’ll just
run/kick and I don’t want to live in fear’ and they explained to me it’s not as
simple as that. Ok ok. Of course it’s not. Finally I feel like I’m part of a
dialogue where my white, self-starting, we’re gonna just do this
attitude is brilliant but doesn’t define my feminism. I recognise I am extremely
lucky, my job involves liking people and theatre and talking about things and
these are my three boldest natural attributes. I’m lucky I worked out what I
want to be at this stage in my life. I’m also lucky no men want to be theatre
publicists – am I right ladies?
I have gained a terrifying
propensity to see what I want and run at it – from work through to play – but
again I realize this isn’t how every woman’s experience is or can be without
some kind of seismic change.
On my flight to Australia for work
as/for a company I’d set up (madness) I sat next to a Jordanian 29 year old. Born in the same
year as me, on the other side of the world there sit two wee newborn girls. She
was now a UN escort for refugees with legal and diplomacy degrees in bundles,
fluent in four languages, travelling the world for work on a weekly basis,
responsible for the future of people’s LIVES and yet she’s not allowed to have
a boyfriend. She watches her friends get married so they can do it and have a
partner and then watches that partner sleep around and take his wife for
granted while she’s trapped – as ‘women don’t end marriages’. This is madness.
Here’s me, strident British
feminist having just ended a relationship with a perfectly wonderful man as we
knew we didn’t want the same things, feeling my heartbreak keenly but knowing
we’d given it the best chance and that we were making a mutually aware CHOICE.
AND THEN – I hear first hand my co-passenger isn’t even allowed to have that
chance to try it out.
When I arrived in Adelaide I met
the Hot Brown Honeys who I have the extraordinary privilege of working with.
They stick a hot poker of ‘fuck yous’ into the feminist debate. All women of
colour, they take stereotypes and expectations and toy with them until all lies
shredded on the floor of a wooden tent. I love them. I love the anger and the
messiness and the skill and the laughs and the tears and, I just love it all. And
there is this moment, this chill that runs through one in that tent, a chill
that makes the grin spread itself back across my face. A moment that says, now
is over, change is coming, and it’s everyone’s job in everyone’s world to be a
equalitist and fight for it.
International Woman’s Day 2015
“If
I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's
fantasies for me and eaten alive.” Audre
Lorde
International Woman’s Day
2016.
“2016?
Wow. Are we still doing this?” Erm.
Me.
We need to keep meddling
and fighting and arguing and being bad feminists. Word.
Friday, 23 January 2015
Those are my chimney tops.
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We got the email on November 28th.
It quite simply stated the owner would be taking over the property in 2015 and
we needed to be out by 22 January 2015. I remember exactly where I was standing
down to what I was wearing, black dress, black mottled leopard print tights and my smart camel and black felt jacket which
has lapels like Cheryl Cole circa 2013.
All those years. If I could slot in a
reference to London 2012 I would cover all the big events that had happened
from the base that was my home most securely and definitely of anywhere I’d
ever lived since 1997.
I moved into my Deanhaugh Street flat with
Laura in March 2012. The week of my birthday. We had looked at the ad for the
flat online in the pub below, in the window seat, not realising the bay windows
of that pub, Hectors, swung round to meet what would be our front door for two
years and mine for another after that.
I didn’t know then it was going to be the
first place where I really felt like I belonged, to become my office when I
quit my sensible day job and set up a company; a party flat, fitting sixteen
people into a kitchen that on a grumpy Tuesday night didn’t seem to have room
for two; the place I got into cycling; the place that meant I afford to buy a nice
duvet; the place I got round to putting my own framed pictures up on the wall.
Laura’s huge tapestry from India pinned up in the huge hall immediately lent
warmth and colour. The place I could have a cupboard of all my cosmetics in the
bathroom and twelve different moisturizers I never used. It didn’t matter what
the flat was filled with as it was mine.
I loved the flat mostly as it was so
strange. Long and thin, freezing cold, top top floor and a level above all the
other high-street tenements so it felt like one was in the set for chim-chiminy
from Mary Poppins. I owned those chimney tops. No one else had that view. From
the back rooms, a glimpse at a far off Edinburgh Castle and skittles and layers
of houses and flats rising up and up into the city centre, also the side of the
flat that caught the sunrise. The front end of the flat, sitting room and the
big bedroom looking out onto the busy high street caught the sunset. This
meaning twice a day one end of the flat was bathed in the warm, pink light of
magic hour and the other end was bathed in the pinky reflection of the sun
waxing or waning.
