Category Archives: My Life

Miscellaneous notes from Oxford

1. Apparently if I spend too much time by myself, not talking to anyone (not including incidental dialogue with waiters, bus drivers, and other people in the service industry) I start to lose all sense of social propriety. This became evident to me in a moment on the train back to London this evening when I turned to the nondescript person sitting across the aisle from me, opened my mouth and got as far as the actual intake of breath one experiences before speaking, before I finally snapped out of it and stopped myself. I had been THAT CLOSE to saying the following words: “Excuse me, are you a boy or a girl?” This is a true story.

2. After reading my very first Neil Gaiman book this weekend I am a little bit worried and a tad displeased. The name of the book is Neverwhere, and the name of my sort-of-book (read: non-book), for the last several years, has been… Nevermoor. Neverwhere (sort of) has a character called Arch. Nevermoor has a character called Arch. Most annoyingly, Nevermoor involves a secret city (sort of) underneath an existing city. Which is basically the storyline of Neverwhere, in a nutshell. Uh-oh.

3. Oh, exciting! When I was in Oxford I bought this seriously cool pink and red bicycle bell with flowers painted on it! It’s the coolest bicycle bell I’ve ever seen! I don’t own a bicycle of course. But does this in any way diminish my excitement? No sirreee!

4. Scene: Pickwick Guest House, my temporary Oxford home. 10am. I have just gotten out of the shower.

Knock knock.

I answer the door, wearing a towel, poking my head around the corner and perfectly aware that I have crazy post-shower fringe and it’s standing up like that scene in There’s Something About Mary. The owner of the B&B is standing outside with a handful of sheets and towels.

“Er – hi.”

“Oh hello there! I’m sorry, I’ve just come to change the linen.”

“Er – okay. I’m in a towel.”

“Oh, so you are. I see you’re still here then.”

“Er – yes.”

“Right. Well, what time were you planning to check out?”

“Um… what time is check-out?”

“Ten-thirty.”

“Well… I guess… ten-thirty?”

“Quite right. Of course. No problem.”

“…’kay… thanks, bye.”

5. Key difference between London and Oxford: in Oxford, people seem to always thank the bus driver as they disembark. It’s EXACTLY like Australia, except older and Englisher and in the northern hemisphere and completely different.

No shoes, no shirt, no co-dependent life partner… no entry.

Have just been reading a Valentine’s Day diatribe by the always entertaining Fweng, who has decided that if February 14 is for lovers, January 21 is for the romantically dispossessed.

Yesterday I decided that the best antidote to Unvalentine’s Day would be to leave London, so I hopped on a train and am staying in Oxford for the weekend. It’s pretty, and old, and as Shezwa’s big brother articulately noted, full of t-shirt shops and ‘keep off the lawn’ signs.

Due to my general intolerance of spending too much time with people I’m not actually sleeping with, I usually don’t have a problem walking into a restaurant and dining alone (cue violins)… however, for some reason tonight I really struggled to find a place I felt I would be allowed into. Apparently the entire city of Oxford is filled with restaurants featuring nothing but tables for two, and tonight every one of them is occupied by sickeningly cute co-dependencies feeding each other forkfuls of salmon en croute. The sight of which is a more effective deterrent than if the proprietors had posted a sign in the window saying, ‘No Shoes, No Shirt, No Unhealthy Reliance on Another Human Being to Keep Your Sense of Self-Worth Alive and Burning… No Entry.’

(I’m not really this bitter. I just like to sound jaded and worldly sometimes, like I’m Nick Nolte or something.)

How to become a nonperson

This is how it plays out in this city, every day. We swerve each other on sidewalks and avert our eyes. We stand at bus stops looking expectantly down the road and never, ever at each other. We swarm the underground every morning and cram onto trains at triple capacity and stand politely in each other’s pockets, face to armpit, elbow to neck, ignoring each other even as we inhale and exhale the same air and we look at our shoes and never, ever at each other. And when two teenage boys get into an argument on the Bakerloo Line and start swearing and pushing each other, we don’t react, we don’t interrupt, we silently think please don’t pull a knife please don’t pull a knife and we roll our eyes and look at the ceiling and never, ever at each other.

