Shit I Thought When I Was Younger.

Ever look back on your upbringing and think, “Shit, I was dumb.”

  1. I thought Red Bull was alcohol.

Not just that it contained alcohol, it was alcohol.  Pure alcohol. My Dad told me this to stop me from buying it.  It was the only item in our corner shop that we weren’t, under any circumstances, allowed to purchase.  I believed this for a number of reasons – The packaging wasn’t very appealing to me as a child, only the bold boys in my neighbourhood seemed to drink it, and my dad was very convincing.  Although it dawned on me later in life that this was simply un-true, I still don’t drink Red Bull around my Dad.

  1.  I thought my parents were always right.

They weren’t.  They were young and I was their second child.  I think they had barely gotten to grips with having one sprog before I came along. It took me years to realise that it was OK for me to disagree with them, because that’s what makes you an individual. I can see infinite differences between how my little sisters have been raised and how I was.  For Sonny (the youngest) it was: “Go sit on the naughty stair!” For me it was; “You’re gonna have a sore arse when you get home.” I love my parents with all my heart, but God, they really were shit sometimes.

  1.  I believed that if you continuously picked your nose it would grow bigger.

Another Papa Dobbin classic here.  He doesn’t have a big nose per-sé, but it is generously proportioned to be larger than the average hooter.  I picked my nose a lot when I was younger, and every time he caught me doing it he would point to his own and say “This is what you’ll get!” in a cheerful voice.

  1.  I was convinced that if I made a face and the wind changed, it would stay like that.

Despite having no idea what this means now, when I was a child I thought it was true.  I literally thought a gust of wind would come and keep my face stuck on ugly mode.  That I’d be walking around with squinty eyes and my tongue stuck out for the rest of my life.

  1.  I thought The Simpsons was a regular cartoon.

Honestly, I find The Simpsons FAR funnier now that I’m older, because I actually understand the jokes.  When I was a child I watched it because it was a cartoon on at 6PM.  The last cartoon of the day before all hell broke loose and the News came on. In a recent episode I watched on the constant repeats offered by Sky, Homer says; “If you pray to the wrong god, you might just make the right one madder and madder” Would I have got this as a child?  Hell no!  Satire is not for the mind of a child.  I regularly watch old episodes and have my mind blown by how niave I was.

  1. I thought the News was the worst thing ever.

Remember how pissed off you were when your parents turned on the News?  Not that there was anything else on the other channels, but you would watch literally anything but the News.  I even remember trying to be interested in it when I was in my early teens, but even then I just didn’t get it.  I was so oblivious to current events, that I thought Sinn Fein was a person till I was about 14.  I’m pretty well informed now, but there’s still no way I could sit and watch BBC News 24 like some older people do.

  1.  I thought Santa was real.

Yeah, until I was around ten.  My cousin told me it was just my Mum and Dad.  I pretended I knew but I didn’t.  I was heartbroken.  I still think back to all those letters I had sent to the North Pole and the steps my parents took to convince me.  My Dad threw rocks on the roof.  My Mum wrote a letter in tiny hand-writing pretending it was from the elves. I also think back to the times it was glaringly obvious; once my Dad told me Santa prefers a nice cold beer instead of milk.  Once I woke up from a nightmare and went downstairs, Mum freaked out when she saw me and started shouting “BACK TO BED!  SANTA HASN’T HAD TIME YET!”  I always wondered why they were so tired in the mornings and didn’t want to experience the Christmas joy.

  1.  I thought I’d be a pioneer.

One night on the way home from my Granny Dobbin’s house, my Dad and I stopped for chicken burgers.  While we were waiting, my Dad noticed something in the doorway of an old building.  I’ve never seen my Dad scared, apart from this night.  He turned on the van and drove forward a bit.  As an intuitive child (aka nosey as fuck) I realized something was wrong.  He said he had to phone the ambulance, because he had seen a body in the doorway (sometimes my Dad could be blunt).  He got out of the van to make the call but all I had to do was put down the window to hear him talking.  He said he didn’t want to approach the body because his daughter was with him, but he was pretty sure that he/she wasn’t breathing.  While we were waiting, to distract me (maybe more himself) we went to collect our burgers.  I was eating mine when the ambulance arrived, which on reflection is strange, because I should have been too worried about the dead body to eat.  The paramedics approached the body and knelt down.  The body groaned, rolled over and said; “Pete?”

