Is your life worth £500?

I have a bike. I am reasonably attached to this bike, so when, last week, I was too drunk to ride it home after an evening out in Covent Garden, I decided to go and reclaim it. ‘It will be long gone,’ My friend warned me ominously. ‘It won’t,’ I replied cheerfully.

My bike, like most people’s newborns, is attractive only to me. It is a dilapidated, rusty object, which, until an hour ago, had lethal metal spikes poking out of its wheels. (I had been meaning to remove these for some time, but not being the type of person who carries her own personal tool kit, had singularly failed to do so).

As expected, it was waiting as patiently as the fat child with asthma during netball trials, exactly where I had left it. I unlocked it and hopped on. As I have already said, I am reasonably attached to my bike. I am, not, however, like most mothers of newborns, blind to its faults.

I trundled off down Shaftesbury Avenue, and had to stop almost immediately. ‘Now,’ I said firmly to my silent bike. ‘You are not the most comfortable of bikes. But even you are not usually so infuriatingly painful to ride. I believe something is wrong.’ I wheeled my truculent bike to the closest bike store.

I have taken my bike to bike stores before.

It is a little like taking a terribly badly behaved puppy to Crufts. ‘Oh dear,’ The bike man said, shaking his head in dismay. He wandered over to take a closer look, running his eyes up and down my bike in a disapproving yet lascivious way. ‘This won’t do at all.’

I waited patiently while he explained the myriad of ways I was certain to die, painfully and publicly, unless I replaced every inch of my bike. ‘Is your life not worth £500?’ He asked finally. It seems I took a little too long to consider this, because he sent me off to see the mechanics. Meekly, I wheeled my bike down to the workshop below.

‘There’s something wrong with my back wheel,’ I said softly, suitably abashed. ‘And your colleague thinks I should rebuild every part of my bike.’ (I had decided to keep my newfound existential crisis to myself at that point.) The bike mechanic looked at my back wheel carefully. ‘You have a puncture,’ He explained. ‘I can replace the inner tube for a fiver.’

There are several points to be taken from this story, but I believe the most important is that, sometimes, especially when it’s 3 days before payday, a life is not worth £500, but could probably be measured out at £18.50 (after council tax has been paid). And also that it’s always worth going downstairs.*

*This is not true. Sometimes downstairs is a) someone else’s flat b) the creepy underground laundry room c) the part of the house they decided not to heat.

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No need to be naked

This morning, I had a meeting with Nike. Initially, I misread the email, so thought the meeting was from 8.30-10pm. i had been told I could bring a guest, and, unable to find anyone decent who wanted to be awake at such a hideously early hour, I invited my Mother.

As it turns out, it was less of a ‘meeting’, and more of a ‘Train to Run’ class, with an ‘Nike Master Trainer’. This was annoying for several reasons, the first being that I had to stop laughing at my Mother for turning up in running kit.

The class was a Women’s only training group.

I personally can think of few more competitive, judgemental situations a person can put themselves in. Luckily, I had brought my Mother. We had a perfectly splendid time, falling over in the balance drills, yelling in the strength portion, laughing while we failed to understand the partner training bit.

By the end of the hour, we had achieved the perfect ‘instantaneous-move-from-lounging-to-doing-the-proper-exercise-because-the-coach-was-approaching’ manoeuvre, and were feeling tremendously proud of ourselves.

‘Quick,’ I whispered to my Mother. ‘There’s going to be a rush on the showers.’ In a burst of speed unseen in the actual running class, we dashed from the studio to the changing rooms.

I grabbed my towel, my Mother grabbed someone else’s washbag, and we hopped into the showers. ‘This is not my washbag,’ My Mother called out to me. ‘I know,’ I replied, slathering myself with the fancy free shampoo attached to the wall. ‘I thought you were upgrading.’ Apparently she was not, so she hopped back out of the shower and returned with her own toiletries. (I personally feel that everyone uses far too many toiletries. There is only one thing you need in a shower. Shampoo. It is the all-purpose washer. Think of it as the ketchup of washing. It goes on everything).

Due to my Mother’s unusual approach to other people’s possessions, I had plenty of time, bored, fully-dressed, in the female changing room. Here are my observations:

1. No-one is able to look elegant when trying to remove their knickers whilst holding a towel around their waist. It is the most ungainly and attention-drawing position of all poses, despite the forced nonchalance of the performer’s face.