It struck me today how easy it would be in London to become a nonperson. Like all the nonbuildings and nonsidestreets and nonphoneboxes you walk past every day and never notice. There, but not really. Existing, but not engaging.

Over a period of time, a little well-applied avoidance is all it would really take. You just… dial yourself back.

You turn up to work every day at the same time and go home at the same time. You don’t talk, laugh, joke with your colleagues. You don’t do anything surprising or impressive. You just do your job and go home. You slowly, eventually become an unimposing, unnoticed office fixture.

You stop calling people back. You barely fill your contact quota with emails and texts, and when your friends want to make plans with you you’re always busy, even when you’re not. Eventually you don’t answer your phone at all.

You put on your coat and leave your house and go to Tesco, or Waitrose, or Sainsbury’s (not Somerfield though – you don’t have a death wish). You buy your cereal and asparagus and teabags and salmon. You line up at the checkout and the cashier asks if you have a Nectar card and you say no. That’ll be nine pounds and thirty-two pence. Would you like a bag? Thank you madam, have a nice day.

And you walk away, and you don’t remember what that person you were just talking to looked like, and they have already forgotten you existed, and you go home, and you watch the news, and you go to sleep, and you get up and play the same game tomorrow, and the day after that, and the day after that, ad infinitum.

These were all just hypothetical thoughts on a train for me, but the sad truth is that there really are nonpeople in London, and we do walk past them every day as though they were lampposts and phoneboxes. When I moved here two years ago the only homeless person I’d ever really encountered was a young guy in Sydney when I went there on holiday. He was sitting outside a Hungry Jack’s so I went in and bought him some dinner. It broke my heart the way people with arms full of shopping bags and briefcases just rushed past him, or worse, scoffed and shook their heads when he looked up at them. I thought, never, never, never, ever will that be me. How could anyone ignore somebody so pathetic, so obviously and helplessly in need of just a bit of time, a bit of sympathy?

Two years in London and never, ever has come, and I rush past people like that boy every single day. Two years of stories about fakes and drug addicts and gypsies has made me a cynic; or maybe that’s just the excuse I’ve given myself for not caring anymore. I honestly don’t know. But every time I look away from a homeless person with their hand outstretched, there’s a grumpy pensioner inside me that tuts and says, oh, he’s only going to use it to buy alcohol, while another part of me says, Jessica, you’ve just left the off-licence with a bottle of red, you hypocritical cunt.

And there’s another, increasingly vocal part of me that thinks… if you took away my job and my family and my friends and my self-esteem, that could be me sitting on the ground next to the cash machine and holding out my hand, or walking through train carriages holding a cardboard sign that say Hungry and homeless, please help.

It breaks my heart and makes me sick to my fucking stomach.

January… When absurd ideas fly on the wings of unrealistic expectation

Ah, January. How I love you and the post-Christmas weirdness you bring. You are nothing if not consistent in the delicate mix of emotions you inspire year after year. A touch of hopefulness for the new year, a spoonful of disappointment for yet ANOTHER year gone by in which I didn’t develop mutant superpowers due to an unfortunate toxic waste accident at a nuclear power plant or similar. And of course, a healthy dose of wildly unrealistic expectations.

Every January I have the following conversation with myself.

“Ooh, it’s January. A brand new year. A blank slate. How exciting. What will we do this year?”

“Ooh, I know! We’ll try something new. And fun. Maybe some kind of SPORT! Yeah! A sport! Maybe we will join a canoeing club or learn archery! Maybe we will buy a red coat and some jodhpurs and start horse riding in Hyde Park! Maybe we will join a female football team and wear knee-high socks and shiny shorts!”

“But Jess… we don’t like sport very much. We don’t have a very good sense of balance or spacial awareness. We frequently trip over.”

“Rubbish! Remember when we were a Nipper, way back in the days of the Dicky Beach Surf Lifesaving Club? Remember how we won every surf carnival? Remember when we were the only girl who would play tackle football with the boys, and would completely exploit this unique position and their innate sense of gentlemanly caution by illegally tackling them around the knees and pushing them over?”

“Yes, I do remember that. It was 16 years ago. We were seven. We were closer to the ground, so falling over didn’t matter very much.”

