Author: She Loves London

  • Why Being Bored Is Good For You

    Why Being Bored Is Good For You

    A few days ago I was walking through the city, near St Paul’s.

    And because I had nowhere else to be, I ended up taking a mid-afternoon detour through Postman’s Park.

    I headed to the flower bed in front of all the plaques, parked myself on a bench, and made a conscious effort to just sit and look around.

    And more and more I find it is a conscious effort – I hardly ever just sit and do nothing these days. There’s always a way out.

    Postman’s Park (image: Diamond Geezer)

    How many collective minutes, hours, days, weeks and months do you think we’ve lost to just absently staring at our phones? I asked my housemate that the other day while we were watching TV – well, half watching, you know how it goes.

    Don’t worry, I’m not going to go all “phones are bad, delete your apps, don’t use them” at you – the truth is, I’m not quite sure how I ever navigated London with any success without mine.

    My phone tells me the weather, shows me important dog news, lets me communicate with my friends using only the whale emoji, and on those rare occasions when I venture out of my stomping ground and into south London, it tells me how to get home. Plus, Twitter and Instagram remain my favourite way of not talking when I don’t really feel like it, and not making eye contact with people I want to avoid.

    Phones have become a shortcut, a fast forward, an excuse to be busy. They’re the somewhere else you have to be without actually moving your feet.

    When you live in a big city, phones are pretty much essential. But we also need to give our brains time to stop and drift and think.

    Because I’m not sure I really want to find myself patting around for a little screen whenever I pause or have to wait anywhere, or immediately reaching for it whenever I sit down, or creepily cupping it in my pocket wherever I walk.

    And the truth is, I’ve got this nagging feeling that I think most of us would like to be doing more with our spare time – myself included – and an equally nagging feeling that phones will probably be why most of us won’t.

    So I’m trying to become a bit more conscious and aware of how I’m spending my time, and allow myself to get bored. I want to get to the point where reaching for my phone when I have nothing to do feels weird and ridiculous and odd, instead of the other way around.

    I thought about all this as I sat in Postman’s Park, and listened to the passing traffic, sirens and car horns. I sat, and occasionally wrote down ideas, and got restless. My mind drifted and wondered, and my eyes scanned and watched. A few times, patches of flowers round the edge of the bed quivered, and out popped the nose of a tiny mouse.

    And in contrast to all the other times I’ve sat down to kill some time and ended up distracting myself, by the time I got up and walked off with this post writing itself in my head, I knew exactly where half an hour could go.

    This post originally appeared in my weekly newsletter. Find out more about that badboy here

  • Excuse Me For A Sec While I Raise Some Awareness

    Excuse Me For A Sec While I Raise Some Awareness

    This post originally appeared in my weekly newsletter which is usually about London, or me, or dogs, or all those things at once. Or like this one, something else entirely. You can sign up here.

    Last week, my mum took herself into central London.

    She was looking for the offices of a magazine she subscribes to; I’m not sure exactly why. But she couldn’t find the building, so she got back on the train and came home, and began calling them instead.

    My mum is 67 years old.

    She likes shopping, the mountains, going to the snow centre in Hemel Hempstead, getting her hair done, exhibitions at the RA in Green Park, and concerts at the Royal Albert Hall. Every Saturday at 6pm she’ll go for dinner in Prezzo, and a few months ago – to our collective bafflement – she started going to church.

    My mum and dad looking swish at the Guildhall in 2015

    My mum also has Frontotemporal dementia.

    Which, if you’re not familiar – and I wasn’t, so why would you be – is the official name for Pick’s Disease; the most common form of dementia affecting young people.

    (The one and only upside to dementia, it turns out, is being considered young if you’re under 65).

    She was diagnosed two years ago, but we’d been watching the slow deterioration of her capacity to understand, communicate, and behave in what would be considered a socially acceptable way for a while before that.

    Dementia’s trump card is its slow progression, which is either a blessing or a curse depending on what stage you’re at. It dawdles along for years removing the names of everyday objects and people, steadily chipping away at empathy, tipping into weird and compulsive behaviour. At times, it shifts into a mode I like to call “wtf, you’re making no sense”.

    Essentially, it makes pinpointing the exact moment the person is no longer able to do something a difficult game. And as Pick’s sufferers have little to no awareness that there’s anything seriously wrong, it’s the family who have decide when to allow the person their independence, and when to take it away.

    Before mum was diagnosed, I had an idea of what dementia looked like in my head.

    It had the withered, expressionless face of an eldery person, a mind that forgot how to find their way home, and a body that fell over. It was also clad in beige.

    In reality, mum looks like any other ex-head teacher who’s seven years into retirement. She goes to daily classes at the gym, takes the tube, walks the dog, wears make up – although increasingly dad has to remind her to put it on – and colour co-ordinates her clothes (usually either purple, pink, red or blue).

    She presents as a normal 60-something, but after a couple of minutes of one-way conversation, you’ll realise something’s not quite right.

    If you know what’s wrong, you’ll understand and roll with it.

