Thursday 31 December 2015

New year - new you?

New years eve. That time where we all try and kid ourselves that next year we're going to fundamentally change our personalities and take up hobbies that we definitely don't have time for.

Depressing isn't it? That choice you have between being ambitious and being a realist at new year?

Why can't new years resolutions be kinder? Why aren't we kinder to ourselves when making them?

I've always found it really upsetting that at time that should be about hope and opportunity we as a society choose to focus on the things we don't like about ourselves rather than the things we do.

Honestly - how many of you have 'lose weight' as a goal this year? Or go to the gym more? How many of you have the word 'less' in front of something you enjoy and 'more' in front of something you don't.

Doesn't this strike you as a bit self hating?

Don't get me wrong I'm not anti- self improvement. Quite the opposite. This whole challenge has been about learning about myself more, and being mindful about my actions. But I haven't approached it from the point of view that there is something fundamentally wrong with me that needs fixing, just that actually perhaps I could be happier and that would be a good thing.

So I'm interested in unpicking our new years resolutions, to ensure they are about us feeling happier next year rather than being motivated by guilt.

So if you want to lose weight - why? Losing weight in itself feels like a bit of a superficial goal -doesn't it? I'm sure there is more to it than that. Is it that you want to love your body again, feel healthy or be fit enough to take that hiking trip you've always fancied. Do you need to lose weight to get insurance to do that parachute jump, or to dance at your son or daughters wedding? Brilliant - you can work on that, and maybe losing weight be a part of acheiving that goal. But it isn't an end in itself and treating it like it is will just reinforce all your negative feelings about yourself and make it harder to keep your resolution! Don't do this to yourself. Don't start your your year setting yourself up to fail.

Set yourself up to succeed. If you don't like the gym then please don't make your resolution to go more. Find some exercise you like: walking, trampolining, dancing, sex. There are loads of ways to work up a sweat - there is bound to be one you enjoy - find it.

One of my friends a couple of years ago made her resolution to go to the theatre every month. She said she felt guilty because she lived in London and never took advantage of it. When I asked her why she didn't do that now she said, that honestly when it came down to it she'd rather spend her money doing something where she could have a laugh with her friends. I told her she should get a new resolution - like maybe to stopping feeling guilty about London's cultural highlights not making her as happy as hanging out with people she loves. Or maybe that her resolution should be to spend  more time with her friends, if that's what she really wanted.

Lots of you having been reading this blog regularly for 7 months now, and so as a little (late) Christmas present to you here's a list of new years resolutions that could make you happier next year...

This year you could decide to:
  1. Stop worrying about why people like you and just accept that they do.
  2.  Make decisions based on joy rather than guilt
  3. Choose to do things that you enjoy, Rather than things that make good stories
  4. Allocate a bit of time every day that is just for you, to do as you like with
  5. Accept there isn't time for you to do everything you'd like to. And that that is true for everyone else you know too.
  6. Let people you love and admire know what it is you love about them.
  7. Stop comparing yourself to other people.
  8. Spend more time with people who make you laugh out loud (or in my case snort).
  9. Spend less time with ( and thinking about) people that make you unhappy.
  10. Examine your habits. And stop the ones that don't add to your happiness (I'm never ironing a sheet again)
  11. Be kinder to yourself. That advice you give people you love about taking it easy, not judging themselves so harshly, choosing to see the good. That applies to you too - take it.
  12. Accept you won't always be your best self. And when you're not recognise it, make the apologies you need to and then brush yourself of and move on. Perfection is too much to ask of anyone especially yourself.
I'm going to try to do all these things next year, and sometimes I'll manage it and sometimes I won't. But at least I'm sure that I won't have started the year making promises to myself that I can't keep.

I hope 2016 is wonderful for you all. 

And if you wanted a manageable resolution, how does a 1 month challenge in February sound? Contact a Family are doing a mini challenge based on my year long one called 15 for February. It's going to be a lot of fun and you can find out about it here. (there is a very silly vid of me and my mate Bella there too)

Tuesday 29 December 2015

Christmas without clothes

Ok that's a misleading post title.

I didn't sprend Christmas naked. My parents were round - it would have been weird. 

But I didn't get anything new either. 

