edit: Garbled entry ahoy! I am very tired indeed! If you can’t be bothered to read a garbled entry from me, do feel free to read this article by evolutionary psychologist Satoshi Kanazawa about why modern feminism is illogical, unnecessary and evil instead. Should suitably jolt you awake if you’ve just lumbered into work.
It’s 3.30am and I am not in bed because I am covered in my usual welts that have been making me scratch so much I’ve given up on my pathetic, bitten nails and started using a butterknife.
The first thing I did when I got off the plane on Thursday (apart from fight the urge, Dr. Strangelove style, to do a Beatles wave) was rush to the nearest WH Smiths and buy my weekly crack-haul of Rubbish Women’s Weeklies. One of the first headlines I saw was, “JAN’S EAR WAS BOILING ON THE HOB”. Now, doesn’t, “boiling on the hob” sound like the most unthreatening murder related phrase? If you’re going to cash in on shocking headlines, “on the hob” is just clumsy. There’s something inherently mumsy about that phrase which makes murder and dismemberment seem like a kind of vaselined memory of a yesteryear Sunday roast.
That aside, this is what’s been happening since we last spoke.
I finally saw my GP about the charming ravages of inexplicable bruising and tiredness. One of the first things he said to me was, “When did you last see your psychiatrist?”, followed by somewhat of a lecture on self harm when he rolled my sleeves up to perform the, “Psst psst” operation with the blood pressure cuff. I think it’s a testament to my calm (aha) nature that I didn’t punch him out. Still, I am now the proud owner of, “Admit One” to the haematology lab of the local hospital, which I’m sure I’ll cash in on… at some point when I have balls larger than a mosquito’s heart.
I also managed to smash the screen of my Macbook, so that’s the end of that. I felt a horrible, materialistic grief at it, even though it was donated to me for the princely sum of nothing. It made me feel Proper Writerly in that pretentious way that people write their “screenplays” in Starbucks, posed amongst the sunlight as if they’re being painted across the street by a rather talented peeping tom. I rather enjoyed staring at a blank screen on a train, wishing the internet would work so that I could watch documentaries on 4oD instead. Naturally, I can’t afford the prerequisite forty billion pounds for another Macbook or laptop so it’s back to the slavery of the desk for me.
Things are going quite well with Robert, although my difficulty in dealing with change has been grating on me. The downside of getting into a relationship with somebody who already knew you rather well is that the first flushes in which one performs the vaguely passable impression of a normal human being are beyond parodic. But evenwith someone who knows you well, it’s all still too much to put on them, and I don’t want to do that again.
Everything has moved very quickly. It’s been less than three months since Rob and I broke up, and already both of us are in new relationships. I’m happy for us to move on (and I want Rob to be happy and I want to be happy, too), because we should, but I am occasionally struck by the strangeness of it, and the swiftness.
I didn’t want to let life pass me by out of terror, and that hiding under the bed for a year maybe wasn’t the best course of action. It was four very eventful years of my life with somebody that I loved very much, and even though it was my decision to end it and it seems to have been right for us (and my conduct was not the greatest), it made me very sad and alone-feeling. I am getting better at it and I know it’s natural, it’s just all very new and strange, getting used to relationships and life changing, coming to terms with everything, the weirdness. I talk about it all a bit too much in a bid to work through it in my head, and also because there is no conduit between my brain and my mouth when it comes to talking. I have no internal dialogue, just a loud, hapless, farcically tripping over bits of wood external one. I need to exercise some form of control over my mouth.
The changes are exciting too, but I am a bit of an idiot who runs and hides with this kind of thing.
I still haven’t properly discussed therapy with my social worker (along with a lot of other things I haven’t done lately), but I will, because I think I need it. I was going to go to Brook and get counselling over the whole stuff in April (crying fits and rants about it all, combined with my tiny breakdown in May, give me the impression I might not be as okay about it as I thought- I didn’t go through it alone, it wasn’t just me, but it changed how I saw myself, my past, present, future, and not in a good way) but pure cowardice has stopped me.
