315: sometimes you just need a moment

Well, gang, this has been a week indeed for a whole variety of reasons, both professional and personal. I won’t go into too much detail but suffice to say that by Saturday I really needed some moments of sanity.

The week started with a lovely evening in Hackney with friend Rhiannon, where we had tickets to watch the recording of an episode of Zack Polanski’s podcast. He was interviewing the Green party candidates for Mayor of Hackney, who are running on a presidential style two-for-one ticket. The mayoral candidate, Zoe Garbett, is running in Dalston and is a member of the London Assembly. The candidate for Deputy Mayor (running in Hackney Downs) is Dylan Law and he’s remarkable – passionate about representation in politics and about seeing people like him reflected. Both were articulate, engaged with their communities and almost had me wishing I lived in Hackney so I could vote for them rather than the omnishambles of Epping Forest District Council. We had dinner at Nando’s beforehand and put the world to rights as usual – it’s wonderful to have such cheerleaders in my life, especially at the moment.

I also got to onboard our new Community Gardener on Monday and visit the Centre for the first time in a while. My Creative Studio is looking fabulous – light and airy, and the creamy yellows and blues I chose for the joinery and floors look lovely. I wanted a space that would work for all our visitors, rather than being aimed at adults or children, so thought in neutral tones. I can’t wait to actually start delivering programmes in there!

Tuesday afternoon saw three of us meeting about 15 of our successful volunteer applicants, talking to them about what volunteering at the Centre will look like. It’s so heartening to have had such a great response from people all over London, from 18 year olds through to retirees, all of whom are excited about being part of this new team.

Wednesday and Thursday were freelance days, supporting a sustainable business expo at the Business Design Centre in Angel. As they were early starts this meant I had two nights in a hotel – blissfully peaceful with triple glazing and only a few minutes from the venue although apparently my location failed to update on Life360 so I could have been ANYWHERE. These are busy days so not having to commute at the end was a real treat. I was on speaker registration and tannoy announcements, using my smily voice at all times and generally being helpful. I must have been being particularly charming, as I got asked out for a drink by one of the exhibitors – a very bluff Jeremy Clarkson type, so I politely declined. It’s so long since anyone chatted me up that I probably wouldn’t have noticed if he hadn’t actually made the request. I suspect he was impressed with my charming ‘drink up and go home’ technique at the drinks reception the previous evening.

The nice lady at Pret gave me my hot chocolate on the house too, for being friendly and cheerful at 7am. Despite swearing I absolutely did NOT need any more notebooks and pens, I came home with seven of each and some nice chocolate. I don’t think I need to buy another notebook until I retire but you never know…

I’ve said before that supporting these events is a really good way to remind yourself that there’s a world outside the one you work in – chatting to people from across the UK about their industries, recommending places to eat of an evening, catching up with people you only see a couple of times a year at these things. One event last year, World Skills, has led to a project with Medway School of Art, so they can lead back to your day job as well.

Friday was back to work with a bump – almost 100 emails lurking in my inbox which all needed to be dealt with, guest lists to be created for upcoming events, questions to be answered, dependencies to be considered. Still, it was Friday and I wound up the day with a five mile walk spotting deer and bunnies in the fields. It’s a good way to clear your head at the end of the week as well as getting 15000 steps in on a desk day.

I decided that Saturday needed to be a day of relaxation, so Miriam and I headed off to Harlow where we installed ourselves in Starbucks to catch up with some admin before heading to the Nailbar for her to get a manicure and me to get a pedicure in the hope that the sun will come out soon….I chose a slightly sparkly orange/red colour for my toes and they make me happy. I never get my fingernails done as they get trashed with typing and crochet but a good pedicure is a treat. I even got my eyebrows done and my fringe trimmed so I can see out of it rather than peering at people. Miriam made me avocado and bacon on toast for lunch and in the afternoon we went out again, did some more admin in a friendly pub where we met an excellent black labrador and an enormous Chinese Red Dog who was very generous with his paw. Thing 2 cooked dinner and I felt much more amenable to everything.

Today has long walks, finishing off the admin and probably laundry – but I feel better about the whole thing,

Things making me happy this week

  • Spring springing near the office
  • Lego flowers
  • The cats being pleased to see me on my return, even though they’d been fed already
  • Haagen Daz Tiramisu ice cream
  • Bumping into my colleague Valentina unexpectedly on my way home on Thursday
  • Baby cows
  • The prospect of a weekend in Wales over Easter

That’s it from me this week!

