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Monthly Archives: March 2012

First love

First love

Do you remember your first love?

It’s an interesting question and one to which my immediate response is; “Stupid question! Of course I do. It was, after all, my first love. How could I possibly forget it?” Then I start really thinking about it and begin to wonder. Who was my first love?

The first love triangle

Was it the beautiful firey-haired Roderick McCrae? The first three years of primary school were spent fighting for his attention with my then nemesis, Tracy.

Roderick’s dad worked on the cruise ships and was rarely home. When he did come home, he would splash out on his only son. Roderick’s birthday parties were legend! Only once was Roddy’s mum ever daft enough to include both Tracy and I on the invite list. I shall never forget the joy of attending the party without her a year later. Nor will I forget the pain of being stuck at home the following year knowing that she was sitting next to him in the pass the parcel ring! *sob*

Was Roddy my first love? I used to yell that I loved him, and that he was ‘mine!’ *stamp foot* into Tracy’s face almost daily.

When my mother told me he’d been killed in a tragic motorcycle accident at the young age of 21 I wept, but I was 38 when I first heard and had had no idea until that point.

The first… er…

Or Jimmy Green? The mysterious raven-haired ‘new boy’ who turned up half way through primary year 4 and stole my claim to being the best artist in the year. I was sickly jealous of the little running men he was famous for doodling. Everyone else loved them. I tried my damnedest to copy his comic style only to discover that my art was limited to being ‘technically good’ rather than compelling. I hated him to the point of obsessive fascination.

Jimmy was the son of a rigger. His dad would be on land for one precious weekend every month and had somehow still managed to build the house they lived in, brick-by-brick, all by himself. Jimmy had a pet jackdaw, wore socks on his hands in winter instead of gloves, and bit his blisters.

Jimmy Green showed me his thing!

The first elopement

Or was my first love Timmy O’Dea? My first official ‘boyfriend’. We met during Year One at secondary school. Together we ran away and spent the afternoon snuggled together in a sleeping bag eating refreshers and stealing mutually first kisses as the rain fell around us.

In our romantic bid to escape the oppression of our terribly non-tragic lives, we had made it all the way to the local park. The sleeping bag got soaking wet and very muddy and, later that evening, when I slunk back into my house, I had to hide it under my bed so my mother wouldn’t see it. I made it just in time for dinner of course. The sleeping bag was discovered a few days later… Timmy and I lasted about a week and a half.

The first ‘I love you’

Most in my family would of course pinpoint Simon Thwaite as my first boyfriend. At 15 it was the right time to be having a boyfriend and we were together for a whole year and one month so he sticks in the family memory. He is particularly well-remembered for wrapping himself in a massive box tied in a cliché red satin ribbon and giving himself to me on my 16th birthday. I was mortified when he then presented me with my first sexy underwear to unwrap in front of my entire family.

Simon popped my cherry soon after that sweet 16th. But that’s OK ‘cos I got his in return…

Together we explored our budding sexuality in a safe, mutual way over a long, drawn out period – an approach I would recommend to any young girl. One lesson I would pass on in hind sight however would be to make sure you shut the bedroom door – even if you think his parents are out.

We both said our first ‘I love you’s’ to one another and truly believed we meant it at the time.

The first passion

However, despite the fact that I wouldn’t change my introduction to sex for anything, if push came to shove, I would have to say that my first true love was probably Nick Thornley.

I was 17. He was 18.

I was in our local pub when some numpty poured cold beer down the back of my neck. I turned around to give the idiot a verbal thrashing and found myself staring into the most penetrating ice-blue eyes I had ever seen. I believe that every molecule in my entire being momentarily broke apart under his gaze. From then on I had to concentrate my entire attention on the tiny bubble that surrounded him, squeezing myself into it so that I might take residence in his soul, just to stay in one piece. The rest of the world simply vanished and for the next year and a half he was my entire existence.

Nick held me in his spell for a long time. Years after he had smooshed my heart into a trazillian pieces by sleeping with another girl during his first year at university, I still compared each and every man I ever met to him. However, even this great passion was something my heart was able to move on from eventually.