2. There are women who, if I looked like them naked, I would never ever bother to clothe myself, but instead occasionally, Anna Karenina like, drape the odd fur across my exquisite body if I felt chilly, yet are bizarrely shy in public changing rooms. (Naturally, as they hid in the corners and tried to change without an ounce of skin being on show, I sought to put them at ease by staring at them and smiling broadly).

3. I am all for body-confidence. However, there simply is no need to lovingly blow-dry one’s hair stark naked. it is almost impossible for the women who are sharing your mirror to apply their eye-liner in a straight line.

4. Not enough women, despite my continued, bullying efforts, are wearing matching underwear. I am considering spot checks on the tube in the morning. I am pretty sure Boris will back me.

5. My Mother takes forever to get showered and dressed. I am not sure if this is because she is tall, or because she is old. Either way, I had very much outstayed my ‘casual observer’ position by the time we left the changing room. I hope you all enjoy these insights, because I’m not sure I’ll be in a position to make any more anytime soon.

 

Gil took us through drills from Nike Training Club’s new running specific classes. These specialised drills will be available for all runners free through the Nike Training Club app and Live classes around the UK –
http://www.facebook.com/NikeTrainingClubUK/app_129270587159812

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Eloise: my model for child-rearing

Yesterday, I acquired a 6-year old. I know the 6-year old, and her Mother was completely happy for me to take her, and I held her hand carefully when we crossed roads, and only permitted skipping on wide empty pavements, and she had a perfectly lovely time- only I’m not sure anyone else did.

I took her to the Godiva chocolate cafe at Harrods, because I have learnt almost everything I know about child-rearing from the Eloise books. It’s London Chocolate Week (which, as my friend pointed out rather unkindly, makes very little material difference to my own life, as ‘every week is chocolate week for you’), so it all seemed to make sense.

I dragged my unsuspecting friend along with us- who, to her credit, was extremely gracious and sanguine when greeted with my new, skipping appendage.

Godiva have just launched their new Christmas range, so obviously I tried them all. ‘I’m not a big fan of fancy chocolates,’ I mumbled with my mouth full of honey and salt-flavoured chocolate. ‘No,’ My friend agreed. ‘I can see that.’ I beckoned a waiter over. (It is amazing how easy it is to order when you are with a beautiful child. People are so smiley). ‘Could I please have a hot chocolate?’ I asked. ‘I don’t want a hot chocolate,’ The 6-year old piped up. The waiter looked concerned. ‘Oh no,’ I replied robustly. ‘Ignore that one entirely. She’s 6-years old.’

My hot chocolate arrived, and was placed in front of the 6-year old, until I swiftly removed it and placed it in front of myself. Except for the fact that Godiva is too fancy to put whipped cream on their hot chocolate, this was the best hot chocolate I have ever had in London. (The 6-year old, I’m sure, would agree if I had let her have any).

Equally, their chocolates aren’t half bad. ‘Ooh,’ The 6-year old begged. ‘Can we get that one?’ She pointed to their Royal Swarovski Box- an enormous, suede case covered in sparkling crystals in the Godiva emblem. ‘Look,’ She pointed out helpfully, opening its drawers. ‘There are loads of chocolates in this one.’ ‘Don’t be so childish,’ I snapped, using my spoon to dig out the very best bit of melted chocolate at the bottom of my hot chocolate. ‘If we get anything, it’s this milk chocolate reindeer figurine. Look at it, all smiley and wearing a scarf.’ ‘That’s not a scarf,’ The child replied loudly. ‘That’s white chocolate.’

As I said, she  had a perfectly lovely time.

(This article first appeared here: thelondonlook.com)

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Here is my advice. (Spoiler: it is great)

I am 27 years old today, a fact I am inordinately proud of. At this landmark birthday (I’m just going to keep saying it until people start agreeing with me), it behoves me to dispense some wisdom. Here it is:

1. Do not ask for butter on your sandwiches unless you like your butter in huge, undigestible lumps, clinging valiantly onto the surface of your bread. The only person who will dispense butter as you personally like it is yourself. This also applies to mayonnaise and branson pickle. Repeat after me: condiments are a private affair. Do not out-source them.

