The slightly prententious title to this week’s piece is not me trying to come across all earnest – it’s actually a lyric from the Arctic Monkeys song Anyways (which you can listen to below).
I’ll be honest, I have been finding things a bit difficult recently. My anxiety remains, thankfully, at arm’s length but it is its ugly brother depression that’s been gathering in a cloud over me.
That voice inside my head has been getting louder. ‘You’re useless’. ‘No one likes you’. ‘God, you’re such a loner’. I’ve been trying to use the techniques I was taught during my CBT sessions to shut that voice out, but it’s been difficult. Things came to a head on Sunday when work felt like an almost impossible task. I wasn’t fit for human consumption. I hid myself away in the kiosk. On the positive side, with some help, I got through it and was much better on Monday and Tuesday. But it can be jarring to think that the darkness can encroach at any moment. You’re never safe from it.
So much for Project Happy, eh? Well, anyway, that can wait for now. The best thing I can do is look after myself right now and tackle it again when I’m feeling brighter.
A book I recommend: I don’t read a lot of fiction but recently I’ve been engrossed in Danny Wallace’s 2012 novel Charlotte Street. I found it in a charity shop. The protagonist, Jason, sees a girl drop what she was carrying onto the pavement while she’s getting into a taxi and stops to help pick her things up. They exchange a lingering smile, then the taxi drives away. But Jason doesn’t notice that he’s still holding something of hers – a disposable camera. And from there an obsession begins!
A song I’m into: Stockport indie band Blossoms released their new single this week, a collaboration with Jungle called ‘What Can I Say After I’m Sorry?’ – the video for it features Everton manager Sean Dyche. Yep. I’ve been playing it on repeat since it came out and constantly have the chorus stuck in my head. Listen below!
If you’ve made it this far, thanks very much for reading and I’ll see you again soon.
While anxiety still constantly lurks behind me and attacks at random moments, I am dealing with it better than I could before all of this happened. I’ve learned to acknowledge the beginnings of a panic attack but not let it take over. It hasn’t got any more pleasant, but it is a step forward.
I am now in my second week back at work, still doing shorter hours for the time being, and while I have got back into the swing of things quite well and been blown away by the warm welcome from my colleagues, there is a growing feeling that I won’t be truly able to move on from this episode unless I make a fresh start elsewhere.
Gressenhall
I got a museum pass for Christmas, allowing me unlimited entry to ten of Norfolk’s museums for a whole year. I love museums, so this was a great gift for me, but with the first quarter of my year being taken up by The Darkness (the illness, not the Lowestoft rock band from the 2000s) I hadn’t had the chance to use it until last Wednesday.
I went to Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse, only three miles or so from home, for a wander around. The building itself, which looms over you as you drive between Dereham and North Elmham, has always given me the creeps. Knowing the hardship that the people in a workhouse went through – separated from their families, worked to the bone and given hardly enough food to live on – makes me feel uneasy. But it was interesting to learn about how the place operated and its joint purpose as a museum of rural life means it has a few buildings laid out as shops from decades past, as well as a room made up like it was the 1950s.
Across the road there is the farm with horses, cows, sheep and pigs. Being spring, there were a couple of lambs and some recently born piglets to see. When I sent my mum the photo of the piglets, she replied ‘aww, little bacon rolls’. Mother! Here is a gallery of some photos I took on the day.
If you fancy a day out, whether you’re alone like lonely old me, or want somewhere to go with the family, I heartily recommend Gressenhall. A museum pass is only £42.30 a year for an adult if you pay by direct debit, which is great value when you consider one visit to Gressenhall would cost you £16.10.
Half Man Half Biscuit
I’ve been listening to Half Man Half Biscuit a lot lately. They are a Merseyside rock band who have been together for 40 years this year and are known for their great riffs and brilliantly funny lyrics. Right up my street. What about this for a line?
There’s a man with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets
National Shite Day by Half Man Half Biscuit
Pure poetry. Why not give them a try?
I think that will do for today. It’s good to be back! Thanks for reading if you made it this far.
My step-dad, my mum and me. Oxburgh Hall, Saturday 24th February 2024.
Without wishing to sound as pretentious as this might seem, it feels like I am saying hello again to myself as much as to anyone who has chosen to read this. The fact I feel able to sit and type this is a triumph in itself; not so long ago I wouldn’t have been capable of it.
I have always been prone to periods of low mood. To feeling like I am struggling to stay afloat. I don’t know why that is, and I certainly don’t relish it. I don’t want to wallow in self-pity. I wish I could be on a consistently upward trajectory, with a clearly defined goal to aspire to that would mean I had been successful. But is anyone’s life really like that? If I have learned anything over the last two months, it’s that everyone has their peaks and their troughs. Some have learned how to deal with them better than others, but only through experience. No one is immune.