The front end of the flat lent the best
people watching of anywhere I’ve ever been let alone lived. If you like
watching people – live on a high street or on a street that reaches long into
the distance – this flat had both. I remember when friends came to stay when at 2am one night a couple of the staff from the pub below left work and he
– out on the street – declared his love for her. We craned our necks out of the
window in silence to listen. I got in a lot of trouble for making a noise that
may have alerted them to our eavesdropping. I have watched people dancing home with
headphones in at 9pm on a Friday after after-work drinks, I have watched men
locked out of their flats by flatmates, partners, parents wandering
listlessly drunk round in circles before turning round and going back to try their luck at the
intercom.
That flat watched the Yes campaign gaining
speed. I sat in my front room with the windows open on the evening of the referendum
soaking up the carnival of tooting horns and exuberant chatter. Yes’s and No’s
sprinkling the windows of the flats and flats and flats stretching down the
road.
The night we finally emptied the flat out
and moved a Subaru of residual crap round to my friends spare room where we are to pitch for the foreseeable – we watched Chris Nolan’s Intersteller. A
film about dimensions, relativity and time and space and home – the story
centres on a bookshelf in a home that no one can bare to let go of.
In all of the time and space and
possibilities, time moves at a speed relative to activity. Those three years in
that flat feel like decades. The eight weeks notice dragged and tripped me up,
rendering me incapable of picturing a reality beyond not being in my home. It’s
not mad to cry and scream and holler at someone taking your security away. It’s
fairly mad not to. I feel a pang when I take a tent down that I’ve stayed in
for a weekend. I’ll find a new home, that no-one else wants as it’s weird and
long or tall or cold or hot or high or bright or similar to the set of a
childhood film if I were able to wander out the windows without falling three
floors – but for now I reserve the right to wonder how my sitting room is
without me chatting on the phone gazing out the window. If my neighbours are
wondering why my bike has gone from the hall. Why my evenings aren’t bathed in
a pink light – and who’s going to clamber over the rooftops in their mind,
tripping over chimney pots and slipping on tiles, gazing into skylights,
sneaking at other people’s top floor lives and disturbing birds’ nests.
Maybe I’ll reserve that right just for
me. In my own dimension.
Wednesday, 8 October 2014
Grayson's Rise and Fall of the Default Man - this is a no suit situation.
I have just read Grayson Perry’s The Rise and Fall of the Default Man. With the picture in my mind of Grayson’s wild dresses that look like a one of those really fancy bouquets with all the different colours of cellophane wrapped round a hot house of flowers - his discussion of ‘suits’ got me thinking.
I have always been fascinated by our personal costumes – why we don’t call our day-to-day outfits ‘costuming’ I have never known. As it all is – whether we wear the same thing every day to try and look, well, the same every day – or whether we mix it up. Here are three hugely broad ways to generalize UK costuming.
1. An outfit which is easy to apply again and again and explains a purpose – so uniforms really, but these include suits (THE SUIT) through to a specific choice of band t-shirt, jeans and converse trainers.
2. A particular style of dressing that allows for a range of dress but does have rules. This can be defined by class, an upper class woman thinks her twinset and pearls is original while she can happily fit in, or it can be burlesque-chic – that kinda 50s look with red lips and tattoos. K Middy is a good example of this; she in essence wears the same dress designed for a conservative voter with a slim waist over and over again. (The one style of dressing all the time is K Middy, not burlesque-chic, although, lord would it be a sweet relief if she did move out of dullsville.)
3. Someone who literally just wears what they want when they want both regardless and in regard to current trends. They just dress. These are the kind of people when you meet them the second and third time you think you’ve met them before but aren’t sure as they are wearing something that totally counters that first meet. These are ALSO the kind of people when you first see them in jeans and then in a dress and hair pulled up to the sky – you may comment – ‘wow – you look great’ as you had already put them in the converse/skinny jean box at the first meeting.
I think I fit into number 3. YES EVERYONE IS ALWAYS SAYING ‘WOW YOU LOOK GREAT’. They’re not, but I do get surprised looks weekly when I’ve scrubbed up.
