Thursday, 30 August 2012

"And the worrrrlllddd, will live as one."

Does anyone remember the big event that happened in London a few weeks back.  Yeah, the Olympics!  Well, actually I don't.  I was working in Oxford over that period with no TV, so the only thing I saw was the opening ceremony before I left and the closing ceremony (because we managed to get a live link on our computer at work).

I have to say, I wasn't that bothered about the Olympics.  We had had all the hype for years, were told about the awful transport we would have in London and I was just desperate to be away from home for it.  Unfortunately, when it came to it, it wasn't as crazy as they had expected and I've probably missed out on something cool.

However, asides from that, I was looking forward to being back for the Paralympics.

First of all, channel 4 should be congratulated on not only broadcasting the event but on their amazing advertising:  They truly built the lead up from the Olympics to the Paralympics with their adverts alone.

Secondly (but not less importantly), everyone involved and participating in the Paralympics should be congratulated.  This is one of the first times that the sporting event has been noticed in the way it should be and I can tell it is already going to be an amazing week and a half of coverage.

I watched the opening ceremony yesterday and it was great to see the likes of Steven Hawkins alongside dance act Orbital, an array of arial acts, the history of science and much more.  The evening was innovative, clever and inspiring and really showed us the greatness of the United Kingdom and what we can be.  I also love that Beverley knight finished with "I am what I am" whilst everyone else was dancing in the background - great choice!

Today, I have been watching the swimming and having previously been a swimmer as a youngster ( 3-16 years old and my main discipline was speed swimming), I am SO impressed by the competitors.  One guy won the backstroke who had no arms and all his power came from doing backward butterfly kicks for 100m and another women with cerebral palsy, mainly used only the power in her arms to win.  Watching today really puts life into perspective and makes you realise how many incredible people live and work around us.  Everything I have trained for seems nothing against what some of these people must have gone through to get where they are today.

I hope, like me, you will enjoy and support the Paralympics and make the most out of this incredible sporting event that we are lucky enough to host.

My blog title comes from a very fitting song, which is a favourite of mine: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRhq-yO1KN8

Wednesday, 22 August 2012

"Music, makes the people, come together"

I went to a ska gig for the first time in ages the other day and it was brilliant!  I went to see Reel Big Fish who have been playing together for 21 years and are just as awesome as the first time I saw them.

The thing I like about a good gig (especially your indie/rock/metal/ska and alternative) is the way the audience come together, the rapport between the audience and the musicians and the natural energy you gain from a fun, relaxed environment.

I have been going to gigs since I was about 16 and there is nothing like a good gig to make your day.  Although in recent years I have been to a lot of dance gigs, I tended to go to a lot more rock and alternative ones in the past (I definitely prefer the audiences at these and there are less dickheads).

One of the first gigs I remember going to was ska band OPM at the joyous Mean Fiddler (still one of the saddest venues to close down in London).  As well as feeling rather grown up that I was going to a gig on my own, it was also the fact I was going to a gig for an album I really loved : )  I also remember people smoking a lot of weird and although I have never taken drugs, I may have been getting high on second hand puff whilst jumping around, lol.  But aside from the haziness, it was a great night and will forever be in my memory.

Since that night, I started going to gigs on a regular basis, as well as Street Teaming, which allowed me to work on and see lots of cool bands : ) I was at the final gig for McClusky (check them out if you like dark metal music) and it was incredible.  There is just something great about tons of people who love the same songs, coming together and singing their hearts out to a live track - you can't beat it!

The best thing about a good gig is it is great escapism for your real life and nothing matters when you jump around like a lunatic : ) I have a list of the top 5 bands I have ever seen live and it is difficult to keep a list when I have been to so many great ones, but at the moment the list stand at this:

1. System of a Down
2. Weird Al Yankovich
3. David Guetta
4. Franz Ferdinand
5. Reel Big Fish (both times)

When I went to System of a Down, it was so packed and hot, I came out soaked, completely covered from other peoples sweat.  I also lost the two people I was with within about 20 mins but still had a great time - it was pure madness!

Other gigs that have been great have included:  Scissor Sisters, Electric 6, Maroon 5, Above and Beyond, Tiesto, Hot Hot Heat, Alien Ant Farm.

If you haven't been out for awhile and need something to perk you up, go to a gig.  Reel Big Fish was exactly what I needed after a few tough months of work and now I'm desperate for my next one : )

Blog title comes from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sdz2oW0NMFk



Reel Big Fish at o2 Oxford

Sunday, 12 August 2012

"Marlon Brando, Jimmy Dean, On the cover of a magazine"

Currently working away from home and staying in student accommodation, with no facilities apart from a kettle and a sink.  Suddenly I feel once again cut off from the world and most the time, completely oblivious that the Olympics is going on.

So barring a bit of Netflix on the tablet, I get quite bored when I have spare time in my room.  So, I decided that because I need something that I can stop and start rather than put time into, I'd buy some magazines.

Now for those of you in your late 20s, I don't know what magazines that you read, but I find it really hard to choose publications.  The problem is I am no longer in my late teens but I am also not a middle-aged middle-class mother of two.  I just want a good read that I can slip in and out of.

I've been reading "women's" magazines for years.  Starting with the "Smash Hits" and "Top of the Pops" of my teenie bopper and early teens to the "Just Seventeen" and "More" of my later teens.  The thing is, in those day, I was trying to keep up with the trends of clothes, music and films and more often or not, to swoon after the idols of my early 90s youth.  Obviously, as secondary school sunk in, reading Smash Hits was just not cool enough for a year 8 going into year 9 girl.  This is when the Just Seventeen era sank in.