It was just a man who had drunk too much, sat down and fallen asleep.  My Dad let me get out of the van and I remember standing there in awe that alcohol could do this to a person.  I stood there, chicken burger in one hand and said “I’ll never drink alcohol, Dad.” This was actually a load of crap because 9 years later he was picking me up from the Square Peg and cleaning my drunk-sick from the back of the car.

Although I look back at these times with a twinge of embarrassment, I’m positive I had a very normal, joyful childhood.  If I have kids and they turn out to be as happy as I was growing up, I think I’ll have done a pretty remarkable job.  My parents don’t read this, but they should be proud of themselves.

Relationship Goals.

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He’s not trying to kill me, it’s just drunken love.

Uniquely designed to pull at the heartstrings, ‘Relationship Goals’ are on the increase online. However, there is a reality with regards to the pictures you may have been seeing of tanned, laughing couples sharing ice-cream and generally having a better time than you are.

A quick background of my relationship for contextual purposes; I’m 23, Boyfriend is 28. Known him for 7ish years.  We’ve been in a relationship for the past (almost) two years. After a complicated beginning back in 2008, we met up for a real ‘date’ about two summers ago and have been inseparable ever since. He asked me out on Christmas day 2013 via card. He gave me a card and a present on the 20th of December and told me not to open it before Christmas day. I figured it would be alright to open the card because he wasn’t specific about that.  It said “I hope this is how my girlfriend will smell.”  I was really confused and sniffed the card. Turns out the present was perfume and I was supposed to open it first. We went on holiday together Summer 2014 which wasn’t a disaster, so I moved in with him last October.  He’s my best friend.

So I did a quick search of the most popular Relationship Goals, and am now prepared to shed some light on the reality of these situations.

The majority of relationship goals that came up in a totally reliable Google Image search seemed to be simply, hanging out. ‘Netflix and chill’ is a term that’s blown up recently, and for good reason.  Netflix is far cheaper than the movies, you don’t have to get dressed up, or even leave the comfort of your own home. Boyfriend and I ‘Netflix and Chill’ almost every night we have together, though we have upgraded it to ‘Netflix and Chill and Alcohol and Snacks’.  The expectation of this is sitting under a blanket all cosy wearing one of his hoodies, with your hair in a pony tail but still looking sexy-cute with your head on his shoulder.  Our reality is me, sitting under the blanket by myself because I’m freezing, wearing a fleece that’s covered in dog hair, having not washed after a week of work, drinking wine from a recycled jam jar because all the wine glasses broke. We normally watch the beginning of two or three movies before saying “This is shit” and trying to find another. If we do sit together on the sofa (Boyfriend likes to sit in his man-chair) we have to get up every 30 minutes or so to go to the bathroom, have a smoke or get another drink. One of us ends up falling asleep to be woken by the other mumbling “Bedtime?”and we shuffle off to our room after turning off all the switches (which is for some reason SO ANNOYING when you’re tired.)

Another popular relationship goal – Playing video games together.  The image I found is of a girl sitting up against a guy holding a controller.  I hate playing video games.  I am terrible at them, and in contrast, Boyfriend is brilliant.  I barely have an attention span to live my own life never mind a fantasy one. I wouldn’t say I was competitive, but last time we played Mario Cart on the Wii, I gave up after one game and told him to fuck off.

Tickles are fun and cute, right? No. I don’t think there is anything boyfriend hates more than being tickled.  If I even say “Tickles!” to him he starts to laugh but has a deep hollow fear in his eyes. Sometimes when we lay in bed and I put my arm around him, he flinches because he’s afraid my hand will apply too much pressure on his rib-cage. We wrestle often, but he doesn’t want to play if I even threaten tickles.

Funny story about the next ‘goal’. Being on a beach together. I mentioned earlier we went on holiday a few summers ago.  We spent around ten days in Majorca and had a pretty amazing time. One fine day we took the ten minute walk down towards the beach. The weather was like 32 degrees and we were dying to get in the sea.  It was a nice breezy day too, perfect beach weather!  We bought a lie-low on the way, and although the beach was packed we found a nice place to put up our little umbrella to settle down and laze the day away.  We took it in turns going into the sea, because we didn’t want anyone to steal our shit. I got sick of this pretty quickly – I wanted to hang out with him in the sea on the lie-low.  There was loads of couples abandoning their stuff and being romantic together, so we cautiously did the same.  It was fun for a while, but I got a bit bored and wanted to go back and read my book.  We had swam out pretty far so it took me a while to swim back.  I started to paddle/walk the last bit of the way, and as I was just reaching the end, I stood up fully to look around for where we had put our towels. I turned to give boyfriend a cheeky wave to show him I had found my way. As I turned, out of nowhere a full-on tidal wave, body slammed me.  I fell over (obviously) and in my embarrassed panic to stand up, I couldn’t find my feet and did a weird floppy thing along the shore.  I swallowed a liter of sea water, and as I came up from under the water (having avoided certain death) all I could see was boyfriend’s gleeful face, laughing hysterically, trying (failing) to ask me was I alright.  He pointed at me but as he was laughing so hard I didn’t know what he was saying. A short while later I realized my top had come off. RIP dignity.  RIP sunglasses. Still, this moment reaches top three in “Funniest things to ever happen” awards.