2. If you want to feel better about yourself, do not go to the gym. There are always impossibly beautiful people in the gym. I suggest McDonalds. That way, you are not surrounded by supermodels and you have some chips.

3. Sometimes, people don’t like you. This is irritating, and it is tempting to ‘encourage’ them to see the error of their ways by contacting them incessantly. Do not.

4. If you are an ‘early-morning person’ stay away from the rest of us. Perhaps you could use the extra time to make us breakfast, and serve it to us in a respectful, unsmiling silence. Basically, even if you ‘love’ the morning, try as hard as possible to act as though you don’t. Trust me, it’ll be much easier to survive.

5. Smile at strangers.

But not the scary-looking ones who are talking to themselves, or the very old ones, who might think you are about to attack them. Only smile at young, attractive people. I think what I’m saying is: flirt. (But not with oldies. Or, despite this photo- animals).

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Recently, I went with a very good friend to Chekov’s 3 Sisters, at the Young Vic. My friend had organised the tickets (second row, no big deal), so I was in charge of organising the dinner. I very much like to eat out, but I have 2 very specific requirements of restaurants.

1. I usually bike everywhere, so arrive for almost every social occasion desperately thirsty. Any restaurant who bothers to bring me the ‘vat of water’ I have begged for quickly will instantly rise in my opinion. (Which, obviously, is extremely important to them, I imagine).

2. I am happy to spend money in restaurants. I am fully aware of mark-ups, and price hiking, and overheads and so on, and I still think that the whole arrangement is splendid- the idea that you get to choose exactly what you want, that someone else makes it, and you don’t have to clean up afterwards. I am only unhappy if I leave a restaurant still hungry.

With these requirements in mind, I made my dinner choice carefully. Having been the victim of several ‘serious discussions’ from my housemates on why ‘it is not normal to eat an entire loaf of bread for dinner’, I plumped for sushi.

I was first taken to YO! Sushi years and years ago, when it had just opened its first London restaurant. To this day, I am saddened by its later removal of the original drinks-delivery robots, who used to beep alarmingly whenever an unsuspecting customer stood in their path.

Luckily, they have continued to serve their food on those awesome conveyor belts, so, swallowing sadness about my lost robot friend, I decided to book us in there.

‘I need these,’ I told my friend, as we sat down. ‘These little at-the-table fizzy and still water taps. You know how some people have those boiling water taps? These are so much better.’ My friend mumbled something indistinctly through a mouthful of salmon sashimi. ‘You’re right,’ I continued. ‘I should start eating.’

When I was first taken to YO! Sushi I gleefully told my Mother that, here, finally, was a restaurant where you were encouraged to play with your food. ‘Look,’ I exclaimed happily. ‘The dishes go around on the conveyor belt, and you snatch them off and eat them! The person with the most empty dishes at the end wins.’ Although my Mother tried valiantly to convince me that this was in fact not correct, I still approach YO! Sushi in the same manner.

I had:

Salmon sashimi (very good, and they have lots of fresh ginger on the table which is awesome, because often Japanese restaurants are very stingy with the fresh ginger and you keep having to ask for it and they hate you and spit in your green tea).

 Chicken Gyoza (which, taking the advice of my friend, I ordered hot from the waiter) were excellent, and as somewhat of a dumpling expert, I feel confident in saying this. (I have become a dumpling expert through an arduous process of trial-and-error, shovelling dumplings into my face weekly all over the world. I am also a toothbrushing expert, but there is no need to show off).

Cucumber maki (this was while I was considering which teriyaki I wanted, and pondering the noodle question- sort of like a palate-cleanser, really. Only with more rice).

Mixed (prawn, salmon and tuna) nigri (just to check whether I preferred nigri (long horizontal rice, slice of fresh fish on top) or maki (rice in roll, filling inside, wrapped in seaweed).

Beef nigri (I was still undecided).

Soft-shell crab inside-out roll (because I love love love soft shell crab and don’t like to play by the rules- once I even ate an after-eight mint for breakfast. It tasted horrible, but that might have had more to do with it being breakfast time than being before 8pm).