Kirsty x

What I’ve been reading

Kate Shugak novels 15 – 20 – Dana Stabenow

314: it’s a wild wild life

I have been asked to point out that I did, in fact, do something of note in week 313 and that was to attend a Best Practice sharing session on making our arts programmes more inclusive. Facilitated by the fabulous Kate Oliver (hi Kate!) who, as well as being a freelance educator extraordinaire, was my predecessor in my current role. The session explored what being radically inclusive looked like for people working in community and SEND settings, and as always was filled with excellent insights from people working in the field, and sparked great discussions and a call for dismantling the patriarchy. Hurray!

It was held at Tate Modern on the 5th floor on a glorious spring day, so we were treated to London looking shiny in the sunshine. I treated myself to an orange hot chocolate from a nice lady with a van and watched the world go by for a while. I love watching people and boats and all the things happening around me in the sun, and then making my way back across the bouncy bridge to St Pauls.

This week I have spent a lot of time hanging out in Myddelton Square, near our new site, while we held public meetings about an aspect of our operations. I stationed myself on the door, greeting people and catching them again on the way out to make sure they went away with a smile. I have to say I was surprised to see a pair of woodpeckers in the trees in the middle of Islington as well as the ubiquitous parakeets, blue tits and pigeons. There was also a squirrel foraging for scraps who hung out with me for a while.

Spring does finally feel like it’s getting a grip, though the paths through the fields and forests are still quite badly churned up. The byway through the woods is particularly bad, thanks to idiots in 4x4s who seem to have no consideration for other users of the space, leaving foot deep clay ruts filled with lakes. They’re even removing fences and damaging the forest itself, and the Essex Way is a mess.

This week (well, Friday 20th) marked the sixth anniversary of my very first post on this blog way back in 2020 and it appears I am still burbling about squirrels, flowers and forests. Thanks for hanging out with me all this time…

Kirsty x

What I’ve been reading:

Kate Shugak Investigations 15-18 – Dana Stabenow

312: hashtag soblessed

Still not wearing grown up shoes

One of the great joys of parenting is the almost constant sense of bewilderment and the nagging feeling that you’ve missed something quite important somewhere along the line which will, in short order, come back to you just that little bit too late to do anything about it. Like being the only parent who forgets it’s non-uniform day, or odd socks day, or that it’s an INSET day and you’re the only parent who has taken their child to school (sorry, Thing 1). I’m nineteen years plus into this mothering lark and I still haven’t got the hang of it. If I end the day with the same number I started with I’m counting it as a win, even now. If they’re fed and clean, all the better though these days they take care of the latter themselves and they’re getting better at the former.

Don’t get me wrong, dear readers. I did not start this journey with quite such a cavalier attitude to my offspring.

When I started down this road I had visions of being the sort of parent who’d have all the kids’ clothes out ready for the morning, all co-ordinated and cute. I’d do baby led weaning and nary a jar of Cow & Gate cauliflower cheese would grace my shelves let alone baby crack (aka Petit Filou). Annabel Karmel would be my guru. They would be breakfasted on something healthy and be at school ready to learn with their socks up and their hair in plaits (not Thing 3, at least until Covid hit and his response to our DIY haircut was to refuse to have his hair touched for the next two years).

I wouldn’t be that parent who was in Tesco at 8am shoving the food tech ingredients into a basket and hissing ‘measure them when you get there!’. I would remember parents’ evening and to buy end of term cards for teachers, but not Roses or Quality Street. I too would be immaculately turned out, possibly with grown up shoes, tamed hair and flicky eyeliner. I’d be on time to the childminder, and would have meal plans that didn’t involve fish fingers. I would remember to book the appointments for parents evening.

Mum Barbie (TM) lived rent-free in my head, as the youth would have it.

