Savvy Article – Climatopause

Written in response to an article implying that climate change is responsible for hair loss in men.

I’m feeling it: waves of anxiety run through my inners like slow-cutting knives; my golden-orange locks thin out, to make way for razor-blade edges of silver-white; and I’m all clammy, alternately baked hot and frozen cold,

I’m nearly fifty years old.

The menopause?

No, no! Not the menopause – I am far too significant to fall prey to this monster of men! For a start, then I am a woman, so how can this man-beast have anything to do with me?

It doesn’t. Does it?

Look at me (if you really have to), and you will see:

  •  the tidal waves of an Indian Ocean tsunami
  • the orange trees of your last Spanish getaway
  •  the grey sludge of car tyres in snow
  •  the roasties from your freezer, reheated

If not the menopause, then what exactly is it? What kind of a man-beast eats away at my soul?

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, 10th October, 2019 

Image adapted from Khusen Rustamov of Pixabay

Savvy Book – The Girl in Red

Chapter 1 – The Half-Girlfriend

Savvy Style – This Is It

This is it – the moment that you’ve all been waiting for!

The final scenes from the slow reveals, of my cheap-as-chips alternatives to Princess Beatrice’s floral frock, as featured in photos celebrating her recent engagement.

Here goes …

First, the £10 and something pence dress, ordered from Unbranded on ebay …

One cannot deny how stylish this is, especially when upgraded to a Summer-mourning-Autumn-going-on-Winter look, courtesy of: black leggings (Asda), black lace-up boots (Clarks) and a cerise-pink beret (probably Dorothy Perkins or Top Shop, back in the day, i.e. when I was very youthful!). Oh, and I mustn’t forget the sunglasses – brown-tinted-bifocals from Boots! I even managed to overcome the very-large-40″ bust of this plus-size dress, by a neat knot at the waist (it was not for nothing, that I was an over-zealous Girl Guide – again, back in the day!).

And the downsides?

The waist knot came undone when I went out for a modelling shoot with my washing line, as did the triple knot of my bootlaces! Clarks! Why can’t you kit your boots out with the old-fashioned-flat laces, rather than the new-fangled round ones that just don’t do the job? The round ones always work themselves undone and end up in either 1) the cat poo beneath my washing line or 2) one, or more, of the numerous cowpats on the water meadows so loved by Thomas Gainsborough (and, yes, I do believe that he went in for the bigger picture – not just for cowpat close-ups!).

The upsides?

The Unbranded dress looks fab with a variety of hat styles, in a variety of locations and, even better, if one has ginger hair – Harry and Ed, select your floral dress (has to be below £10 something!) and bond with Jay Cool!

 

And now for the second slow-reveal finale! Remember, the £6 dress from TU, the anyone-can-wear-it Sainsbury’s brand?

Get ready ….

I love this! It’s predominantly purple (my twin-favourite colour (red being the other!)), it can be dressed down, dressed up, or simply presented with an Unbranded curtain for a  backdrop.

So versatile!

Better rush if you want the TU dress – bought it about a week ago in the sales! But, if it’s the 40″ bust number you’re after, you may still be in luck! I’m guessing that these are probably made to order from an enterprising individual with her (his?) own sewing machine, and bust sizes just keep on going up and up and up …

As for me? I’m changing back into my purple Primark t-shirt, my comfy ballerina-style pumps (Clarks – you’ll have to buy two pairs to get the look!), and then I’ll be settling down with a cup of Stockwell & Co. to read Christina Henry’s ‘Lost Boy’ (which I have to say has got off to a rather sinister start, having already given me the heebie-jeebies!).

img_20191009_101039-3

Toilet! Where are you?

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, 10th October, 2019

Savvy Style – Raining Flowers

Savvy Style – Princess Cool

Savvy Style – Bag a Princess!

Savvy Book – The Girl With All The Gifts

I picked up ‘The Girl With All The Gifts’, thinking it must a biography of my childhood, amazed that, somewhat belatedly, I had achieved recognition – even if only as a work of fiction!

