Wednesday, 30 September 2009

I Love... Buying Bras That Fit!

I should add a couple of caveats to that statement - bras that fit, that don't cost the earth and that come in nicer colours and designs than 'frumpy white' or 'frumpy black'. The reason for this post is that Primark have just launched a new range of bras that come in D-F cups, which is unusual for the cut price shops. They're really pretty, fit really nicely and only cost £6 so I'm really pleased with the 3 that I've bought. I've always had trouble getting bras to fit, since I was old enough to wear one. When I was about 7 I was desperate to fill out and have boobs and now I would happily give some of them up to be able to wear nice clothes and underwear without feeling like a complete lump. Even when my mum took me to be measured the first time when I was about 12 and I was a 32C, the shop girl told her I was a 'big girl' in a really accusing voice, like it was all her fault! So I am used to not being able to buy cheap bras. When I was a bit thinner and I went down to a 34C again it was great because I could just buy a bra and know it would fit but now I'm up to a 36F and showing no signs of going back down, it's that much harder to get nice underwear. In Evans the other day they only had huge industrial sized bras that looked so unflattering and frumpy and cost £20 each. I was really disheartened. Then tonight, lo and behold, Primark the girl on a budget's saviour steps in with pretty, frilly, pink and blue and green bras for £6 and less! Now I just need to find a stockist of size 16 jeans that fit size 16 people and don't cost £75 per pair...

Tuesday, 29 September 2009

I Love... Getting to Work Early!

This may sound like the most geekish thing in the world but I love this time of year because I come in to work earlier. I don't actually start work until 9am, as you can tell from my posting this at 8.55 am, but for the rest of the year I get in and sit down at my desk for bang on 9am and have to start work immediately. This last week the Metro has been really busy on a morning so I made the decision to start my Autumn tradition of getting an earlier Metro. That meant that I was in the city centre at 8.40 and I had time to go to Boots and get some lunch as I'm playing football at lunch time and also to get in to work early.

It's a small thing but I do love being more relaxed first thing on a morning, anything that can help with that is a bonus...

Monday, 28 September 2009

I Love... Charity Shops!

I have been quiet all weekend as it was a really low day on Friday and I have sruggled to really get over it. Someone has deliberately scratched my car while it was parked on the street outside my house, which really tainted my memory of book group (so that can wait for another post). I then had a whole day of training on Friday which didn't really relate to anything I do at work so it was a bit of a wasted day. It wasn't boring but I'd already had some of it from other sources and the rest of it was meaningless to me because I don't work in that area so I could have spent the day doing more productive things. Then the police came over on Friday night to take a statement about the vandalism and so I was really late getting my dinner and had a headache. So not a great Friday by any stretch of the imagination.

But then on Saturday I went shopping in Chester-le-Street with my mum. We really only go there when we want to blitz the charity shops as it's not a great shopping centre. We decided to go and look for period furniture and decorations for my new(ish) house and some picture frames for her needlework that she's been doing so she can display it. Now, any day spent with my mum is great for me as I love spending time with her and we don't get a lot of time just the two of us so it's nice to have the day together. With my dad being away recently we've spent a lot more time together and that suits me.

But on to the reason that I love charity shops. When I was a kid I both loved and hated them in equal measure. When it became obvious to me that the rest of the kids in my class didn't buy clothes in charity shops I began to be really ashamed about going in them, but at the same time I completely loved trawling through the toys and books and clothes that people would just give away. I got some of my favourite clothes and toys from Scope in Durham when I was young. I got a red 'ra-ra' skirt with black piping and a giant Barbie camper van as well as loads of board games and jigsaws. Me and my sister could spend ages choosing things and, because they were so cheap, we were usually allowed to buy whatever we chose.

I also bought the greatest Halloween costume ever in a charity shop - a leather mini-dress and gold stillettos so I could play a murdered hooker (well before the Ipswich murders, in case anyone is offended) I was going for a sort of modern day Jack the Ripper theme and I stuck insects all over my body and had twigs in my hair and bruises on my throat, etc.

Then, as I got older, I discovered the other treasure trove that most charity shops have - books! At first, years ago, you never paid more than £1 for a book but since the shops have realised the revenue to be made from selling reasonable quality books it's more like £2 at least per book. Still cheaper than Tesco though, and you're doing a good thing by shopping in charity shops. I feel like it's my contribution to charity ( I do also donate stuff to the shops too so I've done my bit).

In addition to the books there's winter coats at a knock down price, decent quality jeans and other clothes, although I confess it's been a long time since I bought clothes in a charity shop now that Primark has such nice clothes for low prices, bric a brac and much much more.

