Hasta La Vista Babies 27/02/2010
I’d love to possess a more ‘scientific’ brain! Actually that’s bollocks. Science bores the pants off me. But right now a little knowledge of physics wouldn’t go amiss. Something terrible might have just happened. I can’t be sure. Of course really I shouldn’t disclose this kind of information to you, because confessing to being so dim is rather embarrassing, and generally speaking humans aren’t supposed to admit, let alone, highlight, flaws of this magnitude. Well forgive me but I am human. And I am delightfully flawed. And this, my sweets, is a little example of how flawed I am. I dropped a drawing pin into the toaster. Will I die?! Will I be propelled like lightening across the other side of the room the next time I go to make peanut butter on toast?! Will sparks fly? Will the toaster explode into teeny tiny pieces? Oh if only I had the sense to be sure. I have, of course, considered turning the toaster upside down in order to retrieve the aforementioned drawing pin, but the idea of lots of toasty crumbs everywhere is putting me off. So I guess I’ll just have to risk my life instead. Cleanliness is next to Godliness you know. Now don’t go thinking that this extremely intense dilemma of mine will not affect you. Because it will. In fact it could confuse you completely. Cos you’re not gonna know now, whether my absence from the blogosphere and world wide web in general is as a result of my fatality with the toaster and pin, or not . . . Poor Steph is dead. You might conclude. After all loads and loads of people die from accidents around the home, (and loads and loads of those accidents occur to me every day— honestly I’ve had fires, sparks, electric shocks, I’ve walked into walls, patio doors, windows. I fall down the stairs all the time. Once a roof tile fell and missed me by about an inch and only yesterday I got my head caught in the clothes horse when I bent down to collapse the damn thing.) - the odd’s are not in my favour. But I mightn’t be dead at all. I might be simply working hard away from the comfort of my beloved blog. As are my intentions for a while. In the unlikely event of my survival from accidentally killing myself with stuff in the home, I have plans for a little blog-break. Why? Well despite my talent for running in high heels, (which indeed requires lots of balance,) as yet I haven’t mastered the art of balance in the other important aspects of my life. So other tasks of importance are suffering. Tasks like shopping, getting manicures (seriously you should see ‘em at the moment. I look like a boy.) and laundry. (My life isn’t quite that glamorous just yet.) And it’s high-time I sorted it out. So, dear blog and lovely, lovely readers—It’s not you. It’s me. I’m just rubbish at juggling. I’ve been asked to contribute on a Project on the topic of Pregnancy, which I am uber excited about, (thank you to everyone who took part in my survey by the way!) - so I’m still going to be working hard, even though you won’t see my blogs very often and I’m also going to spend as much time as I possibly can in the depths of a fantasy world by concentrating on my new novel , which thus far, exists only in my imagination. (When it’s longing to be put on paper.) I’ll be back before you know it, blogging regularly and lavishing you with the undivided attention we both know you deserve. But in the meantime forgive me if my posts are few and far between for a while. And rest assured that it’s not because I am lounging around on my (award winning—I hasten to add) butt eating Snickers Bars (Ooooh I could just scoff one of those right now . . . ) In the words of Arnie himself, Hasta La Vista Baby! I’ll be back ;-) Steph x Karaoke @ The Connolly's 27/02/2010
Many Happy Returns :-) 23/02/2010
In just a few hours I’m going to reach the grand old age of twenty-six. It’s high time I invested in Botox Injections. Except if I get Botox now I fear I might never get the chance to use the expression I’ve been working on for sometime. I’d hoped to use it before, alas I’ve not had the chance, but the practise has paid off cos I’m pretty good at it now and it’d be a shame to waste it. I know it might seem a little unusual to practise a facial expression, but you see I have to practise looking surprised, because it isn’t often that I actually am surprised. I’ve been shocked certainly, lots of times. But usually when I’m shocked I’ll gasp a bit, cry lots and then make tea. So there really is little need for a decent facial expression to convey the emotion. And anyway, being shocked and being surprised are two different things. I imagine. It’s my fault I don’t get surprised very often. There are three main reasons. Firstly I’m an inquisitive creature, I like to know stuff. So I’ll bombard my potential surprise-r with question, upon question, until they eventually have no will to continue, and so abnegate and reveal whatever surprises they had hidden up their sleeves for me. Secondly I am incredibly impatient, (but you knew that anyway,) so any hint of a potential surprise and I’ll find myself powerless to cease seeking information until I have every inch of the surprise uncovered. And as if that wasn’t enough I’m also quite intuitive. (Psychic actually, though ‘Intuitive’ makes me sound far less nutty,) so if I can’t crack it with questions and impatience it doesn't matter, because I’ll probably just ‘know’ what my surprise is anyway. Whether I want to or not. Either way it'll probably end in disappointment for all involved. Recognising myself that I am indeed a crap surprise-ee I have always made no secret of the reason for my practising my surprised face. And that is that for as long as I have been walking the earth I have dreamt of having my very own