In all honesty, when I went onto what I'll call "the second strand" of teen magazines, I was more reading them for the gossip than the sexual content.  At that particular age I loved having fun with mates but dating was the last thing on my mind.  I was a proper academic (or boffin used to be the term in my school), not a nerd, I just worked really hard at what I did and wanted to do well in the subjects I liked.  Of course the sexual content at least kept me up to scratch on what some girls of my age group were talking about, so I never felt like I knew nothing.  I also have quite open minded parents, so I was never scared to talk to them about anything. 

College was definitely the biggest change for my magazine reading, when suddenly it was all about "More", that had things like position of the week in it. Also, the pictures of the guys were a lot more risque, it was quite hot : ) Suddenly I felt very behind on everything.  I felt like the only virgin in the college, lol.  It wasn't made easier by the fact that half my class were a year above me, so to them, everything they were talking about was normal.  However, these magazines actually came at the right age, where I started having an interest in certain guys I knew.  I wouldn't say they were the answers to my problems, but were a great support system to growing up.

So now let's move forward just over 10 years. So on the lead up to this I enjoyed fun and frolics of being 18-23 years old and made up for the so called "missed years" of my teens (in all honesty, I had a lot of fun, but I couldn't of handled everything I dealt with then at secondary school, I just wasn't as mature and grown up as I thought I was).  Then since being 23, I have been in a long term relationship with a guy I met over 11 years ago but only stuck with permanently after a lot of two-ing and fro-ing over the years.  I'm not engaged or married (even though it's definitely a lot closer on the cards than previously) and I currently don't have kids (a choice and money thing).  So where does that leave me with a good magazine read?

I like a good bit of Suduko and Hanjie, but I don't want to be just doing that.  I'm not the "Good Housewife" or old enough to buy "Women's Weekly", so what is for me?  I am like many career minded ladies that don't want to think that we are only worthy of tabloid reads like "Heat" and "OK", we want something informative, fun and real - is that really so much to ask for?  I still like clubbing (just not with the under-agers), I like festivals, seeing films, going out with mates, buying stuff that isn't the most expensive on the shelf and bargains.  Just because I'm nearly 30, does all that have to end?

I am currently still buying things like "Glamour" and "Company", but as the ages of the male pin ups and the articles by the women are by younger and younger people, I do wonder, am I just too old for Glamour?  I think the best read (which happens to be free but is only available in central London on a Wednesday) would be the fabulous Stylist (which I have talked about before).  It's the one magazine where I feel it covers a lot of my interests and does not make me out to be dumb.  I fear if it was not for this, women of my age wouldn't have anything.  If anyone wants to create a magazine, I definitely suggest this niche in the market.  We are new age women whose thoughts are not just about a mortgage, husband and popping kids out.  I know I want more from life than just that and I think the magazine industry is missing out on all those readers, who are spending their pennies on other forms of media instead.

As William Nicholson said "We read to know we are not alone" and how true, because I know I am not.

Blog title comes from Madonna's Vogue: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuJQSAiODqI

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

"If you don't like it, you can't send it back"

I wrote a blog awhile back to do with getting older and having to deal with changes in asthma, well the revelation is now having to cut down on caffeine.


I LOVE caffeine!  Not the look of it, possibly the taste but definitely what it does, keeps me awake.


For anyone who works in the Arts or another stressful work environment where the average hours tend to be 10-14 hrs a day, caffeine is essential.


Well, I've been told by my doctor to ideally cut it out altogether.  Due to the fact I adore chocolate and couldn't get rid of that on top of everything else (there would be no point in living, lol), I've decided to cut out the rest and that's good enough for me.  The main reason is due to repetitive heart palpitations that I seem to have been getting on and off in the last few months after various problems with my breathing.  They are still unsure if it is connected with Asthma pumps, stress, allergies etc, so now caffeine is coming out of my diet (sugar better not be next or I won't know how to deal with it : s)


So Caffeine free, how hard can it be?  It's not wheat related, I'm not vegan and as far as I know, I don't have any serious allergies.  Unfortunately, buying caffeine free items was a bit harder than I thought.  Caffeine can be found in fizzy drinks, tea, coffee, chocolate, cocoa powder, baking powder, cookies, liquors, cereal, certain desserts, soy milk, pie crusts, frozen yoghurt's, cake frostings, chocolate ice-cream and these as just the ones I found on nutrition data.  I have to say, it's not until you have to stop eating something, that you realise how many food sources your item is in.


Now again, we don't know how much the caffeine is particularly effecting me, so I am not going to stop eating all of these (and some of them I pretty much don't eat /drink anyway) but I have to cut out some of the main ones.


So I went shopping and luckily came across some decaf tea and coffee (which I have taken away to my live away job).  I have to say, caffeine must add some kind of taste, because I can't get used to the decaf stuff, especially the coffee.  The tea is growing on me and I think I can have herbal and fruit teas as a change : )  I have generally cut out fizzy drinks out of the equation, baring coke, as it's what I like to mix my spirits with.  Boy, is it hard to get decaf coke!  Remember in the 90s, when you had red, white and gold labelled colas?  Well I don't know what's been happening to the gold one (no caffeine, no sugar) because I found one measly place that sold it and only in small bottles.  I just want one 2 Litre bottle of caffeine free coke to last me on this job and that's not even possible! Not impressed : (


The other problem I have had is headaches.  The first few days and even a little now, I had tremendous headaches that would not go away.  I have since been told by someone that it does the same as coming off sugar, your body can't deal with the lack of it and is making up for the loss - by making me feel ill, that's not fair!


I hope after being on this caffeine free diet that I will slowly be able to bring it back in at some point, just not in the heavy doses I was absorbing it before.  Because like many I love tea and coffee and I just can't imagine them in their tasty entirety being part of my life anymore.


Blog title based on:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcJjMnHoIBI