tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-344053642024-03-13T08:53:48.137+00:00A Detailed Account of Everything I've Ever DoneEisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.comBlogger36125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-60324294702421653692009-02-10T10:51:00.003+00:002009-02-10T11:41:07.526+00:00BackSo. <br /><br />Coming up to a year since I last posted anything. Huh. <br /><br />Hard to get started again. Feels all awkward. <br /><br />Anyway, since I am so awesome at them, here’s a book review. <br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/jan/17/interview-charlotte-roche-debut-novel-wetlands">Wetlands- Charlotte Roche</a> <br /><br />So, everyone must have heard of this book by now and everyone must know that it is supposed to be totally disgusting and stuff. And it is disgusting, exclusively. There is nothing else to it. <br />I am not a big fan of the word ‘feminist’. I especially do not like being called one by silly twenty-year-old boys who think that any girl who doesn’t agree with and/or giggle at everything they say is ‘a feminist’. Having any opinions at all if you are a female makes you a feminist. Apparently. <br />I suppose I’ve become a bit more interested in feminist issues lately, though, like cosmetic surgery and dieting and all that jazz. And also, to an extent (I am not going crazy over this or anything), feminine hygiene and women shaving all the hair off their bodies. <br />I’ve got issues with shaving because I think it is all about sexualizing children and that. The more I think about it, the more disturbing it is- how women try to make themselves look younger and younger and younger. Maybe I’ll write about that another day. But I probably won’t. <br /><br />ANYWAYS. <br /><br />I read a review of Wetlands in The Guardian a while ago and promptly ordered it from Amazon. How could I not? As an aspiring writer and a young woman I felt like I HAD to read it. And I am sort of glad that I did, because now I can tell everyone that it is rubbish. And I love telling people that things are rubbish.<br /><br />It is pretty explicit throughout. Not just sexually, it is disgusting in general. A few times when I was reading it on the tube I am sure that I said “errrrrr” out loud. I read a bit to my boyfriend. He started off mildly intrigued but after a page was crying “stop it, stop reading, stop it!”.<br />I’ve read controversial for the sake of it books before and was never very impressed. That’s why I’ve given up on Chuck Palaniuk- he used to be so brilliant but then became all about the shock value (Apparently people were vomiting/fainting at the reading of his short story <a href="http://www.seizureandy.com/stuff/guts.html">Guts</a>, like they were at Wetlands but in my opinion Guts is far, far worse). <br /><br />My main problem with Wetlands is this- it’s just not very well written. I am pretty sure that I could have written it and that is never sign of a good book. Of course, there’s the chance that stuff was lost in translation but I doubt it. <br /><br />Reading it, you can almost hear Charlotte Roche going “hmm I’ve run out of bodily fluids to write about… oh, snot! Yes!”<br />And:<br />“What could she stick up her vage now? The handle of a razor! Yes!”<br /><br />From what I can tell, reading interviews and that, Charlotte Roche thinks that women will be more shocked by the book than men. I am sorry to disappoint her. Sure, it was often gross but nothing special. It won’t stay with me, the way Helen Walsh’s Brass or Chuck Palaniuk’s Choke has. Maybe some women would be shocked, women who haven’t read anything like it before or ever considered their own bodies. <br /><br />I’d heard that the book has a lot of feminist ideas and it kind of almost does but then contradicts them. I can’t be bothered to go into this much further. I’ll be out of my depth. <br /><br />All in all, I think that it is a pretty anti-feminist novel. Charlotte Roche boasts about men being turned on by it, and I get the feeling that she wrote it for men. Like, to impress them or something. There is little there that would appeal to most women. But it’s not even porn. It is just disgusting. And badly written. With annoying characters that nobody could relate to because they are so false. And a stupid plot. And no heart. Just loads of shit and smegma. <br /><br />3/10. <br /><br /><br />In other news:<br /><br />-Despite my 'interest in feminist issues like cosmetic surgery and dieting' I am doing WeightWatchers. It is pretty uncool of me. I have become a point counting bore. But losing eight pounds in two weeks? WINNER, I WIN, WHAT WAS I THINKING LIVING LIKE THAT FOR SO MANY YEARS? THAT WAS NO LIFE! I AM ON MY WAY TO TRUE HAPPINESS, FINALLY!!! WHEN I AM THINNER PEOPLE WILL LIKE ME MORE AND I WILL BE MORE SUCCESSFUL IN EVERY WAY! HURRAH! Srsly- I am aware of how shit I am being and that I have broken all my rules but... whatever. <br /><br />-It is my year anniversary with my boyfriend on Friday. It is very exciting. I am throwing myself into planning it. Because, like, I've never, you know, like, liked anyone as much as I like him and I'm really happy and stuff. And also I am pretty bored and it is something to do.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-31944160466975340452008-04-10T10:25:00.002+00:002008-04-10T10:28:22.043+00:00Busy Doing NothingI'll start posting again soon, probably.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-12874322318020096232008-02-24T18:27:00.001+00:002008-02-24T18:30:11.482+00:00The Tears of A CowI am a cow and I live in a zoo. People are not interested in me. They are interested in the monkeys and the penguins. They are also interested in the elephants and giraffes. They are not interested in me. I am just a cow and no one cares. <br />They don’t even bother putting me in a cage. All I have is a two foot high fence. The fence is what makes me an attraction. If I didn’t have the fence I’d just be a cow on some grass. The fence is there to suggest I am not just a cow- I am an exotic zoo animal. But the fence is fooling no one. <br />People do not crowd around my enclosure. They don’t take photographs of me. Everyone has seen a cow before. Occasionally someone will say “There’s a cow over there” but then they walk off. <br />I don’t know why I am even here. I suppose they didn’t have enough animals and I am just making up the numbers. <br />Often people are angered by my presence. “Why is there a cow here? We can see cows anytime. How endangered are they? Where are the fucking cheetahs?”