The only down side is that people seem to be giving less away now, either that or the charity shops are wise to the value in second hand goods and are selling on ebay instead, because the choice in the shops is not as great. So my message to the nation is to donate things to charity. It eases your conscience two fold because you're getting rid of things you don't want and also contributing to a charitable cause, and you never know who will want what you don't want. If you put things on ebay people may buy them but a lot of times they won't and you'll end up keeping them anyway...

Thursday, 24 September 2009

I Love... Body Shop Body Butter!

Just a short one today as I'm really struggling to think of anything I love today. I want to save my reading group for tomorrow as I haven't been yet and I'll love it even more when I've been.

I do love the body butter, it's not just a cop out. I'd never had it and then I got some free on the front of a magazine and now I'm hooked. At the moment the shea butter is my favourite as it smells like chocolate but I also like the coco butter one and the mango one.

So there it is, short but sweet today so that I can go late night Thursday shopping for new clothes...

Wednesday, 23 September 2009

I Love... Grocers!

Specifically grocers on market stalls, but even the shops are par excellence for buying cheap fruit and veg, which in a 'credit crunch' with the government breathing down our necks to be healthy is a good thing!

I am ashamed to admit that I had never really bought fruit from a grocer on a market stall until I was about 23 and I was doing Weight Watchers for the first time. I was shopping with my mum in Sunderland and we were both really hungry. One of the drawbacks of the plan we were doing for WW (hereinafter referred to as Fat Club, which was our collective pet name for it and any other slimming classes we went to) was that snacking was difficult and carbs were a big no-no so we were struggling to find anything to snack on. It was at that point that we passed a stall selling fruit and veg. I happened to see that they were selling very fresh looking grapes and we stopped to buy some, and my love affair with the market produce stalls was born.

I have today purchased 1lb of grapes, 3 conference pears and a punnet of Scottish strawberries for the princely sum of £2.30. This pleases me as I went to Sainsbury's supermarket on Monday night and bought a punnet of raspberries and happened to notice that a punnet of strawberries was £2, and they were Spanish so not as nice.

Of course, there are drawbacks to this kind of shopping. Firstly you have to have cash, and oftentimes the grocers are a bit gruff if you only have large notes and no change, although most of them are cheerful ruddy cheeked types with leather money pouches and dirty fingernails.

There are also grocers who sell produce that is less than fresh and you have to watch out for these as it's a false economy to buy food cheap and then have it go off before you can eat it. Having said that I bought a peach in Sainsbury's and within a couple of days it was almost liquid in the fruit bowl, so the big supermarkets are just as guilty of selling produce that's past it's best.

The worst obstacle, for me at least, is the face to face nature of the transaction. I am probably (hopefully) not the only person in the world who is glad that the old system of going into a shop with a long counter and asking for everything that you want item by item is long dead. I can't stand having to ask for what I want, I long for the days when everything is mechanised like the self scan checkouts in supermarkets these days. I especially find market traders to be very difficult to approach and I find myself babbling incoherently at them while they're weighing my produce or taking my money so that they don't think I'm being rude!

Anyway, this is detracting from my joy at being able to buy cheap fruit and veg from jovial and obliging farm types so I will end with that thought...

Tuesday, 22 September 2009

I Love... The First Day of Autumn!

Maybe it's not officially the first day today, and it is actually a bit warmer than most autumn days, however I do love Autumn and I especially like the smell when the leaves have changed and are lying on the ground, probably rotting, but that doesn't spoil my enjoyment of it.

As I was walking to the Metro this morning with my boyfriend I smelled autumn in the air and I was excited. I always love being able to tell when the seasons change or when it's going to rain or snow. That might sound strange if you've never noticed it before but look out for the earthy smell in the summer when it's just rained, or the smell of greenery in spring, or falling leaves in autumn. Snow doesn't really have a smell, it's more of a feeling on your nose when it's going to be really cold.

When I was a kid we went to Wales with my Great Uncle and for some reason, probably because our old banger car had broken down, we stopped in a layby/picnic area on the way home for quite a long time. I remember being completely absorbed in covering a puddle with autumn leaves so that none of the water was showing apart from a tiny bit in the middle. It seemed to take me hours to collect enough leaves and place them carefully next to each other so they were all showing and not covering each other. And there were so many colours, reds and browns and greens but all different. I was so proud of my puddle/leaf art and my mum took a picture of it for me before we left, because obviously you can't take a puddle with you in the car.

My favourite thing about Autumn is big chunky wooly jumpers, but that's a different post altogether...

Monday, 21 September 2009

I Love... Getting Lost in a Good Book!

I think this post will adequately cover Saturday and Sunday as well since I have spent a large portion of the weekend reading and thus being lost in two very good stories.