This is the first time I have ever had a prolonged absence from work. I had never before had a sick note signed by a doctor. In thirteen years of work, I have had no more than four consecutive days off with illness – once enforced with Covid and once because of flu (not just a bad cold, the full blown flu). I even carried on when I had shingles at one point.
On a Tuesday morning in early January, I knew I couldn’t continue. I was gone. Going to work, no, leaving the house – no, actually, getting out of bed seemed like an impossible task. I couldn’t identify one particular incident that had led to this moment. I think now that it was like a boiler constantly having its pressure raised until it all got too much and gave in. A culmination of many things. In truth, I had been having panic attacks for over a year already. They nearly always happened at work, and when they appeared I would have to take myself away. I would have to find an excuse to be away from people. I’d deliberately find a task that meant I had to put distance between myself and everyone else.
I couldn’t explain why they were happening. It was the same job I had been doing for all my working life, it was a job I knew how to do, and suddenly I felt incapable, I felt weak, I felt like I was letting people down. The thought of my early shift on a Friday morning would render most of Thursday a waste of time. I couldn’t enjoy my day off because I was full of anxiety about work the next day. It took some persuasion to get me to see a doctor, because I thought I would be wasting their time. But I wasn’t, of course. Doctors have seen this all before. I was put on some medication, pointed towards talking therapies and offered time off work. That was in April.
I didn’t take the sick note then because I didn’t feel like I needed it. It wasn’t that bad. And other than making a few cursory glances at the wellbeing assistance offered by work, I didn’t pursue the therapy route. That seemed like crossing some sort of line. Like I would be admitting defeat. I am wrong about all of this, obviously, and kind of despise myself for ever thinking in this way. But I can’t deny it.
I carried on. I carried on right through the busy Christmas period that is always hell when you work in a supermarket. I dealt with having to work Christmas Eve, Boxing Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. I guess I thought when January came it would be easier. People wouldn’t need so much stuff, either because they had enough already or because they were skint. It didn’t get noticeably quieter, though, and on two consecutive Sundays I found myself on the verge of walking out. I was walking through the corridors, hoping to bump into a manager. If I had, I would have told them that I was going home there and then. My ability to cope had been exhausted. I didn’t go home, though, and I talked myself out of running away. I got through the day and would collapse into a chair in the living room, completely done in, falling asleep at 5.30pm. At 31 years of age!
Maybe I should have spotted that things were coming to a head. That Tuesday morning came and I could not continue. I had to withdraw. I officially went off sick, was referred to the Norfolk Wellbeing Service by a mental health nurse and put on different medication. My mum took me to a garden centre, just to get me out of the house, and I was so restless with anxiety while sat in the cafe, a place that should be calm and comfortable, that it felt ridiculous. It was clear that I would not be able to go to work on the Friday, so we asked for a sick note. I was expecting maybe a couple of weeks, so was surprised when the doctor had put a whole month on the certificate.
The first few days, indeed the first few weeks of the note, were unpleasant to say the least. I was consumed by guilt, shame and paranoia. Guilt that I was letting my colleagues down, shame that I’d let myself give in and paranoia that some people wouldn’t believe that I was as bad as I said I was. I developed a habit of waking with a start at 4am, always 4am without fail, usually from a nightmare where I had gone back to work and it had become apparent it was too early. Even minor errands like going to the local shop seemed terrifying. I would put them off until I couldn’t put them off any longer, and then I would hate every second of them. I wanted to run away from the situation. Home was my sanctuary. One night I even slept in the caravan on our driveway because it was thought that a change of scenery, however minor, might help me sleep a bit better.
Going to the football, something I have been doing for fifteen years, felt like the most insurmountable challenge. On the morning of one match I had every intention of going but had got myself into such a state that my mum suggested it might not be a good idea. I stayed at home while mum and my step-dad went. I was immediately relieved at not having to go through the ordeal but angry with myself for not being up to it.
The lowest I felt
For a while, this seemed to be the new me. Outside of society, hidden away, not capable of functioning in the real world. It honestly didn’t feel like it would ever get better. But something else I’ve learned is that things always get easier after a while. The doctor doubled the dose of my medication, I reached the top of the waiting list to start telephone appointments for cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and I realised that it had been a while since I’d had an ‘episode’.
Throughout all of this, our little budgie Messy had been a constant companion. He was something for me to care for, to stop thinking about myself for a while, if only to feed him and get him some clean water in the mornings. When my mum and step-dad were at work, just hearing him moving around his cage or chucking bits of seed out of his food dish made me feel like I wasn’t on my own.
Then Messy died.
We thought he had hurt his leg, because he wasn’t moving very well. He had never been able to fly, because the people we bought him from had clipped his wings (we did not know this at the time, and don’t approve of this practice), so we were used to him hitting the floor with a thud when he frequently tried and failed to take off. He wasn’t getting any better, though, and he had completely stopped chirping and talking. He had stopped being himself. So we took him to a vet. Looking back on it now, I think the vet was just trying to soften the blow when she entertained our idea that he had hurt his leg. She quickly suggested it was possible that it was a neurological problem, and that if it was there wasn’t much that she could do.