. I swish my tail and pretend not to hear. <br />People boo me. They say “boo!” and laugh because it sounds like “moo”. They think they are being witty but they are not. <br />Sometimes they throw things. Cans, pebbles. At my head. <br />I have vowed to myself that the next time some joker throws a can at my head or boos me I will kill them. I’ll charge at the fence and tear it down. I’ll stamp on them and all their ugly little friends- killing them dead. How boring will I be then? How run of the mill, how unremarkable, how ordinary, how mundane? If it’s danger they want I’ll bring it. I’ll bring it and they’ll be really fucking sorry.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-59534147678730005982008-02-19T10:22:00.001+00:002008-02-19T10:26:14.218+00:00What She Will Do When He ReturnsShe will eat him when he returns. <br />First she will eat his toes and feet. Then she will eat his ankles, calves and knees. And then she will eat the rest of him. She will eat every single piece of him because she is very hungry. This is her plan.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-74694092716685277592008-02-16T23:54:00.003+00:002008-02-17T00:00:25.935+00:00Under The BridgeFrom now on he will live under the bridge. <br />He will sleep on a bed of cardboard and pigeon feathers. <br />He will eat rats and glass.<br />There was a time when he slept on a mattress and ate rice.<br />But his mattress and rice days are over. From now on he will live under the bridge. <br />And he will be King of The Bridge. <br /><br />Late one night, a week into his new life as King of The Bridge, he wakes up to find A Girl standing over him and looking at him.<br /><br />A Girl is under the bridge because she was walking along the river and happened upon the bridge. <br /><br />Who are you?<br />I am A Girl. Who are you?<br />I am King of The Bridge<br />Where’s your crown?<br />It’s over there<br />Why isn’t it on your head?<br />Because it was itching me<br />It doesn’t look much like a crown<br />Maybe I will rape you<br />Maybe?<br />I haven’t decided yet. I probably will though.<br />If I try to run away now will you catch me and kill me?<br />Yes<br />How will you kill me?<br />I will drown you in the river. I will push your face into the water until you stop moving and then I will have sex with your corpse<br />Why is there so much blood coming out of your mouth?<br />I ate some bottles earlier and they were quite sharp<br />Do you live under the bridge?<br />Yes<br />Maybe I will come and live here with you<br />You could be Queen of The Bridge<br />I would like that<br />I would like that too. I’ll fashion you a crown out of these rat tails and bottle caps<br /><br /><br />And they live under the bridge together until they both die horrible, painful, slow deaths.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-61372098794465502512008-01-22T10:22:00.000+00:002008-01-22T10:58:40.046+00:00I Wrote SomethingI wrote something last night. I wrote this:<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /> <span style="font-weight:bold;"> My Grandma's Houses</span><br /><br /><br />My grandma’s house is a bungalow. It is very small and it doesn’t have a garden.<br />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. <br />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:<br /><br />“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?”<br />Or:<br />“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?”<br /><br />She will just pretend she didn’t hear you. <br /><br />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:<br />-The bath<br />-The backyard<br />-Under the bed<br />-Behind a door<br />-On the street<br /><br />I do not consider them good hiding places. I consider them RUBBISH hiding places. <br /><br />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?”<br />Me and Peter got to ride in the van with Liz’s boyfriend (because it was his van).<br />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. <br />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. <br /><br />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. <br /><br />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.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-58843996973203348422008-01-13T22:55:00.000+00:002008-01-13T23:07:58.214+00:00Conversation 2-Have you ever swum in a swimming pool?<br /><br />-Obviously.<br /><br />-Some people haven’t.<br /><br />-Everyone has.<br /><br />-No.<br /><br />-Everyone has.<br /><br />-What if you lived somewhere where there wasn’t a swimming pool?<br /><br />-Everywhere has a swimming pool.<br /><br />-Well, what if you were allergic to chlorine or something?<br /><br />-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. <br /><br />-What if you couldn’t afford to go to the swimming pool? Swimming is expensive.<br /><br />-You probably would have gone with school. <br /><br />-Have you ever nearly drowned in a swimming pool?<br /><br />-Yes.<br /><br />-Really?<br /><br />-Yeah- this horrible girl I went to school with held me under the water and wouldn’t let me up.<br /><br />-Why didn’t you just kick her?<br /><br />-I did but she just kicked me back and carried on pushing my head down. She was much bigger than me.<br /><br />-Why didn’t the lifeguard do anything?<br /><br />-He did, eventually. <br /><br />-How long were you under water?<br /><br />-I don’t know. It probably wasn’t that long but it felt like forever. <br /><br />-It sounds horrible.<br /><br />-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.<br /><br />-That’s embarrassing.<br /><br />-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. <br /><br />-Jeez.<br /><br />-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. <br /><br />-What was it like when you did go back to school?<br /><br />-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. <br /><br />-Apart from you.<br /><br />-Yeah.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-75692741510895337982008-01-11T19:25:00.000+00:002008-01-11T19:46:20.208+00:00Conversation 1-Hello.<br /><br />-Hello.<br /><br />-Do you want to talk about something?<br /><br />-Okay.<br /><br />-What do you want to talk about?<br /><br />-I don’t know.<br /><br />-Let’s talk about swimming.<br /><br />-Swimming?<br /><br />-Yeah.<br /><br />-Okay.<br /><br />-Have you ever swum in the sea?<br /><br />-Yeah. <br /><br />-Have you ever been stung by a jellyfish while you were swimming in the sea?<br /><br />-No but I nearly have been.<br /><br />-Really?<br /><br />-Yeah, I was swimming and I turned around and there was this jellyfish floating next to me.<br /><br />-Was it alive?<br /><br />-I don’t think so, it was just floating there.<br /><br />-I saw a dead jellyfish once.<br /><br />-Really?<br /><br />-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?<br /><br />-No. <br /><br />-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.<br /><br />-Probably. <br /><br />-Like, all of it’s insides. <br /><br />-Yeah. <br /> <br />-It would probably be really gross and upsetting.