Fresh crab and mango inside-out roll (because it is terribly important to eat fresh fruit, and this concoction of Fresh crab, avocado and mayonnaise wrapped with fresh mango with keta caviar looked absurdly delicious).

I would have eaten more (I am always exceptionally keen to win) but we had to pop off and see the play. My friend ate some things too, but as her end tower of stacked empty plates was far shorter than mine, I’m not sure it really counts.

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In which I am wise

On Monday, I left the house early, feeling smug. I had carefully packed my gym bag, and left it un-missably opposite the front door. I had a plan. I was going to go to work, then pop home and rush straight out to the gym. ‘Golly,’ I thought as I slammed my front door. ‘It is so easy to be organised. Why do people make such a fuss about it?’

It wasn’t until I got to work that I realised I had forgotten my keys.

Luckily, my housemate (junior doctor, coming off 3 consecutive night-shifts) was at home, lounging around in her bed, so I quickly ran the front door bell upon my return until she stumbled downstairs to let me in.

Yesterday, I was at the theatre, so naturally I ignored the several missed calls I received from both my housemate and my little sister. I arrived home cheerfully just before midnight. ‘Hello!’ I yelled as I entered our flat. ‘I see you guys missed me. But I am home now.’ I was greeted with a frosty silence by my little sister, who had apparently had to curtail her own evening to deliver keys to my housemate, who had forgotten hers. ‘Well,’ I said briskly. ‘That’s very silly.’ My housemate made a facial expression which I believe embodied both her contrition and her quiet appreciation of my words of wisdom.

Today, I forgot my keys.

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I have a spare-therapist

Last night I was at Book Slam, where I sat between a woman who was the doppelganger of my therapist (which was both comforting and disconcerting, and made it difficult to stop staring at her) and my housemate. One of the many excellent things about Book Slam is that they give you bar/toilet breaks between each performance. I don’t mean to sound self-centred, but it really is perfectly designed for me.

‘OK,’ I said, as Simon Armitage left the stage to thunderous applause. ‘If you go to the bar, I’ll pop to the loo, and we’ll meet back here.’ ‘But I need the loo too,’ My housemate complained. She looked at me warningly as I leaned towards my spare-therapist (total stranger who had the misfortune to be sharing our table) to ask her to go to the bar. ‘OK,’ I grumbled. ‘We can go to the loo together.’

I would now like to briefly explain the layout of our flat. You enter by the front door (I know, we’re boringly conformist. But when I get rich I’m making myself a pirate bed, so there’s still hope), and straight ahead is the living room. If you turn right you pass the shower, then the kitchen, and then the toilet.

The bedrooms are on the left- though calling my little sister’s room a ‘bedroom’ suggests she keeps it in a state fit for human habitation, rather than as a perfect replica of a crack den. It is not a large flat (though, luckily, my bedroom is), but the acoustics are such that it is moderately difficult to hear people unless you are in the same room as them. Or, as we quickly discovered, you wee with the loo door open. (Our flat can be quickly defined by its occupants’ most prominent features- an endless supply of wine, a penchant for inappropriate jokes, and a terrible fear of missing out).

‘I’m so pleased I got to hear Simon Armitage live,’ My housemate said happily as we popped to the loo.

‘You know his poem, ‘Poem’?’ ‘Yes,’ I replied, undoing my belt in preparation for my wee. ‘Well, I think about it a lot,’ My housemate continued. She then launched into an excellently intimate and well-thought out discussion of how she has used this poem when faced with difficult patients. ‘Everyone has a right to life, She declaimed loudly as we entered the toilet. To be greeted by the startled face of a fellow loo-goer, who was not expecting two, variously dressed women to burst into the public toilet, apparently discussing abortion.

‘It is possible,’ I mused to my housemate as we left the toilet hurriedly. ‘That we need to work on boundaries. At least, I’m pretty sure that’s what my actual therapist would say.’ We headed back to our table, where my housemate hastily prevented me from asking the stranger I had appropriated as my spare-therapist what she thought.

http://www.bookslam.com/

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In which I defeat both waitrose and my Mother

My Mother is reasonably annoying. She’s a lawyer, purportedly, but since we’ve all grown up and left home she’s just ‘had so much extra time’ (which, I have pointed out it might be wise not to say quite so loudly in front of her clients), and has been amusing herself by popping off on little courses.