“Remember nine years of jazz and tap? Remember third place in the 100m sprint at the athletics carnival in grade ten? Remember kickboxing? Remember POISON BALL?!”

“Remember when we fell up the escalator last week?”

“Ooh, maybe we will ROCK CLIMB!”

Please don’t nick my content (you boring, whiny f***)

Please bear with me. This post has two points, and it will take me a little while to get to either of them.

A pretty good chunk of the (minimal) traffic Digressica.com gets is due to the posts I’ve written about the Landmark Forum, which I find quite interesting. When I first booked into the forum, I scoured the net in search of balanced, informed Landmark Forum reviews, so I could have some idea of what to expect of the three-day course. So I’m glad that now I can contribute to that conversation in some way.

It always amuses me to see the extreme reactions people have to the Landmark Forum. It’s either effusive declarations of undying devotion and tales of miraculous transformation, or embittered rants about how it’s all about making a profit, it’s a cult, it’s manipulative, it’s Scientology reborn (!?), and so on and so forth. Whether the former or the latter, they’re generally waaaaaay off the mark.

Because I have a fairly balanced view of the Landmark Forum, of what it can actually help me accomplish and where its limitations lie, I find myself playing Devil’s Advocate whenever anyone talks to me about it. If they bang on about how crap it is, I always want to point out the good points about it. If they wax poetic on its virtues, I tend to roll my eyes and poke holes in their praise. (Maybe I’m just contrary.)

So… my first point is that, anyone who’s read my posts about the Landmark Forum will know that while I feel I certainly got a lot of benefit from it, I tend to take the whole thing with a grain of salt.

And – importantly – I am completely okay with any extreme opinions that people have about the Landmark Forum. Mind-bending cult that just wants to take your money? Cool. Best thing to ever happen to the world EVER, probably going to fix global warming and end poverty? Alrighty.

But it irked me to find this blog post, which quotes a post of mine about the Landmark Forum in full and introduces it by describing me, the author, as a ‘professional in crisis’ (erm… not really, cheers though) and a ‘prime sucker’ (ouch, that smarts).

And this is my second point. Even more than completely misunderstanding and misrepresenting me and my experiences, it annoyed me that this person (who writes anonymously) actually thought it was kosher to reproduce someone else’s original blog post in its entirety without their permission.

Bloggers, help me out here – am I justified in my annoyance, or overreacting? I have no problem with being linked to (obviously) and quoted from, but for fuck’s sake… PLEASE don’t copy and paste my work onto your blog because you can’t write persuasively enough or are just too lazy to come up with original content.

And especially don’t do it if you’re trying to illustrate a point I most assuredly don’t agree with.

Dictation

Attention, Landmarkers. I am running a racket.

Attention, non-Landmarkers. Running a racket is top-secret (not really) Landmark Forum jargon for someone or something is getting on my nerves and I would like to whinge about it in three, two, one:

My Landmark Forum In Action seminar leader called me last week. I was at work, and rather busy, didn’t want to talk to anyone at all, and especially not anyone Landmarky. Talking to Landmarky people means that I have to have things like integrity, energy and responsibility. Three things best left alone on a Monday morning.

“Hi, Jessica? It’s ****. Are you interested in doing the Landmark Assisting Programme?”

“Um. What?” 

“We really need assistants for some of the seminars.”

“Oh.”

“We’re desperate.”

“Oh. When do you need someone?”

“This Thursday night. Can you come? It would really help us out.”

“Um. Sure. What time?”

“6:30.”

“See you then.”

“Oh, that’s great! We’ll see you on Thursday. Thanks!”

Actually, I’m not at all interested in the Assisting Programme. The Assisting Programme is for Forum graduates who want to climb the ranks of the Landmark elite, ruthlessly clawing their way up out of the writhing pit of volunteers with their endless stories of rackets, breakdowns, breakthroughs, transformations and all manner of jargony life moments they’ve experienced since the forum. In short, they want jobs.

But I like my seminar leader. She’s sensible and intelligent, and she said she was desperate. So I decided I would go, because I told her I would, and because I have lots of Landmarky integrity these days.