<br /><br />-Probably. <br /><br />-But it seemed like it would be a really cool thing to do back then, on the beach.<br /><br />-Yeah, I understand.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-72297862306694430142007-12-18T17:52:00.000+00:002007-12-18T18:06:24.001+00:00I'll Never Write the End of ThisSo, university is over until next year. <br />For part of my final creative writing assignment I had to write a play or a bit of a play. So I did. And here it is:<br /><br />As you can see, I didn't pay much attention to stage directions or making it make any sense but, as I've said before, I am an artist. <br /><br /><br />KATHY: I never liked him that much. I’ve liked people a lot more. But they were bad people with ugly habits and grim futures. From the beginning I knew he was good, he had good intentions. And, yeah, everyone said that he was boring but I didn’t think so. And anyway I was sick of all those ‘fun’ characters who got off their faces every night and were taking break dancing lessons. I was more like him than them. <br />We met at work, both temping at a huge company in town. Being temps, no one would associate with us. So we ate lunch together, walked to the station together. Then we started going to the pub to complain about our days and slag off the permanent staff. And all of a sudden, before either of us could even notice, we were together. <br />For a while it was good, really good. He treated me really nicely and I think I was quite decent to him too. We had a good time. <br />But after a few months he started annoying me. First of all it was just little things he did, words he used, the way he made sandwiches. But then everything about him irritated me. His hair, his weird lopsided smile, his trousers, his key ring. The way he quoted newspaper articles all the time, as if he had no opinions of his own. His overuse of the word “nice”, his fingernails. His hair, his voice, how indifferent he always looked. The position he slept in, how he acted around my friends, his answer phone message. How he called me Kath or ‘K’, the way he sometimes spoke about himself in the 3rd person. The outrageously stupid things he came out with, his ringtone, his hair. And yet I stayed with him.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />A busy café in central London. Christmas music is playing from a small radio and there is some tinsel decorating the till. A couple in their mid twenties are sitting opposite each other at a table. </span><br /><br />KATHY: Are you going to get anything to eat?<br />SIMON: I don’t think so.<br />KATHY: Me neither. Just coffee.<br />SIMON: Yes, I’ll have coffee too.<br />KATHY: Cappuccino?<br />SIMON: No, filter coffee.<br />KATHY: Oh. I thought you’d get cappuccino. <br />SIMON: I was considering cappuccino. It was between cappuccino and filter coffee.<br />KATHY: And filter coffee won.<br />SIMON: Yes, but it was close.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Silence as they examine menus. A WAITRESS appears beside them</span><br />WAITRESS: Hi, you guys alright?<br />SIMON: Hello. Can I have a filter coffee please?<br />KATHY: Can I have one too? <br />WAITRESS: Sure, two coffees.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">WAITRESS exits</span><br />KATHY: So, have you done any of your shopping? <br />SIMON: I’ve done most of it. <br />KATHY: What did you buy?<br />SIMON: I got the majority of it from the Oxfam Unwrapped catalogue.<br />KATHY: Really? Like, toilets and donkeys? <br />SIMON: Yeah, I got a goat for my sister and a well for my mum. <br />KATHY: Oh. Have you gotten me anything yet? <br />SIMON: Yes but it’s a surprise. <br />KATHY: Is it from the Oxfam Unwrapped catalogue?<br />SIMON: Yes.<br />KATHY: Oh, right. <br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The WAITRESS reappears with two coffees </span><br />KATHY: Thanks<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The WAITRESS exits </span><br />KATHY: I went to the cinema last night.<br />SIMON: What did you see?<br />KATHY: That new film, I don’t remember it’s name. American, you know the one with the guy in it, that new one. <br />SIMON: Oh yes. It got a really good review in The Guardian.<br />KATHY: Yeah, it was really powerful. I went with Michael. <br />SIMON: How’s he? <br />KATHY: He’s alright. Broke up with his girlfriend though, was feeling a bit rough, needed someone to talk to, a shoulder to cry on. <br />SIMON: Ah. I’ll give him a ring later on.<br />KATHY: No, it’s alright, I already sorted it out, he’s better now. <br />SIMON: I’ll ring him anyway. Haven’t spoken to him in a while. <br />KATHY: Fine. <br />SIMON: Why don’t you want me to ring him? <br />KATHY: I don’t not want you to. Go ahead and ring him. I was just saying that I already sorted it out. <span style="font-style:italic;">Pause</span> Why would you ring him anyway? You’re not even friends. You’ve only met him twice. <br />SIMON: Don’t be ridiculous- I’ve known him for ages. Mick and I are good friends- I even bought him a Christmas present.<br />KATHY: From the Oxfam Unwrapped catalogue?<br />SIMON: Yes! <br />KATHY: He won’t have gotten you anything. And why are you calling him Mick? No one calls him that. <br />SIMON: Kath what is your problem? <br />KATHY: I don’t have a problem. How’s your filter coffee? <br />SIMON: I’ve had better. I suspect that it is actually instant. <br />KATHY: Yes, that’s what it tastes like. I’ll be back in a minute. <br />KATHY stands and exits. Simon gets his mobile phone out of his pocket and dials a number<br />SIMON: Mick, it’s Si! How’s tricks? <br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Time passes. Kathy returns to the table. They sit in silence for a while. </span><br /><br />SIMON: You alright?<br />KATHY: Yes. <br />SIMON: Good. Mick is going to come down in a bit. <br />KATHY: What? Did you just ring him now?<br />SIMON: Yeah. He’s up for coming to the gig with us later. <br />KATHY: He hasn’t got a ticket.<br />SIMON: I don’t think that will be a problem, I doubt it’s sold out.<br />KATHY: Why?<br />SIMON: Why what?<br />KATHY: Why wouldn’t it be sold out?<br />SIMON: Well, this girl isn’t exactly well known is she?<br />KATHY: Just because you’ve never heard of her.<br />SIMON: I have heard of her, I read about her in-<br />KATHY: I know, you read about her in The Guardian.<br />SIMON: Yes. <br />KATHY: I’ve known about her for months. <br />SIMON: Oh, well done. <br />KATHY: We always go to gigs together, you and me. Just us. That’s what we do. <br />SIMON: So? You want me to call him back and tell him not to come?<br />KATHY: No, I wish you hadn’t called him in the first place. <br />SIMON: Well, I’m sorry. I didn’t realise that us going to gigs alone was so important to you. He doesn’t have to come tonight, he can just hang out with us here before we go. <br />KATHY: Fine.