‘What are you doing this week?’ I asked, feigning interest politely during our phone call. ‘I’m going on a little cooking course,’ My Mother told me cheerily. ‘Hmm,’ I replied vaguely. As it turns out, my Mother’s ‘little cookery course’ was a Cordon Bleu Technique Class; a week-long program of the cuisine techniques used in restaurants all over the world. 
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Awkwardly, the week after this ‘little cookery course’ my Mother came to dinner at mine. ‘What the hell am I going to cook?’ I wailed to my little sister, who was smugly getting ready for her date, cunningly organised for the evening our Mother was coming over.

It was imperative that I cooked something hugely impressive. I was hindered only by a lack of time, lack of money and lack of culinary skill. I could not fail. I am often intimidated in Waitrose, so I made sure to prepare carefully for my expedition.

‘Why have you googled ‘cheap meat that seems expensive”?’

My little sister asked, popping into my bedroom to ‘borrow’ a necklace. ‘And ‘fancy puddings that are easy to make’?’

My pre-expedition reconnaissance completed, I strode into Waitrose with purpose.

‘Game?’ I asked the nearest Waitrose employee politely. He looked at me in fear, and scampered off.

‘Well,’ I thought to myself huffily. ‘The customer service sure has changed around here.’ I made my way to the game aisle by myself.

 

The trouble with game is that it all looks terribly unappealing before it is cooked. It may be low fat, cheap and delicious, but there’s no getting around the fact that, uncooked, it has none of the antiseptic spotlessness of chicken, or pork. I wandered miserably up and down the Waitrose aisle. It seemed that, despite my extensive preparation, Waitrose had once again defeated me. Suddenly, in the black pit of my despair, I noticed a light blue glimmer of hope. It seems some very thoughtful chap, or possibly 2 very thoughtful chaps, David Oliver (it’s always frightfully hard to tell with posh people. I spent a weekend firmly addressing my host as Bunko, until someone pointed out that this was the name of his dog), have taken all the fuss out of game- creating these great pasta sauces and slow-cooked stews.
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‘Well,’ I thought to myself smugly. ‘It seems you haven’t won yet, Waitrose.’

I had a main, which conceivably I could have cooked myself- and I had carefully picked the rabbit and flageolet beans dish, so that I could distract my Mother with the minutely detailed account of the time I skinned a rabbit. I briefly considered pretending that I had actually shot this rabbit, but decided that I would only resort to that if conversation ran dry. Now all I needed was a starter, and some kind of sweet, and I might very well get away with the whole caper.

The starter proved beyond me, in the end, but my Mother arrived laden with wine and crisps, so it didn’t matter. She complimented me on the ‘delicious and innovative’ main, and oohed in delight when, insisting she ‘simply couldn’t eat another thing’, I brought out the Amelia Rope chocolate. ‘Oh no,’ She insisted as I flashily unwrapped the chocolate from their VV Rouleux ribbons. ‘You know I don’t like chocolate.’ (My Mother is, despite her ability to pay the bill, one of the worst people to go to restaurants with. She refuses, point-blank to order a pudding, no matter how much you explain how little you want to share yours, and then snarfs 3/4 of whatever you have ordered for yourself). 
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‘It’s dark lime and sea salt,’ I said casually. ‘Oh, and this one is pale hazelnut and sea salt. That one’s coffee.’ My Mother wavered for a second. ‘Well,’ She said, reaching forward to break off 3/4 of the chocolate bar. ‘I’m pretty sure good quality chocolate doesn’t have that many calories.’ I stared at her in confusion. ‘Yes, darling,’ She continued happily. ‘In the same way that expensive wine won’t give you a hangover. That’s why I brought so many bottles. Well, that, and I thought your meal would be inedible.’

I glared at my Mother across the table. ‘But darling,’ She went on. ‘It wasn’t! It was quite lovely. Now let me tell you about my next little course…’

 

(this article originally appeared at http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/lucy-karsten/in-which-i-defeat-both-wa_b_1914102.html)

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Vodka for my ladies, whiskey for a grown man

There’s a line in Childish Gambino’s ‘Bonfire’:

Vodka for my ladies, whiskey for a grown man.

