Thursday 28 February 2013

If the Shoe Fits

When I was in school, I hated shoe shopping. It was the most boring thing in the world to me. My mother had to bribe me with sweeties for the yearly School Shoes trip.

This is because I had learned at an early age that the pretty shoes would not fit me. Because I had fat feet. Short, fat feet. So those beautiful shoes with the unicorn on? Either too tight or too long. The ones with the secret garden trail in pink stitching and the pretty little sparkles? Would have mangled my feet if my mother had listened to me instead of watching the way I hobbled around the shop in agony.

So I wrote off shoe shopping for my entire school career, pretty much. And then I went to University, and discovered that in the decade-and-a-bit since my traumatic shoe shopping experiences as a child, shoes had changed! They fit me better! And were prettier!

I also discovered that I have quite frankly the most ridiculous taste in shoes ever. And also pretty expensive taste.

It started when I discovered Irregular Choice.

                                                                                                                            (personal picture)

I bought these beauties shortly after discovering them. They've got a Unicorn on the sole. A UNICORN. They're basically Crack in shoe form.

And it was a slippery slope from there for my bank balance and shoe collection.

So thusly, when it came to start looking for wedding shoes, it was almost a certainty that I would find something ridiculous and love it.


THE RULES:

- No peep toes. I don't like looking at my feet.
- No slingbacks. I need all the support I can get.
- No pointy toes. I do not want Witch-feet.
- Stiletto heels. Everything else makes me look clunky.

Most importantly:

No White Satin.

Satin stains, and I'm just the sort of person to manage to stain it. And when would I ever wear white satin shoes again? It would almost be like throwing money into a black hole. No, I want shoes that I will wear again and again, because otherwise why bother? I found T.L.C. Creations.

More specifically, I saw these shoes on their facebook page:




(images from T.L.C Creations)

The lace! The colour! The music script! I was in love!

And then I read the story behind them:

"The bride lost her father a few years ago. She said she wished she had something of her father's to send us to use in the design. I asked if there were any letters or cards that he might have given her with his personal message written in them. She had a few of them so we were able to include this expression from her father in the design of her shoes. It says "I am very proud of you, love Dad". Now she will have part of her father with her when she walks down the aisle."

Well, if I ever needed any more encouragement to buy from them, that was it. I was straight there!

Their website is full of whimsical designs, combining sparkle and lace with beautiful textures - they even have a range with the artwork from an early edition of Alice in Wonderland. They could customise! They could adapt! I was in a whirl of amazing shoe-possibilities - could I get some with some of the text from Pride and Prejudice on? Could I get some with illustrations from Winnie The Pooh? - until I looked at the prices and my dream was cut tragically short.

Shoes are tragically not playing a significant part in our budget. And quality and customisation come with a hefty price tag. So T.L.C were dropped from my mental wedding plan as quickly as they'd arrived in it.

But that doesn't stop me looking.


Do you have a pair of dream wedding shoes? Did you manage to get them, or did you have to compromise and get something else?

Monday 18 February 2013

Things I Will Never Wear at the Gym

A t-shirt that says "Shedding for the Wedding"

Let's be realistic. You and I both know that the only reason I am going to the gym is so that when I am shoe-horned into a white dress, Greenpeace don't come and try to drag me out to deeper water because I look like Moby Dick's little sister. But people at the gym don't know that. Can't we all just at least pretend that I'm there for more substantial, less vain reasons? That I'm there to improve my way of life, so I stop getting out of breath climbing stairs. Maybe, MAYBE, people might even think I enjoy being there, and that I wouldn't rather be at home eating pie, drinking wine and watching a film where either Ryan Reynolds or Ryan Gosling takes his shirt off.

And even worse, I would rather light myself on fire than wear a shirt that says "Sweating for the Wedding". Way to kill what little allure I'd managed to cling onto whilst doing my impersonation of Jabba the Hutt on the crosstrainer.

(image from RufflesWithLove on Etsy)

Other slogans I will not consider:
- EARN YOUR SHOWER
- WORKING IT FOR THE DRESS
- OPERATION: WEDDING DRESS
- NOT A BRIDEZILLA

Things I might consider:
- I'D RATHER BE SLEEPING
- PIES ARE GREAT
- THIS IS ONLY SO I CAN GET DRUNK TONIGHT AND NOT FEEL GUILTY


 (Image from Spreadshirt.com)


A teeny tiny tanktop and hotpants

Yes, skinny girl at the gym, I'm talking to you. Maybe you are fortunate enough that your thighs don't rub together when you run, but that doesn't mean I want a full unfiltered view of the underside of your arse as you spring merrily onto the treadmill in what is basically your underwear. If I turned up wearing that skimpy little camisole, with my bra showing, and those itty bitty shorts, I'm certain the result would be positively obscene. Also, it's freaking February. Go put some clothes on. What would your mother say if she saw you out of the house dressed like that?