Cut to 6:30 on Thursday night. I am prepared for a hectic night of running around the way I have seen assistants do on television. I march into Landmark Forum headquarters on Eversholt Street near Euston station to find a suspicious number of people milling around, all of them wearing name badges that say ‘Assisting Programme’.

“Hi, I’m here to assist. What can I do?”

“Oh!” A look of bewilderment. “Great! Um… go see that guy in the grey shirt.”

I approach the guy in the grey shirt. “Hi, I’m here to assist. What can I do?”

“Oh!” A look of bewilderment. “Great! Um… go see that guy in the blue shirt.”

I approach the guy in the blue shirt. “Hi, I’m here to assist. What can I do?”

“Oh!” A look of bewilderment. “Great! Um… see that girl over there? The one writing the intention of tonight’s session on the whiteboard?”

I look over. There is a girl writing a couple of sentences on a whiteboard in huge letters. She is taking approximately one minute to write each word. “Yes.”

“Do you think you could read out the intention of tonight’s session to her so she can write it without looking at it?”

A look of bewilderment. This time from me.

“Yes. I think I can do that.”

I’m so glad I could help Landmark in their hour of desperation. Nobody reads aloud like me.

Crazy, Narcissistic and Geeky walked into a drug den…

I have really, really vivid and detailed dreams on a regular basis, and am constantly thrilling friends and workmates by reliving every tiny little detail in full Technicolor and surround sound for their entertainment. I’m just generous like that.

But now I have my new best friend, Blog. So when I woke up from a horrible and extremely lifelike dream this morning just bursting to tell someone about it, I thought, Blog will want to hear about this! Blog is probably DYING to hear about this! I should tell Blog straight away!

Because I don’t have swirly music and hazy camera techniques to denote the dream sequence, I will have to rely on the power of ITALICS as a dramatic storytelling device.

I was with one of my brothers, Crazy Brother, and one of my sisters, Narcissistic Sister (or ‘Narcissister’, if you will). Crazy Brother was, strangely, going to see a drug dealer, and even more strangely, thought this would be a fun excursion for his two younger sisters, Narcissister and Geeky Sister (that’s me) to accompany him on.

Crazy, Narcissistic and Geeky approached a very suspect property where a man stood outside holding a machine gun. Crazy and Narcissistic didn’t appear to notice the man holding the machine gun, and continued merrily toward the front steps of the house.

Geeky was, suddenly and completely, unable to move or speak. She could only stand there for what felt like forever, but was probably only a few seconds, and watch as machine gun man lifted his machine gun and pointed it towards Crazy and Narcissistic. Finally Geeky managed to splutter out something unintelligible to alert Crazy and Narcissistic to the danger of being on this very suspect property with this very scary man holding a machine gun. Alas, it was too late. And while Crazy managed to duck to the ground just in time, Narcissistic was mowed down by the scary man with his machine gun.

Geeky rushed to where Narcissistic lay on the footpath and was relieved to find her heart still beating. She waited a long time for the ambulance to arrive, and it finally showed up approximately eight minutes later. The End.

Phew. Well, Blog, I hope you enjoyed my dream and thank you for listening.

5 Thoughts I’ve had this week that prove I’m turning into my mother

1. I wonder if I’m getting enough vitamins.
Are we meant to actually take vitamins, or is that a fallacy created by big business pharmaceuticals and perpetuated by women’s magazines whose job it is to make us feel bad about ourselves? I can’t decide. Today I attempted to drink this Vitamin Volcano smoothie thing from Pret. Didn’t like it, and don’t feel like I’m bursting with sunshine and health.

2. I wonder if I’m getting enough hours of sleep.
Eight? Six? Five? Five and a half? Four? What exactly is the ideal nightly amount? I am on a constant quest to find my own perfect sleeping-to-waking ratio. Sometimes I can function for days on only four hours a night, and I become convinced that four hours is my optimum, and start to cram in loads more to-do list items to fit in my brand new 20-hour day, and get a bit full of myself, and start looking down on all the suckers who need a full eight hours in order to go about their humdrum lives. And then on the third or fourth day, I forget to wear shoes to work.

