Monday, July 14, 2008

looking for lisa




While moving home recently, I stumbled across some writing from when I was sixteen, and indeed, hadn’t thought about since I was sixteen. One in particular I had forgotten I had written, but remember what drove me to write it like it was yesterday. My then-boyfriend’s habit of buying FHM every month, issues slowly stacking up under the bed, was really starting to nark me. I, frankly, found it hard to believe that he really wanted to know what Lisa Faulkner had to say about being in Holby City (he didn't watch it), and indeed, he was more interested in seeing what she looked like in her underwear. In fact, it upset me so much that I can pretty much draw every single one of the photographs in the “article”. I spent a good two years after this trying to work out how I could pass my A levels, solve the corruption that came with globalisation and look like a girl would look like, if she was in FHM.

I still can’t go out without my make-up on (even at Glastonbury) and preferably not without my hair straightened or a body coated in head-to-toe Johnson’s “Holiday Skin™”. I panic and skip my meals if I look in the mirror and the tops of my thighs touch. I regularly check my skinny jeans (which I never wear) to make sure I can still pour myself into them without lying down to do the top button up. When I was a teenager, I was so fraught about this kind of thing that I picked up every high-achiever’s favourite sickness, the big A, and spent my late teens waiting for my body to successfully menstruate again. Fun, huh? The minute it did, I got acne. Brilliant. (That's gone now, thank god, but I'm typing this while I've got my facepack on.)

The bizarre thing is, in order to counteract this daily obsession, I deliberately cultivate a very scruffy, bookish, outwardly tom-boyish appearance, for fear that anyone “serious” might rumble me for being a primping, preening girlie. So I spend ages plucking, waxing, styling, glossing, painting and blow-drying, only to throw on six-year-old jeans and an ink-stained t-shirt, ’cos god forbid anyone finds out I actually care what I look like. I want to curl up and die of embarrassment if my boss catches me reapplying mascara in the toilets after work. In my line of work, the comma, not the kohl, is key. I rail against the body fascism of everything from Cosmopolitan to Playboy in front of my friends and colleagues, and then pinch my stomach fat and have a cigarette.

All of this is stupid, but to try and stop thinking this way now is like telling me to stop drinking. I know it’s not all that good for me, and I probably do it far far too much, but, er, if I don’t do it, something bad might happen… I mean, it’s normal, isn’t it?

One of my best friends has recently had a baby daughter. Bemoaning the fact that even at four weeks old, we can’t help but praise her beauty and cuteness, I asked my friend what she thought she could do to stop her daughter getting screwed up over trying to be pretty. My friend was very sensible and stoical. Nothing. She’ll try to reinforce her daughter’s sense of her self, and how clever, resourceful, kind, funny and sensitive she is, etc etc etc, and try to limit comments, both praising and damning, about the physical appearance of herself, her daughter and all other women in general…and hope for the best.

Until she buys her first copy of Cosmo and starts finding phantom cellulite that she’s far too young to have, that is.

Fact remains, if you’re female, it doesn’t matter if you’re intelligent, articulate, charming, talented, good, vivacious, strong, creative, kind, determined, principled, organized or witty. Blah blah blah. Of course, all those things help. But if you don’t look like Angelina Jolie/Kate Moss/Lisa Faulkner/Jessica Alba/Jenna Jameson sometimes it feels like it doesn’t really matter all that much.

And even if you are beautiful, FHM and the men of Great Britain might only rate you at #56 in its list of #100 women, anyway. So, tough.

I look nothing like Lisa Faulkner, so that edition of FHM hurt like hell, because if my boyfriend thought she was pretty, what did he think of me? I now know that, although my ex-boyfriend found Lisa Faulkner attractive, he no more wanted me to look like her than he wanted me to star in a primetime BBC hospital drama series. But it still hasn’t stopped me trying to look a little bit more like her, and a little bit less like me, even though I know it’s basically impossible.

What a stupid, crushing bore. There are books I could be reading while I do this. Or worse, books I should be writing while my GHDs heat up.