As you know the year long challenge I'm taking limits me to 35 items of clothing all year. I bought items number 30 & 31 at the end of November ( a cashmere polo neck &  a flannel shirt), and didn't get anything at all in December.

And it felt a little weird - because December is normally a big spending month for me. I don't know if I'm alone in this - but December for me is all about cosy. This means every year I follow a shopping pattern as predictable as those of migrating birds - normally I buy:
  • some kind of loungewear made of super fluffy fleece
  •  a knitted dress
  • some kind of knitwear that is glittery
I love these things passionately for a couple of weeks. and then I never wear them again. They get charity shopped come March and then I re buy them the next December. 

It wasteful I know - but honestly I'd never conciously noticed that I did it until this year when I couldn't.

One of the things the capsule challenge has really helped me with is impulse control. I'm just less inclined to buy things on a whim when I know that whim will need to be in constant use for the next 5 months. So when I've found myself thinking I want something, I've asked myself what places and what months it'd work in and more often than not I realise it's a dumb choice. I really , really hope this attitude lasts me beyond the challenge because it'll save me a lot of money & the environment a lot of landfill if it does.

So has my Christmas been any less cosy because I didn't get any new clothes?

You know it really hasn't. Pretty much every day since finishing work I've worn one of my 2 pairs of jeans with one of my 3 shirts. I've felt relaxed and comfy & when I've wanted to snuggle down in something soft I've put on my cashmere jumper and snuggled down in that. And it is much MUCH softer than any fleecy or glittery winter top.

Cosy washing up gear


Which is actually a bit of an unexpected advantage to the capsule. You simply can't afford to save anything for best - so the precious lovely things I own are actually getting worn!

My Christmas was gorgeous folks - and I hope yours was too. 

And if you are feeling overflowing with Christmas generousity still - then remember what this challenge is actually about - fighting the disadvantage that families of Disabled children face and give the gift of a donation here.

Take care

Friday 11 December 2015

It is possible to overthink a capsule wardrobe



So it’s been nearly 3 weeks since my last post. It turns out that getting ready to take a 6 week holiday from work is in fact a lot of work. I’ve been totally consumed by getting everything that’s in my head down on paper and as a result haven’t been able face going near a computer when I get home.

But I’m back now and in the time since we last spoke I’ve been super busy, and have added 3 new items to the capsule. This takes me up to a (kind of scarey) 31. I have just over 5 months left and less than 5 items to add, if it didn't feel real before the challenge certainly feels it now.

So as usual each new item comes with a bit of a story so:

Sometimes I feel like doing this year long capsule wardrobe challenge has been a bit like joining a cult. My mind has become so filled with the capsule rules that I lose track of all logical thought. This was definitely the case when it came to thinking about winter. One of the big things that people who write about capsule wardrobes tell you is to really think about how many different ways you can use any item in your wardrobe. 

And I really took that on board. My trusty mac has been with me everywhere this year, and I fully intended to use it as my winter coat as well – just with loads more layers underneath it than I use in summer. I figured that with a couple of jumpers underneath, a hat, scarfe and gloves it would be perfect.

Then on the coldest day yet this year I found myself crouched over shivering whilst waiting for a train and began to think again. I’d left myself space for gloves and a hat in the capsule – but it was becoming increasingly clear that toasty wrists would mean nothing if I could feel the cold in my internal organs.

I started to talk to my friends about ‘glove alternatives’. I was still really wedded to the mac as my outer layer for winter, so I started thinking about those winter tops that have super long sleeves with thumb holes in them as an option that doubled up as gloves. I even went as far as trying a couple on. 

I’d put them on and frown at myself in the mirror at how not to my taste they were. And then try my mac on over the top to see how that would look. This had 2 main outcomes:

1)      me getting assigned my very own not at all subtle security guard watching to check I wasn’t trying to steal anything and,

2)      a tiny bit of my soul dying as I tried to force myself to buy something I hated in the full knowledge that I’d end up wearing it every day all winter.

So I went home and cried. And my lovely husband (who is fast growing tired of this whole challenge) listened to me frowned for a bit and said: “ let me get this straight, you think you need to buy this ugly top that you have because it’ll keep your body and hands warm in winter and it’s only one item right?”

“Yes” I snivel whilst blowing my nose on my sleeve and generally acting like the world is about to end.

“And you think this is the only option, because you need to be warm, and it’ll fit under your mac so you’ll be dry too?”