I think I should leave it at that, so I don’t embarrass myself further. There is a lot more I could write about; grocery shopping (NO YOU BUY THE BREAD) or who does the most housework, but to conclude, I don’t think any relationship is perfect, especially ours.  I don’t agree with people when they say relationships are hard work, and if they are, should you really be in one?  I wouldn’t change a thing about him, and he wouldn’t change a thing about me.

(Or else.)

Story Time: The Blender.

 

When I decided to ignore my monster of insecurity and write this blog, I found I was constantly reminding myself not to write about mundane topics and to stay away from a ‘woe is me’ style of writing.  I’ve kept journals and diaries intermittently my whole life; I thought I would look back on them fondly with rose tinted glasses and a warm sense of nostalgia, however, as most journals will be, they’re extremely embarrassing.  Despite this, I have chosen to share one, which could be regarded as a little mundane as it was a ‘woe is me’ diary entry, but I feel it’s entertaining nonetheless.

It’s one of my oldest ones, when I was 7 or 8.  This is now a classic Dobbin dinner time story in my house. You know the scene; for once everyone is in a great mood, laughing and joking, poking fun of silly things we did when we were cute(r), trying to out-do each other with embarrassing stories of our shared past.  Seven out of ten times my mum or sister will mention ‘Molly’s Diary Entry’ and everyone will roll around the floor laughing.

I remember what actually happened very vividly, and I should provide some insight so we can all be fair about this whole escapade. I had watched an episode of Finger Tips, wherein Fearne Cotton guided me happily through how to make banana milkshakes (she was totally on that program with Stephen Mulherne).  I need to emphasize the gravitas of how delicious this milkshake looked.  I didn’t even really like bananas, but it was so elementary it practically made itself.  Bananas, milk, sugar – blend.  We had milk and sugar of course, but did we have bananas, and more importantly did we have the fundamental blender?!

We did.  WE DID!

JOY.  I would finally get to recreate something I had seen on TV.  None of this ostentatious Art Attack shit where I needed acrylic paints, glitter and PVA Glue (and talent – you lied to us Neil Buchanan).  I didn’t need to ask a grown up to help me. I didn’t even need to pull a chair over to the sink.  This was as easy as tying my shoe (which I had recently mastered).

So with the milk on the island, the sugar out and bananas peeled, I’m almost ready.  I go into the pantry to haul out this blender.  It’s roughly 1997 so the blender is literally the Titanic.  I onerously take Titanic and plug her in.  Almost there.  I can practically taste that sweet potassium dairy goodness.

Disaster strikes.  My mum walks into the kitchen and my dream collapses.  Tells me to ‘Put away the blender’, shouting that she doesn’t want to clean up after me again, ‘not after last time’, whatever that means.  As a very irascible child I naturally protest, I implore my mother to understand, I desperately try to convey my convulsive need for milk blended with banana, I cry… I end inevitably sulking in my room.

I felt like a Prisoner of War. There I was, set to have my first ever illustrious banana milkshake and the experience is over before it could begin.  Beleaguered in my bedroom, I release my anger by screaming into a pillow for 30 seconds straight, then take my little red face over to my little lilac desk and write in my little flowery diary.  Having only just mastered the basics of the English language I write something along the lines of “I hate my life.  I want to die.  Mum won’t even let me use the blender”

I know that despite how ludicrous this was, there is something sweet to this story.  I know that others will have similar experiences, although they are not cause for feelings of discomfort or embarrassment. I feel these memories should remind us of how innocent we all once were.  It makes me feel an ambivalence which is synonymous with childhood.  That bittersweet, rueful quality of life whereby you feel like you lost an old friend, but gained something very important along the way.