I was talking to Number One son on the phone today and looking for the TV remote (obviously TV is only tuned into news channel) in the space that is my king size bed. I love my bed, it is my safe space and I spend a lot of time there, musing, writing, talking to myself , eating, reading, raging, crying, laughing and yakking on the phone. Oh I nearly forgot the sleeping and sex bit...how did I manage that?!!
'Stop muttering Ma, it can't be that hard to find' said Number One son.
'Erm...actually it is, there is everything in here apart from a man' I replied.
I imagined him raising his eyes to the ceiling until I listed the contents of my bed.
1. Two Sunday papers complete with magazines (I have an awful Sunday paper habit).
2. Jelly tots, marshmallows, pink smarties and mints, carefully stashed under pillow.
3. Empty bottle of lucozade, half full Evian bottle.
4. Three phones, two mobiles and a cordless landline.
5 Three remotes, one Digi box, one TV and one DVD player.
6. Tissues and make-up bag
7. Three paper backs. Greek travel book, Dictionary and South American travel book.
8. Six Pillows, two cushions, duvet.
9. Electric Blanket
10.One unmentionable item!
See! I have a little trouble finding things. Obviously I dig, said contents, out every day and adore sweet smelling clean bed linen. My mother is responsible for my 'sniffing pillow cases' habit. She came over the other day and said, in her best Hyacinth voice, ' Shall I change your bed darling'. I was a little taken aback as I had just changed it the day before. (note, also sleeping alone)!
I think The Git understands more than most of us. He has an inordinate sense of smell and when my lovely daughter laundered a couple of his skate boarding T-Shirts, he said they smelled funny and could I wash them. Similarly, when my mother washes his shirts he eulogises over the smell. Why? As my mother and daughter use the same stuff?? Hmmm...one of the mysteries of life.
I had a bit of a 'longing' yesterday. I had not seen my older children and grandaugher for a couple of weeks. This was mainly due to the 'shoe and evian water carrier' misbehaving. I had a terrible pang and wanted to kiss them all.
I got into the shoe carrier and threatened it until it started. Joshy got in with his skate board and was very pleased that mummy (how lovely, I am still a mummy....just) was driving him to Truro.
Shoe carrier (under a death threat) did not misbehave and I encountered a welcome commitee that consisted of beautiful, tired daughter and Miss Angelina, in jamas, tutu, sunglasses and Princess high heels. Lots of kisses followed and a joyous short time. Parking is difficult and my heroic dad had driven up from Falmouth to pick Joshy up.
We had perhaps 15 minutes together and Josh went off with Dad. I tracked down number one son. James was just on shift at The Prince William, where he works one night a week. I asked one of the bar maids if James was on shift.
'Who are you' she asked
'His Ma' I replied
'Nah, you are too young' she said.....big smile on my face!
She called James and he was a little stunned but happy to see me.
'Oh you smell famliar James'...me
'You do too Ma'...him
We were both wearing Georgio Armani. I was so happy to give him a hug. I miss him sometimes but happy he is an independant person and living his own life.
As I left, a few of the girls shouted, goodnight James' Ma.
NICE x
Donut Children are Nomadic kids, who travelled the world with their parents. Living a life of a bliss when they were just five... We are all grown up now but long for that life once more.
Tuesday, 19 January 2010
Monday, 18 January 2010
Rolling Up My Sleeves !
Right!, she says rolling up her sleeves! As many of you regular readers know, I have been struggling with the Blogging of late and had a conversation with Mr S about it the other day. He told me that Donut Child was great but that I was still scared to Blog in a more emotive way as I know who is reading it. He set me a challenge. He asked me to Blog honestly and to email it to him, before publishing, for his opinion. I have been Musing about the conversation for the last couple of days and have decided, bugger it! I am soooo... not doing that, in fact I am going to Blog 'honestly' about how I perceive him, publish it and be damned. If he wants me to write full on then he must deal with the consequences. Challenge on, here I go....
I met Mr S on the 4th of October last year. Previous to that we had been talking via MSN and phone as our first contact was on an Internet dating site. We met at a country pub and had a meal together. He was so different to any of the guys I had met and I did not know quite how to act with him. In fact if I am honest, I was pretty nervous around him and I usually only act like that around guys I really fancy. Consequently, I had too much to drink and he was unbelievably patient with me. The next morning he woke me and asked if I wanted anything to eat. What struck me was that he didn't just go down for breakfast and leave it at that, he came back up, ruffled my hair and offered to bring me breakfast in bed. He slowly revealed himself as a very caring individual.