“Yes” I sniff feeling conflicted about whether to be distressed about the horror of what I’m going to have to wear all winter, or smug about how clever my solution is.

“But wouldn’t a proper winter coat do all those things?”

Which is how I ended up buying a parka.

It is waterproof, faux down filled, it has multiple massive pockets, a button off padded hood and extra bonus - I don’t hate it.

So here’s my coat – I’ve worn it every day since I bought it three weeks ago – and it’ll probably get worn every day (except when I’m out of the country) until April. 




While you’re thinking about how I stay warm. Think about how difficult it is for families to ensure they keep themselves and their families warm on a limited budget. I started this challenge because I was disgusted to realise how many families of disabled children go without heating or clothing in order to meet the extra costs of raising a Disabled child. Contact A Family are working tirelessly to change this. If you want to make a donation you can do so here.

Friday 20 November 2015

Why I'm doing the challenge

Hello friends,

On Monday I'll be halfway through the challenge, so I thought I'd share a little about my motivation.

Regular readers will know I started this year long challenge because of a conversation I had at work. You'll also know I work for Contact a Family, a charity that supports families of disabled children. They do lots of things, from providing advice and information, to campaigning, to organising family trips and supporting more than 150 parent carer forums across the country to influence local policy making. They are pretty awesome and I'm proud to work there.

What I don't think I've told you is why I care so much about this issue.

As a small child I lived disability as a part time sibling. I've spoken before on this blog about my mum being a bit of an inspiration, and certainly one of the things that has shaped my life and my attitude to disability came from her.

I don't know how many of you know about family link caring? Basically it works like this. Children with complex needs, often need more care than other children. What this means in practical terms is that their parents, and other family members take more time undertaking tasks to keep them safe and healthly. Politically that's why we use the term parent carer to talk about parents of disabled children. Because over and above the stuff you need to do to parent every child, there are addittional caring responsibilities, often involving a huge level of skill. And this means that parent carers can get tired, and that children with complex needs get less time away from their parents than other children their age. If you think back to your own childhood you'll realise that some of your funniest and most meaningful memories came from times when you tested boundaries, made mistakes or just tried something that felt alien to you. And I'm prepared to bet that a good proportion of those memories were made when you were at friends or other family members houses and your parents weren't there. As children our parents are structure - and we need time away from them to understand ourselves as individuals. So family link carers basically offer the opportunity for children with complex needs to have that experience of being away from home, by opening up another skilled carers home for regular days out or overnight stays. 

In our case it gave C & K (the two girls my family were linked with), the chance to hang out with other people and be more independant. It gave their parents a break from caring. And it gave me a unique understanding of the barriers that disabled children and their families face accessing, well everything really. Two weekends a month if we wanted to go swimming, or to the shops or the park, we could be out of the door in 15 minutes without thinking, and the other 2 we couldn't. We'd have to consider what play equiptment was accessible to C on her wheelchair (clue: none), wether there was even adequate paving so her chair didn't get stuck in the mud on the way to the park, if the swimming pool had a hoist, we'd have to make a plan for where to park in our small town so if we 'popped to the shops' we actually could get into most of them.

And if anything it was more difficult with K who didn't have mobility needs, but was a wonderful (if a bit sweary) girl with Down's syndrome. Where could we take her where she wouldn't be asked to be quiet, or expected to stay still for longer than she could manage. Where could we rely apon other children to be kind and accept her exuberant offers of friendship, accompanied as they were with too tight hugs? Where mothers and fathers didn't either quietly move their children away, or talk about her as though she was a lesson in her hearing? K did have a learning disability. It didn't mean she wasn't smart, or that she wasn't sensitive to peoples emotions - she was both of those things, and being constantly made aware she was different by people around her (even the kind ones) hurt her feelings, and ironically brought out in her the kind of behaviour that people feared.

It was crappy. And yes it was the 1980's, and some things have changed. But not enough. When I talk to young people, the parents and to siblings - the stories they tell feel achingly familiar and all the more devistating for being lived all year, rather than just a couple of weekends a month.