Grayson talks about suits for about a third of The Rise and Fall of the Default Man – and that’s where I’m getting. Now, luckily, at the bold wee age of 28, I feel 100% comfortable (83% of the time) in my own skin. This has heightened since I quit the ‘day job’ and chose to run my own life, I have left a system – and though in the arts – a system run very much by men in suits.
Never have I been interested in wearing a suit during my professional life. There is ONE exception to this rule, when I was tired of posing in front of paintings for the papers and considered dressing as Janelle Monae to see if they still wanted ‘girl in suit.’ I didn’t do this. I wore jeans and a parka to muse underneath a Louise Bourgeois Spider instead.
I have never worn or owned a trouser suit, a skirt suit, a grey pleaty thing – except perhaps for school uniform. I did have to wear a tight fitted skirt, shirt, tie and waistcoat when I worked in a five star hotel’s champagne bar, but that all backfired when one day the skirt was so tight I poured boiling hot coffee all over the lap of a be-suited man out for a work do.
I know that when I have strolled into meetings in a holey grey jumper over a ballet style black strappy top and a waist high, thigh high patterned orange skirt – I knew I wasn’t dressed as everyone else. My opinion may not at first have been so valuable for the Default Man and his suits – and that my lively disposition (it’s so Jane Austin no? NAUGHTY LYDIA,) may not initially have endeared me as grey and black could've sans orange and eyeliner – but I was always clean and smart and I was never going to dress that part. I had turned up to the interview for said job in bottle-green boots and a navy dress with a white trim that could only be described as circus-cum-sailor-chic. I also had badly damaged bottle blonde hair.
When I met the Queen and Prince Phillip backed into me at a visit to my work, I wore a black polkadot knee length dress from brick lane, hair spray, eyeliner and bright turquoise heels that I’d grabbed for £7 in Miss Selfridge four years previous. The Queen didn’t ask me to leave for not wearing a suit, nor did the special ops guys I was chatting to as we showed press photographers (all requested to wear suits) around.
I sometimes feel lucky to inhabit my world where I don’t need to, and refuse to dress in a ‘predictable unfussy, feminised version of the male look,’ but hopefully the more meetings and train carriages I sit in working – the less it will matter – and the more people will join me, dressing in WILD variations of some style day-to-day.
Yesterday, on the train down to London, in clashing red ALARM rimmel lipstick and a fluorescent pink jumper from H&M (teamed with skinny jeans and converse) messy hair and stationed between a battalion of men in suits traveling to London for work - ME TOO GUYS, ME TOO – the man next to me offered to get my case down. Now, as a dickhead (not a feminist, as a dickhead, refusing politeness isn’t a feminist action) normally I would say no, but he was in a good spot to grab my bag so I thanked him, and he passed it to me. ‘Woah, that’s light for a mumble mumble…’ I grinned, knowing I had heard what he said, ‘light for a what?’ I questioned. ‘Light for a female’s bag’ he replied. I won’t tell you what I said, I’m sure you can imagine, but I did smile and I did think to myself – ‘well, yes, running my own company and tottering to London for work does open me up to a whole world of really light weight costumes – and not a suit in sight.’
I have always been fascinated by our personal costumes – why we don’t call our day-to-day outfits ‘costuming’ I have never known. As it all is – whether we wear the same thing every day to try and look, well, the same every day – or whether we mix it up. Here are three hugely broad ways to generalize UK costuming.
1. An outfit which is easy to apply again and again and explains a purpose – so uniforms really, but these include suits (THE SUIT) through to a specific choice of band t-shirt, jeans and converse trainers.
2. A particular style of dressing that allows for a range of dress but does have rules. This can be defined by class, an upper class woman thinks her twinset and pearls is original while she can happily fit in, or it can be burlesque-chic – that kinda 50s look with red lips and tattoos. K Middy is a good example of this; she in essence wears the same dress designed for a conservative voter with a slim waist over and over again. (The one style of dressing all the time is K Middy, not burlesque-chic, although, lord would it be a sweet relief if she did move out of dullsville.)
3. Someone who literally just wears what they want when they want both regardless and in regard to current trends. They just dress. These are the kind of people when you meet them the second and third time you think you’ve met them before but aren’t sure as they are wearing something that totally counters that first meet. These are ALSO the kind of people when you first see them in jeans and then in a dress and hair pulled up to the sky – you may comment – ‘wow – you look great’ as you had already put them in the converse/skinny jean box at the first meeting.