We spent a couple of hours talking and I got my train home. At that moment in time I did not realise that I had met the most wonderful guy, who was destined to become one of my best friends and I cannot imagine my life without him. Mr S is an anomaly in this world. I suppose he could be perceived as dangerous but he has a strong moral code made up of honesty, forgiveness, humility and standing tall in anothers shoes. This is why he is such a huge force in my life.
Ok, ok sycophantic bit over. We do have our moments, I have actually put the phone down on him on a number of occasions, being a stressy knickers and furious because he is always right and I HATE being wrong! He deals with my tantrums, instantly forgives me and reverts to the norm. Not many guys can do that.
What makes this guy so special?, I hear you ask. He has a photographic memory, which I struggle to keep up with. I am a bit of a live wire myself and have never met a guy that could keep up with me on all levels. My brain is a bloody peanut compared to his amazing abilities. That has its own frustrations but he is good for me as if I get lazy, he immediately pulls me up short and puts me back on track.
We have a lot in common. We are both insomniacs and its good too talk to someone in the wee small hours. We both Blog and I inspired him to create another more fun, elemental Blog. We spark off each other and share a love of Greek mythology and food. I know I have to re-learn most of what I have forgotten about Greek mythology. We both have the ability to 'scan read'. He does it as a matter of course, me when I choose to. He recognizes my love of literature and languages and wishes that he could read and lose himself in a book as I do. His photographic memory denies this pleasure to him. Most of our 'fun' arguments are about words and grammar. He has studied Greek and Latin and I will shout at him until I am blue in the face about origins of words.
Oh....I forgot to mention, he is a talented Engineer and can do anything he desires. Lay a floor, build a kitchen, re-wire or plumb a house, fix a boiler and teach little old me to hot wire a phone socket! My car was vandalised. He said, no problem and arrived on my doorstep with the glass for the back window and fixed it. He can panel beat, respray and service a car, strip an engine....etc...etc... I think you get the picture. He builds computers and often wanders round to friends to sort their 'pute problems out....Phew, I am exhausted.
He challenges, frustrates, exhausts and irritates me....and I bloody love it! We all need friends like Mr S. His only problem is a penchant for beautiful girls and I have lots of fun teasing him about his 'Harem'. Luckily they are in safe hands....
Be Kind to those around you.
Muse x
I met Mr S on the 4th of October last year. Previous to that we had been talking via MSN and phone as our first contact was on an Internet dating site. We met at a country pub and had a meal together. He was so different to any of the guys I had met and I did not know quite how to act with him. In fact if I am honest, I was pretty nervous around him and I usually only act like that around guys I really fancy. Consequently, I had too much to drink and he was unbelievably patient with me. The next morning he woke me and asked if I wanted anything to eat. What struck me was that he didn't just go down for breakfast and leave it at that, he came back up, ruffled my hair and offered to bring me breakfast in bed. He slowly revealed himself as a very caring individual.
We spent a couple of hours talking and I got my train home. At that moment in time I did not realise that I had met the most wonderful guy, who was destined to become one of my best friends and I cannot imagine my life without him. Mr S is an anomaly in this world. I suppose he could be perceived as dangerous but he has a strong moral code made up of honesty, forgiveness, humility and standing tall in anothers shoes. This is why he is such a huge force in my life.
Ok, ok sycophantic bit over. We do have our moments, I have actually put the phone down on him on a number of occasions, being a stressy knickers and furious because he is always right and I HATE being wrong! He deals with my tantrums, instantly forgives me and reverts to the norm. Not many guys can do that.
What makes this guy so special?, I hear you ask. He has a photographic memory, which I struggle to keep up with. I am a bit of a live wire myself and have never met a guy that could keep up with me on all levels. My brain is a bloody peanut compared to his amazing abilities. That has its own frustrations but he is good for me as if I get lazy, he immediately pulls me up short and puts me back on track.
We have a lot in common. We are both insomniacs and its good too talk to someone in the wee small hours. We both Blog and I inspired him to create another more fun, elemental Blog. We spark off each other and share a love of Greek mythology and food. I know I have to re-learn most of what I have forgotten about Greek mythology. We both have the ability to 'scan read'. He does it as a matter of course, me when I choose to. He recognizes my love of literature and languages and wishes that he could read and lose himself in a book as I do. His photographic memory denies this pleasure to him. Most of our 'fun' arguments are about words and grammar. He has studied Greek and Latin and I will shout at him until I am blue in the face about origins of words.