But, alas, the reality turned out to be pretty grim. Far from achieving recognition, in M. R. Carey‘s story, I, along with the rest of my kind (were there ever any others?), had been gobbled up by a new master species of upgraded sproglings (can one be gobbled up, i.e. past tense, and still be able to read?)!

I guess that my old-pre-gobbled-up self couldn’t really complain about it – being a middle-aged vegetarian, I would hardly have been able to mingle in with the flesh-devouring sproglings. Neither would I have been a likely candidate for the post of Lab Assistant to the very endearing, scientist, Caroline Caldwell, who captures the sproglings for the purpose of ‘separating’ their ‘brains from’ their ‘skulls’:

‘She does it quickly and methodically, and she gets the brain out in one piece, with minimal tissue damage. She’s reached the point now where she could almost do it in her sleep.’ (p.41)

Besides which, then my pre-digested self was incredibly clumsy, so there was no way I could have performed any sort of precision surgery in my sleep.

If you are the squeamish sort, it’s probably best to avoid this particular read. I relay to you, now, what happened when my very squeamish and God-fearing mother picked it up on one of her visits.

____________________

“What is that awful book you’ve left next to my bed?” 

“Oh you mean, the M. R. Carey novel? It’s so good! You should read it!”

“It’s disgusting – not my type of book at all!”

“You haven’t been reading it then?”

“Well, I picked it up because I’d just finished my Catherine Cookson, and could hardly believe what I the content! Disgusting! Horrible!”

“You won’t be reading anymore then?”

“Certainly not!”

THE NEXT MORNING

“I finished that book – and it didn’t get any better! Disgusting! How could anyone think it up?”

“You won’t be reading any more M.R. Carey novels then?”

“Is there another one? Is it a sequel? What happened to …?”

“You don’t want to know!”

“No, it really was awful, but …..”

_________________

As I said, readers, if you’re in any way squeamish, it’s best not to …

“Mum, have you borrowed M. R. Carey’s ‘Fellside’?”

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, October 2019

Image adapted from khamkhor from Pixabay

Please do read a taster of my own WIP dystopian novel, ‘The Wall’. Likes and comments would be much appreciated!

 

Savvily-Serious Poem – Lift Lines

Inspired by the words of Christina Henry, in her novel, ‘The Girl in Red’:

‘.. a cloak made of tired that pressed down on her shoulders and made her neck droop.’ (p.32)

And by my memory of  lamp I once owned, in the shape of a lady wearing a crinoline dress – a lady whose undergarments had been replaced by a lightbulb! Needless to say, my father confiscated the said lamp, deeming it to be unsafe – when the good lady’s skirts showed signs of scorching!

Life Lines

Studying the lines in my neck, I see that

at this moment,

they fold down, each one overlapping the one below, as

they compete for one title.

The droopiest one makes it .. all the way

down to the

ground and this is

wonderful.

In my new crinoline skirt, I look and feel …

divine – all of me, held up –

held up and lit up!

Lit up and shining, glowing – a beacon for lives

lived, living and loving.

Lives loving all that is the future.

Lines that droop, lift and revive me.

 

 

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, October 2019

Image adapted from DarkWorkX from Pixabay

 

Please read, like and comment on:

Silly Poem – One In Before Midnight

Chapter 1 – The Half-Girlfriend

Savvy Style – Ginger Legs

Savvy Book – The Girl in Red

Finished it!

A tragically-wonderful walk through the woods with a girl going by the name of Red.

Tragic, because in the aftermath of a devastating disease, a young woman travels on alone to her Grandmother’s house, as she bravely finds strategies to cope with thoughts of the various family members she was forced to leave behind.

As Red alternates between strategies of avoidance, distraction and confrontation, her resilience overcomes numerous obstacles – in her determination to, once again, taste Grandmother’s home-baked bread.

En route, Red forges some wonderful friendships (and enemies), some fleeting, some more permanent. Can enemies be wonderful? Yes, if their characters have been created by Christina Henry!

This is a fascinating read, somewhat reminiscent of Harold Fry’s journey to reconnect with his old friend, Queenie Hennessy.