I am not ill. I am not lonely. I am not impoverished. I have a job I love, and wonderful friends and family close by. I have a lovely boyfriend. I even occasionally get chatted up in bars or bookshops by people who’ve forgotten their spectacles or had too much to drink. But I’m still plagued by the worry that all of these things will disappear if the tops of my thighs touch when I put my feet together. I don’t care if smoking gives me cancer. I care if it makes me look old. It means more to me that I get wolf-whistled in the street than if my boss tells me I’ve done a good job.

But then, I can at least say to myself, “Darling, you’re excellent at copywriting,” or “Wow, you know a shitload about Hemingway”, but I can’t ever look at myself and think “Hey, did you used to be in Holby City?”

Monday, July 07, 2008

historical materialism and ljubavi

Darling Vicarage is back in her old flat, dolled up with a sexy new internet connection and ready to return to the information super highway. I'm desperately seeking a flatmate at the moment, and so gumtree and spareroom.co.uk are getting more of my attention than blogger right now, but no fear, I will be back.

But first things first. Since minifig moved out I've been forced to confront my blind ignorance of all things interwebby, like, how do you add links to your blog? If I could link successfully, missingdustjacket would be directing you here, a smashing blog by a fine man who knows a heckuva lot about CLR James, as I've been reliably informed by people who went to his lecture during Marxism this weekend. The "What They Say" section alone puts my poor links to shame.

And this here is my song of the week.



Watching Eurovision at my first proper Euro-party (i.e: it wasn't just me and my sister monkey2 and long-suffering boyfriends in tow) I was utterly flabbergasted when my enthusiasm for Bosnia's entry was met with consternation. If you can ignore the absurd video, I think you'll agree this sounds like MGMT invited Kate Bush for dinner when suddenly Bruce Springsteen turned up and started dancing on the tables. I think lesser-spotted mid-noughties indie outfit The Delays might have dropped by to pick up their keyboards too. I have already listened to this 8 times tonight, and you know, it's still not enough.

It's called Pokusaj and it's by Laka, and this here's what they're singing about.

Ne silazi sa cardaka rek'o mi je pjevac Laka

Don't come down from the castle, laka the singer told me personally
Ne klepeci nanulama, nemoj da se pravis dama
Don't clap with your wooden slippers, don't pretend that you are lady
Ne silazi sa cardaka rek'o mi je licno Laka
Don't come down from the castle, Laka told me personally
Ne silazi sa cardaka dok ti ljubav nije jaka
Don't come from the castle untill your love is strong enough

Na moju omiljenu foru
On my favourite tactic
Prevarim faunu i floru
to cheat fauna (animal world) and flora (plant world)
Da zivot nije postao u moru
that life didn't come from the sea
Nego od ljubavi,
but from love
Ljubavi, ljubavi
Love, love
Od ljubavi
from love


Kolike protracili smo dane

So many days we have spent
Lezeci, jeduci banane
laying around, eating bananas
Pa spadosmo na niske grane
so we fell on lower branches
Bez ljubavi,
without love
Ljubavi, ljubavi
love, love
Bez ljubavi
without love


Pokusacu da te poljubim
I'll try to kiss you
A ti se pravi luda
and you pretend you are crazy (like you don't notice)
Pokusacu da te poljubim
I'll try to kiss you
A ti se pravi luda
and you pretend you are mad
Pokusacu da te probudim
I'll try to wake you up
A ti se pravi budna
and you pretend you are awake


Ne silazi sa cardaka rek'o mi je pjevac Laka
Don't come from the castle laka the singer personally told me
Ne klepeci nanulama, nemoj da se pravis dama
Don't clap your wooden slippers, don't pretend that you are a lady
Ne silazi sa cardaka rek'o mi je licno Laka
Don't come down from the castle Laka told me personally
Ne silazi sa cardaka dok ti ljubav nije jaka
Don't come down from the castle untill your love is strong enough


Pokusacu da te poljubim
I'll try to kiss you
A ti se pravi luda
and you pretend you are crazy
Pokusacu da te poljubim
I'll try to kiss you
A ti se pravi luda
and you pretend you are crazy
Pokusacu da te probudim
I'll try to wake you up
A ti se pravi budna

I know, it makes not a lot of sense, but I adore this. I cannot, cannot, cannot stop listening to it. Plus, as I've got the house to myself, it means I can do great big epic laps of my flat in the big fat soaring chorus. (I really need someone else in here before I become too dreadful to live with anyone...)