I think I fit into number 3. YES EVERYONE IS ALWAYS SAYING ‘WOW YOU LOOK GREAT’. They’re not, but I do get surprised looks weekly when I’ve scrubbed up.
Grayson talks about suits for about a third of The Rise and Fall of the Default Man – and that’s where I’m getting. Now, luckily, at the bold wee age of 28, I feel 100% comfortable (83% of the time) in my own skin. This has heightened since I quit the ‘day job’ and chose to run my own life, I have left a system – and though in the arts – a system run very much by men in suits.
Never have I been interested in wearing a suit during my professional life. There is ONE exception to this rule, when I was tired of posing in front of paintings for the papers and considered dressing as Janelle Monae to see if they still wanted ‘girl in suit.’ I didn’t do this. I wore jeans and a parka to muse underneath a Louise Bourgeois Spider instead.
I have never worn or owned a trouser suit, a skirt suit, a grey pleaty thing – except perhaps for school uniform. I did have to wear a tight fitted skirt, shirt, tie and waistcoat when I worked in a five star hotel’s champagne bar, but that all backfired when one day the skirt was so tight I poured boiling hot coffee all over the lap of a be-suited man out for a work do.
I know that when I have strolled into meetings in a holey grey jumper over a ballet style black strappy top and a waist high, thigh high patterned orange skirt – I knew I wasn’t dressed as everyone else. My opinion may not at first have been so valuable for the Default Man and his suits – and that my lively disposition (it’s so Jane Austin no? NAUGHTY LYDIA,) may not initially have endeared me as grey and black could've sans orange and eyeliner – but I was always clean and smart and I was never going to dress that part. I had turned up to the interview for said job in bottle-green boots and a navy dress with a white trim that could only be described as circus-cum-sailor-chic. I also had badly damaged bottle blonde hair.
When I met the Queen and Prince Phillip backed into me at a visit to my work, I wore a black polkadot knee length dress from brick lane, hair spray, eyeliner and bright turquoise heels that I’d grabbed for £7 in Miss Selfridge four years previous. The Queen didn’t ask me to leave for not wearing a suit, nor did the special ops guys I was chatting to as we showed press photographers (all requested to wear suits) around.
I sometimes feel lucky to inhabit my world where I don’t need to, and refuse to dress in a ‘predictable unfussy, feminised version of the male look,’ but hopefully the more meetings and train carriages I sit in working – the less it will matter – and the more people will join me, dressing in WILD variations of some style day-to-day.
Yesterday, on the train down to London, in clashing red ALARM rimmel lipstick and a fluorescent pink jumper from H&M (teamed with skinny jeans and converse) messy hair and stationed between a battalion of men in suits traveling to London for work - ME TOO GUYS, ME TOO – the man next to me offered to get my case down. Now, as a dickhead (not a feminist, as a dickhead, refusing politeness isn’t a feminist action) normally I would say no, but he was in a good spot to grab my bag so I thanked him, and he passed it to me. ‘Woah, that’s light for a mumble mumble…’ I grinned, knowing I had heard what he said, ‘light for a what?’ I questioned. ‘Light for a female’s bag’ he replied. I won’t tell you what I said, I’m sure you can imagine, but I did smile and I did think to myself – ‘well, yes, running my own company and tottering to London for work does open me up to a whole world of really light weight costumes – and not a suit in sight.’
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
This Referedum is 100% Pure Pop (and songs from the shows)
Never has a place felt more electric. In a matter of hours more of Scotland will head down to the polls than ever have before to cast their vote, make their voice heard, lend a vow and make history.
Never have my dips and delves into my pop back catalogue been so illustrative of the political climate as every song spins a new story on the bloody independence referendum. Not content with making my coffee high a whirlwind of panic about what to do – pop music changes its mind as quickly as I can draw on too much eyeliner and sing along. The romance, the trauma, the tremor of change, the darkness of heartbreak, the joy of new love, the moments between, the sweaty exchange of naughtiness afterwards, our winning popstars and musical mavericks have been writing songs about the referendum for decades. Here are my pick of the Top Seven.
Let’s kick off with a 2002 classic. (No. ONE)
Chill out, what you yellin' for?
Lay back, it's all been done before
SORRY. I wasn’t yelling Avril. I was listening to the excited and invigorating conversations echoing out of Perth, Aberdeen, Glasgow, Ullapool and Edinburgh and seeing how the rest of the world responds. You know someone in AMERICA did a thing on a tele show? Uh huuuuh. Mad ey.
