These Are The Days

I should be doing: dissertation.
I am unfortunately doing: decadence.
I must really get some: discipline.

Thursday coffee with Zakir (previously incarnated here as Marilyn Monroe with short hair and specs on a paper tablecloth, now hitch-hiking his way to Morocco) in Essence. Chance encounter with Richard on Charing Cross Road when heading home. Richard has a spare ticket to A Beautiful Mind. Briefly consider ditching Alec, who was meant to call but hasn’t, and isn’t answering his phone either. Finally decide I really should just go home and study. Alec has of course telepathically waited until I make this commitment to discipline before calling (from the pub). I abandon natural law for Ali G Indahouse and we hotfoot it to the Odeon. (Note to Alec’s colleague who apparently reads this: whatever he tells you, he went to it voluntarily and laughed particularly loudly at the puerile bits.)

On Friday I decide to skip the last lecture of my university life, thinking it would be a bit insincere now to fake diligence just because it’s the Last One. Lunch with Alec in Soho Square. A mob of pigeons swoops overhead and I mutter a lot about how and why I hate birds. He tells me about the exciting world of cheese (the stuff in fondues, not the Astoria on Saturday night). It’s sunny. We eat bread and rocket and watercress and relish and ham (and exciting cheeses) with fingers and improvise a relish spreader from a bit of bread. Alec is trying to point legendary whisky pub The Toucan out to me on a nearby street. “Look, over there, can you see the black [painted facade]?” and of course there happens to be a black guy sitting on the next bench directly in the line of Alec’s finger.

After lunch we have half pints of Guinness (all right, all right, mine with blackcurrent cordial) in The Toucan, which is playing a wonderful cover version of Portishead’s Glory Box. I later find out it’s John Martyn. We head back to the British Museum’s reading room to study. Sitting at a table where Karl Marx could quite possibly have drafted Das Kapital, I flop sleepily around for the next two hours while pretending to read about Bentham’s rejection of natural law. Embarrassing.

Some time on Saturday John sends this text message: “I celebrated the end of term by watching a committed Christian being burnt to death and wish you could have been there to see it too.” (He went to watch The Wicker Man). I later recall that this happy occurrence in John’s life must have been at about the same time as when I was teaching the choir All Glory Laud And Honour To Our Redeemer King in the chapel.

Saturday afternoon is spent in Balans on Old Compton Street where Han Ling and Teresa treat me to a belated birthday lunch and I gorge myself on strawberry pavlova. In the evening I attempt to reacquaint myself with Bentham and natural law once again when music starts coming through the wall from Tim’s room. I grab a roll of gold wrapping paper (it was nearby), lean out of my window and bong lightly on his. Tim’s head appears, a little apprehensively (in the dark a roll of gold wrapping paper looks not unlike a crowbar). I tell him I like what he’s playing and ask him to turn it up. He does. I abandon Bentham for something that goes a little better with Faithless: an old issue of Cosmo.

Dinner is markedly less flamboyant than earlier meals. It is leftover chickeny tomatoey pasta from Thursday. I delight in playing this fact up to Alec, who is of a refined culinary disposition (recall: the exciting world of cheeses) and visibly blanches. On TV there is How To Have A Number One. Before Alec realizes this is about pop music he is aghast that people have made a documentary about the other activity this title suggests. Then Pi, which is rather more absorbing than Requiem For A Dream despite the lack of Jared Leto or Kronos Quartet on the soundtrack. I only raise my eyebrows when old big-haired mentor explains Archimedes in the bath to mad genius protege in elaborate and unnecessary detail. This is so that even dumb viewers will understand, and is a device commonly employed in the X-Files, where Mulder explains scientific theories to Scully while X-Philes everywhere yell “Yo Mulder, I think she knows about electromagnetics!”

On Sunday I am reminded of how little exploration I have done of nearby London when we pile into a friend’s car and head for Giraffe on Marylebone Road, a happy orange place which offers non-annoying world music and inoffensive cuisine.

Later Mark pops into my room to discuss Tuesday’s debating jaunt to QMW. “All right, then,” he says, once we’ve discussed arrangements, “I’ll text you as soon as poss.” Getting into the spirit of things, I reply that this’ll be fab, dahling. “Phenom!” says Mark, breezing out. I am reminded of an encounter a week or so ago in the hallway, Mark having just found an ad for a lovely flat and being veeee excited about it. I was veeee everything for the rest of the day. It splits your face into a wide happy grin and makes you sound all cheery.

At night I have a Coke (it’s Sunday so Lenten sacrifices don’t apply) and watch West Wing which is overly jingoistic at points but still hits the spot, and talk to mum on the phone, and read some Rawls, and go to bed happy.

This evening I watch Vertigo with Ken, tomorrow I potter down to Mile End to debate at QMW, and some time in early May I have a nervous breakdown, withdraw from exams, and screw up my degree.

Jumbled Headmusic

From a piano session with Tay last night, Carrot Rope (Pavement), Jed The Humanoid (Grandaddy) and Evaporated (Ben Folds Five) are sitting cross-legged on the floor and swaying dreamily.

From The Royal Tenenbaums on Sunday, Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard (Paul Simon) is throwing sand and thumbing its nose at the above three.

From Alec putting on The Cure last night, Lullaby (ohhhh, when that bass comes in) is slinking and gasping its way round clawing at the walls while simultaneously reapplying layers upon layers of black eyeliner.

From the radio this morning, Witness (Roots Manuva) is bursting the bionic zit splittah, downing ten pints of bittah, right now seeing clearer than most and sitting here contented wit’ dis cheese on toast.

I Guess 22 Is No Big Deal

Things that made me happy:

  • Not having to do morning choir practice and mass because Michael volunteered, before he even found out it was my birthday. I got a lie-in.
  • Avril spotting me across the room when I finally ventured downstairs for tea and bawling “Happy birthday Michelle!”, which got everyone else to start singing.
  • Swyrie baking me a chocolate Nutella cake.
  • Cards from people I really hadn’t expected cards from.
  • Sitting on the pavement in the sun outside Caffe Uno with chicken escalope sandwich and a latte.
  • Finding Yesterday Was Dramatic – Today Is OK (Mum) and The Document (Andy Smith) going very cheaply at Reckless Records.

Things that made me laugh:

  • The naked guy on a plinth at Trafalgar Square.
  • My rather appropriate description of where John and I had wandered to as “the arse end of Old Compton Street”.
  • “Warning: Choking hazard. Small parts. Not suitable for children under 3 years” on the packaging of the Jesus Action Figure (with poseable arms and gliding action!) John gave me.
  • Also the “Made In China” statement for said Jesus.
  • The Wash Away Your Sins cleansing bar, also from John. Its instructions: “3. Moisten oneself 4. Lather vigorously 5. Rinse 6. Repent.”
  • The Royal Tenenbaums, at night. More of a laughing-inside movie than laughing-out-loud movie for me, but still, undeniably laughing.

Things that made me feel guilty:

  • John spending the afternoon with me even though he really should have been doing his dissertation. I, on the other hand, failed to even call him when he turned 21 recently and still haven’t bought his birthday present.
  • Being really badly prepared for evening mass, and having to ask someone who was good at sight-reading to play the ones I couldn’t play.
  • My priest, with more than enough to occupy him this weekend given that he was moving to a new parish on Monday, taking the trouble to make me a card. I’d been meaning to do the same for him to say goodbye and thank you, but never got round to it, just scribbled a message in the communal well-wishers’ book on Saturday night while merry on alcopops.

Things that made me feel sad:

  • I didn’t do Sing-a-long-a Sound of Music as I’d been hoping. There just weren’t enough people willing to go to be able to make a proper good time of it, although Shoop and John (bless them) supported the idea staunchly right to the end before accepting my eventual decision to call it off. It would have been fun.
  • The realization today when Claire asked if I’d had a good birthday that the most honest answer I could give was “No, not really. But then I never really do, so I’m pretty used to it by now.”

Rainy Days And Saturdays

Loon Fung supermarket is insanely crowded on a Saturday afternoon. I jostle along cramped aisles in search of hor fun and spinach noodles and chrysanthemum tea and ginger, listen in the queue to conversations I can’t understand, except for the shopper asking for Ayam brand curry in distinctly Singaporean accented English.

The cashier is harried but efficient with snatches of automated courtesy. She tells me the price in Cantonese, I thank her in English. We exchange the quick grimaces that pass for smiles in other parts of the world, and I stagger out with my bags feeling appropriately chinkified for the next while.

It’s pouring down. At first my gaze is inexorably drawn to the heels of the person in front of me as I walk head down through the rain. It was wonderfully sunny earlier and many people were tempted outside in khakis and cropped trousers. Now I see mudspots and rain beaded on leg hairs.

By the time I get to the Sainsbury’s on Tottenham Court Road the rain is dripping off my soaked head into my mouth and down my neck and I’m past caring. I walk leisurely, head up as if it were summer, swinging my multiple kg bag of rice as much as I dare.