I would like to get a bit more help with things than medication, though. I think I’m ready for all that stuff, finally, and I don’t want mentalism and emotional worries to carry on ruining my life and my relationships. I need a bit of help to get out of the paranoid, cyclical and obsessive thought patterns that make me miserable. Hooray. And I need to try to live more “in the moment” and to look to the future instead of the past because I want to be happy, I want to give things a go with Robert because he is lovely, and I just want to be able to feel hopeful about life, to be open, and to not be so scared. Because the moment can be quite wonderful and the world, beautiful. I very very much want to be happy and I often am because my life-mentalism aside, if you can imagine such a thing- is for the most part exciting and good right now. I have very little to complain about. Even if I’ll always have a mental illness, I need to get a handle on it and realise I am still living in the world. Which is what I’ve tried to do lately.
I should get my head out of my hole, eh!
ANYWAY! I’m going to stop talking about this now.
In Mental News, I am managing, though struggling with depression (which is getting worse but which I will talk to my social worker about, as it’s intensely annoying given that there’s, as usual, nothing in my life that’s particularly depressing) and intrusive thoughts that I am dealing with but that irritated me by still hanging around on holiday, which is one of the reasons I really struggle with actually going on holiday at all. My moods, unpredictable as they are, can sometimes scupper a good time and I don’t like letting people down like that. Having to take medication, or not, is also annoying. In Barcelona I took as little as I could get away with, but spent one day so drugged up I couldn’t absorb anything. I think the contraceptive implant is also making me a little bit unstable; I’ve varied wildly between wanting to laugh hysterically, cry and wanting to scream for the past month, and put on even more weight. And I’ve had bouts of rage- well, aren’t I just the loveliest to be around, eh?
The problem with holidays, well, with anything, is that you can’t get away from yourself. And I do often try. I entertain a ridiculous amount of fantasies that involve me packing a bag, leaving no note, discarding my phone and taking a flight somewhere, anywhere, and starting again. Then I survey the realities of the situation- not least two hungry, friendly cats who need me, what would be a shattered family ringing the sad relic of a phone off the hook, a flat without rent paid, a thousand little comforts that I would miss.
When I was younger, I had a doomed and pointless relationship with a Welsh man. I would save my school lunch money and, most Wednesdays, take the two hour long train journey to Dublin, followed by the overnight ferry (the grandiose Ulyssess) to Holyhead. There, I would entertain myself by lying to anyone I can came into contact with. I lied about my name, my age, my whole life, and, if feeling particularly brave, my accent, which doubtless sounded sketchy in the extreme but which in my exuberance I thought I’d probably gotten away with. For a few hours, maybe twice a month, I would pretend to be someone different entirely.
I sometimes wonder if, by writing this blog, I am taking refuge that, in this medium, I can come across as wiser, more together, more interesting than I really am. Because in my daily life, I am scattered, I am paranoid, I feel like a liability. Whereas I hope you look forward to my increasingly sproadic updates, in my day to day life, I would imagine you to be less enthused about such things…
I did have a wonderful time, despite, as you probably know, the Mentals, they follow you, and that pissed me off. I would have liked to have been someone else without these problems, and would have liked to leave some of my issues and sadnesses and worries at home. In the moment, as I said, would make my life a lot happier, and I often need to be kicked into it! Intrusive thoughts have been particularly bad now for a little while, and the degree of emotional numbness I have to employ to deal with them (for sanity’s sake- they would break me otherwise), can drift, jellyfish-like, into my life, surroundings, infection- and it’s downright fecking annoying when that happens. As I’ve taken a moment to hiss at my brain to shut the fuck up, I’ve missed something. It isn’t fair. And so very hard to explain!- even when you’re with someone who knows the score as far as your mental health is concerned (the upside, then, of going out with someone who knew you already- you don’t need to have the awkward, “So, er, here’s a funny story about this time I spent in a mental hospital…” discussion).
The trip to Barcelona was planned at about fifteen second’s notice. It’s been a while since I’ve done anything spontaneous, given my caution these days, my necessary caution to look after myself, which I often bemoan. It was only my second time out of Britain in my entire life. The first, a jaunt to America with Project Children when I was twelve, doesn’t really count as the whole thing was such an unmitigated disaster that I’ve actively blocked half the memories out.
But look, here I am looking deceptively grumpy in a posh eatery in a place that isn’t Britain! Hooray! And you can smoke indoors. I felt so naughty.