If you are a fan of the non-fiction genre of travel writing, but feel the need for a taste of something to stimulate the old imagination, go for it!

‘The Girl in Red’can be purchased from Waterstones, as can Rachel Joyce’s ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’ , as can another of my favourite travel-fantasy books – ‘The Hobbit’ by J R Tolkien (nothing to do with why I now live in a cave!), as can … (1)

Now, to continue on my own reading and writing journey …

 

 

Do join me … by reading some sample chapters from my forthcoming family history book, ‘From The Myddle, To Everywhere, And Back Again’.

And, a sample of my forthcoming ‘‘Not So-Secret Diary of a Newly-Qualified Teacher’.

And, a sample from my forthcoming dystopian bestseller, ‘The Wall’!

And, …

Okay, you have me there – I’m only working on three books at present. Somebody out there, please tell me, which journey should I be focusing on getting to the end of first?

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, October 2019

 

Disclaimer: Should you choose to purchase a book from Waterstones, via one of my links, I will receive a small commission at no extra cost to yourself.

(1) … for something a little more light-hearted,  ‘A Walk in The Woods’, by Bill Bryson, my all-time non-fiction travel writer!

 

P.S. My favourite quote from ‘The Girl in Red’, and very likely a stimulus for my next poem: 

‘Red sighed then, not wanting to stand up. She was just so tired. She’d never known a person could be so tired before everything had happened but it was like a cloak on her all the time now, a cloak made of tired that pressed down on her shoulders and made her neck droop.’ (p.35)

 

 

Silly Poem – One In Before Midnight

Before Midnight arrived, I met the One,

but, on the strike of 12, I fled,

leaving behind not myself, but my shoe,

complete with a note, saying

‘Do not pursue!’

 

And, after Midnight’s departure, I struck

up

with the next One.

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, 8th October, 2019

Image by Moshe Harosh from Pixabay

Serious Poem – Forth From Afar

Savvy Books – Old and Wise

Savvy Style – Raining Flowers

 

Chapter 1 – The Half-Girlfriend

Rose Howard: The Half-Girlfriend

It wasn’t easy, being rid of her Englishness, but she had to try. Otherwise, all she had striven for, and all that she had lost – all ambition and anguish, and the energy she had expended in getting to this point, to where she stood now, would have been for nothing. She was nearly there, almost a Euro- Scot, and she would never, never be a Nothing.

Rose Howard felt a gentle tug on the bottom of her right-trouser leg.

“Come on down now, Rose! Your shift is up – it’s time for Morag to takeover!”

It was her half-boyfriend, Bruce.

She was one of the lucky ones, one of the select group of the English defectors; the majority of the Euro-Scot boys claimed they’d rather be dead, than seen even just talking to one of her kind, to a girl who had come over from the other side of The Wall. But Bruce? Bruce, she’d known for a long time. Bruce was different!

__________________________________________

It had been obvious from the off that Bruce was something else, something and someone different to the English boys she’d known previously. It had been the year 2017, three years before The Wall

Grace had been at a sleepover that weekend. At first, Rose had been jealous. Why had Grace, just two years older than herself, been invited to a sleepover? And why hadn’t Rose been invited as well? Rose had always gone everywhere with her big sister. She and Grace were inseparable!

In an attempt to console her, Rose’s father had dragged her along to some kind of a party, with the promise of a buffet and balloons. Only it wasn’t the kind of party Rose had been looking forward to. It was a political party conference, a grown-ups’ parley about English ties! And Rose, had been deposited in the adjoining buffet room, in loci parentis to a sleeping Alfie. Following a quick see-you-again-very-shortly hug, Mr Howard and his tickle-Alfie-in-the-face tie, had tossed themselves into the parley!

But Alfie, being Alfie, awakened to the goings on by an itch, had soon made his objections known! Rose had abandoned her drawing pad and pencils and, unable to think what else to do, plucked her baby brother out of his pram and sat down with him for a cuddle. It didn’t do the trick. Alfie’s crying turned into the sound of a howling wolf cub. Please, God, Rose muttered. Please, God, help! Tell me what to do! Should I take Alfie to Daddy? God listened. God appeared, in the form of a boy. Jesus?