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Enter MICHAEL</span> <br />SIMON: Here he is! Mick! Over here!<br />KATHY: Calm down, for God’s sake.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">MICHAEL walks across stage and takes a seat at the table next to SIMON</span><br />MICHAEL: Hi Kathy, you alright?<br />KATHY: Yes.<br />SIMON: What’s going on, Mickey? <br />MICHAEL: Oh, not much. Just been in bed most of the day.<br />SIMON: Still feeling a bit rough, are we? After breaking up with Sarah? <br />MICHAEL: Yeah, well. Not brilliant. <br />SIMON: I never really liked her all that much, to be honest. <br />KATHY: You never met her.<br />SIMON: Well, I didn’t like the sound of her, from what Kath told me.<br />MICHAEL: So, what’s this gig tonight? <br />SIMON: Ah, well, about that. Kath says you can’t come.<br />KATHY: Simon! It’s sold out. <br />SIMON: It isn’t. She says we can only go to gigs together, no one else is allowed to come.<br />KATHY: It isn’t that, Michael, he’s just being a bell end.<br />SIMON: So, sorry. I would have liked you to come, someone decent to talk to.<br />KATHY: Stop being like this, you’re making him uncomfortable. <br />SIMON: What? You’ve been horrible to me all day.<br />KATHY: I haven’t. I am just sick of this. Sick of all this stupid, petty stuff. <br />SIMON: It’s not me! It’s you! Always putting me down, going on and on about stuff that doesn’t matter, trying to make me look stupid in front of our friends, treating me like I am an idiot. <br />KATHY: They are not ‘our’ friends, they are my friends. You have no friends. <br />SIMON: You see, Mike? This is exactly what I am talking about!<br />KATHY: You have no friends so you try to steal mine. But they don’t like you, no one likes you because you are a fucking idiot. <br />SIMON: So you don’t like me? Why on earth have we been together all this time then? <br />KATHY: I am not talking about this now. It isn’t fair on Michael. <br />MICHAEL: Um, yeah. I think I’d better go anyway.<br />SIMON: No, don’t let her make you feel like you have to leave.<br />MICHAEL: Nah, mate, I’ve got some stuff to sort out. I’ll give you a ring later.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">MICHAEL stands and exits </span><br />KATHY: Do you want another coffee? <br />SIMON: I suppose. <br /><br /><br />Well, there you go. Oh, and by the way: <a href="http://www.sixsentences.blogspot.com">Six Sentences</a> is really cool. My Christmas Tree story went up on there today so you should go and read it in a different font and/or submit your own six sentence story.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-29822294025591265632007-12-09T22:30:00.000+00:002007-12-09T22:43:50.503+00:00One Little Christmas TreeOh my days it's Christmas soon! To celebrate I've written a festive, feel-good story:<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">One Little Christmas Tree</span><br /><br />The one we’ve chosen is a four foot Norwegian that claims to possess excellent needle retention, good branching, and a scent far superior to that of it’s fellow trees. When we get it home and take it out of the netting we see that it leans precariously to the left and is missing numerous branches. There isn’t enough tinsel in the world. We sigh and it just wobbles apologetically. We sigh again, louder. I know you feel I’ve let you down, it says, but trust me, you could never feel as let down with me as I do with myself. <br /><br /><br />I'll probably write some more Christmassy stories in the coming weeks. I encourage you to do the same because Christmas is cool and writing wrocks. Go on, go on.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-5758784060903870022007-12-02T22:48:00.000+00:002007-12-02T23:11:24.699+00:00"Look at these assholes"So it's fair to say that I failed at NaBloPoMo. I was, like, busy and stuff. <br /><br />The past few months have well and truly flown by and now it's nearly the end of term. On the whole I've enjoyed it- it was well weird at first but now it's all cool. <br /><br />I am supposed to write a play for tomorrow. I don't do plays. They are too difficult. And I am expected to do well or whatever since I 'studied' acting for two years. Whatever. <br /><br />I saw The Darjeeling Limited yesterday and it was so, so great. I recommend it. STRONGLY.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-34933065212068917962007-11-21T23:01:00.000+00:002007-11-21T23:25:04.390+00:00Met This Girl on Monday...I wrote this in a rush before creative writing club today. So, like, yeah, whatever.<br /><br />In April we went for coffee and we didn’t touch each-other. It had been over a year but it was still too soon. You looked uglier than I remembered. You were losing your hair and you looked even thinner than before. I talked constantly, hardly pausing for a breath, and you just sat there, watching me. <br />In May we went to the zoo. It was too cold to go to the zoo but we went anyway. We touched and you made me laugh. I didn’t remember you being all that funny before but now you were. I laughed a lot and you liked it. We saw all the animals and we touched each-other. <br />In June we went drinking. It was the day before my birthday and you got me a card. I saw that you’d drafted the message in pencil first and then traced the letters with a pen so you wouldn’t make any mistakes. <br />We went drinking and then we went to the park and threw grass and soil at each-other. You stuffed a load of it down my top and it was all in our hair. And then you asked if you could kiss me and I wanted to say, “I don’t know, <span style="font-style:italic;">can</span> you?” but I didn’t say that, I said “Um, yes”. And you kissed me. <br />A bit later in June we walked along the South Bank and I asked if we were back together or not. You said we were and we both changed our status on myspace. <br />Even later in June we had a sleepover at your house. I bought new underwear and we had sex on the wooden floor. It wasn’t great. After, we ate pizza and watched a Tim Burton film in our pajamas. And then we did it again on the sofa and it was better. We stayed up most of the night talking about our favourite ever gigs of all time and how stupid everyone else was. <br />In July and August we went to a lot of places. We were good. We went to Warsaw for a week to drink a lot of vodka and hang out in old churches. On the final night you proposed and I cracked a rib laughing. <br />In October things took a turn for the worse. You stopped calling so much and I slept with someone else (someone who, by the way, DID appreciate me and didn’t have such SHIT taste in music and wasn’t such a fucking WASTER LOSER IDIOT). <br />In November we needed to talk and so we did. You held my hand and said that this wasn’t working out for you anymore and I said fine, whatever, me neither. And that was that. We changed our statuses back and acted like nothing had ever happened.