Oh....I forgot to mention, he is a talented Engineer and can do anything he desires. Lay a floor, build a kitchen, re-wire or plumb a house, fix a boiler and teach little old me to hot wire a phone socket! My car was vandalised. He said, no problem and arrived on my doorstep with the glass for the back window and fixed it. He can panel beat, respray and service a car, strip an engine....etc...etc... I think you get the picture. He builds computers and often wanders round to friends to sort their 'pute problems out....Phew, I am exhausted.
He challenges, frustrates, exhausts and irritates me....and I bloody love it! We all need friends like Mr S. His only problem is a penchant for beautiful girls and I have lots of fun teasing him about his 'Harem'. Luckily they are in safe hands....
Be Kind to those around you.
Muse x
Friday, 15 January 2010
When We Were Five....
I rang my friend Marie last night to ask her some questions about our wonderful childhood days in Famagusta, Cyprus when we were five. What brought this on was a conversation with Mr S and how we perceive death as a child. It may be a bit of a long one...but I hope it is worth the read.
We lived in a block of flats next to The Grecian Hotel in Famagusta. The flats were right on the beach, lucky us! It was 1968, my mother had four children at the time, she was 24 years old. I was five, the terrible twins two and a half and Christian just a baby. We lived on the second floor and Marie, her mum, Pauline and Dad, Tom and siblings lived some 8 flights up from us.
The beach was beautiful, white sand, calm, clear, blue seas and you often had difficulty telling the sea from the sky. The heat haze shimmering over the sand and very few tourists lazing away the day. We finished school at lunchtime and at the age of five we swam like little Gobi's and were often allowed on the sand, being watched carefully by our mothers, pegging out washing on their balconies. My mother would lower a bucket, containing my lunch, to me on the beach but we were never allowed to swim unless our parents were there. Then my father would come off shift, pull off his uniform and put on his trunks, put me on his back and swim out with me and show me the wonders of this new underwater world through his snorkel and mask. We would dive down together, me grabbing a little shell, him, able to stay down much longer and coming up with much more interesting things.
An idyllic life, apart from when someone got into trouble. The tourists were mainly German with a sprinkling of well off English (this was 1968 after all). The red flags were posted when it was too dangerous to swim. There may have been a bit of an offshore breeze but the water looked the same. Clear and calm but danger lurked within, as Famagusta beach was well known for its little eddies and undercurrents. They were extremely powerful and if you got dragged into one, you had to fight for survival. We had, had this drummed into us by our parents, the tourists did not have that knowledge.
I suppose my first memory of someone in trouble was my mum shouting at me to grab the twins and follow her. My father and Tom worked different shifts so if dad was on shift then Tom was probably sleeping off nights. Mum would run up all 8 flights dragging us four behind her and call for Tom to help as someone was in trouble. Tom would roll out of bed, pull on a pair of shorts and go after the poor man/woman/child in trouble. He (as I remember) was a strong swimmer. A stocky but not a particularly big guy. I talked to mum about it today as I wanted to know how Pauline felt about it at the time and she did admit to Pauline being a little upset on only one occaision. There was another guy, I think his name was Ian, perhaps a Navy diver and he went out with Tom a few times.
The German tourists were I suppose 'voyeurs', they watched but did not step in to help, whatever nationality was in trouble. Some days Tom and Ian saved people (plus other guys from our flats) and other days the people that got into trouble drowned. Marie and I both remember a body being dragged from those beautiful blue waters. Trouble is....we did not realise what was happening.
A body, pulled fresh from the sea, much like a fish, looked like it was sleeping. Our mothers busy, content in the knowledge that we were on the sand and would never dare to swim in the sea without supervision. Us, looking at the dead body with no emotion. They looked like they were asleep, peaceful and content. We did not realise what death was. I think I saw about seven dead bodies by the age of six. Do not forget, we had no TV very little radio and no knowledge of the world outside our happy existence.
Marie and I explored why we felt like that in our phone call last night. We decided that we were wrapped in the cotton wool, that WAS a forces child. The 'was' is in big letters because most forces children today do not experience those Halcyon days that we had. We spent most of our young life on 'Camp' and did not have to deal with any crime, old age or sickness. If any person committed a crime, dared to get sick or old, they were shipped off to the UK. So the body pulled from the sea meant nothing to us because we did not understand the cycle of life.