Why do you have to go and make things so complicated?
I see the way you're acting like you're somebody else
Gets me frustrated
Life's like this
You, you fall and you crawl and you break
And you take what you get and you turn it into honesty
Seems you’re a little confused Avs. At least things are nae ironic for you.
Something has changed within me (No. TWO)
Something is not the same
I'm through with playing by the rules of someone else's game
Too late for second-guessing
Too late to go back to sleep
It's time to trust my instincts
Close my eyes and leap!
This poetry is lent to us while we are listening to the musical soundtrack from the lauded ‘oh what did happen before Oz to make that witch green?’ Wicked. I think Elphaba has some sound advise for possible ‘YES’ voters.
I'm through accepting limits
'Cause someone says they're so
Some things I cannot change but 'til I try, I'll never know!
Too long I've been afraid of losing love I guess I've lost
Well, if that's love it comes at much too high a cost!
EXCLAMATION MARK. Huh. What a drama.
There’s also a load about looking to the Western sky… so you can either look to the Western SKYE or the NORTHERN sky. Up to you really.
STAY WHERE? (No. THREE)
Alright dudes in the white coats of glory. Endlessly 90s. Endlessly relevant for Davey Camerooooon and his dudes. Also – without being glib – for those that genuinely love Scotland but want to see what this wild rebellion can do to change things without going solo – there are some lovely sentiments.
Baby if you've got to go away
Don't think I can take the pain
Won't you stay another day
Oh, don't leave me alone like this
Don't you know we've come too far now
Just to go and try to throw it all away??????????????????
Probs best to ignore the stuff about ‘I touch your face while you are sleeping’ as it’s a bit creepy and I don’t like the idea of future UK PM Boris Johnson sneaking into my house and doing just that. Though I’m sure Ed Miliband has muttered ‘Though it's all for you that, I do seem to be wrong.’
These duo-banging love-sharing coke-downing dudes have a little to say on the matter. If only to advice voters to ‘open your eyes and LOOK at the day.’ Trust me, all I bloody do is look at the day and indulge myself in a level of panic I've never politically experienced before, bearing in mind I was really freaking scared of David Cameron becoming PM.
Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone. (No. FOUR)
Why not think about times to come,
And not about the things that you've done,
If your life was bad to you,
Just think what tomorrow will do.
Don't stop, thinking about tomorrow,
Don't stop, it'll soon be here,
It'll be, better than before,
Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone.
Slightly sinister there. I never meant any harm to you but wooooops I may just have discharged that gun.
Ok ok ok ok this is just freaky. A film about sisters who discover they love each other more than the MEN IN THEIR LIVES? Tell me about it. Frozen's Let It Go storms in at No. FIVE.
It’s tricky to really realize this as there’s been a bit of a UK-wide heatwave this week, so there’s nae chance of snow even in the Cairngorms
The snow glows white on the mountain tonight, not a footprint to be seen.
A kingdom of isolation and it looks like I'm the queen.
The wind is howling like this swirling storm inside.
Let it go, let it go!
Can't hold it back any more.
Let it go, let it go!
Turn away and slam the door.
I don't care what they're going to say.
Let the storm rage on.
The cold never bothered me anyway.
It's funny how some distance, makes everything seem small.
And the fears that once controlled me, can't get to me at all
It's time to see what I can do, to test the limits and break through.
No right, no wrong, no rules for me.
I'm free!
And we continue with a little meta (and much repetition.)
Let the storm rage on! The cold never bothered me anyway...
It gets really cold in the winter. Erm. Salmond, whatcha gonna do about that? JUST ASKING.
The sun'll come out, tomorrow (NO. SIX)
So you gotta hang on 'til tomorrow
Come what may. Tomorrow! Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow
You're ONLY a day away.
Lord above. No sleep ‘til Brooklyn huh? (NO. SEVEN) Night y'all.
Never have my dips and delves into my pop back catalogue been so illustrative of the political climate as every song spins a new story on the bloody independence referendum. Not content with making my coffee high a whirlwind of panic about what to do – pop music changes its mind as quickly as I can draw on too much eyeliner and sing along. The romance, the trauma, the tremor of change, the darkness of heartbreak, the joy of new love, the moments between, the sweaty exchange of naughtiness afterwards, our winning popstars and musical mavericks have been writing songs about the referendum for decades. Here are my pick of the Top Seven.