I am sure I could have been Mum Barbie, really, except for that thing called real life that kept getting in the way. Thing 1 was a fussy eater, colicky when she was small and then she didn’t like pureed butternut squash and sweet potato, or green things. She would like one thing for a week so you’d lay in a stock. Big mistake. Huge mistake. I learned. Petit Filou to the rescue, as at least she was eating. At 19 she’s still a fussy eater. Still, I loathe beans and pulses of all description because of the texture so I can’t really criticise. Things 2 and 3 – jars all the way. Sanity saved. Thing 2 has turned out to be a foodie and will try anything – her favourite food was always ‘someone else’s’ and if we mislaid her in a restaurant she was to be found peering over a table at other people’s food, with an unnerving hard stare similar to that patented by Paddington.

As for the co-ordinated cute clothes – well, there were clothes and thank heavens the kids were cute. Tracy the childminder/lifesaver used to say that the parents at the school knew which parent had been responsible for dressing the child that morning. Three days a week I’d be off to work at 6am and Daddy was in charge of clothes. Just because everything has stripes it doesn’t mean they match. My own dressing for several of those early years was more ‘has anyone been sick on me? Nope? Good to go!’ than a ‘fit check’ as Thing 1 tells me these are called.

At no point did my children arrive at school with their socks up. Thing 1 was often handed over straight to first aid thanks to her ability to fall over from a standing start, while Thing 2 was usually screaming in fury at being left at school. Thing 3 was a dirt magnet. I gave up: they were there. I wasn’t late, although my hair remained (and remains) untamed and I still live in DMs and Converse. I tried ballet flats but with my Hobbit feet they’re never going to work. Flicky eyeliner remains beyond me even with felt tip pens and a stencil.

2017. First day of new school. Note socks.

I was in awe of those parents who managed with swan-like serenity to juggle their offspring from school to activity to gym to bed on time, probably via something home cooked and nutritious. The ones with the perfect blonde highlights, yoga pants and immaculate children with big bows in their hair. Their kids probably came home with the same clothes they started with and didn’t lose whole PE kits (twice). The ones who made things for cake sales, ran the PTA (in school hours – way to alienate the working parents, folks!) and who always managed to make it to school assemblies and sports days in time to sit at the front to cheer their child on, even though we weren’t supposed to. I hated sports days as a child and as a teacher, and even as a parent that never changed.

The Playground Mum Barbie cliquey mums at the gates who gathered in twittery groups and went for coffee at Costa and yoga classes together while I hared off down the hill to the station. Who collared mums they’d never usually deign to speak to when they wanted your support to get a child with what would turn out to be ADHD removed from the school ‘for his own sake, so he can have the care he needs (simper simper)’. The ones who share carefully curated family pictures on their socials with hashtags like ‘making memories’ and ‘so blessed’. In my head I knew that these weren’t ‘real life’ and their reality was probably much like mine, but one thing you learn when you live with mental health issues is that your head is a bloody liar at times.

No one carefully curates the moments when your phone rings with the school number on it and your heart sinks. Is it the umpteenth courtesy call of the week to say that Thing 2 has clashed heads with her inseparable buddy again and just to be aware. The fourth call in one day to say that the three year old had got overexcited playing dinosaurs in the playground before school and bitten someone, and did we need to have a chat about his behaviour before he started school six months later?

Not my son

No one curates the moment when you’re trying to wrangle three kids out of the door and you wonder when it’s your turn to have the meltdown at the idea of putting shoes and coat on and going somewhere. The cluster feeding when they’re either attached to you or screaming and you can’t put them down, so you walk for hours pushing the buggy and crying quietly knowing that as soon as you get back to the house it’ll start again. The moment when they found the crayons or the maple syrup and redecorated the walls or carpet, or when they refused the carefully cooked fish fingers but ate the compost from the plants, or when you decided that enough was enough and everyone was having the same dinner. Stroganoff Gate remains one of the worst evenings of my life. When you’re on the phone trying to explain to the doctor that no, I can’t bring in the one with the suspected ear infection as the other one has confirmed chicken pox. I can laugh now about the year I begged – only half in jest – for just 24 hours without a sick child. I made it to 25 and it started again. No really, I can laugh about it now.

Post-Natal Depression Barbie has never taken off, for some reason. Even poor old Pregnant Barbie was discontinued. There’s probably a reason for that.

