I was really touched to receive a Very Inspiring Blog Award from
the wonderful, Smirkpretty, AKA Shannon, whose own blog is, quite frankly,
inspiring. If my writing can ever be deemed inspirational, then it really is worth
every moment of the sweat and toil. Thank you, Shannon. You can visit Shannon's blog at http://smirkpretty.wordpress.com/.
As I’ve been writing this blog for a couple of years now and already had the dubious honour of dredging up seven things you wouldn’t
know about me, this time, I’m going to have to dive a little deeper. Goggles
on, we’re going in.
1. I was the unwitting guest at
the wake of a decapitated man. It was almost twenty years ago and I had about
tuppence-ha’penny to spend on rent. After
weeks of fruitless searching however, I’d reluctantly upped the amount I was
prepared to pay by £5 per week. I was with my now-husband and as we drove up
the crunchy gravel drive, we commented on what amazing house you could find for
that relatively small increase in budget. I do recall it being a little dark,
though. Eventually the door was answered by a tiny Asian lady who simply looked
and beckoned us in. She directed us over to a couple of wooden chairs, the last
in a line of eight resting against the lounge wall. We sat down. Other people
nodded acknowledgement without taking their gaze away from the rolled up carpet
in the middle of the floor. Nobody spoke. ‘It’s like waiting at a bus stop,’ I
whispered to my boyfriend. ‘But what are we waiting for?’ he whispered back.
It transpired we were waiting for
the landlord to come and take us to the actual house for rental. It was the landlord’s
son who appeared in his place. I rejected the room which was opposite the
graveyard and two miles away from where the advert had described. It wasn’t
just because of the broken light hanging from the centre of the room with
shards of faulty light bulb hanging threateningly from it and a muffled
explanation as to why the light didn’t work; something about a fight between
two tenants. Nor was it particularly the fault of the bed which had clearly
collapsed on one side, so badly that the putrefying mattress had half slumped
down on to the floor. No, it was the notes in the tiny kitchen assigned to 12
people which put me off. They made it quite clear, with a rather excessive
brutal directness, exactly which item of food belonged to which person and woe
betide anybody who dared to pick from somebody else’s shelf.
The next day we read in the paper
that a landlord who had been ripping off his tenants had had a dispute with one
of them. In the process he’d lost his head which explains why the alarmingly
human like form rolled up in the carpet in the living room, seemed a little
short for a fully grown man.
2. I’m learning Slovakian. I can
say this in three tenses, can add in an adverb or colourful adjective, if
required, and even tell you that my dog is also learning Slovakian (and add
that I don’t actually have a dog, or a cat). But learning to tell the time has
driven me to real tears on not one, but two, occasions. I suppose, with no
other distractions and an interlocutor with the patience of Job, I could just
about spit out the answer nowadays but by the time I’ve worked out that it’s,
‘five minutes before the first quarter of the tenth hour’ (ten past nine), it
will already by eleven minutes past nine and I’ll have to start all over again. If a Slovakian ever has the misfortune to ask
me for the time, I shall say, ‘neviem’ and hide my watch.
3. I cycled the Pyrenees in a week last September and it was the best sporting experience I’ve ever had. I’m not sure I could really muster the energy, or time, to train again but I’m so glad I did it once in my lifetime. My husband and I raised £2,500 for the Stroke Association, a charity close to our hearts because our twelve year old daughter suffered a stroke when she was one. She’s made an amazing recovery. Pre- national health and research done by the Stroke Association, I’m not so sure she would have done. We will always be grateful to them.
3. I cycled the Pyrenees in a week last September and it was the best sporting experience I’ve ever had. I’m not sure I could really muster the energy, or time, to train again but I’m so glad I did it once in my lifetime. My husband and I raised £2,500 for the Stroke Association, a charity close to our hearts because our twelve year old daughter suffered a stroke when she was one. She’s made an amazing recovery. Pre- national health and research done by the Stroke Association, I’m not so sure she would have done. We will always be grateful to them.
4. I have arthritis in the third
finger of my right hand which I have found out, only today, is not inflammatory
arthritis but the other type which means that my degeneration may not be quite
as fast as I’d feared. Please raise your glass of olive oil and share a toast to the longevity of joints.
5. I have bunions, hearing aids,
glasses and the odd protesting joint but as I explain to my concerned-cum-amused
husband, I feel it’s only my peripheries that are broadcasting my advancing
years. The women in my family live for near-centuries and I intend to give them
a run for their money. By then, they’ll have invented a pill to sort out feet,
eyes and ears and a gadget to turn the pages on a Kindle, so I’ll be fine.
6. I ran the midnight marathon in
Norway and got my pace so badly wrong that I was reduced to a lollop after the
first half. I spent so long at one feed station, stuffing myself with bananas,
cheese sandwiches, flap jack, jelly babies and energy drink - this is the girl
who can’t normally eat within two hours of running - and chatting with the
officials, that fellow runners thought I was a marshal and asked me to
hand them a drink. At that stage, I have to say, I was tempted to jump ship.
7. I was a tour guide but I have
no sense of direction. If you put me in a field and spun me around, I would die
searching for the exit. Now my children are older, it is they who take me to
the toilet in a restaurant to ensure I make it back before the end of the meal.
I did a season of bus and walking
tours based in countries I knew but in places I hadn’t always been to myself.
The idea was that we crammed up on the history of the ones we didn’t know and memorised
maps so that we could guide our guests around.