For me as a child, the natural thing would have been to resent these more highly planned, less free weekends but two things prevented that from happening. Firstly I genuinely loved C & K. C was kind and gentle and really happy to let me dictate the pace of play, and K was was wild and brave and taught me swear (one of my greatest talents to this day). And secondly my mum redirected my frustration and anger where it belonged, not at C & K, or at her, but at the society that forgot that disabled children existed when it planned parks and leisure spaces, that didn't teach children and adults to be welcoming to and accepting of difference. That shrugged it's shoulders and said "it's too difficult" when asked to releive some of the caring responsibilities from parent carers so they can enjoy some time just being parents, or to consider the economic impact of raising a child who needs more care.

And I still have that anger. I'm still furious that families of disabled children are allowed to live in poverty because not enough is done to alleviate the addittional costs of raising a disabled child. I'm disgusted when I see public attitudes to disability, and read more about the idea of disabled people as scroungers than I do about the injustices they face, because we as a society choose not to pay attention.

It worries me that everyone I know knows someone with a disabled child, yet hardly anyone can identify disabled adults amongst their friendship group. Yes some disablities are attached to life limiting conditions (C is longer with us), but most aren't. So why aren't we all able to identify people with learning disabilities, people who are deaf, or blind, who have mobility needs amongst our friendship groups? Is it because those children that we know now don't get to play alongside other children, or sit by them in class, so as they grow disabled children have less and less contact with their non- disabled peers? Is it because the lack of adjustments made for these families isolates them, and what we don't see we don't care about, and so our children don't make those friendships and when they become adults they aren't motivated to stand with disabled people as say 'this is not ok'?

I think that's part of it. And that's why Contact a Family are working so hard to support families of disabled children to be less isolated, and to form communities of support. Because anger isn't enough. We need to take action to change this and the donations readers of this blog are making allow us to do that. To keep lobbying. To keep shouting about this. To keep giving families the information they need about their rights.

Together we've raised more than £2,300 so far, please please keep the donations coming. Because 6 more months of wearing the same clothes is easy (it's not. I'm sooooo bored), but a lifetime of isolation isn't. And it's preventable. Here's the link to donate  

This is a personal blog and contains my personal views, not necessarily those of any organisation I represent in any capacity.

Friday 6 November 2015

The importance of warmth



So I mentioned a couple of days back that I’ve been feeling starved of colour for the last couple of months. 


It seemed to be like the easiest way to inject colour into my life all winter was to buy a colourful scarf. That’s easy to do right? Wrong.  I agonised over what to buy. Everyone knows that more choice leaves us less happy. In my case I have loads of choice, until I make the choice & then there is no backing out.

 All the choice and nothing to show for it or no choice forever (ok for 7 months – but it feels like a long time) =Torture. The challenge has delivered me loads of great things over the last 5 ½ months, but it’s also reintroduced me to my old friend indecision. And even though indecision and I have been estranged – she’s wormed her way back in there pretty successfully and is now my constant shopping companion.


Honestly. I’ve needed a scarf for weeks. I must have looked at EVERY SCARF ON THE INTERNET. I became a total scarf bore. I knew exactly what I wanted – I had a really clear picture in my head but I couldn’t find the real thing anywhere.


And what I would normally have done if I wasn’t doing this challenge was picked something ‘near enough’ to see me through until Plato’s higher scarf presented itself. But since I have to stick with whatever choice I make this year, I put it off. I went out day after day and night after night in my thin mac with my neck exposed until surprise surprise I made myself ill. 

I was a full on snot factory last week. It was disgusting. I had a sore throat, earache, blocked nose and all the associated headaches. My husband got no sleep at all as a result of my rambunctious snoring. And I don’t deserve any sympathy at all because I did it myself with vanity.


You know how Kate Moss once said ‘Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels?’ (at least the internet says she did. Kate if you didn’t I’m super sorry for mis- quoting you, and if you did – stick around – cos I think you’re eating the wrong food). I have a problem with that phrase – it’s patently untrue. I mean maybe if you eat in a really self punishing way potentially, potentially unsweetened granola with skimmed milk doesn’t taste as good as skinny feels, or a plain bowl of quinoa with no veggies. But mashed potatoes? Apple crumble and custard? Cheesy beans and waffles? They all taste at least as good as skinny feels as the hips and bums of our nation’s women will testify.


I know what I’m talking about on this. I got dysentery in Nepal 9 years back and got super skinny. And you know what? It felt alright – I knew I looked good in my bikini. But it didn’t feel as good as homemade peanut butter and chocolate sauce pancakes taste – which explains why I’d put it all back on within two years.