Never caught on, for some reason

Eventually you find your playground tribe. Often it’s the ones also dashing up the hill from the train, cursing the existence of Platform 1 and having to cross the bridge and the fact that there’s never a bus when you really need one. I was lucky and had a childminder who did pick-ups three days a week but on the rare occasions… We moved schools when Thing 1 went to secondary school: Things 2 and 3 started at the primary school in our village, where the worst thing that I heard on the first day was ‘They tried to play with me and they didn’t even introduce themselves!’. The playground parents were much friendlier, and the school was more welcoming. I think I got the hang of it all eventually – I still miss the odd parents evening, as telling me about a March date in the previous September, and sending 13 page newsletters is too much to wade through.

I think I’m winning. There’s three kids here and I’m pretty sure they’re mine – I’ll take it! #soblessed

Things making me happy this week

  • Not this little thug, who attempted to hamstring me earlier for having the temerity to walk past her
  • Making a job offer to a new team member – made my day!
  • Thing 2’s new obsession with sourdough – cinnamon and raisin has been my favourite this week, though the rosemary and confit garlic is pretty impressive
  • Bridgerton. So frothy and flirty and fun. Benedict is redeemed
  • https://www.instagram.com/realpuppetregime/ on Instagram – very funny
  • Several days of sunshine, which went a long way to curing all ills
  • My thumb joint slowly improving – hopefully I’ll be able to crochet again soon

And that’s it from me for the week! Hope you’ve had a good one too.

Kirsty x

What I’ve been reading:

Kate Shugak Investigations 5 – 10 – Dana Stabenow. That’s it. Nothing else.

311: living la vida locos

First of March! A Happy St David’s Day to all who mark the day, and those who don’t.

Thank you to the lovely people who reached out to me after last week’s post, and especially Alicia who brought me cookies. Oat & Raisin, in case you were wondering, which just happen to be my favourites.

This week has been better – there’s been the odd 4am wake up when my brain was convinced my alarm had gone off. It played Bowie’s Starman. I told it to be quiet and my Beloved informed me that it hadn’t actually gone off and now he was awake too. Ah well.

On Wednesday neighbour Sue and I went on an excellent evening out courtesy of Sadlers Wells’ occasional culture sector free tickets. They’re how we went to see Tutus a few weeks ago and Quadrophenia last summer. Our new site is next-door-but-a-couple to Sadlers Wells, so it’s very convenient for the office.

Sue and I met at Angel and wandered down to Banana Tree for a good pad Thai and a natter about the joys of parenting teens, prom dresses, being functional adults – that sort of thing.

The performance was The Opera Locos by Yllana. Described as a comedy opera where Puccini meets Elvis (via Mika, Whitney Houston and more), we really didn’t know what to expect. I know nothing about opera other than Terry Pratchett’s Maskerade.

Two and a half love stories, audience participation in the form of an opera masterclass and an unsuspecting love interest, much slapstick, flamenco, mugging to the audience and some gorgeous singing was what we got, and it was SO much fun. We giggled like idiots, had an ice cream in the interval (mint choc chip) and then I took Sue on a historic walk through my favourite bits of Clerkenwell on the way back to Farringdon. I didn’t show her the Clerk’s Well as it was dark and I can’t give away everything all at once, can I?

The only issue I had was the full face mask make-up that the performers were wearing – I am phobic about masks and dolls. Working at the Museum of Childhood was an exercise in aversion therapy which did not work.

We continued giggling all the way home on the train, which is not the usual response to the Central Line. Probably I should try  ‘proper’ opera (propera?) at some stage.

Other things making me happy this week

  • A long catch-up chat with an old friend on Saturday morning
  • Lunch with Thing 2, London sister and brother-in-law on Saturday at Hare and Tortoise
  • Reading a lot as my thumb is misbehaving and won’t let me crochet
  • Rediscovering the joy of reading out loud – though there really is a limit to the number of times one can read The Tiger Who Came To Tea with full cast of voices.
  • Bridgerton season 4, part 2. Oh Benedict, you fool.
  • Attending a Foley and animation workshop with Laura Copsey and Simon Hamlyn as part of our project with a local school
  • Coffee with ex-colleagues on Friday

This week I have a dinner out with Amanda, no interviews (hurray!) and some early nights planned.

Kirsty x

What I’ve been reading:

The Tiger Who Came To Tea – Judith Kerr. On repeat.

House of Sky and Breath – Sarah J. Maas (Audible)

Ride or Die – Hailey Edwards

First Witches Club – Maisey Yates

A Brazen Curiosity – Lynn Messina

Kate Shugak Investigations 1-4 – Dana Stabenow