Make-up

Honestly, my face feels gross enough underneath a load of makeup after a night out clubbing, and I get way more hot and sweaty at the gym. Because that's what you're supposed to do there. Surely when you get all sweaty the makeup gunks into your skin, and doesn't your mascara start to clump up or run? And if it doesn't then either you've got really expensive makeup, you're an android, or you're not exercising properly. I shouldn't feel underdressed when I go to the gym - and walking into the changing room often feels like walking into a very exclusive club and the doorman let me in by mistake.


Nothing

Much as I dislike feeling underdressed at the gym, I am profoundly uncomfortable feeling overdressed. My gym is a University gym, reserved entirely for staff and students. This means there is a chance you could be wandering around nekkid and bump into your Lecturer and/or Boss. This appears to not occur to or bother a lot of people at the gym, but frankly the idea of my boss even seeing my sports bra (which is a fairly substantial item of clothing in itself) gives me the wiggins.

Of course, this may be because for a short while after the gym opened, one of the senior members of my department seemed to keep leaping out at me from behind lockers in the changing rooms and scaring the beejeebus out of me. It was like a Monty Python sketch - "No-One expects Viola in her swimsuit!"

Totally aside from that, it's a bit of a sucker-punch to the self-esteem to walk through the door and suddenly be surrounded by tiny naked Chinese girls. It feels like a porny Gulliver's Travels, where I'm a giant and Lilliput is full of Asian Nudists.


My Engagement Ring

Or any jewellery actually. I see a lot of people on forums or on pinterest who have 'gym rings', but this would not work for me.

- Exercise makes me sweaty and gross, and I don't want to associate that feeling with my ring. I don't want my pretty 'tainted' with exercise and fitness and healthy things. I might start taking it off when I eat salads.

- When I get hot and sweaty, I take my jewellery off. I might not even pay attention when I'm doing it. And I've got form for leaving stuff in the cupholders around the gym when I swap equipment. Which, y'know, is bad enough when it's the key to your locker. I'd rather not test myself.



Do you have any Gym No-Nos?

Monday 11 February 2013

The Proposal

Once upon a time - well, 15th September 2012 - I went out for the day.
I was at J-con, a day-long convention which I actually really enjoyed. My expectations had been pretty low, and it was an early morning and predicted to be a long day, so when I found myself chilling out and having a good time, I was pleasantly surprised. I also bought some art from the extremely talented Echosilver - two originals, and a gorgeous little print of a watercolour to go on my desk, for the princely sum of 14 of your English Pounds. I was very pleased.

Then I headed home - to the promise of a roast dinner cooked by Jon, because it was getting towards that time of year and we'd both been starting to think that it was time to head into Winter Mode (Roasts, PJs, Red Wine etc etc).

And I was greeted by this:

Yes, candles, candles we have had before, those were nice, but not the bit that got my attention. Focus on the important part.

Jon had tidied the dining room.

I was delighted. That place had been a shit-tip for weeks, because it's the first room you come into, and it's become a natural dumping ground for crap - coats, shoes, bags, stuff we need to take out of bags that we don't have time to put away right now, junk mail, real mail etc etc.

TIDY. <3

And the candles were pretty too. And scented, so the sort of dampish smell that we sometimes get from the laundry was all gone.

So Jon dished up the dinner (minted lamb - yummm!) but then scurried off to get drinks, and reappeared with a bottle of rose champagne.

HERE is where my alerts came on. I asked what this was all for, and he grinned. Then a look of horror and panic came over my face as he fumbled for whatever-it-was in his pocket, and that made him panic and thrust it towards me with

"It's a hat!"
This was not an inaccurate statement.

Inside the hat, however, was this:



Well. I rather felt like I'd had a comedy piano dropped on me. I said yes - there wasn't much else I really could say. And then I swore at him. And then we drank both bottles of sparkling wine and I swore at him some more.