There is a moral to this story. I was so naive that I married a Forces guy, thinking all Forces guy's were perfect. I was in my 20's and finally realised a couple of years later that crime, death and old age existed within our small world. I think the term 'Cotton Wool Children', is apt. Hey, it wasn't a bad life....think about the beach!
Namaste and respect to My Uncle Tom
Muse x
We lived in a block of flats next to The Grecian Hotel in Famagusta. The flats were right on the beach, lucky us! It was 1968, my mother had four children at the time, she was 24 years old. I was five, the terrible twins two and a half and Christian just a baby. We lived on the second floor and Marie, her mum, Pauline and Dad, Tom and siblings lived some 8 flights up from us.
The beach was beautiful, white sand, calm, clear, blue seas and you often had difficulty telling the sea from the sky. The heat haze shimmering over the sand and very few tourists lazing away the day. We finished school at lunchtime and at the age of five we swam like little Gobi's and were often allowed on the sand, being watched carefully by our mothers, pegging out washing on their balconies. My mother would lower a bucket, containing my lunch, to me on the beach but we were never allowed to swim unless our parents were there. Then my father would come off shift, pull off his uniform and put on his trunks, put me on his back and swim out with me and show me the wonders of this new underwater world through his snorkel and mask. We would dive down together, me grabbing a little shell, him, able to stay down much longer and coming up with much more interesting things.
An idyllic life, apart from when someone got into trouble. The tourists were mainly German with a sprinkling of well off English (this was 1968 after all). The red flags were posted when it was too dangerous to swim. There may have been a bit of an offshore breeze but the water looked the same. Clear and calm but danger lurked within, as Famagusta beach was well known for its little eddies and undercurrents. They were extremely powerful and if you got dragged into one, you had to fight for survival. We had, had this drummed into us by our parents, the tourists did not have that knowledge.
I suppose my first memory of someone in trouble was my mum shouting at me to grab the twins and follow her. My father and Tom worked different shifts so if dad was on shift then Tom was probably sleeping off nights. Mum would run up all 8 flights dragging us four behind her and call for Tom to help as someone was in trouble. Tom would roll out of bed, pull on a pair of shorts and go after the poor man/woman/child in trouble. He (as I remember) was a strong swimmer. A stocky but not a particularly big guy. I talked to mum about it today as I wanted to know how Pauline felt about it at the time and she did admit to Pauline being a little upset on only one occaision. There was another guy, I think his name was Ian, perhaps a Navy diver and he went out with Tom a few times.
The German tourists were I suppose 'voyeurs', they watched but did not step in to help, whatever nationality was in trouble. Some days Tom and Ian saved people (plus other guys from our flats) and other days the people that got into trouble drowned. Marie and I both remember a body being dragged from those beautiful blue waters. Trouble is....we did not realise what was happening.
A body, pulled fresh from the sea, much like a fish, looked like it was sleeping. Our mothers busy, content in the knowledge that we were on the sand and would never dare to swim in the sea without supervision. Us, looking at the dead body with no emotion. They looked like they were asleep, peaceful and content. We did not realise what death was. I think I saw about seven dead bodies by the age of six. Do not forget, we had no TV very little radio and no knowledge of the world outside our happy existence.
Marie and I explored why we felt like that in our phone call last night. We decided that we were wrapped in the cotton wool, that WAS a forces child. The 'was' is in big letters because most forces children today do not experience those Halcyon days that we had. We spent most of our young life on 'Camp' and did not have to deal with any crime, old age or sickness. If any person committed a crime, dared to get sick or old, they were shipped off to the UK. So the body pulled from the sea meant nothing to us because we did not understand the cycle of life.
There is a moral to this story. I was so naive that I married a Forces guy, thinking all Forces guy's were perfect. I was in my 20's and finally realised a couple of years later that crime, death and old age existed within our small world. I think the term 'Cotton Wool Children', is apt. Hey, it wasn't a bad life....think about the beach!
Namaste and respect to My Uncle Tom
Muse x
Monday, 11 January 2010
The Dating game Part 2!
Mr S got a flea in his ear the other night. He accused me of being 'reclusive' because I said I wasn't attending the upcoming school reunion (various reasons and a clash of dates) AND, horror of horrors... I have not dated for a while. Talk about waving a Red Rag at a Bull! Consequently, I have taken a deep breath and joined another dating site! So there! Mr S, stickin' my tongue out at you!