Anyway I digress. What I wanted to say is that I’ve come up with a new and much healthier saying, from what I’ve learnt from letting myself get sick out of vanity, and here it is:

“Nothing looks as good as warm feels”. And it’s totally true. On Sunday I realised that I couldn’t research scarfs forever. So I gave myself 15 minutes at Spitalfield’s market to find and buy one. And it’s not my dream scarf- but actually it’s pretty close and today all day I’ve been warm. Which is priceless.




Come on gang I made myself sick for the challenge that’s got to be worth some sponsorship?

Monday 2 November 2015

50 shades of grey (alright 27 but....)

It feels like a while since I last did an honest to goodness clothes and fashion post. So it that's what you come here for then brilliant because today I'm talking about colour.

Last week I hit 5 months of my extreme capsule wardrobe challenge. 5 months in which I have worn only 27 items of clothing. 5 months of being paranoid every time I put something in the wash, of watching my smart, pristine clothes begin to look shabby & 5 months of being sensible with every single clothing choice I've made.

And here is where sensible has left me. Of the 27 items of clothing I've worn so far 25 are of what I would describe as a neutral colour, by which I mean black, white, grey, blue or a muted green or olive. Colour has all but disappeared from my life.And I look back over photos of myself over the last few years and I realise what a huge change this is, and I miss colour. In fact at the moment I almost mourn it.

me in grey


In the summer when the light was bright and clear everyday, when my daily walks on the marshes were filled with wild flowers showing off with their vibrant colours it was fine to be in neutrals. But now as the nights draw in, and the marshes settle into muddy feilds next to grey sky I feel invisible.

There is no contrast between me and the concrete streets I walk through, and somehow I feel smaller as a result, less vibrant and less alive.

me in grey again


I saw someone at Wednesday's event who was wearing the most amazing poncho in this gorgeous turquoise fabric and immediately headed over to talk to her, her choice of clothes cheered me up - but also gave me the impression that she'd be confident and bright herself (which she was). Do I then look mousy in my fog coloured clothes? Am I less approachable in these muted colours?

and more grey

and (yawns.........)


I know that bright colours make me happy come winter - I'm wearing my mustard cardigan almost everyday, and I know I feel more myself in it. I bumped into an old colleague on the tube a few weeks back, and she commented on the dark colours I was wearing, and how they were the smart choice, but not the kind of clothes she'd associate with me and they aren't the clothes I'd associate with me either. So with 7 months and 8 bits of clothing left I'm going to stop with the sensible (at least in terms of colour - I know I will need warmth). Bring on the fushia, the poppy red, and the turquoise - the noisy stimulating colours that will see me through winter confident and larger than life! 

So I'm going without clothes this year and struggling but parents of disabled children go without much more in order to ensure their children's needs are met, things like heating. The counting the costs report is here and here is where you can donate.

Friday 30 October 2015

People my age have loads to offer

 This week alongside two of my lovely friends I hosted an ace event at Soho House. It's the first of 3 events we're running to support the Clothes off my back challenge, and it went really really well.




We had a full house of 30 young creative people join us, and I had conversations with a couple of them about how charities treat them and I thought I'd share some thoughts about it here.

I am sick of hearing people talk about how feckless, irresponsible and selfish people my age and younger are. I know that every generation faintly disapproves of the next, but in our case I think the onset of technology has made it worse.

I hear people my parents age worry aloud that video games have made us short in concentration and violent, that reality television makes us all seek instant gratification, and that social networking has made us mistake online conversations for real friendships.

I've heard people say that televised violence has made us insensitive to the suffering around us, our online profiles self-obsessed and shallow.

I have to say this is not my experience. 

I know some really exceptional people who make real sacrifices to make this world better. People who protect human rights in Nepal, who provide medical care in Calais, I have friends who've raised huge amounts of money running marathons, and who volunteer their time mentoring and supporting vulnerable people.

My experience of my generation is that we engage emotionally and intellectually with the problems that we see in the world, and that given the opportunity we'll take action to make a difference. But I also think that the old fashioned ways of raising money from us just don't work.

