Wednesday, 31 December 2008

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Can you believe the rather splendid (for me, at least) year that was 2008 is almost over?
I mean, I can't say that if I was given the opportunity to relive '08, I would, but I can at least say I'm leaving it in good spirits, and I'm happy with most of the things I've said, done and witnessed throughout the past 12 months.
They've been some pretty eventful 12 months, though, and I think all that's left for me to say now is;

bring on 2009!

Happy New Year!

Tuesday, 30 December 2008

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My sister just came through and gave me a Kinder Bueno bar.
I'm listening to the ABBA CD I bought in Tesco yesterday for £3. (I've fallen in love with ABBA after watching my sister's Mama Mia! DVD three times since she got it on Christmas day. Super Trouper is my current favourite song.)
I finally cut my fringe yesterday morning.

The only drawback to my current bliss is that my mother is trying to persuade me to wear a helmet when we go skiing for a week in February. Does she want me to die of embarrassment?

Saturday, 27 December 2008

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Have you heard of Yelle?
No, I don't suppose you have - unless you're as obsessive a follower of Nylon magazine as I am, or you're well up in the French disco scene.

Basically, she's a French electro-pop singer whom I discovered through my subscription to Nylon's video podcast. She makes awesome music that literally makes you want to jump up and start dancing right there and then. She's got amazing style too.

http://www.nylonmag.com/?section=article&parid=2324


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I hope you had a good Christmas. I certainly did!
I have decided Santa is my new best friend.
He brought me numerous fantastical gifts; the Marc Jacobs Daisy perfume I've been pining after for so long, Cath Kidston's book 'Make!' (overall rather good - I like the guide at the front of all the different stitches used, although most of the items of clothing she suggests customising are slightly obscure. Do people actually wear skirts that long any more?) and a new watch (M&S, which I would ordinarily associate with my grandmother and sticky toffee pudding. However, the watch is lovely, with a huge face and one of those chain-link straps I was actually considering branching into men's watches to find because, until Christmas day, I didn't know they existed in womenswear) - to name but a few.

As well as all this, I received 'Perfumes: The Guide' by Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez. I must admit, I was a bit confused when I first peeled away the wrapping paper. I've never been particularly interested in perfumes, you see - I only really pay attention to samples in magazines and the occasional excursion to Boots' perfume department with my friends to collect testers - so an entire book dedicated to them was a bit of a strange gift idea for me. However, on closer inspection, it's actually a really well-written, often rather funny book. I especially liked the authors' review of a range of perfumes by Clean (whatever that is). LT and TS reviewed eight of Clean's perfumes, and each one only got one star. Clean Fresh Laundry (appealing name, don't you think?!) received one line of writing; "A sniff is enough to put you off personal hygiene for weeks at a time". That one made me laugh. Although the book only gave my beloved Daisy an "adequate" three stars, I've enjoyed dipping into the pages for a spot of humour or pointers on what to look for next time I'm perfume shopping (although that won't be for quite a while, seeing as Daisy is sitting proud on my dressing table still practically full).

Haha, and I'll bet you weren't expecting a book review!

In other news;
I still haven't got round to trimming the fringe.
I purchased Ladyhawke's album today. Love it.
My iPod died, but it's OK, I saved its life.

Wednesday, 24 December 2008

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img by ksjaber.deviantart.com

merry christmas!

hope you have a great day.
i'm off to bake gingerbread...

Tuesday, 23 December 2008

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Not sure why you'd want to read this, but I wrote it as an assignment for English at school, and I'm quite proud of it. It's called The Depressive Memoirs Of A Teenager's Mourning;