surprise party. To walk towards a dark room and into an excitable cheer, a sea of happy faces and a display of party poppers has been a fantasy ever since I was a kid. It would be amazing. And I could do my best surprised face and there’d be a clown. (or maybe not.) And we’d all have a simply fabulous night! But you couldn’t keep it a surprise from me. So I don’t mind that I know. And my ‘surprised face’ truly is very impressive. Nobody else would ever need to know that you know that I know. It’ll be our little secret. I realise that I’ve left you very little time to organise my party. What with it being my birthday tomorrow. But you won’t have to do much. Just hire me a room somewhere with alcohol and a dance floor that is compatible with my Roland Cartier shoes (i.e a not sticky) and invite everyone on my Facebook Friends list. And I’d need a cake. Obviously. But a little one would do. So long as it’s big enough for lots of sparkler thingys. Cos I’ve always wanted lots of them. Oh I can’t wait! (But don’t worry, I’ll forget that I know about it now.) Though I’ve yet to have my own surprise party I’ve had some wicked Birthdays all the same, particularly in this last decade. The year 2000 saw me turn sweet, (sort of) sixteen. I celebrated with my mates in Yates Wine Bar in Camberley. I might have been two years too young, yet ‘Yates’ was my regular haunt back then. Oh and that night was the best! The Karaoke. The Pink Cow-girl hat I wore. (A fashion faux pas perhaps, but at the time it was a much-loved accessory.) - Mum made me a chocolate cake with candles. A one and a six. But before anyone else noticed a friend of mine had the bright idea to turn the ‘6’ upside down. Thus turning me 19. ‘Hello Steph’ spoke a familiar face leaning against the bar. Nice jeans, lovely shoes. Early 20’s, rather dishy actually, (as mum would say.) It took a few seconds for me to realise who he was. ‘Happy, er ‘19th’’ He smiled. I blushed furiously, nodded and replied, ‘Thank you Sir.’ He knew I wasn’t nineteen. He taught year 11 P.E at my school. Later Mum and Paul dropped my friends and I off at Pantiles. We danced the night away to Shania Twain, Britney Spears and S club 7. I can’t remember exactly why, but I do recall telling the bouncers that it had been the ‘best birthday ever!!’ The following birthday wasn’t quite so successful. I went to Bo's - Bojanglez Nightclub—my fav club in Guildford at that time. I’d just returned from a holiday in Gran Canaria and had painfully obtained a tan to be proud of, (this was before my discovery of the wonders of fake tan.) I teamed the tan with a little denim number, white denim jeans (those were the days when my arse defied gravity, so I could get away with them then) and a matching jacket, embellished with lots of silver and gold studs. Anyway the outfit, carefully selected to win back the heart of the bloke I had been seeing in college, didn’t have the desired effect. In fact he didn’t even notice my JLo inspired look. Because he was too busy in an embrace with another girl. And he didn’t come up for air. But of course I was a survivor. An independent woman. I was working for my money. The shoes on my feet? I bought ‘em. I didn’t need no man to validate me. Blah, Blah, Blah. So I did what every independent girl would do. I got pissed, cried and made an absolute twat of myself. And that was the end of that. My 18th was a blast. I had a house party at Mum and Pauls pad in Eversley. I don’t know how I convinced them to agree to it. But they did. And as far as house parties go this one was pretty successful. Nothing got broken, no-one got hurt, (except my gold-fish, Inny, who nearly met his fate when Best Friend and Fish-slaughterer Katy, poured the entire contents on his fish food into his bowl because she thought he ‘looked hungry.’) The following year, 2003 I began my Music Course at Brooklands and found myself tottering in stilettos and a faux fur jacket into a class room of punk-rocking guys with holes in their faces, rainbow-coloured hair and beyond-baggy jeans. And whilst I didn’t immediately find myself kicking off the heels in favour of a pair of Converse, I did form unlikely but everlasting friendships with these guys. They opened my eyes to different trends, my ears to different sounds and my mind to different views. They are the reason that I am just as happy to listen to Rage Against the Machine as I am LLCoolJ. It was obvious that this birthday would be different. And I blew out my 19th candle on a free pastry, (given to me by a lovely lady in a service-station) at 2am on the M4 on my way home from a gig in Wales. My darling daughter made her debut on the outside world a week before my 20th. Marking this birthday the official turning point in which this girl became a woman, (well, a ‘mother’ at least.) Lorelei and I had a joint party that year, at home in Arborfield. A party to celebrate my birthday and to welcome Lolly into the world. My 21st was a Hollywood-themed bash in Woodham. With Karaoke. (Can you spot the pattern here?!) fabulous dresses and dancing til dawn. T’was an awesome night. And for my 22nd I chose to flick a middle-finger up to maturity by hiring the Laser Quest in Guildford for my friends and I. Karaoke and a massive party at the Castle in Chertsey was on the agenda for 2006 and my 23rd. I think we continued the party back at our pad by the river? Jay?? Anyone?? Ah well, whatever happened it was wicked. (My 23rd came a close 2nd to my 16th in order of best birthdays ever.) Nothing could top that, not really. My 24th didn’t. It was crap actually. Not worth documenting. And last year, my 25th I was pregnant with Leo. I drank a quarter of a can of Bud on the tube to celebrate, (classy girl that I am) and Jay and I went to see Blood Brothers with Steve and Ellie. Twas a lovely evening, even without the alcohol. Phew, and there you have it—proof that even at the grand old age of 26 my memory is still very much intact! How about yours?? Can you remember your last 10 birthdays?? If so pray do share! In the meantime I’ll see you at my surprise! Ssssshhhh!! Steph x My girl Lollipop! 16/02/2010