Taking out a direct debit for £20 a month and getting an email or letter about the good being done as a result of your donation, must have felt really meaningful back when communication was slow and information hard to come by. Pity marketing of the old school Band-Aid style worked when we only had access to news reports about the scale of a problem. But now we have more access to information, we want to know more, not just about the problem, but about how charities are solving it. We want to be more than chequebooks. We want to be a part of the solution. 



We know that raising money is key and we know how to do it. You are not going to get into our wallets through guilting us. But engage us and you'd be amazed what we can do.

On Wednesday I spoke to high end marketers who are desperate to work with charities but not in the way charities want to engage them. They know how to reach out to people and get them to act on their emotions - but are frustrated that they only ever get to redesign logos rather than being given a problem to solve. 

I spoke to lawyers, to designers, business people and artists and they all agreed that they'd give more, and encourage others to do the same if they felt like their skills were valued - and these were some really skilled people!


So Wednesday we held a life drawing dinner party at Soho House. 30 people created some lovely art, ate an amazing meal, laughed, drank and had some really opinionated discussions. Myself, Bella and Charlotte had a clear idea of what we wanted when we put together the evening. No guilt, no asking people to get out their chequebooks, no forcing people into conversations about why Contact a Family exists. Instead we wanted people to have a genuinely good time, to listen to what they thought, find out what they were into, and begin meaningful relationships.



I think we achieved that. As people left a couple regaled me with stories of being shown heart-breaking videos over dinner and then being challenged to hit fundraising targets (they donated but refused all future contact with the charity), being called to be told about a child's early death, and being asked to give more money (they cancelled their direct debit), and being shamed for wearing expensive shoes by a chugger. We didn't do that. Our guests left happy, they learnt a little bit about a charity they'd never been exposed to before, and between them they donated £1357 including gift aid. Plus we made some friends - who have more valuable things to offer than just their money.
 
If you came along - thank you. And if you didn't but are reading and sharing this blog - thankyou.  If you are talking about the rights of disabled children and raising awareness in your social networks - thankyou. If you are one of the people who've made the 45 THOUSAND visits to my tiny little blog - Thankyou.

And if you've got an idea about something you can do to make the world a better place - thankyou. I'd love to help - it doesn't need to be this charity - anything you care about. Let me know if I can help you make contact with organisation where you can make a difference - because the thing with our generation is, our social networks make us pretty well connected. 

And you know what - if you do want to donate - that's great too, you can do it here.

Take care kids. Sometime this week I'll be posting about knitted shorts - so keep your eye out for that! 

Saturday 24 October 2015

The Fabulous Mr & Mrs Cooper



So two of my best mates got married yesterday and I am FAR too hung over to blog today.

Thankfully I was one of the 'best men' - so I thought I'd share a couple of photos of the fabulous day and the speech as I orginially wrote it!

The gorgeous Mr & Mrs Cooper

Well, isn’t this lovely. Lovely couple, lovely venue, lovely bridesmaids (one of whom I have a fully secured snog scheduled with later). Let’s start by just taking a look  around and luxuriating in how  all round gorgeous today has been.


I’ve had the great pleasure of attending both the hen and the stag before coming here today and I have to say I’ve never experienced such a joyous lead up to a wedding. Bob & Laura have excellent taste in friends. You are all crazy rockstars! So feel free to pat yourselves on the backs in congratulations for your all round awesomeness. 


But enough about you – lets concentrate on the bride and groom. All this gorgeousness today will come as no surprise to anyone. Of course with these two we couldn’t have imagined anything different. I love these guys, they are just made for each another aren’t they? Their senses of humour, taste in everything from food to furniture – even their yoga teacher says they move the same – quite simply the perfect couple.


 

And what’s wonderful about them is not just how much they love each other. But actually that it’s catching.Because there are a load of ways of loving another person, and most of them are about putting your energy into them, focusing on them and eliminating a little something somewhere else to make space for that love. But sometimes, rarely there are these amazing unicorn couples who find loving one another so effortless – that the joy they have in one another spills out into the world. 
 