The point?

I guess, the reason why I’m sharing this is in the hope that, if some young person with a broken heart is reading this now they might realise that, however much it hurts now there is always another chance at love. It may be different, but that does not make it any the less important in the long-term. Love has many perspectives. New experiences can be just as satisfying. There’s generally more to come.

 
2 Comments

Posted by on March 31, 2012 in Childhood, Family, Life, Lifestyle, Parenting

 

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Watercolour classes


Last night I attended the last of this term’s watercolour evening classes and, sadly, this will be my last class for sometime. I have to reserve my future evenings for preparations required for when I turn freelance at the end of June.

However, I was chuffed to bits to produce something I’m really rather pleased with on my last night. The goose painting above was clearly inspired by (copied from) a photograph I took recently with my new camera. See my past blog on ‘Birds of Emberton Park‘.

Do let me know what you think!

 
18 Comments

Posted by on March 30, 2012 in Life, Lifestyle

 

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A happy herd of elephants headed for Nepal!


I just took delivery of this happy herd of elephants from the Thirst-Pockets team today! They’ll be a wonderful addition to the pile of small toys I’m taking on my upcoming elephant expedition to Bardia in Nepal.

These boys will help put a smile back on the faces of the village children following the dental treatment they will receive from one of the three dentists that are coming with us. Part of our mission to give back to the community through which we will be travelling, these dental checks are a crucial aspect of the local healthcare.

We will also be helping to teach the children that wild elephant are not to be feared. What a great tool these squiggy soft elephant toys will be to help us with that particular aim!

Thanks Thirst Pockets!

 
2 Comments

Posted by on March 29, 2012 in Adventure, Elephants, Life, Nepal, Travel

 

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Managing multiple cameras

Managing multiple cameras

Having the roles of both videographer and photographer in my upcoming elephant expedition to Nepal, I have spent some serious brain time researching and considering the need to comfortably juggle two bits of precious tech while trekking.

I know that I can video with my camera and take stills with my camcorder but neither produces satisfactory results. So, before anyone suggests it, I’m sticking with both bits of kit.

Bouncing kit becomes irritating very quickly

Until recently, I was considering some type of shoulder strapping. However, following a recent trip to the Brecon Beacons I quickly discovered the impracticalities of having both camera and camcorder swinging freely. To be frank, it’s irritating enough to have even just a camera freely swinging from around your neck when you’re trekking. So, you can elect to have it immediately accessible, yet bumping around up front, or confine the strap under an arm and have to pull it around every time you wish to take a snap. Neither option is perfect and neither of these options leaves much room for a second camera of any sort.

I did eventually end up having my video camera up front and using the around-the-waist strap of my backpack, with its quick release buckle, to tie it down when not in use. At least then all I had to do was unclip, point and record. This setup was till a whole pickle when having to negotiate walking sticks too!

The paparazzi solution doesn’t cut it in Nepal

Online research (outlined in a previous blog) revealed multiple strapping solutions of various types used by the paparazzi. However, none of these offer much protection for the precious tech when it’s not in use. This may be OK when running around after celebs through the streets of London, but in dusty Nepal I do not want my cameras to be open to damage. I need them to be safe – but immediately to hand.

I was at a loss!

My solution: the Kata shoulder bag

Until I spotted the nifty double case pictured above on Amazon.

The Kata DL-H-531 Hybrid D-Light Shoulder Bag has two perfectly sized sections for my hybrid camera with its long lens attached and my video camera. Each section can be connected or disconnected from one another and carried using a single shoulder strap and/or connected to my survival belt (which is the crux of preventing that annoying bouncing and I have to wear the belt at all times anyway). It seems like the perfect solution so I have purchased one.

I envisage having the tech straps round my neck but keeping them snuggled in each pouch, nose down and ready to be grabbed at will. I have yet to test it out and don’t really have time to do so properly before I leave, but I have high hopes for this solution and shall let you know how I get on with it upon my return.

What do you think? I’d love to hear your opinion and/or any advice. Have you ever managed to successfully solve this problem?