And kissing Statue Monkeys- the craven, concrete keepers of humanity- in a bid to spare the lives of us all. Appease them. They live everywhere, even in zoos.

Robert is a great person to go on holiday with (although sometimes I was struck by the weirdness of being on holiday with him, both because of who he has been in my life, and because this is all very new)- he tries to talk the language (albeit in a South London accent, and I can now say “please” in Catalan), isn’t afraid to try anything and has the childish enthusiasm of a five year old who’s downed a whole tube of Haribo, except when sulking about leaving expensive Venetian plague doctor masks in overpriced taxis.
Like I said, it was brilliant, I just wish I could have left my crap at home! Sometimes, I felt euphoric and free, and it was romantic and fun. I am now getting too tired to write but! I wish I could go and live there. I could subtly just show up in someone’s flat and change the locks while they’re at work. It has opened my eyes a bit, I barely realised there were places outside England (though I do, and always will, have an adoration of windswept, freezing shuttered seaside towns).
I was expecting I guess, the sterility of Britain to be on mainland Europe, but it wasn’t so- Barcelona is a beautiful city, somewhat ruinous, with sandy coloured blocks with balconies squaring up to each other amidst the blazing afternoons, even its pavements artistic and adorned with carvings that look like flowers, look as though they belonged on the walls of a Roman bath, so if like me you’re prone to staring at your feet as you walk, you still have a view. It’s a mix between the old, almost medieval, gothic and modern, which doesn’t jar. It is alive and vibrant, even in the quiet streets late at night you still here music or singing from somewhere. People eat late there, there isn’t the weekday rush to bed at 10pm, and yawning. Kids wander around kicking footballs at midnight. I sat coveting calamari (which I used to be afraid of, but now love) at 3am. Robert bought a load of Barca stuff for his (pre-marital) stepson and we ran into the massively talented waiter who played football with him two years beforehand, and wandered around in his ANTIMADRIDISTA t-shirt, which I’m sure endeared him to the rabidly Barca supporting locals.
Our hotel was huge and modern, in a quiet neighbourhood near the Arc de Triompf. We didn’t get up until the afternoon most of the time, the heat was very unforgiving and lots of places would be closed in the afternoon. It was also near the Park of the Ciutadella, where parrots apparently congregate, but I didn’t meet one. I did, however, meet a Spanish pigeon.

"HOLA, I am deep voiced PIGEON".
We didn’t go to many of the big places because we didn’t have time. We visited Sagrada Familia, Casa Milá and other Gaudi works- they’re all beautiful, startling, and strange to see them just plonked on a busy street.

Sagrada Familia, the world's most beautiful construction site...

Casa Mila
Went to the chocolate museum (Robert, as a foodie, wanted to shag everything he saw) and got chocolate tickets (the whole place smelled so delicious that I wanted to live there), went to the Miro gallery where I jumped through a sculpture when nobody was looking, walked La Ramblas (but not with real intent EH MANICS FANS EH EH EH) which is like a circus crossed with Oxford Circus and got stoned near the Cathedral of Santa Eulalia on three puffs of very strong Chilean weed given to us by Carlitto. (Proof once more that cigarettes are currency- he asked me for one and in return he handed me a joint. I haven’t smoked in years, it was rather…affecting!) We spent most of the time at the Cathedral with a ton of people who were playing flamenco music, and were eventually moved on by La Policia, bastardos! We giggled a lot on the way back. We also went to Barcelonetta, the little fishing area on the coast, where the sea is turquoise and where I embarrassed myself as a tourist by being genuinely quite happy to find a copy of the Sun on the beach. I paddled in the sea a little, I got very wet.
Most of the time was spent in various cafés where I drank so much coffee I could have powered a small hamlet with my energy. My eating disorder also followed me there so I was quite paranoid about eating, but the food was too gorgeous not to and by the last day I felt comfortable enough with it to relax somewhat. I had, for the first time: paella (HOW DO YOU EAT THE SHELLFISH. HOW?! Is it living decoration, because I ended up just talking to it), lamb’s brains (not mine, and horribly smooth), tripe stew (also not mine and it looks like what it is, which is the innards of cows) and QUINCE! which not only has a wonderful name but also tastes so sweet it’s indecent.

This is not just any paella. This is delicious paella with El Gordo the shellfish, that I had no idea how to eat and refused to suck out its innards.
The nicest place was Casa Delfin, which we went to twice, sitting outside listening to the street sounds. Food was rather cheap (ooh er, price of beans innit), the alcohol amazingly so, though I only drank two or three times. We went to a posh place once, and I felt acutely aware that we didn’t belong with our mad hair but I quite like that feeling sometimes. It overlooked the harbour, which was beautiful at night.
We also wandered round Montjuic, which houses the Olympic stadium. It’s odd to see such an expanse utterly empty, and it was, except for two cats padding along the steps. See?

Cats! In the Olympic Stadium! Cats don't care! They own the world!
I was nervous about going somewhere hot because of my arms, which I kept covered up most of the time, but not, as you can see, when I went to the beach. I get rather paranoid in short sleeves and I had some relatively new marks so didn’t fancy running the gauntlet of, “WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS” that I’ve got in Belfast and London.

A man did decide to comment, in Catalan. He stopped me outside a cafe and gestured to his arms, and began miming cutting. He was talking, in some context, about sexy Brazillian ladies who cut themselves, and oddly congratulating me, and Robert, about my arms. It was the only time somebody pointed them out, but still, an odd attitude. I didn’t know whether to be flattered or offended.
In short: it was great.
Hope I can go back at some point when I am rich, because it was such a beautiful city and I didn’t get to see as much of it as I’d have liked to. I also felt strangely smug getting free though not free sandwiches on the flight home. Ah, I’m easily pleased.
Anyway, after the “Read More” is a thousand photos for the interested, click to embiggen them. I am off to bed with my butterknife!
Read more »