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-47683809888354579112007-11-14T22:20:00.000+00:002007-12-18T17:46:04.129+00:00How Come Stuff Like This Never Happens to Anyone Else?Get this:<br /><br />So, on Sunday I bit the inside of my lip when I was eating some bread. It hurt but I didn't draw blood or anything. So I forgot about it. <br />Monday night I got home and happened to look in the mirror. I saw a mark just under my lip- a purple mark. I was like "WTF?" <br />I said to my dad "WTF is this?" and he was like "Oh, you must've burst a blood vessel" and I was like "!!!" <br />So I showed it to everyone the next day and they were like "OMG Eisor WTF is that?" and I was like "Burst my blood vessel up innit" and they were like "Oh my days".<br />So that night when I got home I looked in the mirror again and the mark had DOUBLED in size. You can imagine what I was like. <br />So today I did not leave the house. Because you know what it looks like? It looks like a lovebite. A lovebite on my face. And that is so not cool. I have a very classy image to uphold! What a blow. <br /><br /><br />I am currently reading 'A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius' by Dave Eggers and it is well good.<br /><br />Also: How unfair is <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/7095134.stm">this</a>? What exactly has he done to get on the Sex Offenders Register? Who is he harming? What a world. Hahaha.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-47443541354680422412007-11-12T20:39:00.000+00:002007-12-18T23:06:48.041+00:00Slipping Down Slowly, Slipping Down SidewaysMore top quality writing:<br /><br />This morning I was up at 5 o’clock- beating the sun by miles. I had an unusual craving for tea. There was no milk or sugar so I drank it straight. It was really disgusting and I couldn’t finish it. I swapped it for a can of coke, lit my first cigarette of the day and made a list of essential items. <br />It’s changed here, not half as good as it used to be, we say like we’re 70. Newcastle has lost it’s sparkle. We remember hide and seek in the pet cemetery, searching for the price of a mix-up in the gutter, playing chicken on Chily Road, drinking blackcurrent squash and eating peanuts in the Free Trade’s beer garden while our parents played Joni Mitchell on the jukebox, building dens in the backlane, reading the legendary graffiti in The Tyne’s toilets. Sunday afternoons in Chopwell Woods, school trips to the castle, getting lost in Eldon Square, sitting outside the library watching Mad Malcolm play the guitar and shout at red cars. <br />The city hasn’t changed, we have. We’re older, looking through cynical, bored eyes. We’ve done everything there is to do, gone everywhere worth going. We’ve outgrown it. <br />We are frequenting the same pubs our parents did when they were our age. The ‘l’ from the Jesmond Swimming Pool sign is still missing but that stopped making us laugh ten years ago. We spend every day with the people we went to playgroup with and they’re talking about getting jobs at BT and buying cars. And we’ve seen too many movies to be content here anymore. <br />I am on my way to your house to take you away. As soon as you open the door I am going to tell you to pack your leather jacket and laptop and come with me to Central Station. I know you’ll come, we’ve been planning this for months, I am only doing it for drama. We are going to elope. Elope to London. <br />Last night I sat on the back steps with my mum for the final time. We drank Lambrini (1.99 from the Spar) and listened to Carole King. <br />“How come you always stayed in Newcastle? Didn’t you ever want to explore?” I asked her.<br />“This is my home. I was born here and I’ll die here. God, how depressing”<br />“But it doesn’t have to be like that. You could leave anytime you wanted”<br />“I’ve got you kids, I couldn’t leave”<br />“But we’re grown up now, mum. You can do whatever you want”<br />“If only” she said and drained her glass. “Another?”<br /><br />I’ve said goodbye to the cat and my bedroom. I’ve got a rucksack on each shoulder and I’m walking. <br />Down Dinsdale Road- twelve years ago I fell off my rollerskates and cut my knee just over there, by the postbox. <br />It’s a classic cold morning in the North East. But it’s bright and the air is fresh. I wonder how I’ll cope with the pollution in the capital. I’ll get used to it, probably. <br />For some reason I’ve got ‘Fog on the Tyne’ in my head. I went to school with the guy who wrote that’s granddaughter. She’s got two kids now and he’s dead. It’s a good song, sort of. <br />There’s Heaton Park where you can “go and see sex at night” according to my cousin, Annabel. I don’t know about that but to be honest I haven’t ever been there at night. It’s dangerous, even in the daytime. <br /><br />They filmed a bit of Byker Grove over there- although we all know they filmed most of it in Durham. We all hated Byker Grove. <br />Sid’s Shop- where mum’s chuckie is about 400 quid so we can’t go in there anymore. We have to run past it usually but today I am leaving forever so I don’t care. <br />Down the hill towards The Cluny where mum and Annabel work as waitresses. I say work, whenever I go in they are just eating chips and gossiping. Luckily the manager is my auntie so they can do as they please- what’s she going to do- fire them? <br />Walking by the Ouseburn canal now, nearly there. God, the water is so filthy. Adam Baker jumped in once and sliced his foot open with a broken bottle. We had to take him to the hospital and he needed all sorts of injections. Idiot. <br />“Hi”<br />“Hi”<br />“Where’s your mum?”<br />“She’s asleep”<br />“Okay, good. Come on”<br />We are on the number one bus. We are excited, excited like we were on the day Alan Shearer visited our primary school. Excited like when the Methodist church burnt down. Excited like we used to be every Halloween and Bonfire Night. But this beats those things by a long way. We’re leaving, leaving together, leaving for somewhere we’ve never been. Leaving for good. <br />We look out of the window and know we’ll remember this place fondly, and it will always be our home. But we’re wasted on this town.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-70022190188432001012007-11-08T17:04:00.000+00:002007-11-08T17:16:05.771+00:00A Better DayI watched 'Delicatessen' for the first time today. It was so awesome that I couldn't quite believe my eyes. <br /><br />I am off to see <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lez_Zeppelin">Lez Zeppelin</a> tonight! <br />I am sure it will be fantastic. Can't wait. <br /><br />Yeah! Come on!Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-68465076891814194482007-11-07T23:36:00.000+00:002007-11-07T23:37:40.023+00:00Near Death Experience lolYeah, I nearly died today (sort of). Here's the story:<br /><br />I was passing a bus stop (with a bus at it) on Oxford Street when there was this MASSIVE loud noise- like an explosion. Then all this smoke started coming out of the bus. Naturally my first thought was "oh good another terrorist attack" and everyone else seemed to have the same thought as we all started running for our lives. Problem was that there were many, many people and we all ended up crushed against a shop front. Everyone was screaming and it was fucking terrifying. But then the bus drove off and I was like "What?". People started walking away. I was like "What?". I turned to the girl standing next to me and said "What? What just happened?" and she told me. <br />Turns out some jokers lit a firework and threw it under the bus. <br />There was a crowd gathering around something so I asked the girl what that was about and all. <br />She said: "Everyone turned around and ran and this old woman got knocked over and trampled on. She hit her head. She's got a walking stick and everything- those bastards"<br /><br />I went on my way shaking like mad. <br /><br />How stupid do you have to be to do something like that? Not only was it totally dangerous but it also made hundreds of people think they were about to die. <br />You just don't do that on Oxford Street. Everyone is well jumpy ever since that day when it all kicked off. How fucking stupid do you have to be? <br /><br />Well, that ruined my day. Oh, and on the tube home there was this abandoned Twirl chocolate bar on the seat opposite me and I was convinced that it was a bomb and drove myself half mental. How ridiculous. <br /><br />They turned on the Christmas lights today. It's the 7th of November for crying out loud! What a world.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-693182144222424492007-11-05T23:17:00.000+00:002007-11-05T23:30:57.575+00:00PeopleOkay, here's a well long bit of writing. <br /><br /> <span style="font-weight:bold;">People, People Who Need People (The Luckiest People?) </span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">1</span><br />He said I was beautiful as if saying it would make it true. He was saying what he thought he was supposed to. He didn’t believe it though and neither did I. <br />I liked Daniel and he liked Michelle but they wouldn’t consider either of us for a second so we teamed up. We didn’t like each other that much. We went everywhere together and held hands on the street. On Valentine’s Day he took me to see Lost in Translation and then we went to Café Rouge. We bought cards and he gave me flowers. But the whole time we kept our eyes open, looking out for something better. We were together for three years but we never really liked each other that much. We just happened to be free on the same days. <br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">2</span><br />On Thursday the post is always late. That’s because we’ve got two different postmen now- Martin and Barry. We’ve known Martin for years, he delivered all the children’s 11 plus results and is always so nice and friendly but he’s only working part-time now so we have to put up with Barry three days a week. Barry is incompetent. Always late, uniform not ironed, headphones in his ears. He’s a disaster- did I tell you he’s got a tooth missing? He has tattoos all over his arms and he doesn’t even have the decency to cover them up, he always wears the same grubby blue short-sleeved shirt, hardly buttoned, with nothing underneath. <br />“Alright Mrs. King?” he says, handing over my Lakeland catalogue and Ted’s Private Eye. “Hmm thank you” I always reply before quickly closing (and locking) the door. <br />At night when Ted is asleep, the garage door is locked and the teasmaid is set, I put my fingers deep inside myself and think of Barry and his ghastly unbuttoned shirt. <br /> <br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">3</span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">We are sitting in the back yard. My mum is talking about her new boyfriend:</span><br />“He says he is going on a walk. Whenever I call him he’s in Heaton Park. Always in Heaton Park”<br />“Right” <br />“I’ve heard things about Heaton Park. I’ve heard you can go down there and… see sex”<br />“So that’s what you think he’s doing, dogging?”<br />“I don’t know. He never tells me anything”<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Wojtek comes through the backdoor</span><br /><br />“Wojtek?”<br />“Yes”<br />“Where have you been?”<br />“Park”<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">She looks at me</span><br />“What were you doing there?”<br />“Drink”<br />“Drinking? Alone?”<br />“No, with friends”<br />“Which friends?”<br />“New friends I meet today”<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">She looks at me</span><br />“Polish or English?”<br />“English”<br />“Men or women?”<br />“Yes. One man, one woman”<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">She looks at me</span><br />“Where are you going now?”<br />“I go bath”<br />“What are you eating?”<br />“Potato”<br />“Where did you get that?”<br />“Shop”<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">He disappears indoors. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">She turns to me</span><br />“See?” she says, “He never tells me anything”<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">4</span><br />Friday night was Film Night and it had been for two years exactly. They watched two films each time. Usually American indie films as those were their favourite but every now and then they’d try a blockbuster for size. He had a big widescreen TV in his room and they usually sat on his bed while they watched. Afterwards they’d discuss each film in detail and give it a mark out of 10. Then he’d walk her home. <br />But not tonight. Tonight she’s not coming. She’s got a date, she says, with Bill from the video shop. <br />He’d always assumed that they’d end up together. One Film Night he’d pluck up the courage to kiss her and soon after that they’d get married. And be together forever. But that couldn’t happen now, no, not after this, no way. <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">5</span><br />She knew there was a way to eat spaghetti without making a prat out of yourself but her mind had gone completely blank. She could barely hold a fork, let alone remember how to use it. <br />She liked him. He had nice eyes and teeth. The rest of his face wasn’t all that but she didn’t think that was important, really. What counted was that he wasn’t a complete monster and he liked her, liked her enough to ask her out and she was grateful for that. <br />It had been so long since she’d kissed someone that she worried she might have forgotten how to. She’d practiced earlier on