 
 

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Blog obsession

Blog obsession

When do you know you have become obsessed by your blog?

Is it when your heart starts beating overtime simply because you realise its fifteen minutes until the time you usually update your blog and you have not written anything yet? Or is it when you realise you’re now blogging about blogging?

I say both. And, if that is the case, then I hereby must stand and confess my obsession.

A photo is no longer a photo, it’s a feature image

Every inspirational thought I now have is automatically added to the ‘potential blog’ list. Every photo I take ranked and filed for ‘potential feature image’ possibility. Friends are now refered to as ‘readers’ and weekends as ‘blog time’. I’m done for!

Is this a good thing? Is it a negative aspect of modern culture? Or is it simply weird? You might have a different opinion, and if you do I’d love to hear it (of course – engagement is encouraged at all times), but again, I think it’s possibly all of these things.

So, where is the line? When does a happy hobby become an unhealthy obsession?

Quelle horreur!

When I looked up this last question online to see what came back, the three top posts included a rather interesting item entitled; How to Not Be an Obsessive Girlfriend which was so fascinating it distracted me for some time, a less alluring forum thread about HiFi obsession, and a completely terrifying article on; ‘How to defeat a Facebook obsession‘.

According to this article; “While “Facebook addiction” or “Facebook addiction disorder” are not medically approved terms, the reality of addictive behaviors on Facebook are a growing problem for many Facebook users, and one that therapists are seeing more frequently in their patients.”

This rather suggests that ‘blog addiction’ might also be a firm reality and, sure enough, when I plug this into Google (Google addict that I am) I am affronted with a mass of articles shouting my own truth back at me. I’m even offered the potential to; Test your blogging addiction Aaargh! No! Don’t do it!!

Testing my blogging addiction

Yet, inevitably I can’t resist. So I hit the link and follow it…

…and find myself on a page that offers to both test my blog addiction and find out what my body would taste like to a cannibal! Good grief!

On the plus side, I’m slightly less concerned regarding the medical validity of this blog test now, so here goes.

Huh! To let you know how I got on I’d have to sign up to a dating service and I’m simply not that way inclined. However, you ‘ll have to trust me when I tell you that, as it turns out, I’m still a complete novice when it comes to blogging and didn’t even hit the half-way-mark on the blog addiction injection monitor. I’m a light weight. :D

LOL! I’ve just realised that – now I know I’m not obsessed (what do you mean it’s not a scientific test?) I can happily keep blogging to my heart’s content. After I’ve wasted a few more moments finding out what I’d taste like to a cannibal of course. *grin*

Until tomorrow then!

 
10 Comments

Posted by on March 27, 2012 in Life, Lifestyle

 

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Love and destruction

Love and destruction

Earlier this week, I was watching an episode of Criminal Minds that I had recorded on Sky+ from the Living HD channel. Towards the end the narrator recited the following quote:

Someone famous once said, “Love is giving someone the ability to destroy you… and trusting them not to.”

Goosebumps!

This is so true and I get goosebumps every time I remember it.

The fact is that the ones we love most have the ability to hurt us most – even when they have no intention of doing so. Even without thinking about it, we constantly look to them for recognition, appreciation and positive reinforcement and if it’s not immediately forthcoming we are so easily hurt. In our pain we might tend to overreact and therein lies the beginnings of that potential to erupt into passionate throes of mental conflict.

A brief misunderstanding, inattentive response or simple lapse of judgement from our partners can be rapidly turned into a vast emotional gulf. When I told him I loved him and he didn’t respond, did he mean to let me know I didn’t love him or was he just not listening? When he absent-mindedly said yes when I was expecting him to say no, was that because he was distracted by other things or did he really mean to say yes? And, if he is so easily distracted is that because he just doesn’t care enough to listen?

The power to trust in love lies within each of us

It is just too easy to fall into the trap of wondering if we are no longer loved simply because our loved ones are lost in their own world and are not, perhaps, attending to our every whim in that moment. But is that a good reason to break the bonds of a relationship? Or is it within us to stop wondering if they love us and give them the benefit of our understanding that, sometimes, life can get so hectic that lapses in judgement can happen. These misunderstandings do not have to mean the worst.