“Wit yer doing with that bawlin’ wee bairn? Where’s yer maw[1]?”

“He hasn’t done a wee! I’d know if he had. I’d smell it!

“Aye?”

“I said that Alfie hasn’t done a wee! He’s a good baby. He’s my brother and I’m looking after him. And, anyway, what’s a maw?”

“Your mother! Where’s your mother? And why yer stuck with a bairn?”

“I don’t have a bear. I’m six – too old for cuddly toys. My mother’s dead and Alfie hasn’t done a wee!”

“But you do have a bairn – you’re holding him and he’s making a right din!”

“I’ve already told you. Alfie’s a baby, not a bear or a barn, and he can’t help being noisy. He’s bored. I’m bored.”

“Aye, me too! Here, I ken what to do!”

And with that, the boy who turned out not to be Jesus and who spoke funny, lowered himself down to her level, sat cross-legged on the floor next to her and stuck his pinky into Alfie’s bawling mouth. Silence. Within minutes, Alfie had closed his eyes and was fast asleep.

Bruce was better than God. Bruce was amazing. He was the only boy Rose had ever known to take an interest in her baby brother, and the only boy who didn’t seem to care that she was just a girl. Since the day of the conference, they had been firm friends. And, with their parents’ permission, they had exchanged contact details and kept in touch. Bruce regularly emailed her with photos of his home in Scotland, and Rose had responded by sending copies of some of her flower drawings. Sometimes, Bruce even sent her photos of flowers he’d spotted in Scotland, so that she could identify them and the details to her scrap book.

How naïve she had been, how young and innocent. But, even if she had understood, back then, how much her life was about to change, there was nothing she could have done about it. For that debate, titled ‘Should England break ties with Europe?’ had, within the space of just twelve years, reduced England – shrunken it – transformed it into nothing. Transformed the people into Nothings. The people. Grace. Grace and Alfie. No.

No, she must try. Try not to think about her siblings. Try not to think about how she had failed them; failed to bring them with her. For now, she must focus on her goal. She must gain full admittance. Must become – indispensable.

But then? Then, after The Wall, with Rose being on the wrong side of it, everything had changed.

Still, she was here now. Ten years after The Wall, and thanks to Bruce, she had made it! And, once it had been confirmed that she could stay – once the DNA results had been returned showing that she was 11% Scottish – Bruce had (at last) confessed his true feelings for her. He no longer wanted to be just Rose’s best friend; he wanted to date her, even wanted her to be part of his own family someday.

And now?

Now, she felt proud – proud to be Bruce’s half-girlfriend. One day, hopefully soon, Rose would become his full-girlfriend, but that would only happen if she could proved herself fully to the Euro-Scot Keeper and be deemed worthy of full-status as one of them. At that point, Rose would finally be able to rename herself, to cleanse herself of the last vestige of her birthland. She’d already chosen the name – pending approval, she wanted to be referred to as Thistle[2] – prickly, formidable and, most importantly, loyal!

_________________________________________

“Rose, Rose! Quit your dramin’[3] and come down to the groond![4]

“Hold on a moment!” Rose responded to Bruce, jerking the cloth of her trousers up to regain her foothold. “Morag can wait! I wasn’t daydreaming! thought I just saw something. A movement in the copse over there, a telling shadow, perhaps something hiding in the undergrowth!”

“Okay, Rose! I’m coming on up to back you up. If it’s a Nothing, we’ll have it soon enough!”

“No need for back up – I can handle it!” And with that, Rose pulled back her slingshot and fired into the copse.

“Just a rabbit!” she proclaimed. “Seems the Nothings do have some food supplies after all!”

“Ha, not for long! I’m going over to grab it. Rabbit soup?”

“No! It’s not worth the risk – if you’re caught, they’ll eat you alive. Bunch of savages, the lot of them. And, anyway, that’s all by the by. I saw a rabbit. I didn’t hit it. It got away. How else did I know what it was?”