3. Sammie Lesbot didn’t reply to my text message. She always replies to my text messages. It’s been several hours. She must have been hit by a car, or kidnapped, or stabbed in Tesco. She must be trapped under the tube.
Actually when you think about it, it’s an amazing feat of cerebral athleticism, leaping straight from reality, OVER rationality and logic, and landing effortlessly on top of unfounded panic without even breaking a sweat.

4. Hmm, this economy thing sounds bad. I am a grown-up now. This could possibly affect my lifestyle in some way. Nonetheless, I am going to buy some new boots and this very nice purple coat. Ooh, look at that iPhone. WANT.
I got both my financial prowess and indefatiguable shopping ability from my mother.

5. Hmm, this road seems clear enough. Although… there seems to be a vehicle coming. Or is it a tree? It’s hard to tell from this distance. Well, I will just wait it out before attempting to cross the road. Tra la la.
Better embarrassingly safe than sorry.

The mental, the differently-abled and the fabulous

Apologies for the extended radio silence. I haven’t completely disappeared from the airwaves; I just went home to the southern hemisphere for a couple of weeks and was obviously far too busy and important to post, opting instead to carelessly shunt aside my lovingly created blog and indulge in a two-week maelstrom of unseasonal winter sunshine (interspersed with thunderstorms), blurry nights out at beachside clubs (featuring sticky floors and unfriendly bouncers) and vegemite on toast without a trace of irony or patriotism.

If I had actually planned this trip to Oz in advance, I might have been organised enough to drop a post before I left. But alas it was all very last-minute, which to the untrained eye might look like a mildly exotic streak of spontaneity, but actually was more due to a minor nuclear meltdown in some part of my brain that I guess came temporarily unhinged. Danger, Will Robinson!

So my thought process, apparently, was that when life gets you down, when you have a complete mental spazfest and you don’t know how to fix everything up all neat like, the OBVIOUS solution is to flyyyy! Fly, my pretty! Fly away!

Because – derrr – when you come back from your little sojourn, everything will have miraculously fixed itself in your absence. Suffering writer’s block every time you sit down to work on the novel you keep telling yourself you’re writing? Feeling too completely inept to achieve anything at work? Worried that all the social retards at your magical life-changing seminar series are somehow “getting it” while your under-developed brain is just too simple and childlike? Suddenly horribly aware that in the face of overwhelming evidence, you might now consider the existence of God (or Whatever) to be equally as probable as leprechauns, garden fairies and anybody ever solving the world food crisis? Shocked and appalled that for once you’re just not getting every single bratty little thing you want? And any number of other fairly insignificant problems that your inner drama queen has blown up to ten times their original size, like horrible paralysing sea monkeys?

Well, have I got a solution for YOU!

Yes, the logic astounds. So needless to say I came back to London (quite happily) to find that not only was my life and everything in it exactly the same as when I left two weeks earlier, but there was actually nothing particularly wrong with it in the first place.

Huh. How ‘bout that.

I have no theories behind this minor life event. It remains a mystery, like the Bermuda Triangle or Pete Doherty’s enduring fame.

So because I have been away from this thing for so long, I am burning up – BURNING UP! – with things to talk about, and I shall begin with

The Paralympics
Does this festival of differently-abled athletics seem a little… patronising? I’m genuinely asking, because I can’t decide how I feel about it all. What is the point of the Paralympics? And because the Paralympics exist, does that mean disabled people aren’t allowed to compete in what I probably shouldn’t call the “fo’ real Olympics”?

A friend of mine was telling me about a girl with only half an arm (well, she had one full arm, and one that was kind of a stump or something. I’m sorry, I have no idea what the PC term for this is, so if anyone can enlighten me, please do) who won gold in some bike riding marathon thing (probably not the official name). Apparently people were saying that if she’d been in the Fo’ Rizzles, she’d have won bronze.

If she’d known this, would she have wanted to bypass the Paralympics and go straight for third place in the Olympics? Would the fact that she was competing against… oh gosh, whatever you call non-disabled people… make it somehow a more significant win?

And knowing that this girl could have kicked most of their arses, how does that make the Fo’ Riz Olympians feel? Perhaps this is why they have to separate the Olympics from the Paralympics. Just in case some stud in a wheelchair decides to get his awesome on and sail into a victory, making all the rest of them feel like utter knobjockeys. Imagine if that girl really had competed in the Olympics and come in third. What a kick in the guts for the winner… she gets the gold medal and STILL has her thunder stolen by Stumpy and her bronze. Tough gig.

