Tuesday, January 22, 2008

I Wrote Something

I wrote something last night. I wrote this:




My Grandma's Houses


My grandma’s house is a bungalow. It is very small and it doesn’t have a garden.
She used to live in a big house. Well, quite big. It had an upstairs. She had two sofas and a garden and a second bedroom for when we stayed the night. She had a big dining table and a hallway.
She was so upset when she had to sell the old house. And she must still be upset because she hates it when you talk about it. If you talk about something that happened there, like:

“Remember that weekend when I was a fortune teller and Peter was my assistant? And I wore your dressing gown and clip on earrings? And we set up that stall in the front garden and put the big umbrella up and I used that paperweight as a crystal ball? And I read Maggie from next door’s palm and she gave me a five pound note and you said I had to share it with Peter and I said I wouldn’t and he ripped it in half and I threw the paperweight at him and knocked him out and he had to go to hospital?”
Or:
“Remember when me and Peter painted a mural on the old bedroom wall? And because Peter spilt paint all over the carpet you said we couldn’t go swimming and I punched him in the face and gave him a black eye? And school sent a social worker round to Auntie Julie’s because they thought he was the victim of child abuse?”

She will just pretend she didn’t hear you.

She moved eleven months ago. To a completely different village. It’s actually closer to us by eight minutes which means the bus ride now takes only 24 minutes. But I would rather it still took 32 minutes because the old house had loads of good hiding places for hide and seek. There are no good hiding places in the new house unless you consider these places good hiding places:
-The bath
-The backyard
-Under the bed
-Behind a door
-On the street

I do not consider them good hiding places. I consider them RUBBISH hiding places.

We were there on the day grandma moved because we were helping to carry stuff to the van. Everyone was there- mum, Auntie Julie, Uncle Johnny, Liz, Liz’s boyfriend, and Maggie from next door. Although mum and Auntie Julie weren’t really helping because they were just walking round the old house and saying stuff like: “Oh God, remember when I drank loads of absinthe and smashed that window and mum stopped my pocket money for three months so she could afford to have it replaced?”
Me and Peter got to ride in the van with Liz’s boyfriend (because it was his van).
Grandma went in her car with the cushions and duvets and the others just walked there. It was the summer holidays and I had sunburn on my back from building sandcastles for four hours at the beach the day before. Mum had put loads of aftersun on it and my t-shirt was sticking to me.
When we all got to the new house and went inside Peter looked up and said: “The ceiling is so low! And there’s no room! Where am I supposed to hang my punch bag?”. Auntie Julie told Peter off and he started crying so I kicked him and then grandma went out the back and shut the door. We looked out the window and she was crying too.

We have to go to a different bus stop to get there now, too. The first time we went on our own we got on the wrong bus. We ended up by the Safeway in Blaydon and we had to call grandma from their phone to come and pick us up. She wasn’t angry and she let us get McDonalds. I got a Happy Meal and so did Peter. Grandma got an apple pie and it burnt her tongue and she said she was going to sue McDonalds but I don’t think she ever did.

Because the house is so small there is only room for one bed so we have to share- grandma, Peter and me. Actually, we slept like this in the old house anyway- all of us in grandma’s bed, even though there was another bedroom meant for us. It makes it more fun and like a sleepover. Grandma sleeps in the middle because Peter snores and if she sleeps in the middle I can’t reach over to pinch his nose until he wakes up and when he wakes up- head butt him. Grandma snores too but I would never head butt her. Grandma puts her arms around both of us and we sleep like that. Grandma snores so loudly, like a massive beast. But I would never head butt her because she’s my grandma.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Conversation 2

-Have you ever swum in a swimming pool?

-Obviously.

-Some people haven’t.

-Everyone has.

-No.

-Everyone has.

-What if you lived somewhere where there wasn’t a swimming pool?

-Everywhere has a swimming pool.

-Well, what if you were allergic to chlorine or something?

-Yeah but if you were allergic to chlorine you probably would have swum in a swimming pool at least once and that’s how you’d know you were allergic.

-What if you couldn’t afford to go to the swimming pool? Swimming is expensive.

-You probably would have gone with school.

-Have you ever nearly drowned in a swimming pool?

-Yes.

-Really?

-Yeah- this horrible girl I went to school with held me under the water and wouldn’t let me up.

-Why didn’t you just kick her?

-I did but she just kicked me back and carried on pushing my head down. She was much bigger than me.

-Why didn’t the lifeguard do anything?

-He did, eventually.

-How long were you under water?

-I don’t know. It probably wasn’t that long but it felt like forever.

-It sounds horrible.

-It was. My nose was running loads and I was crying and the lifeguard had to call my grandma to come and pick me up because my mum was at work.

-That’s embarrassing.

-I never wanted her to pick me up from anywhere because she had all these dogs and when you opened the car door all the dogs would jump out and run off. And the car was really old and falling apart and the doors were all different colours. And my grandma herself was really weird. She was a bit of a hippy- she always wore these patchwork trousers and these sandals made out of rope or something. And she dyed her hair orange. So she barged into the baths, calling my name and all the dogs ran in and the receptionist was going mental and shouting “Get those dogs out of here!” and my grandma came over to me and picked me up like a baby and walked out with me in her arms. Everyone was at the pool that day- everyone.

-Jeez.

-Yeah, pretty much. That was on a Friday afternoon. I spent the whole weekend with my head under a pillow, just remembering it and groaning and imagining school on Monday and groaning. I begged mum to let me stay at home but she said no. So I put on my uniform and pretended I was leaving for school but instead I ran to the park and hid in these bushes all day.

-What was it like when you did go back to school?

-It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be. A few people said some stuff but after a while everyone just forgot about it.

-Apart from you.

-Yeah.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Conversation 1

-Hello.

-Hello.

-Do you want to talk about something?

-Okay.

-What do you want to talk about?

-I don’t know.

-Let’s talk about swimming.

-Swimming?

-Yeah.

-Okay.

-Have you ever swum in the sea?

-Yeah.

-Have you ever been stung by a jellyfish while you were swimming in the sea?

-No but I nearly have been.

-Really?

-Yeah, I was swimming and I turned around and there was this jellyfish floating next to me.

-Was it alive?

-I don’t think so, it was just floating there.

-I saw a dead jellyfish once.

-Really?

-Yeah. It had washed up on the beach. These kids were poking it with a stick and then one of them said they were going to jump on it's head. I wanted to jump on it too but my mum said no and took me away. Have you ever jumped on a jellyfish?

-No.

-I imagined it would be bouncy but it probably wouldn’t be. It’s head would probably explode and you’d probably get stuff all over your shoes.

-Probably.

-Like, all of it’s insides.

-Yeah.

-It would probably be really gross and upsetting.

-Probably.

-But it seemed like it would be a really cool thing to do back then, on the beach.

-Yeah, I understand.