6 years ago today . . . "15 February 2004" Quick update... Spicy foods eaten? Check Fresh Pineapple consumed? Check Reflexology performed? Check Backache? Check Contractions? (despite whether or not they are 'practice' ones) Check Baby? Still in tummy :-( Have been having tightenings, every 5 minutes or so, getting quite painful and have been lingering around for about 4/5 hours now... lasting about a minute each. Not very happy, and will be in a foul mood if by this time tomorrow I still don't have my fresh baby on the outside world... Fingers, toes and everything possible crossed this is it? Steph & Bump x (38+6)" And 8 hours later I became a Mummy for the very first time :-) ![]() Lori ~ Dec 2009 "There is a rock on the banks of the River Rhine in Germany where a beautiful mermaid sits and sings. Her beauty so radiant, her voice so powerful, and her song so alluring, that many a sailor has met his fate distracted by her presence. Her name is Lorelei. So too was the character played by Marilyn Monroe in the 1953 hit-movie, 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.' Many poems have been written, many songs too, all inspired by the magical qualities of which the beautiful Lorelei possesses. Mumma's darling girl, your name suits you to a tee. Lorelei Jasmyn, you are but five years old and already you are making your mark on our world. You are so intelligent, so knowledgeable, so inquisitive and the more I get to know you day-by-day, the more certain I am that you are destined for great things. You're an absolute blessing to me, you always have been and you always will be. When you first made your presence known your Mumma was just nineteen years old, in college, studying Music, working part-time as a waitress. I knew very little of the meaning of life, but you changed all of that. Fate had decided that that Summer, 2003 would see many a new discovery in my life. And before I started my second year of college I packed my Rainbow Stilettoes into my back-pack and jetted solo across the globe to spend the season with my best friend in the land down under. Together Katy and I travelled along the east-coast of Queensland, Australia. We swam in the Great Barrier Reef. We rode horses along the beach. We got lost in the Rainforest. Got stuck in a cable-car high in the mountains. We sang in bars, slept in hammocks under the stars and survived on a diet of watery beer and instant noodles. We had an absolute blast. That was to be my last Single-gal Summer. And by the time I set foot on English soil again I knew you were there. I couldn't eat anything. Couldn’t stand the scent of food full stop, never mind the taste. And my hormones were shot to pieces. The in-flight movie on the way home, Bambi, had me sobbing almost hysterically. It wasn't a big shock when the pregnancy test proved positive. But it was terrifying. Nobody teaches you how to be a Mumma. And babies don't come with instructions. I was young and society often frowns upon young Mummies. But determined to prove myself I tried endlessly to do as good a job of raising you as I possibly could. Often when Babies are born Mummies can suffer from something called Post Natal Depression. Nobody really talks about it. Perhaps because nobody likes to admit it. But Post Natal Depression can leave you feeling desperate, lonely, sad and unhappy. And because babies bring so much joy, when a new Mummy feels unhappy she also feels guilty. And guilt has to be one of the worst emotions to feel. I thought perhaps I wasn't very good at being a Mummy at first. Nobody tells parents whether they are doing a good job. Instead people only point out the things that a new Mummy or Daddy is doing wrong. Not holding the baby correctly perhaps? Or bottle-feeding instead of breast feeding? There are endless reasons to feel guilty as a parent and very little recognition for the things that you do perfectly. I had wanted everything to pan out perfectly. To feel the instant rush of Mothers Intuition, to bond with you as they do in the movies. Yet it was a slower process for you and I. At the time I felt I couldn't tell anybody. I painted a smile on my face to hide my fear, and I cried in my bedroom, where nobody could see. Because I thought I was alone. I thought it was different for everybody else and I thought you would be better off with somebody older and wiser, who knew what they were doing. Yet my gorgeous baby girl it was you who saved Mummy from feelings of utter despair. Your first smile, at three o'clock in the morning, about 12 weeks after your arrival, was a moment of euphoria that shall never be forgotten. The way that you gazed at me. Your eyes wide and full of love. And it was at this moment that I knew. You needed me. I needed you and together we would be okay. And as you grew you showed so many signs of love and appreciation. And you'll never know what that means to me. To hear you say, 'I love you,' to watch your face seek mine for approval and encouragement. To feel you in my arms and to watch you blossom into the most beautiful little lady I have ever known. You have given my life a real purpose Lorelei and I pledge to you that no matter what I will always be the very best Mumma I can be." ~Excerpt taken from my book, 'Give a girl the right pair of shoes . . . And she can conquer the world.' ~ Happy 6th Birthday Lori!!! |