In the end, the power to decide whether or not we will allow our hurt to turn around and destroy us, and destroy our relationships with those we love, lies within each of us. We have all been in that place where it has been necessary to focus on something other than our partners for a few moments. We have all made those same mistakes. We’ve all been tired enough to slip up and do the wrong thing, or say the wrong thing at the wrong time. We’ve all been there. So is it any wonder that our partners might occasionally make similar mistakes and unintentionally hurt us?

Undertanding and communication are free and can solve a great many things.

So, here’s my response to the wonderful quote above. Feel free to quote me on it! :D

“Trust allows love to survive daily living.” Sarah Lawton, 26 March 2012

 
8 Comments

Posted by on March 26, 2012 in Life

 

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Essential items that are NOT on my expedition kit list


In addition to the more usual expedition stuff – like hat, boots, survival belt. shirts, water purification tablets mosquito net and insect repellant etc. included on the kit list, the pile of weird items I need to take with me on my elephant expedition to Nepal just keeps growing:

  • some Thirst Pockets kitchen towels with which to try drying off elephants (this may sound crazy but just read the great story about my expedition sponsors)
  • 125 sterile plastic test tubes to collect and store elephant poop for DNA testing
  • a humongous plastic jar of silicon gel (with which to dry out elephant poop for transportation and storage)
  • a tartan berret with red wig hair & haggis apron to kit myself out for the celebrations during the mandatory last night Burns Supper; I have to recite the ode to the Haggis being the only one with a Scottish accent! Aaargh!
  • second-hand specs to give to the village adults
  • a bunch of mini toys to give to the village kids. Including some seriously cool mini teddies knitted by UK grannies and a cute little Thirst Pockets elephant! Aww!!

An odd and growing pile. :D
How exciting and extraordinary!!

 
7 Comments

Posted by on March 25, 2012 in Adventure, Elephants, Kit, Nepal, news, Travel

 

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Welcoming in the Spring

Welcoming in the Spring

What a glorious day!

I actually managed to put everything else down today and get out into the garden for the first time this year. I am now aching all over and more than slightly springy in my outlook as a result.

The remembering

Every year I put my garden to bed for the winter after months of harvesting and constant watering and, at that time, it all seems like a great big relief. The winter months come as a restful release and the brain so quickly forgets how the garden was created. Why the garden was created…

…and then comes the Spring. The renewal. The remembering.

How wonderful it is to get your hands into the soil again. To smell the blossoms, the daffodils and crocus. To pull the old herbs, their wizened roots gripping the soil’s depths. Three years they have given greatly. Given plenty. Given flavour. To soups and stews, pot roasts, tray bakes, roast dinners and salads. Now it is time to reinvigorate the herb beds. To dig down deep and grasp the great, thick tap roots. Pulling with all your might until, slowly, the soil begins to give and up comes the old to make way for the new. The root system shedding fluffy, aerated earth, so delicious and ready to accept the rich compost and the young, fresh plants. The air filled with the scent of parsley, thyme, mint and sage.

The wonder

Planting out the baby broad beans. Grasping the bamboo stakes and once again, applying might from the pit of your gut to plunge them as far into the earth as possible. The sweat and the glory…

…and the wonder…

…how could I possilby have forgotten how much I love this?

 
4 Comments

Posted by on March 24, 2012 in Life, Lifestyle

 

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The Sponsor

The Sponsor

Needing to raise over £2000 towards my contribution to my upcoming expedition to Bardia in Nepal, I contacted the marketing team for ‘Thirst Pockets®’; a brand of kitchen towel that features an elephant on every pack.

“With the power of an elephant in just one sheet, Thirst Pockets® kitchen towel absorbs spills and locks in moisture through unique pocket technology. This makes the Thirst Pockets elephant the perfect ambassador for our super strong Thirst Pockets kitchen towel.”

My pitch

I wrote an email that said:

Picture a typical UK housewife using Thirst Pockets® kitchen towel to clean an elephant!