He revealed that he had a dozen tiny cowboy hat jewellery boxes, because they could only be bought in bulk. He'd been researching rings for months - it's gold, tanzanite and diamond (and matches my Graduation Ring perfectly - also gold, tanzanite and diamond). And it nearly perfectly fits - he stole my Graduation Ring without me noticing to get my ring fitting - unfortunately, that goes on my middle finger and not my ring one. But it's near as dammit a perfect fit.

"It's your birthstone," he told me.

"Is it?" I said. "I thought my birthstone was Topaz."

"Well, there seem to be a couple for each month. But Tanzanite is definitely one of the birthstones for December."


...

"My birthday's in November."



Yeah, he swore a lot. And then he admitted that the flowers he bought - carnations - he'd thought were roses, and hadn't realised until he got home and read the label.

And then one of the candles which he'd put the used match in flared up and singed the cabinet we'd inherited from my Granny.
It wasn't a perfect proposal by any means, but that's what made it perfect for us. That, and a dozen tiny cowboy hats make anything okay.


Do any of you have funny proposal stories? Did you handle it well? Did anything go wrong?

Friday 8 February 2013

In the Beginning...

Let's talk about how Jon and I met.

When I was 18, I trundled off to University, as many 18-year-olds do, bright-eyed and full of hope! After setting up my bedroom, my parents left and I wended my way down to the 'Welcome!' talk with another girl I'd found from my course, in the room next to me.

As we were sat at the front, another girl came over to us, two boys in tow. She briskly introduced herself, and announced that she, too, was studying English, as were her two companions. One, in a suede jacket with a slight twinge of an accent, introduced himself as Jon. I didn't see him again that evening, and he doesn't remember us even meeting then.

HE remembers us meeting the next morning when, on the advice of our Subwarden, I found myself leading a large group of people past the bus stop immediately outside of our Hall, and down to the other, quieter bus stop at the end of the road. HE spent the next week or so referring to me as "That Girl Who's Afraid Of Roads", as I was a little nervy when faced with the giant city-sized roads, which dwarfed my tiny hometown roads in comparison.

Somehow we ended up in the same group of friends. I was quite taken with him, and briefly worried that he fancied another girl more - and she'd got his phone number first! - until I found out she was a lesbian, so I could relax. Although at the time Jon did have quite long, fluffy hair, he wasn't really effeminate. Particularly not in any way that would have mattered!

You have to understand, at the time I considered myself not much of a catch. Having once sat on a bus back from a waitressing assignment and listened to two boys list the hottest girls in my school, without having realised that we knew each other at all during the 6-hour shift we'd just worked together, I think I was rather justified in assuming I was nigh-on invisible to the opposite sex. Aside from a few awkward near-encounters in high school with friends that had sent me into near-meltdown over the stress of it all.

That was another thing: I didn't know how to cope with the idea of Relationships. I wasn't by nature a socially anxious person, I've always been fairly gregarious. But the idea of that kind of Relationship was like a sucking black hole of terror, with a soundtrack of the teasing I'd occasionally get in high school if I even spoke to a boy. It was good-natured, from my friends, but always made me want to curl up into a little ball. In high school people knew I didn't do boyfriends, so attention was always immediately drawn to any interactions I had with boys.

But at University, no-one knew me! No-one knew I apparently had a crippling anxiety that sang the "Sittin' in a tree" song at me. This just left the one hurdle to overcome, which was knowing what the hell I did with myself now.

I figured he liked me back when we ended up doing a late-night group reading of some Edgar Allen Poe a couple of weeks into Uni. I'm still not sure why we were doing a reading, although I have a vague memory of it being because one of our friends hadn't done his reading for his seminar the next day, and somehow had managed to convince all of us to help him do it. This turned what should have taken half an hour to read into a two-hour long session as we passed the book round the circle and each read a paragraph, but it was fun anyway.

After that we sort of just... stumbled together rather ineptly and together we have stuck, with comparitively few meltdowns along the way. I had one briefly when I realised that all our friends knew we were in a relationship (oh hello, High School Anxieties, that's where you've been), and another when we got engaged, but otherwise we've done pretty well. We date our anniversary as 5th November, but we have no clue really, we never went on any dates (seemed pointless when to all intents and purposes we lived together). We picked the 5th for the simple reason that it meant we had a reason to go see the fireworks every year.

I've never written about this before. When we're asked how we met, we tend to say, "Same Halls, same course, same friends - it was just easier than avoiding each other!"

Which is true, but on a couple of different levels.


How did you and your SO meet?