It buzzed round and round in my head, the cold minty chill overwhelming my throat and mouth. I scrubbed as hard as I could with the toothbrush, almost wanting to taste the harsh, acrid blood from cut gums mixing with the frothy peppermint in my mouth.
It had been just over a year since that day. That awful day when my entire life was torn apart. “You’ll never understand what it’s like to have a twin unless you do,” someone once told me. You’ll also never understand what it’s like to lose one. I know it seems hard to imagine, but losing my twin sister was worse that losing a grandmother or an uncle – and those events are hard enough to handle as it is. Losing Louise was like losing a part of myself. Every day since then, it’s felt like I’m betraying her if I sing a song she liked, or if I eat a custard cream. Custard creams were our favourite biscuit. I can’t even look at a custard cream now.
Eventually, I took a deep breath. I spat, noting the red streaks through foamy white with a satisfied sigh as I washed them away. I hastily grabbed my straggled black hair and tugged it back from my face with a purple scrunchie.
Mum handed me a banana as I stumbled down the stairs, hauling my schoolbag after me. I managed a weak smile of thanks, and hastily scrambled for the door. I might have been able to avoid my parents every morning, but as hard as I tried, I was forced to look straight into the old music room, untouched for more than a year, on my way to the front door. I tried not to acknowledge the dusty piano, which I’d happily sat at every night while Lou sang beside me. I hadn’t touched it since she died. The school psychologist had told me more than once that he thought I should start playing again; “You are terribly talented, after all, Carrie,” he’d said. I didn’t care how talented I might be, the shrink was just sitting there for an hour a week because it was a well-paid job. He didn’t give a toss whether or not he was helping me. I’d made it very clear right from the start that he was doing a lot of things, but not one of them was helping.
I realised I’d been standing there for several minutes, staring at the piano. So much for ignoring it, then. I blinked twice, turning away, pulled my bag firmly over my shoulders and yanked the door open – perhaps with a little too much force.
“Bye, Carrie!” I heard mum call from the doorway. I didn’t turn round.
I drew in a shallow sigh as I came to the wheelie-bin at the bottom of the drive. I looked down longingly at the banana in my hand. It was the same every morning; I’d stand there and will myself as hard as possible to just take a bite – the way I would have if Louise had been there. Louise...
Her name brought a lump to my throat, which I tried to shoo away by opening the lid of the bin and dropping the untouched banana in. Yesterday’s toast and jam still lay intact on top of the pile. Still the lump persisted, forcing me back to that terrible day just over a year before...

I squeezed my sister’s hand, feeling the hot, sticky beads of sweat roll from my palm to hers, and down onto the starched hospital sheets. The beep... beep... beep... of life support machines mingled with the muted notes of Frank Sinatra’s ‘Fly Me To The Moon’ – Louise’s favourite song, which had been playing on repeat since she fell into the coma – in the back of my mind. I scanned Lou’s face urgently for any flicker of life - a twitching eyebrow, a gulp for air. Anything. I could hear people in the corridor outside. A soft click - had someone come into the tiny, alien room in which my twin and I sat silently, side by side? I didn’t care. I didn’t turn to see if I was right. I didn’t even acknowledge that anything had changed. I just sat there staring at Lou’s pale, flawless face, desperately hoping that she would wake up and smile at me, the way only Lou did, and only Lou ever could. I felt a soft hand on my shoulder. Still I didn’t glance up. The hand stayed, unflinching. It felt like it was resting there for hours, but then maybe it was only a few seconds. Was someone speaking? I could have sworn I heard my name... And Louise’s...
“Carrie? Carrie, honey. Carrie! Would you listen to me, please?” My mother’s voice was pleading, not authoritative in any way. I turned my head slightly and looked up, blinking drowsily as if waking from a long sleep. Mum’s face was wet. She’d been crying. No, not crying. She’d been weeping.
“Carrie, love, they’ve got to...”
I must have been staring blankly. For the first time, I noticed my dad behind her. He stepped forward. Had he been crying, too? Dad never cried...
“Carrie, they’ve got to turn the machines off. There’s nothing more they can do.”
I didn’t understand. What machines? Nothing who could do?
A doctor appeared in the doorway.
“Are you ready?” She asked, her eyes full of sympathy.
Ready for what? What was happening?
The woman moved past my parents to the end of Louise’s bed.
What?
Those machines?
My sister’s machines?
The doctor flicked a switch.
“NO!” I cried, reaching out towards the machine as the familiar sounds slowly faded... beep... beeeeep... beep... beep... bee...
And the room was dead.
“Lou?” my voice had shrunk to a whisper. I felt as though my soul was fading with Lou’s. Her hand went limp in mine. I heard the doctor slip from the room, but all I wanted to feel was Lou’s soft hair in my face as I cried into her cold, stiff neck.