Let’s kick off with a 2002 classic. (No. ONE)
Chill out, what you yellin' for?
Lay back, it's all been done before
SORRY. I wasn’t yelling Avril. I was listening to the excited and invigorating conversations echoing out of Perth, Aberdeen, Glasgow, Ullapool and Edinburgh and seeing how the rest of the world responds. You know someone in AMERICA did a thing on a tele show? Uh huuuuh. Mad ey.
Why do you have to go and make things so complicated?
I see the way you're acting like you're somebody else
Gets me frustrated
Life's like this
You, you fall and you crawl and you break
And you take what you get and you turn it into honesty
Seems you’re a little confused Avs. At least things are nae ironic for you.
Something has changed within me (No. TWO)
Something is not the same
I'm through with playing by the rules of someone else's game
Too late for second-guessing
Too late to go back to sleep
It's time to trust my instincts
Close my eyes and leap!
This poetry is lent to us while we are listening to the musical soundtrack from the lauded ‘oh what did happen before Oz to make that witch green?’ Wicked. I think Elphaba has some sound advise for possible ‘YES’ voters.
I'm through accepting limits
'Cause someone says they're so
Some things I cannot change but 'til I try, I'll never know!
Too long I've been afraid of losing love I guess I've lost
Well, if that's love it comes at much too high a cost!
EXCLAMATION MARK. Huh. What a drama.
There’s also a load about looking to the Western sky… so you can either look to the Western SKYE or the NORTHERN sky. Up to you really.
STAY WHERE? (No. THREE)
Alright dudes in the white coats of glory. Endlessly 90s. Endlessly relevant for Davey Camerooooon and his dudes. Also – without being glib – for those that genuinely love Scotland but want to see what this wild rebellion can do to change things without going solo – there are some lovely sentiments.
Baby if you've got to go away
Don't think I can take the pain
Won't you stay another day
Oh, don't leave me alone like this
Don't you know we've come too far now
Just to go and try to throw it all away??????????????????
Probs best to ignore the stuff about ‘I touch your face while you are sleeping’ as it’s a bit creepy and I don’t like the idea of future UK PM Boris Johnson sneaking into my house and doing just that. Though I’m sure Ed Miliband has muttered ‘Though it's all for you that, I do seem to be wrong.’
These duo-banging love-sharing coke-downing dudes have a little to say on the matter. If only to advice voters to ‘open your eyes and LOOK at the day.’ Trust me, all I bloody do is look at the day and indulge myself in a level of panic I've never politically experienced before, bearing in mind I was really freaking scared of David Cameron becoming PM.
Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone. (No. FOUR)
Why not think about times to come,
And not about the things that you've done,
If your life was bad to you,
Just think what tomorrow will do.
Don't stop, thinking about tomorrow,
Don't stop, it'll soon be here,
It'll be, better than before,
Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone.
Slightly sinister there. I never meant any harm to you but wooooops I may just have discharged that gun.
Ok ok ok ok this is just freaky. A film about sisters who discover they love each other more than the MEN IN THEIR LIVES? Tell me about it. Frozen's Let It Go storms in at No. FIVE.
It’s tricky to really realize this as there’s been a bit of a UK-wide heatwave this week, so there’s nae chance of snow even in the Cairngorms
The snow glows white on the mountain tonight, not a footprint to be seen.
A kingdom of isolation and it looks like I'm the queen.
The wind is howling like this swirling storm inside.
Let it go, let it go!
Can't hold it back any more.
Let it go, let it go!
Turn away and slam the door.
I don't care what they're going to say.
Let the storm rage on.
The cold never bothered me anyway.
It's funny how some distance, makes everything seem small.
And the fears that once controlled me, can't get to me at all
It's time to see what I can do, to test the limits and break through.
No right, no wrong, no rules for me.
I'm free!
And we continue with a little meta (and much repetition.)
Let the storm rage on! The cold never bothered me anyway...
It gets really cold in the winter. Erm. Salmond, whatcha gonna do about that? JUST ASKING.
The sun'll come out, tomorrow (NO. SIX)
So you gotta hang on 'til tomorrow
Come what may. Tomorrow! Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow
You're ONLY a day away.
Lord above. No sleep ‘til Brooklyn huh? (NO. SEVEN) Night y'all.
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