    If you don’t, you’ll probably do what the staff at the woman’s magazine did, which is start to worry and call 101 to have the police do a check.

    Despite affecting a frankly ridiculous amount of people worldwide, dementia isn’t really talked about that much. Least of all by the family and friends going through it, and rarely by the sufferers themselves – who aren’t always elderly, frail, and forgetting their way.

    September 21st was World Alzheimer’s Day, and September is World Alzheimer’s Month, which sets out to raise awareness of the different types of dementia in all the forms it takes. And that’s why I’m going slightly off topic today and writing this – because the more people who are aware that there are people like my mum around the world, and in this city, the better.

    Because she’ll undoubtedly continue taking herself up to London on errands she can’t explain and we don’t understand. And we’ll continue to let her, as long as it’s safe.

    You can donate money to the Alzheimer’s Society here

  • My First Open House London In Photos. Lots of Photos.

    My First Open House London In Photos. Lots of Photos.

    On Sunday I volunteered at Open House London.

    If you’re not familiar, Open House is a yearly event that most Londoners usually hear about three weeks after it happens. At which point, they’re like “oh god, yeah! I always mean to go to that, is it good?” and you’re like “well it’s meant to be, but I don’t know because I always forget it’s on” and then you both agree to go next year and, that, my friends, is generally the end of that.

    But weirdly a lot of people do remember it’s happening without having to tie themselves to volunteering and thus signing up for weekly e-mails that effectively say, and I’m paraphrasing here, YOU HAVE COMMITTED TO SOMETHING, YOU FLAKY BASTARD: DO NOT FORGET TO TURN UP. In fact, not only do people remember, but they arrive outside the Gherkin at 5am on a Sunday and form an orderly queue.

    And by far the best thing about volunteering – apart from getting to skip the queues, having lots of people be very nice and polite and smiley to you for three hours, and being mistaken for someone who could answer questions like “what are the three crowns on the company’s crest symbolic of?” and “how did they light the rooms in here before electricity?” – was that I got to have a nose around Draper’s Hall before everyone else arrived.

    Much like myself, Draper’s Hall had just undergone its yearly wash and was looking absolutely banging.

    After my shift ended and I’d been fed (seriously, big up Draper’s Hall – that lunch was A+) I set out to visit as many buildings as possible, with the side aim of seeing how many people I could irritate by brandishing my volunteer’s priority badge and walking past them to the front of the queue (answer: at least 4).

    I started small, with St Boltoph’s in Aldgate.

    Then headed down to Lower Thames Street to Custom House.

    Then because I mega like really really old stuff, I went across the road where there were actual, real life, extremely ancient remains of some Roman baths.

    Did you know London had Roman baths?

    I did not.

    But mate, I shit you not. Underneath the city in what is otherwise pretty much a car park, let’s be honest, there they are. Roman Baths:

    Next stop was another one of the livery halls.

    This time, Apothecaries Hall. Where the outside had just been re-painted in an excellent shade of cobalt blue.

    The inside wasn’t too shabby, either.

    And if you were walking down Liverpool Street over the weekend and wondered what the massive queue outside the Andaz Hotel was all about, it was all in aid of this:

    After that, it was about half past four and, bloody hell, my feet were starting to ache.

    That’s the bit no one tells you about Open House: you end up walking for miles and standing a lot and eventually will zone in on anything remotely resembling a seat, even if that seat is a ceremonial chair in a Masonic Temple.

    But by this point in the day, instead of feeling well tired, I’d really got into it.

    Aside from being able to get inside so many extremely good buildings, it felt like a good excuse to just roam the City taking photos.

    So, here’s a truth bomb.

    I usually feel pretty self conscious taking photos in public. Which is weird because these days photos and blogging are pretty much part of the same deal.

    The fact is I’ll often see things I want to take photos of around London, but for whatever reason – either there’s too many people around, or I feel awkward standing there trying to get the right settings, or I just feel embarrassed about getting my camera out in front of people – I’ll let the moment slide by.

    But not today, bitches.

    I think it was partly because everyone else at Open House was doing it – Gorillapods ‘n’ all – and taking their time, and 90% of people who were around had cameras slung round their necks.

    Whatever it was, there were a few occasions where I just stood on the street snapping away without really caring who was watching.

    Two men on a bench were having a good old stare when I was taking this one, which normally would have made me rush it and shuffle on. But on Sunday, I gave them a little wave instead.

    The nosy little bas– 

    And alright, it was also easier because the Square Mile’s verrrrry quiet at the weekend.

    It was nearing 5pm when I found Leadenhall Market pretty much empty, so I stuck around to make the most of that.

    Then I wound my way back to Liverpool Street station past all the high rise offices and glassy Shard wannabes, via that weird building with all its pipes on the outside.

    The Open House closing party didn’t start til 6pm, but by 5 o’clock I was pretty knackered. My first Open House had done me in.

    So in another world first, I actually passed on the offer of free booze and went home.

    I’ll go next year though. Promise.