Before stepping into the hall I vaguely remember a similarly soaked occasion when I was a child, where I tried to shake like a dog and my mother said it addled the brain. I go in and meet Elaine, who twitters “Oh, is it raining? I didn’t notice.”

Sing-a-long-a Sound Of Cynicism

Apart from traditional ideological divides eg. East/West, North/South, capitalism/communism, pro-life/pro-choice, I have discovered yet another source of stark and violent division amongst peoples.

So tell me, if a good friend of yours called you up and said it was their birthday on Sunday and they’d decided to spend the afternoon at Sing-a-long-a Sound Of Music, would you say: i) “OMIGOD, that sounds SOOOO fantastic, I’ll come as a brown paper package tied up with string!” or ii) “Sweet Jesus, deliver me from this hell on earth”?

Humph. Well, screw the naysayers. I’m not old enough for dignity yet.

Step Aside Ron Jeremy!

So there I was, suffering acutely from dissertation exhaustion, and then Jeremy Bentham pornolized to Jeremy “Big Cock” Bentham.

The Dialecticizer’s results bring less glee but are edifying nonetheless, especially Redneck, Swedish Chef and Hacker.

Have You Got Your Bloke Best Friend Yet?

The April issue of New Woman (purchased recently while in a mood for temporary aberration) informs us all that this season’s must-have accessory is a bloke best friend (BBF). This is splendid – for once in my life, not only am I in fashion but I’m quite sure I trump most of the fashionistas because I’ve actually anticipated this trend by two years.

What’s even better, of course, is that Russ is an extremely affordable and hassle-free BBF compared to what the article posits. I don’t need to keep buying him booze or suffer through endless conversations about the footie. I enjoy numerous perks such as company on marathon walks through London, Paris and Amsterdam (he also navigates), escort services to and from clubs complete with protection from dodgy men while within (it also helps that he tends to be the best dancer in the room and carries our bottle of water most of the time), lastly, much spoilage and indulgence but also brutal honesty when needed.

My point, and I do have one, is that BBFs are great, and I’ve got one of those classic ones that’ll be worth millions in years to come. A vintage Chanel, or Vivienne Westwood, if you will. (Russ proceeds to disown Michelle as best friend and sue for libel.) So rush out and get yours if you haven’t got one, girls, and you can only steal mine if you deserve him.

Elsewhere in frivolity, my pop tart of a boyfriend is better acquainted with Gareth’s and Will’s videos than I am. This is most vexing and I think a serious clarification of our respective roles in this relationship should be undertaken, pronto.

Other areas of concern are that he treats the proper cooking of a spatchcock as a matter of import on which worlds will begin and end. This perversion, at least, is mitigated by the dreadful joke he makes later involving the replacement of the “p” in “spatch” with an “n”, which reassures me that he is indeed base and vulgar the way a Real Man should be.

Deep Thinker

Trying to home in on a dissertation topic, I slave away in my room reading Nonsense upon Stilts: Bentham, Burke and Marx on the Rights of Man (Waldron, editor), Utilitarianism and Natural Rights from Hart’s essays in jurisprudence and philosophy, and Jeremy Bentham and Representative Democracy (Rosen).

I then go down to meet John and be fodder for his dissertation (anthropology). By this time my fried brain is capable only of metaphysical gems such as “I like American prime time drama more than British, because it just looks…glossier” and “I don’t like widescreen TVs, they make all the people look misshapen”.

Juxtapositions. I can delude myself no longer. I am clearly a pleb.

The Joke Was Funnier Before I Got It

Esther told me this joke:
Q: What did sushi A say to sushi B?
A: Wassup B?

In the split-second before I realized the answer was referring to wasabe, I thought it was just one of those really pointless jokes descended from the road-crossing chicken, and in that split-second the joke was hilarious.

Angst Blip

An unfamiliar feeling of melancholy last night: in bed, under blankets, reading Bentham. Feeling extraordinarily drained, longing to switch the lights off and go to sleep, yet unable even to doze off between chapters the way I normally do; genuinely fascinated with this man and his thought, yet listless and distracted thinking about events of the weekend; trying to snap out of being annoyed with myself, yet unwilling to actually do so because I think I should suffer a bit more first (how very Catholic); usual reluctance to sleep when my mind is racing and won’t stop, suddenly replaced with a yearning to escape all that and think of nothing.

At one point Roads (Portishead) was playing. Thank goodness it wasn’t the version off Roseland NYC Live, which feels like Pathos walking the world. Then we’d really be in for some Dawson’s Creek moments.