Now, I am the last person to turn down a vodka tonic, but, in the spirit of breaking down gender barriers and feminism everywhere, I decided that this would be the year that I finally got to grips with whiskey.

I began, naturally, by raiding my Father’s liquor cabinet. ‘Mmm,’ I thought as I felt a pleasant warmth spread out through my chest. ‘I see why the chaps have been keeping this to themselves.’ Irritatingly, my Father discovered my ‘testing’ before I could properly continue my whiskey education.

Luckily, the kind chaps at The Singleton of Dufftown have created the ideal classroom for me to continue my drunken feminist quest.

The Singleton of Dufftown, the makers of what many consider the ‘the single best tasting single malt whiskey’ have created, for 2 days only, The Singleton Taste Room- a room, which they believe, provides the perfect tasting environment.

They have asked renowned chef Mark Hix to create the perfect dish, the DJ Gilles Peterson to provide the perfect soundtrack, the designer Max Lamb is in charge of perfect chairs and other design features- in short, they have created, with attention to every sensory detail imaginable, the perfect place for anyone, novice or expert, to enjoy whiskey.

Oh- and it’s free to enter, and they’re handing out free glasses of Singleton whiskey.

Sometimes, just sometimes, it seems that the world genuinely cares about my own little projects. And whiskey, of course.

The Singleton Taste Room, 27th & 28th September 6pm – 9pm, FREE ENTRY, 33 Portland Place, London. W1B 1QE.

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That which is allowed to Jupiter is not allowed to an ox

My Father’s favourite saying, when we were growing up, was this:

‘Quod licet Jovis, non licet bovis.’

(That which is allowed to Jupiter is not allowed to an ox).

My Mother’s was, ‘Stop it.’

I have been thinking about ‘do as I say, not as I do’ a lot recently, mostly because I have been spending my mornings with a new 6 year old friend. (Sorry- ‘a new almost 7 year old’ friend). I believe, with the fervour and enthusiasm of anyone who doesn’t actually have children, that all moments are ‘teachable moments’, and therefore regularly turn innocuous questions about ‘which are good after-school clubs to do’ into searing monologues on gender equality and religious tolerance.

My 6 year old friend puts up with these with the equanimity of someone who is used to ignoring over-enthusiastic adults, and politely waits for me to finish. ‘So, are you going to bring your new micro-scooter over tomorrow?’ She asked yesterday. ‘Certainly,’ I enthused. ‘We can race on them and practise our times tables.’ My friend nodded happily.

It was not until I got home that I realised what a moral quagmire I had stumbled into. I have, proudly and delightedly, recently received a very shiny and speedy-looking adult micro scooter.

What I do not have, however, is a helmet. ‘Just wear your bike helmet,’ My housemate suggested. ‘No,’ I snapped crossly. ‘Scooter helmets are entirely different. They’re a different shape, and colour, and vibe- are you trying to make me look like an idiot?’ 

Which was the wrong thing to say entirely, as I suddenly realised that it didn’t really matter what helmet I was wearing, or how ‘suitable’ it was for the activity. I am a fully-formed adult. I do not need to wear a helmet whilst scooting along happily on my micro-scooter. I also do not need to wear knee-pads when I roller-skate, or sit in a special seat when I’m in a car. Unfortunately, my 6-year old friend does.

‘So just wear the helmet, look like an idiot, and make sure she knows that she must always wear her helmet,’ My little sister suggested. Which sounded like an entirely reasonable suggestion. Until the morning, when I carefully wheeled my micro-scooter outside (these things are valuable, I have been keeping it safely tucked up inside my room- or, as my little sister insinuates, inside my bed- which, obviously, is entirely untrue. It stands by the door, to make sure any burglars or clothes-stealing little sisters are prevented from entering my room) and began to put on my bike helmet.

‘I don’t even rinse fruit,’ I wailed to my little sister, who ignored me entirely and went to work. ‘How does anyone have children and still live the life they want to?’ It was here,in a flash of panic-induced inspiration, that I remembered my own childhood.

‘Quod licit Jovis, non licit bovis,’ I thought happily. ‘And I can begin to teach her Latin at the same time.’

http://www.micro-scooters.co.uk/

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