I could feel the tears welling behind my eyes as I walked along the pavement that separated the tarmac road from the immaculate gardens of the middle-class houses on my street.
‘No,’ I thought. ‘Not again. You can’t let them see you crying again. It’s been more than a year...’
I wiped the moisture from my eyes and looked up to see an old woman standing at the gate of number 33, smiling up at me through wire-rimmed, half-moon glasses. Her hair, which looked much like the steel wire we used in craft at school, was spewing out over her head in all directions. The house she stood in front of wasn’t so different from my own – we lived on the same street, after all. The garden, however, evidently wasn’t nearly as well looked after as the ones surrounding it. A gnarled old tree, which may have borne fruit of some description in the past, rose up from a browning lawn patched with clovers and thistles. The wrought iron fence was almost entirely obscured by an untameable bush which could once have been a neatly trimmed hedge. This same hedge was reaching out spindly green fingers to brush the old woman’s wrinkled cheek.
“Stop that gawking, would you?” the woman broke into my thoughts. “Your sister’s not in the tree, so you can forget that.”
“Excuse me?” I said, startled and confused.
“Louise. Your sister? I’m sure you haven’t forgotten about her, the way you’ve been moping about for the past year.” The woman pushed her glasses up her nose. “I understand that you’ll always be grieving, but you can grieve on the inside, underneath everything else. Underneath a life.” I couldn’t believe I was hearing this. And from a complete stranger! “Carrie, sulking is all you ever do these days. And the crying! That, my dear, has to sto—“
“How dare you!” I cried, cutting her off mid-sentence. “How dare you presume to tell me to get over her? My best friend!” A startled look flitted momentarily across the woman’s face, before she turned calmly and walked away without another word.
I could feel the tears coming again – and there were a lot of them. Instead of continuing on my journey to school, I turned and ran as fast as I could back home. I noted mercifully that my parents had left for work – the strange woman’s lecture must have lasted longer than I’d realised.
I burst through the door, flinging my bag down onto the ground. I threw myself onto he piano stool. Almost before I’d even sat down, the tears started. I don’t know how long I sat there, but it was an awfully long time...
When the river of tears finally ebbed away, I righted myself, spread my fingers before me, and out came the opening notes of ‘Fly Me To The Moon’.

Monday, 22 December 2008

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the fringe
is getting far too long.
straightened it this morning,
and i actually couldn't see through it.
the thing's a health hazzard.
i might get happy with the scissors in a minute...

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christmas wishlist


Topshop Heart-Shaped Bag


Karen Karch 'Gabrielle' Ring


Atonement on DVD


Urban Outfitters Message Envelope Locket

Saturday, 20 December 2008

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“You can't stay in your corner of the Forest waiting for others to come to you. You have to go to them sometimes."

- Winnie The Pooh

Wednesday, 17 December 2008

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Normally, I would think of Christmas as a time of celebrating everyone and everything in one's life, but recently it's been working the opposite way round for me. This year, advent has been a time in which I've had the opportunity to see who my real friends are, the ones who're just in it for the fun, and the ones I'm no longer entirely sure why I bothered to develop a relationship with in the first place. The past few weeks has been a surprisingly difficult time. One filled with exasperation and having to tread exceptionally carefully in order to avoid saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. It's not just me, either. Everyone I know seems to be getting more and more exasperated, and for no apparent reason. Friends who happen to be extremely happy at the moment (and believe me, there are very few) are merely a source of jealousy and annoyance for the rest of us.
It would seem that I'm longing for the winter break even more than I would usually be.

Monday, 15 December 2008

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Saw James [see previous post] play at the SECC in Glasgow on Friday night. They were incredible. They actually blew my mind away. One drawback was that some guys were pissed out of their brains behind us and they kept throwing half-empty cups of beer over our heads. My hair stank afterwards, but it was worth it.

alice in wonderland party; sat. 13th december


partygoers in the kitchen


alexandra burke winning the x factor


our polaroid photo wall


partygoers contd.

Friday, 5 December 2008

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I got this skirt for the Christmas Party at school.
I'm wearing it now.
I love it!

Monday, 1 December 2008

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Ladyhawke; My Delirium



My current favourite song. I love the video too - it's really original and so artistic.