the back of her hand but it wasn’t really the same. Maybe he didn’t even want to kiss her. Maybe he thought of her as a friend. Maybe he only asked her out because he felt sorry for her. God, that didn’t even bear thinking about. <br />He said something she didn’t quite hear or understand but she laughed anyway. Hahaha, yes. <br />He didn’t seem to be having any trouble with the cutlery. Did he go on a lot of dates? He probably did, all the time, loads. Non stop. <br />He didn’t look very happy, he was probably ruing the day he asked her out. She asked how work was and concentrated on smiling and nodding at the right times and pretending to eat. <br />Jesus, he just looked at his watch. It’s over before it’s even begun. She should just excuse herself now and save them both a lot of awkwardness. If she left now he might ask her out again. Before she got drunk and vomited on him or started talking about her childhood. She should leave now. Right now, while they still have a chance. <br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">6</span><br />Our whole relationship was built on lies. LIES. Two years ago, when we met, he told me that he was a doctor at Great Ormond Street. I was impressed, obviously. He moved into my flat after a couple of months and we were Very Much In Love. After work he’d come home and tell me about how he’d just separated some Siamese twins or given a nine-month-old baby a heart transplant. It made me feel bad- he saved the lives of children and I answered the phone for a company that made chairs. Compared to him I was a complete waste of space. But I though that by being his girlfriend I’d be special too, a bit of his magic might rub off on me. <br />On my birthday he brought home a card signed by all the terminally ill children at the hospital. I wept over it, I really did. And he was so wonderful to me- always telling me how amazing and beautiful I was. How he’d never met anyone like me, never had a connection like this with anyone else. He talked about the future- babies, a house in country, holidays in Switzerland. <br />One night in August it all came out. He didn’t work at Great Ormond Street. He wasn’t even a doctor. He was assistant manager at a branch of Superdrug on the other side of town. He didn’t think someone as special and amazing as me would even consider someone like him. So he bended the truth a little. He didn’t intend to carry it on for so long but he was scared. Scared I’d leave him. But now he knew that I loved him for him, not for his occupation. I did love him for him didn’t I? We’d be okay wouldn’t we? <br /><br /><br />In my opinion- the best thing about this is the title. But it seems that a lot of people don't know where it's from which is just disgraceful. If you don't know I won't tell you. <br />Anyway, yes.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-41223877498972883062007-11-03T23:45:00.000+00:002007-11-03T23:49:20.891+00:00Joke of the DayJoke of the Day:<br /><br />Two snowmen are standing next to each-other<br />One says to the other "Do you smell carrots?"<br /><br />Hahahahahahaha.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-62061539528010110352007-11-02T11:35:00.000+00:002007-11-02T18:42:07.511+00:00Yeah!<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjShD5rEqx3zqnzRgt21-Vp54fvlkA-tDpgH81DGL_0j8DkBrK92Br8hLdEUQRzvORafpWOf4o-PXq-lq7AhGAHs9pP7di3lxpLO6Ker6Mm6gcNqxzMrGu12VghP6lp0EZT_HqZag/s1600-h/SNN0207GG_180_382534a.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjShD5rEqx3zqnzRgt21-Vp54fvlkA-tDpgH81DGL_0j8DkBrK92Br8hLdEUQRzvORafpWOf4o-PXq-lq7AhGAHs9pP7di3lxpLO6Ker6Mm6gcNqxzMrGu12VghP6lp0EZT_HqZag/s400/SNN0207GG_180_382534a.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5128196938516378082" /></a><br />There is a <a href="http://thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/x_factor/article417626.ece">'shocking' story</a> on The Sun's website today. <br />It's about this fifteen-year-old girl off the X Factor. She's the token sad sack because she nearly died of this illness a few years ago- but her love of singing pulled her through or whatever. She can't sing for shit but everyone loved her. <br />Until now. <br />Turns out she's not such a nice girl. She's in a gang (her gang name is Lady Shiverz). She threatens to cut out people's eyes. She's been caught on camera "battering" a random girl. <br />I am looking forward to hearing her excuse. Was she rehearsing for a play? Was she possessed by the devil? Did the girl call her mum a prostitute? <br /><br />Whatever she says, she's getting voted off on Saturday. <br /><br />Speaking of X Factor- it's the worst thing on television at the moment (apart from Dragon's Den, Loose Women, Most Haunted, Honey We're Killing the Kids, Market Kitchen, anything with Gordon Ramsay in it). I hate everything about it- the contestants, the judges, the songs, the audience, the voiceover, the opening credits, the adverts they play between breaks, Sharon Osbourne's hair, face and voice. <br />It is disgusting, a joke of a show obviously all set up to finally make Simon Cowell the RICHEST MAN IN DA WORLD EVA and it is extremely insulting to our intelligence. And it's the nation's favourite programme. Huh.<br /><br />Update: <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7075263.stm">Surprise surprise!</a>Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-468072336650303562007-10-15T19:40:00.000+00:002007-10-15T18:48:32.792+00:00Have You Seen...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvP-y5BFwfDllSF6KQSXtbXjq1XQOLwWphlhmtOIdaFhZqYBImINGB5YWlAbwg_Zl6EbHhhIjm1JgVM-f262G4Np5IAX4seLqCSPuxUzOXI9FQRv22Obdr94Cz0qDl76RRkZx5zw/s1600-h/spatula.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjvP-y5BFwfDllSF6KQSXtbXjq1XQOLwWphlhmtOIdaFhZqYBImINGB5YWlAbwg_Zl6EbHhhIjm1JgVM-f262G4Np5IAX4seLqCSPuxUzOXI9FQRv22Obdr94Cz0qDl76RRkZx5zw/s200/spatula.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5121637101367778594" /></a><br /><br />The new spatula has gone missing. She hasn’t seen it, I haven’t seen it. We check behind the oven, under the fridge, in all the drawers. It is no-where to be seen. We suspect that the heat, greasiness and caked on food has overwhelmed it and driven it into hiding. We have no sympathy. We need the spatula to make pancakes. <br /><br /><br />Buckets more coming soon.