I find one of the only times I can completely switch off the outside world is when I am reading. Sometimes I will read a book that I love so much, Interview With The Vampire is a great example of this, that it does not matter where I am I can become completely absorbed in it. Even to the point where, when I stop reading, I am shocked to find myself still in the same spot that I was when I started. When I read Interview With The Vampire I was working in a music shop and I ate my lunch every day in the staff room. One day I was so absorbed in the story that I 'woke up' from reading and it took a couple of seconds for me to figure out where I was! That's when you know you're really reading something very special to you that you will really enjoy.

I am currently reading 4 books, 2 ficton and 2 non-fiction. They are Charlie Brooker's Dawn of the Dumb, Cesar Millan's Be The Pack Leader, Stephanie Meyer's Breaking Dawn and Philip Pullman's The Amber Spyglass.

I find Charlie Brooker completely hilarious as he expresses the way so many people I know feel about the world, just general hatred and distaste for everything that he comes across, but he can accept when he likes something so you know he's not just slagging off the world for the sake of a cheap laugh, he does genuinely hate everyone and most everything in it. His book, although very amusing and reassuring, convincing me as it does that I am not alone in my negativity, goes against what I'm trying to achieve with this blog and so I have put it away to be read when I can cheerfully disagree with his opinions!

The Cesar Millan book was bought to help me and my boyfriend cope with our newest addition, a one year old Jack Russell Terrier dog that we adopted from my boyfriend's parents when they couldn't cope with him anymore. His name is Arthur and he is just about the sweetest little thing that I have ever owned/taken care of/loved. My in-laws had him from a puppy and I pretty much loved and coveted him on sight so it was really great for both us and them when they asked us to adopt him - they still get to see him and have him for holidays and we got the dog we'd both wanted for some time. The only problem is that he was pulling on the lead really badly and we could not make him stop. I thought that the Cesar Millan book would be a God send as I love his show, Dog Whisperer, and I wanted to have a sort of spiritual connection with the dog. Turns out all he needed was a nose collar and he's completely fine now! So I haven't really finished reading Cesar, convinced as I am that my dog is a perfect angel and I need know no more about dog psychology!

The first of the fiction books that I started was Philip Pullman's Amber Spyglass, the last book in the His Dark Materials trilogy. I don't normally go in for fantasy type books as I find them hard to visualise and so can't relate to the characters. I had a hell of a job figuring out what an elf or an ork looked like until Peter Jackson so kindly demonstrated it. So I didn't think I'd enjoy the Philip Pullman books but I was persuaded to read them by a friend and I was hooked. The Northern Lights has to be one of the best books I have ever read and, even though the Subtle Knife wasn't as good and so was a bit disappointing I stuck with it and am loving the Amber Spyglass. The only problem I have with trilogies and other serialised stories is that I miss them so much when they're finished.

The final book that I'm reading is a loaner from a friend and is Breaking Dawn by Stephanie Meyer. I have to admit that I'm not enjoying this book as much as I enjoyed the previous 3, which were all examples of books I completely got lost in, I could lie in the bath reading them until the water was freezing, but this one is not gripping me as much. Saying that I have managed to read half of it in one weekend and it's a thick book so I must be enjoying it. I'm hoping it gets a bit better as it's a bit slow and drawn out at the moment.

So, in summary, reading is one of my favourite things!...

Friday, 18 September 2009

I Love... Stationery!

There is just something about the undiscovered potential of a new pad of paper or a pen that really excites me, I can't explain it but I love new and fresh stationery.

It's mainly new stationery that excites me. I love to imagine all the exciting words that could be written in a new journal or on a new legal pad. Imagine the brain working to create something from nothing and put it down onto paper. Even highlighters and staples and post its, especially post its, are included in my love for all things new and stationery related.

My favourite items are definitely paper based, although once a pen (even a new pen) has soiled the pages they somehow become less exciting, like they could never live up to the high expectations that I had for them. When you rip off the top page and the one underneath is clean, that almost brings the excitement back again but mainly, once used they become mundane, how I imagine most people around the world view stationery.

The catalyst for this outpouring of love for paper and pens has been that I have just bought my oldest friend's 30th brithday present. I agonised for weeks over what to get her and eventually settled on a 100 year diary, which is basically a really nice journal that you can use to record all of your thoughts, memories and other things for a really long time. Sort of like a posh scrapbook. I would love a gift like that and I really hope that she appreciates the gesture as I genuinely did tailor the gift to her personality. She loves to make lists and then cross them off when she has done them, she is a keen traveller and explorer and she runs her own business so visits a lot of different towns with that. She has also recently got married and so will be having children in a couple of years and she is more than likely going to get a cat soon. So she will have lots of memories, now she is over the dreaded hump of 30, to record in her journal.

I am tempted to buy one for myself but I will wait for my birthday in February and see what that brings...