Oh dear.
I used all the means at my
disposal to get myself, and the holiday makers, around these foreign cities.
The bus drivers would quietly point out landmarks before we arrived. The
hoteliers would suggest a seemingly obvious building for me to aim for so that if
all else failed, I could find the way there, sneak out the map and do everything
in my power to recall the way back to the hotel. But the rest of the time I
used to make it up.
Whilst I may not be able to
remember which way to turn out of a car park, tell me a story and I’ll remember
it for ever. Hence my oft-used line, ‘I’ve brought you this way because I just
have to tell you about…’ I almost pulled it off. Almost. One wonderful American
gentleman who kindly took it upon himself to give a little cough on the off
chance I was about to walk past a turning on several occasions, wrote on his
feedback form, ‘I’ve never had so much fun in my life. This lovely lady
couldn’t find her way out of a square box but I could listen to her talking all
day.’ I say, thank the lord for the American love of a northern English accent.
So, to my list of my 15 blogs which inspire and make me smile. Congratulations on your well-deserved awards! To this list I add my usual proviso, if your name is missing and you feel it should be there, it should. It’s my brain cells. I forgot to mention, they’re on the decline too.
http://annalisacrawford.blogspot.co.uk by Annalisa Crawford
http://alongthewritelines.blogspot.co.uk
by Derek Thompson
http://www.standingnakedatabusstop.com
by Lesley Richardson
http://www.whoatemybrain.com
by Nick Cross
http://skybluepinkish.wordpress.com
by Gillian Smellie (hoping this will inspire you back to blogging, Gillian!)
http://isabelcostello.wordpress.com
by Isabel Costello
http://chicklittings.blogspot.co.uk
by Debs Riccio
http://authorhollyrobinson.blogspot.co.uk
by Holly Robinson
http://spiesliesandpies.blogspot.co.uk
by Charlie Wade
http://www.iamjakebarton.com
by Jake Barton
http://theelephantinthewritingroom.blogspot.co.uk
by Sally Zigmond
http://cassam-isanyonethere.blogspot.co.uk
by Anne Mackle
http://www.racheljlewis.com
by Rachel J Lewis
In accepting your award,
please:
1. Display the award logo somewhere on the blog.
2. Link back to the blog of the person who nominated you.
3. State seven things about yourself.
4. Nominate 15 other bloggers for the award and provide links to their blogs.
5. Notify those bloggers that they have been nominated and of the award’s requirements.
1. Display the award logo somewhere on the blog.
2. Link back to the blog of the person who nominated you.
3. State seven things about yourself.
4. Nominate 15 other bloggers for the award and provide links to their blogs.
5. Notify those bloggers that they have been nominated and of the award’s requirements.
I look forward to your
posts :)
Thank you for awarding me, and congratulations yourself!!
ReplyDeleteI comppletely understand the trip to the toilet problem in restaurants. I'm exactly the same! The decapitated landlord would make a great short story.
Thanks Annalisa, so nice to have safety in numbers. I might think of the decapitated landlord as a short. It's a good title if nothing else, 'The Decapitated Landlord', ihmmm...! Looking forward to your post!
DeleteThank you so much Jackie! I'm tickled pink with my Inspirational Blog Award - and feel humbled to have been recognised by such a prolific and successful blogger as yourself this early in my blogging career!
ReplyDeleteOnly trouble is, I think I'll have a sleepless night trying to come up with seven interesting facts or stories about myself which will come even close to matching your hilarious, intriguing and inspirational ones.
Thanks again!
Lesley x :)
Bless your deluded self, Lesley ;) If it helps, it took me a week to get my response down on paper... I'm sure once you get going, the stories will flow. I had to delete number 8 about 'raw lamb' because my word count was getting out of hand but I really couldn't stop scribbling once I started. I know you'll do a great job, look forward to it!
DeleteFantastic-(as ever) I feel i know you that bit better now! x
ReplyDeleteHe he, Antonia, I think you knew me quite well before?!
ReplyDeletebless you for adding me to your inspiration roll call - I am actually unworthy as I hardly ever blog these days - I am a lapsed Blogger. I didn't think anybody cared. You've given an old girl a wee smile today. Thank you :) x
ReplyDeleteCough splutter. Stop that talk right now! I love your blogs. I laughed so much at the picture of the estate agent and I've just read your 'maths' blog on your launch into the self-pubbing world and laughed out loud at your picture of the your non-able-to-sell self. Tee hee. That's me! Even the curly hair... I hope your award will inspire you to continue, keep blogging, ok?
Deleteonce again, bless your little cotton socks! :) x
DeleteThankyou so much for tagging me, I am truly honored as I love your writing and really do think your blog is far more inspiring than mine! I was in the blogging doldrums, but you have got me writing again. I loved the decapitated landlord story, that is quite brilliant! I'm not sure my 7 things will live up to yours but I'm giving it a go. I'm up to number 4 so far. I'll let you know when i get there! Thanks again, Tash xx
ReplyDeleteTash, I am exceedingly chuffed that you like my writing because what you say about yours is absolute poppycock, your blogs ALWAYS make me laugh out loud. I've just been over to your 'not going out' blog, just to prove a point, and yep, hilarious! So, less of the modesty and get those other three written because I'm looking forward to reading them, ok??
ReplyDeleteLovely blog as ever, always look forward to reading it when the email pings into the box so well done again.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lyn, that makes me very happy!
ReplyDelete