Not just any elephant; this elephant is carrying the housewife in search of the largest elephants in the world to gather data towards preserving the herd…

Now link this concept with Georgia Pacific’s commitment to delivering significant contributions that support its neighbours and the environment.”

To my unending surprise and delight, my pitch was answered with a resounding ‘yes please’.

Corporate Social Responsibility

My timing had turned out to be perfect. The Thirst Pockets® brand team had decided to make supporting elephant conversation a significant part of the 2012 campaign  when my email popped into their inbox!

Like other successful big household companies, such as Coca-Cola, Procter and GambleCafé Direct and Marks & Spencer, Georgia-Pacific via its Thirst Pockets® brand are taking corporate social responsibility (CSR) and sustainability seriously.

“The Thirst Pockets® brand believes it is up to all of us to ensure that these magnificent creatures survive and thrive. The elephant has been our emblem for the past 6 years.” Vicky Williams, Thirst Pockets marketing manager at Georgia Pacific

My thanks

So, while I must offer my heartfelt thanks to Georgia-Pacific, and disclose that I shall forever more be slightly biased in my selection of kitchen towel, and may at times, slip a quick ‘Yippee for Thirst Pockets® brand!’ message into my blogs, tweets and Facebook messages, I will continue to remain true to myself.

The fact is, I elect to buy Thirst Pockets® kitchen towel because, by doing so, I can have the benefits of a great kitchen towel while knowing that elephants and elephant projects will benefit from critical financial support that they might otherwise struggle to find. I like my household comforts but also like to think I’m doing my best to consider the environment. I am, after all, a self-confessed housewife from middle-England.

I really do believe in CSR and the power of big brands to provide genuine help and support for wildlife, ecological and conservation projects worldwide. We all have to find a way to live together successfully and sustainably after all and I don’t know about you, but I’m not keen on giving up too many of my modern-day comforts to do so. That’s just my reality. I want to eat cake, drink coffee, wipe up spills quickly and easily and live on a healthy planet too!

 

 

 
13 Comments

Posted by on March 23, 2012 in Adventure, Elephants, Nepal, news, Travel

 

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With thanks to blogging and blog readers

With thanks to blogging and blog readers

Every day I get the joy of reading, approving and responding to some of the most lovely comments in response to posts on this blog. Today I had the added bonus of a message saying that I’d had more likes than on any other day. 22 no less, in one day!

It really made me realise that it was time to really stop and thank you all for being so open and willing to take the time to read my daily blurbs and reach out with your own thoughts and opinions. It makes me feel truly appreciated as a blogger and touches my heart as a human being. I’ve always been a sucker for a compliment and I routinely blush to my roots when reading the often deliciously complimentary words some of you add to the bottom of my posts. So…

Thank you, Thank You, Thank You!

I can say with absolute pride that, with your help, I now have nearly 600 followers and my viewing figures routinely surpass 200 views a day. I have no idea how that compares with other blogs but I can tell you that I’m chuffed to bits with these numbers and look forward to making sure they continue to increase.

I have posted 189 times since my first post on 3 December 2011. That includes at least one post every single day… I can only apologise for what might be an irritating persistence in some of your in-boxes!

Your opinion counts

Begun with the aim of gaining attention for my upcoming expedition to Nepal and future travels, this blog has blossomed into what I hope is a more rounded reflection of my general lifestyle. I love being able to share the lessons I have learned as a wife, mother and cat lover, and I really enjoy hearing your opinions on these topics too. I also like to write about my interests, such as gardening and photography, as well as share those childhood memories I most cherish. Producing this mix is a real pleasure.

However, I’d also be happy to hear your thoughts and feedback on the blog so far. What do you most enjoy reading? Are my blogs too long or too short? Is the quality of writing consistent enough and is the fact that I post every day irritating?

Please do let me know. I write this blog for you as much as I do it for my own pleasure. Your opinions, thoughts and ideas really do count.

 
19 Comments

Posted by on March 22, 2012 in Life, Lifestyle

 

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