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-2821904280078694862007-10-01T00:47:00.000+00:002007-10-01T09:26:52.510+00:00A Polish Man in London and The Fit Girl on the TubeMy homework for Writing London- Creative Writing About London this week was to:<br />Write a character description of a stranger. Like, someone you see sitting outside a cafe, on the bus etc. And then write what you think they think of you. <br />I didn't really stick to the brief but, hey, I'm an artist. <br /><br />Check my writing skillz<br /><br />4:30pm on the Central line, Eastbound. The bunch of yellow carnations are squashed and dirty. He’s been up and about since daybreak and is exhausted. But he’s clutching the flowers to his chest and smiling to himself. <br />He’d come to be with Ana. She’d been working as a cleaner while studying English s:<br />part-time. Her English was great to begin with- why did she need lessons? If anyone needed them it was him. He couldn’t speak English for shit. At school he’d been top of the class in almost everything but he had come to realise that this counted for nothing here. He couldn’t do plastering or bricklaying. He was no one. <br />Ana had said that there were lots of Polish people in the U.K. He wondered where they all were. He saw a lot of black people. A hell of a lot. And not just black, Indian, Chinese- they were all here. He kept his bag close. <br />Ana was living with 8 girls- 5 Polish and 3 Ukrainian. The Polish girls were all from big cities like Warsaw and they teased him, calling him “farmer boy”. He usually stayed in the bedroom whenever Ana was out- he thought that was for the best. <br />When Ana returned from work in the evenings they went to the pub with her friends. Her new friends. They all spoke English to each other. Ana translated as best she could until she got too drunk. <br />Ana has been in London for five months. The first month she was on the phone every night, crying and begging him to come and join her. He had booked a ticket as soon as he had the money. When she met him at the coach station she had cried and hugged him harder than ever before. But now she was distant and seemed to resent his presence. “I can’t hold your hand all the time!” she shouted. “You are supposed to be a man- go and get a job, make your own friends- look after yourself!”<br />Today is their anniversary. Three years since their first date. After Ana leaves, he ventures out into frosty, sunny London in search of the perfect gift. He’s heard that Oxford Street is the number one place for shopping so that’s where he goes. <br />Many hours later he returns, bruised, battered and triumphant. He lays the flowers on Ana’s side of the bed and collapses next to them, spent. <br /><br /><br />Yeah it's not like... properly finished though. So, I did that. And then I did this:<br /><br />She’s looking at me and writing in a notebook. Is she a policewoman? She doesn’t look like a policewoman. Maybe she is undercover. <br />I wonder why she is wearing sunglasses on the train. She could be blind but I don’t see a stick or a dog. Maybe she just likes sunglasses. <br />Her handbag is made out of pink, see through plastic. There is a lot inside it. It is very messy. <br />Now she’s laughing at something the short man sitting opposite said. He is wearing sunglasses too. She’s telling him a story. She speaks fast and with a lot of exclamations. She makes the wanker sign with her hand. Now they are both laughing. She laughs like a witch. <br />She takes off the sunglasses and rubs her eyes. She looks tired. The short man hands her a wad of cash and she puts it in her purse, quickly. Maybe she is a prostitute? Or maybe not. She doesn’t look like a prostitute. She is wearing a cardigan. <br />They continue to chat animatedly. She doesn’t show her teeth when she smiles. Maybe she doesn’t like them. <br />She puts the sunglasses back up on, stands up and they get off at Debden. <br /><br /><br />My thoughts on both 'pieces':<br />I like parts of the first one. I like the basic idea and I like the character. It's obvious that I lost interest towards the end though. And it's not very good technically but who cares, really? Who cares? <br />The second was totally difficult and I am not pleased with it. Apart from <span style="font-style:italic;">She doesn’t look like a prostitute. She is wearing a cardigan.</span> which I am sure is genius. <br /><br />Oh- the wad of cash was the deposit for Gerel's new house and he asked me to hold onto it for safekeeping. Just to clear that up.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-47897037382029509282007-09-13T12:26:00.000+00:002007-09-13T12:29:44.999+00:00Don't You Just Hate It When...You buy the ‘Hair’ soundtrack from Morrisons for £2.99 and it’s only when you get home that you find out it’s “as performed by The Stage Door Orchestra”?Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-31085556279644777052007-07-18T00:14:00.000+00:002007-12-18T17:48:47.300+00:00Geeing back doon toon, man, it's reet canny there, likeAlright?<br /><br />I am off Up North for two weeks on Saturday to help my mum move house. I am travelling first class- how cool is that? You get free tea, coffee and packets of shortbread. And the chairs are nicer. And there's less chance of a madman coming to sit next to you, trying to touch your face and telling you that he is "looking for virgins" and has "about four or five planes". <br />Yes- first class will be a whole new world. <br /><br />I am looking forward to my stay in good old NE2. Mainly because I'll get a break from my silly job as a rubbish waitress. No more polishing glasses! No more burning my hands on hot plates! No more being called "hey, girl, hey you girl there"! No more idiot boss telling me off for not pronouncing the T in water! For two weeks. <br /><br />Yes, it will be nice to get away. A change of scene and all that jazz. On the downside I'll have only my family for company and no internet access. Boo. <br /><br />I made up a well funny joke:<br />What do you call a cow that is a philosopher?<br />Camoooo<br /><br />I told it to Daniel and he went "What? What? I don't get it. What's Camus?". That's because he is silly and uneducated- not like me. <br /><br />Anyway- that's all from me for a while. Later daze.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-34474721859310615282007-06-22T00:08:00.000+00:002007-06-22T07:07:34.756+00:00"We're the future, we're the pride"I don't know if any of you subscribe to Popbitch. Some people do, some people don't. My dad does. He called me today and said "Oh my God Eisor you won't believe what was on Popbitch today". <br />In the section 'Things That Make You Go Hmm' was the <a href="http://media.soccerclips.net:81/upload_music/0wnsdzi1686v.mp3">'Teesside Song'</a> from the early 90s. My dad was heavily involved in producing it and even got his five year old daughter (me) to star in it. <br /><br />I think you'll agree that I make the song.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34405364.post-17235855980285699502007-06-04T16:55:00.000+00:002007-06-04T17:00:50.555+00:00OMG it's all different!I know! I am feeling the new template. I like the red/orange. It's fresh. And that font is pretty kicking too.Eisorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10223683166841985261noreply@blogger.com4