And that’s what we are witnessing here today, that beautiful champagne like bubbling over of love, that made all our hearts swell as these guys said their vows. That makes picnics and dinner parties and walks in the park just that little bit more fun if they are there too. I once spent a tortuous 12 hours including no less than three vehicular breakdowns travelling to Cornwall with these guys. My most vivid memories of that trip (beside our encounter with  Tim the words most helpful serial killer) is dancing around to Jack White in a multi story car park whilst we waited for our third rescue by a mechanic. It wasn’t wasted time, or angry time, or lets bitch at one another cos we’re all so frustrated time, it was simply we’re stuck here so let’s do our best to have fun time. It should have been a nightmare, and it wasn’t – because time with these guys is never wasted.





We could talk about their talent if we wanted to, god knows they are talented, Laura’s photo’s, bob’s drawing, they can both cook, they can both style a room. Laura knits and crochets things of beauty, and I still resent Bob for not giving me one of the wire meshing dragons he made in sixth form.


But if I’m honest it’s not really their talent at work stuff, or at art stuff that interests me. It’s their talent as hosts, as the kind of friends who make those tiny, wonderful adjustments to make everyone welcome. It’s the interest and concern they show for people that they know well, but also people who are new to them that makes them unique and precious.
 


Now I know there are supposed to be jokes in this speech –  but I also want there to be love. Because actually I feel pretty honoured to be here today, speaking to you all about these lovely lovely people.


When Bob asked me to be his best man, I punched him. Hard.


It was perhaps not the most dignified way  of accepting the honour – but I was actually lost for words (unusual for me), and deeply chuffed and excited to be asked.


Bob and I have been friends a long time. We met in sixth form, taking the same hour bus ride to a school we both hated. I think Bob must have dated/ snogged 50% of my mates during that period, he was the undangerous ladies man. It was the self confident ok with themselves girls who liked Bob, girls who expected boyfriends to be respectful and nice to them. And Bob was. While the relationships didn’t last, the underlying friendships did. We went to a lot of fun parties and even developed a bit of a fan club made up of some friends younger brothers and their mates.


One of these boys once said to me that if Bob and I ever had a baby it’s be so cool it’d be god. Which makes me very glad that Bob & I were never in the slightest bit attracted to one another – as a) we’re both of us actually quite geeky and it might result in a global ‘lowering the bar’ on cool, which would be shame for all the hipsters in Bob’s beloved east London. And b) because nobody would want any kind of deity that displays our shared indecisiveness, excessive politeness, ability to get distracted by shiny things or adoration of Laura. Nothing would get done! What use is a God that is fixated on Lauras boobs? I mean they are spectacular, but someone would need to keep gravity and  physics and stuff working and no god created by Bob or I would be up for that!


Which brings me to Laura. I love you. You are an absolute gift in my life and having spoken to a load of the women here today – I can say that I am far from the only one who feels this way.




Bob and I lost touch for a few years after school, and the first time we went for a drink after reconnecting he started to preach the gospel about this amazing woman he was in a relationship with. How she was pretty, and funny, and creative, generous and talented. And I thought. Well to be honest I thought he was full of shit. No-one could possibly be that insufferably  brilliant.


The first time I met Laura was at my birthday party & I thought she was lovely. The second time was an afternoon in their tiny little flat and it is no exaggeration to say I fell a bit in love. Because you really are all the things Bob described and more. My lovely precious friend – how lucky I am that Bob fell in love with you and you with him. Because it gave me one of the people I love most in the world. 


And bob. Oh bob – who here has seen bob dance? Then you will know what I’m talking about. And if you haven’t – then tonight my friends you are in for a bloody treat. There is simply no one in this world as happy as Bob is when he’s dancing. It is fabulous. 

fabulous


Bob is one of my very favourites. I am never bored in his company – he doesn’t judge when I get lonley if Matt’s out for the evening and I don’t judge him when he’s the same when Laura’s away. We’re both rubbish without our beloveds – and know the other one will be required to come drink a pint or watch a film to prevent us collapsing in on ourselves and we’re both totally fine with that.


Bob is fun and he’s generous – and he can talk about real stuff as easily as he talks about star wars and I value him more than diamonds. He’s the best mate a girl could ask for and he’s going to make a wonderful husband. 


And to both of you together, I won’t wish you luck because you don’t need it, I will wish you fun, and opportunities for adventure, I wish you Sunday afternoons under a blanket, meals for two, and meals for 10, Scotland, camping, the sea, and exciting undiscovered cuisines – I wish you both the life you desire and with each others support you will have it. And so finally from all of us here – lets toast- to happily ever after.