As I write this, I have 68 mails sitting unopened, in my mailbox on the site that shall not be named. Oh god, here we go again. Close friends of mine who know me well, are quite aware that I am perfectly capable of getting myself into trouble without even going out of the door. Also, do I have the energy to do this all over again? The British dating game is an exhausting, bewildering, bitch of a minefield.
Oh, and don't think that dating elsewhere in the world is any easier. Apparently there are 200,000 more single men than women in New York. How brutal is that? Frankly I would rather pull my own teeth out than be a single girl in that city. In Tokyo, you should take a business card to 'Gokon' dates, which are essentially blind group dates, there is a huge list of do's and dont's for these meetings and it seems there is safety in numbers. Just as well , when there are 27,704,000 ish of you! I could go on musing about the dating habits of the world but I want to swing this in another direction.
Five years ago, if you admitted to using an internet dating site, even your nearest and dearest friends would snigger into their drinks. So what has changed? The explosion of the WWW is what. The introduction of broadband and the huge explosion of communication technology. All of this has contributed to a shift in our socialising habits. When I was a young woman (clutching my zimmer here), we had no email, no text messages, no mobile phones. It was letter, landline or face to face. I cannot believe this is a bad thing. I have discussed the downsides of this in a previous blog but would to prefer to embrace rather than erase the phenomenon that has become our world.
So here I am, on the edge of Bodmin Moor, stuck in the snow, yet able to share my thoughts with you on this blog, able to text or phone any place in the world. I am also able to see photo's and profiles of prospective suitors, eliciting such comments as, Mmmm, too young but hot, oh he is gorgeous, Nah, you are joking and I am so not going there... I am behaving exactly as predicted, first impressions count. It is just a shame that you cannot make eye contact, watch how the guy moves and take a breath of his aftershave.
Still the same minefield, different rules, wish me luck.
Muse x
As I write this, I have 68 mails sitting unopened, in my mailbox on the site that shall not be named. Oh god, here we go again. Close friends of mine who know me well, are quite aware that I am perfectly capable of getting myself into trouble without even going out of the door. Also, do I have the energy to do this all over again? The British dating game is an exhausting, bewildering, bitch of a minefield.
Oh, and don't think that dating elsewhere in the world is any easier. Apparently there are 200,000 more single men than women in New York. How brutal is that? Frankly I would rather pull my own teeth out than be a single girl in that city. In Tokyo, you should take a business card to 'Gokon' dates, which are essentially blind group dates, there is a huge list of do's and dont's for these meetings and it seems there is safety in numbers. Just as well , when there are 27,704,000 ish of you! I could go on musing about the dating habits of the world but I want to swing this in another direction.
Five years ago, if you admitted to using an internet dating site, even your nearest and dearest friends would snigger into their drinks. So what has changed? The explosion of the WWW is what. The introduction of broadband and the huge explosion of communication technology. All of this has contributed to a shift in our socialising habits. When I was a young woman (clutching my zimmer here), we had no email, no text messages, no mobile phones. It was letter, landline or face to face. I cannot believe this is a bad thing. I have discussed the downsides of this in a previous blog but would to prefer to embrace rather than erase the phenomenon that has become our world.
So here I am, on the edge of Bodmin Moor, stuck in the snow, yet able to share my thoughts with you on this blog, able to text or phone any place in the world. I am also able to see photo's and profiles of prospective suitors, eliciting such comments as, Mmmm, too young but hot, oh he is gorgeous, Nah, you are joking and I am so not going there... I am behaving exactly as predicted, first impressions count. It is just a shame that you cannot make eye contact, watch how the guy moves and take a breath of his aftershave.
Still the same minefield, different rules, wish me luck.
Muse x
Monday, 4 January 2010
The Minefield that is Blogging.
I am struggling with Donut Child (yet again) as I worry my daily life and thoughts may be too boring to share with you, consequently I do not blog as often as if I was writing this as a private memoir. I was inspired to write tonight having just watched a programme on BBC4 entitled 'Dear Diary'.
The programme explored some famous diarists and questioned their ability to be honest within their private journals. It made me question my own capability. Did I censure my own writing, pre blog, or did I let it run free? I have to say, it is much easier to write for oneself than to share with others, but nowhere near as exciting. Yeah! vanity publishing it is but then, oh bugger and double bugger, I have opened a real can of worms now and as tired as I am, must carry on.