“Damn, Rose! Why didn’t you let me come up? I could have tried out my arch’ry graith[5]!”

“I take it you are referring to your Great-Something-Grandfather’s bow and arrows set?”

“Yeah, but you need to shake off that language, Rose – you know you do! You know we’re supposed to use the old Scottish terms now. Dinnae[6] go get yerself lifted[7]! We didn’t break free from English rule, from that loser Horace, for nothing!”

“By the English, I take it that you mean the Nothings. Or, in using the old terms, are we allowed, now, to dispense with the new?”

“Rose? Do I detect a hint of sarcasm in your tone? You want to watch out. I thought you were desperate to be accepted by the Euro-Scot Guards, to be a fully-fledged Border Control Officer? If that’s really the case, you’re going to have to dispense with that sort of humour. It won’t go down well at all! In fact, I’d say it was a very English sort of a humour. Harsh, unfeeling and, if I may say so, rather controlling!”

“Oh, rather! Tally ho! Spiffing!”

“Rose! Shut it! I mean it!”

“Oh, come on! Can’t I have a joke with you anymore? Remember, before The Wall went up? You know, the time when we used to have a laugh together?”

“Yeah, but that was then. This is now. Things have changed, tightened up. You know that, Rose. Come on, you know that more than anyone! Anyway, let’s stop bickering. You know how I feel about you Rose, and you need to get down from there. It’s Morag’s turn to keep watch!”

“No!” Rose retorted. “No, like you said, I need to prove myself. I’ve only been up here a couple of hours. I can do more – carry on – and complete the shift!”

“Rose, get down here! Now! You’re just in training. Two hours maximum – it’s the law!”

Clambering down via the footholds, Rose arrived at ground level. Bruce wrapped his arms around her. He loved her. Didn’t he?

“Come on,” he said, in his best tone of reassurance. “Come on, I know you’re impatient; know that you want to just get on with the job, and miss out the training part, and I’ve no doubt you’re more than capable of holding your own. But we’ve all had to go through the procedures, all of us, even me – me, Bruce Douglas! You’ll get there soon enough!”

“Okay, okay. I get it! I’ll try harder. I promise I will! But, Bruce?”

“Yep!”

“Don’t be offended, but I feel I ought to let you know that you don’t sound so Scottish yourself these days! In fact, I’d say you sounded rather splendidly English – sorry I mean Nothing! Doesn’t the ‘Euro-Scot Acclimatisation Glossary’ state that yep or yes or even yeah should be replaced with aye?”

“Yep! Sorry, I mean aye! Okay, so you have a point. One up to you! I blame that dastardly posh boarding school father, I mean da[8], made me go to up in Elgin. Didn’t do his research. Who’d have thought it would have such strong links to Germany and the Anglo-Saxons? The Headmaster got his comeuppance, though – in the end!

Anyway,” Bruce laughed. “I’m pure done in and we’re agreed that ma heid’s mince[9]. So shut yer geggie[10] and come on home now!”

Success! Rose was chuffed that to see a glimpse of the old Bruce return – the one who laughed and joked with her. But home? Rose wasn’t entirely sure whether she was entitled, yet, to call Bruce’s abode home. Sure, Bruce’s family, owned it, as they did all the other dwelling-places in the borderland counties of Scotland. And, sure, Bruce had taken her in, accepted her as his half-girlfriend, persuaded his brothers to trust her, to let her in to the Douglas clan, albeit by them reluctantly.

But Rose wanted more. Wanted more that to be just a half of something: a half-girlfriend, a half-Euro-Scot, a half-border-officer. And recently, she’d been having so many doubts that she felt half-convinced Bruce more-than-likely doubted her too. No matter that he might say otherwise, with all his ‘you ken’ this and ‘you ken’ that persuasions. Did she know Bruce? Really know him?

Wrapped up in the arms of her half-boyfriend, Rose had been surprised not to feel the usual surge of adrenalin, of electricity, of …

… gratitude.

Yes, that was it! Gratitude.