Agyness Deyn
In my favourite part of the London Lite – the text column – someone raised a most excellent point this evening. Why is everybody obsessed with Agyness Deyn? It’s not that I don’t think she’s pretty. She’s pretty stunning. I like her eyebrows especially. (I’m not being sarcastic; I really think they are cool.)

But… there just seems to be something of an imbalance between the level of interest in her and the number of interesting things about her. I can only count one – her eyebrows. Well, I guess that’s two.

I’m so confused.

You know who actually IS interesting? Maureen Johnson is interesting. That’s who.

Maureen Johnson
Oh I love her! Love to the power of love. I don’t remember how I came to find her blog one day a few weeks ago, but I am now obsessed with it.

Maureen is a young adult fiction author from New York, and I have not read a single one of her books. I hadn’t even heard of her before accidentally stumbling upon her blog, but I guess now I will have to read some of her work, because she is like awesome made solid. Funny, insightful, genuine and fabulous.

She is so seriously cool, that I’m left pondering why people like Pete Doherty and Agyness Deyn and Amy Winehouse and whoever else is the Train Wreck Du Jour keep getting our attention and print space, when clever and cool people with lots of interesting things to say like Maureen are left to languish in comparative obscurity.

I would like to make it my mission to let people know the radness they are missing out on if they do not read Maureen’s blog and buy her books. I am going to have Maureen Johnson t-shirts made.

Large Hadron Collider
I am super excited about this. I know it’s old news by now, but aren’t you excited still? The day they kicked this baby off, I was refreshing Radio4’s dedicated Big Bang Day website every five minutes. The updates were mostly just things like, “Oh lovely, now we’re all bathing in champagne and our own cleverness, which we’ve managed to turn into liquid because we’re clever scientists, what a marvellous day this has been”, but it was all just so exciting!

In case you have been living under a rock, the Large Hadron Collider is a big ol’ sciencey kinda machine built at CERN, the world’s biggest particle physics lab in Geneva. Its Big Sciencey Destiny is to fire protons around a huge tunnel the length of the Circle Line (a line on the London Underground, for those of you reading this from outside the centre of the universe) at the speed of light, and smash them together to see what sciencey things happen!

And oh, the things that will happen! Not only could they recreate the conditions surrounding the Big Bang, but apparently this machine could do lots of other fun stuff as well. The people in charge have said it could lead to a cure for cancer or bird flu, and maybe even solve the problem of radioactive waste.

I am sure it is far more complicated than the image in my head, but what I imagine (and please don’t ruin this for me with the real sciencey truth, if you happen to know it) is that the protons speeding around the Circle Line, when they smash into each other, will spontaneously burst into things the likes of which we’ve only dreamed of.

Boom! Look, a little tiny universe, with little tiny humans! There’s me! Look how tiny I am!

Boom! Look, a cure for cancer! It says it right there on the label!

Boom! Look, a unicorn! A garden fairy! GOD! There you are! You’re shorter than we expected, but welcome!

It’s a whole new world of possibilities, people, and I for one am going to start planning a new wardrobe.

Danger! Danger! High voltage

danger! danger! high voltage

WTF? (That was a rhetorical question.)

Apparently it’s not just London that’s gone loopy. Things are c-c-c-crazy in Kent as well.

This is the third or fourth time that I’ve heard of someone being knocked from a platform onto train tracks (deliberately, accidentally or otherwise) in the last month.

Standing on the underground platform listening to music or writing a text message I used to idly wonder what would happen if I were to drop my phone, iPod or other precious and essential item onto the tracks. The silly thought in my quaint little brain was that if there was no train due for two minutes or so, I could probably just jump down and grab it.

That was until I learned the track is ELECTRIFIED! Oh yes. Like greased lightning. Oh no, that’s electrifying.

Like there weren’t enough things in London to induce mild panic attacks on a daily basis (I’ll make a list some time). Now I have to worry about people pushing me onto electrified train tracks.

When did we decide steam engines were a bad idea? I would be okay with going back to those.