I have explored this before, as has my blogger friend Mr S. He tried to make me realise, at the time of his blog, that even my private handwritten journals, would be read by someone, during my lifetime or posthumously. I was having none of it at the time. My wonderful excuse for blogging publicly was my broken elbow, can't write for very long you see....
After watching the programme and thinking back on my conversations with Mr S on this, I can only conclude that he (as per bloody usual) is spot on. I really felt, in my heart that my journals, were for my eyes only and would only be read after my death. To be brutally honest, whilst they provided me with a great sense of comfort and solace at the time of writing and the joy of revisiting them, they now represent a huge threat to my privacy. Sitting there, little ticking time bombs. I guard them jealously, if I lose one down the back of the sofa etc...I lie awake at night trying to remember where I left the damn thing. Right! Time to pull my socks up, invest in a lock box, complete with booby traps, vile curses and a bit of voodoo for good measure and put them away. Perhaps, then I can give my full attention to Donut Child.
Problem is, Donut Child has its own dilemmas. I desperately wanted this to be a big piece of shining honesty, much like myself. I am often described as being too honest by my family of Southerners and blunt but 'made that way' by those North of the border.
Mr S, encouraged me to create another blog, to be totally honest about the darker (but infinitely more interesting) side of me. I have failed miserably and have shelved it for the time being. I know why I have failed. I SHARED and maybe I can do that to a certain extent with Donut Child but a hard lesson has been learned. Some of me, must be kept, ONLY for me.
I hope to find a solution by being more honest on Donut Child and creating another blog, for my eyes only. Having said all that, I love, love, love blogging, reading others and being part of a fantastic blogging community. Who needs TV, there are so many interesting people out there, all writing down their thoughts, hopes and dreams. Even if one person reads your words, its is a massive blast and everyone should do it. It does not matter about your written word, grotty grammar or perilous punctuation, if it helps you to see a place more clearly, then that is what Blogging is all about.
Happy New Year to all you readers and fellow bloggers.... take a deep breath and enjoy the ride that is 2010!
The programme explored some famous diarists and questioned their ability to be honest within their private journals. It made me question my own capability. Did I censure my own writing, pre blog, or did I let it run free? I have to say, it is much easier to write for oneself than to share with others, but nowhere near as exciting. Yeah! vanity publishing it is but then, oh bugger and double bugger, I have opened a real can of worms now and as tired as I am, must carry on.
I have explored this before, as has my blogger friend Mr S. He tried to make me realise, at the time of his blog, that even my private handwritten journals, would be read by someone, during my lifetime or posthumously. I was having none of it at the time. My wonderful excuse for blogging publicly was my broken elbow, can't write for very long you see....
After watching the programme and thinking back on my conversations with Mr S on this, I can only conclude that he (as per bloody usual) is spot on. I really felt, in my heart that my journals, were for my eyes only and would only be read after my death. To be brutally honest, whilst they provided me with a great sense of comfort and solace at the time of writing and the joy of revisiting them, they now represent a huge threat to my privacy. Sitting there, little ticking time bombs. I guard them jealously, if I lose one down the back of the sofa etc...I lie awake at night trying to remember where I left the damn thing. Right! Time to pull my socks up, invest in a lock box, complete with booby traps, vile curses and a bit of voodoo for good measure and put them away. Perhaps, then I can give my full attention to Donut Child.
Problem is, Donut Child has its own dilemmas. I desperately wanted this to be a big piece of shining honesty, much like myself. I am often described as being too honest by my family of Southerners and blunt but 'made that way' by those North of the border.
Mr S, encouraged me to create another blog, to be totally honest about the darker (but infinitely more interesting) side of me. I have failed miserably and have shelved it for the time being. I know why I have failed. I SHARED and maybe I can do that to a certain extent with Donut Child but a hard lesson has been learned. Some of me, must be kept, ONLY for me.
I hope to find a solution by being more honest on Donut Child and creating another blog, for my eyes only. Having said all that, I love, love, love blogging, reading others and being part of a fantastic blogging community. Who needs TV, there are so many interesting people out there, all writing down their thoughts, hopes and dreams. Even if one person reads your words, its is a massive blast and everyone should do it. It does not matter about your written word, grotty grammar or perilous punctuation, if it helps you to see a place more clearly, then that is what Blogging is all about.
Happy New Year to all you readers and fellow bloggers.... take a deep breath and enjoy the ride that is 2010!
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