Just lately, Rose had started to question herself, and her convictions. Did she love Bruce really? Did she love him enough to give up everything for him – for everything Douglas? For everything that could still be said to be Scottish? Or was she just grateful to him; grateful for his part in her escape, for giving her a way out, a route out of what was left of the country the Howards had once been proud to call home?

Pushing her thoughts away, defying them to intrude upon her again, Rose pulled herself – her thoughts – together. She had to love him enough. She just had to. She had no choice – not now! Not after all she had been through, that they had been through, to get here – to get to where she stood now. For Rose Howard, unlike all the other Howards, stood on the right side of The Wall. She stood for everything the Scottish people stood for. She stood, with them, for everything that was Scottish and, even more importantly, for everything that was now a part of the New Europe.

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, The Silly-Savvy Salopian, 8th October 2019

Image by PublicDomainPictures from Pixabay

Chapter 2 being published on 9th October 2019 – Watch this space for link to the other side of The Wall!

N.B. This is a work-in-progress novel so please do get in touch with your comments! If you spot any typos, or inconsistencies, let me know! The beauty of WordPress being that errors can be easily corrected and the post updated. Read, like, comment and follow …

[1] maw = mum

[2] The thistle is the national symbol of Scotland, as opposed to the rose – the symbol of England.

[3] dramin’ = daydreaming

[4] groond = ground

[5] graith = archery equipment or bow and arrows set

[6] dinnae – don’t

[7] lifted – arrested by authority figures, e.g. police

[8] da = father or dad

[9] ma heid’s mince = my head’s all mixed up

[10] shut yer geggie = shut your cake hole, i.e. shut up!

 

Book Reviews by Jay Cool:

Chapter 2 – The Half-Sister

Savvy Books – Old and Wise

Savvy Book – Burn

Savvy Book – The Legacy

Savvy Style – Ginger Legs

Just about to order a pair of ‘Rustic Ginger’ tights to match my hair colour. I’m also guessing that they will look fab with the £6 dress I bought from Sainsbury’s autumn sale.

The very friendly lady at the til joked that it might be next summer before I could wear my bargain, but I disagree. With a pair of thick tights, and plenty of over-layers, i.e. black cardigan from Primark and denim-jacket from New Look, I reckon I can work the look for Autumn.

 

Sure, it’s a bit chilly today, but the sun popped out for a stint earlier this morning, giving me all the dose of happiness medicine I need to hold onto enough summer spirit to see me through to Christmas (assisted en route by a good book and a glass, or two, of red)!

Christmas? It can’t be nearly time to think about that – surely – can it? Just a minute ago it was last Christmas, and the unfinished family jigsaw’s still under my settee! Sorry, Mrs Hinch, that may well mean the carpet in that area hasn’t seen the hose of my vacuum cleaner for some time!

Christmas? What am I on about – it’s still just October! Sure, I can get away with that Sainsbury’s dress – once the Rustic Ginger tights have arrived!

Watch this space for a Rustic Ginger photo shoot …

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, October 2019

Disclaimer: I receive a small commission for sales (none to date – help me out here!) from ‘Love Leggings’ and ‘Waterstones’, but am not on commission from Sainsbury’s!

 

Please read, like and comment on my other posts:

Serious Poem – Electrical Slices

Savvy Style – On The Flat

Silly-Savvy Miss Lacks Lustre

Serious Poem – Forth From Afar

Feeling fear, I

worry about my fearlessness,

faring all that rolls forth from afar.

Forthright, I go,

floundering  forward.

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, October 2019

 

Image courtesy of Pixabay.com

 

Serious Poem – Tuesday Morning

Savvy Tips – Net it!

Savvy Book – The Legacy

Serious Poem – Tuesday Morning

Sun, brightness, clear

mind.

Bubbling up, I splash myself into movement –

calling, bouncing, buoying

others.

Grabbing, peeling, wolfing

banana maintenance.

And oats to last.

Stop, sit, stop, sink.

Temple invasion.

Oh.

 

Copyright owned by Jay Cool, 8th October, 2019

 
Image by Elena Tishkova from Pixabay
 

Serious Poem – Monday Morning

Savvy Books – Old and Wise

Silly Poem – The Truth