Messy had hardly been home an hour when he literally fell off his perch. He was still with us at this point, blinking away, hugging mum’s shoulder on the sofa, seemingly unable to move by himself any more. I found it too upsetting. I couldn’t stay in the room. I shut myself away. Mum was magnificent. She held Messy for as long as she could, and made sure he was comfortable, keeping him warm in a box in his last hours. We knew what was coming. By the time we woke up on Saturday morning, after not much sleep, he had passed away. It was pure grief. This wasn’t just losing a budgie for us. It was losing a member of the family. A friend. A character. It all felt so unfair; he was only fifteen months old. We were supposed to have up to eight years with him.
Messy. We didn’t have long enough with him, but the time we did have was special.
The only positive from Messy’s untimely death was that he completely stopped me worrying about a meeting I had at work on the Saturday morning to discuss my absence. I was so worried about him, so sad about what was happening, that any anxiety or nerves I had about going back to that place had been rendered irrelevant. I was not bothered in the slightest. I found it all very easy, and for the first time I said I was prepared to go back to work.
The next morning, we buried Messy in the garden and planted a flower above him. He will never be forgotten. At the time, both I and mum said that we couldn’t contemplate having another pet because it hurt too much when we lost them. How could you love something so much, only for them to break your heart like that? But in the days since I have softened my stance on this. I would love for Messy to have a successor. I’ve even thought about a name – Tidy.
Whether it was the resolve instilled in me by Messy’s death, the medication starting to work, or a combination of the two, I have found the world easier to deal with of late. Last week, I went to London with mum and stayed a night in an AirBnB without feeling anxious at any point. I think the sheer number of people in London, and the way you can blend into the background and move around unnoticed, helped. I have been to a football match, travelling by bus and sitting in my usual seat, without letting my nerves get on top of me. Life no longer feels like a challenge I can’t rise to. I have my moments, and there is no point where you feel completely fine, but you feel like you can be part of society again.
My return to work is approaching. It’s 17th March. I will be starting off by doing shorter shifts, to get back into the swing of things, for the first week or so. But it feels like a big step. And not one I’m having nightmares about any more. I am determined to go back and to show everyone that I am not weak, that I am just as capable as I have ever been and that I might even be better off for the experiences I’ve had since the start of the year.
I have been reading a book called Wintering by Katherine May, which I have found helpful. It explores ‘the power of rest and retreat in difficult times’, and it has changed how I see these cold and dark months. It’s not a period where you are supposed to sit and wait it out, eager for the summer to return. It looks at how winter is an important time in itself, and how different people and indeed different animals adapt to it. I have picked out three quotes from it that I have found particularly relevant to me.
Unhappiness has a function – it tells us that something is going wrong.
Our present will one day become a past.
We who have wintered have learned some things.
Robins sing through the darkest months.
Wintering (2020), by Katherine May
You see, I no longer feel like I have failed. I no longer feel like I gave in. I have been ill. My body told me that it needed to rest, to recover, and I have given it time to do that. I can now come back into the world, to feel normal again, and take the things I have learned along with me. I have wintered. And now I am ready for the spring.
If you have made it all the way down this far, you have done extremely well and I thank you for that. This has been a self-indulgent post to say the least. But it has been incredibly therapeutic to feel these words flowing out of me. To be able to make sense of what has happened to me. I feel like this marks my return.
Most of us have had a camera phone for quite a while now, with hundreds if not thousands of photos taken over the years. I’ve scrolled through mine and picked out ten that have a story behind them.
1st November 2010 – Dad
I have told the story about my dad more than once, but in short, he died in 2014 at the age of 69 having been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease six years previously. It’s nice to have this photo on my phone. Dad is in his sheltered housing flat here, on the sofa where we drank bucketloads of tea and watched countless football matches. His cheeky grin is showing off the false tooth he wore. The story goes that it was knocked out by a cricket ball during a match on the playing fields of what is now the Hewett School when he was a young lad.
1st June 2020 – seeing family for the first time since lockdown
I think for many of us it was a bit of a shock to go into total lockdown in March 2020. Never before had we faced so many restrictions on our lives, but then it had been a hundred years since the last pandemic of Covid’s scale. It wasn’t until June that the restrictions had been eased enough for me to go and see my mum and her other half Dave (aka Stephen to me). It was strictly outdoors only though – thankfully the weather was lovely. This was also Dave’s birthday and the day my mum presented him with the papers showing that she’d legally changed her surname to his.
20th July 2021 – sunset at Old Trafford, Manchester
This was taken at Old Trafford cricket ground as the sun set on a red hot July day in Manchester. The match between England and Pakistan turned out to be the first sporting event to be played in front of a capacity crowd since the pandemic began. England won.
28th November 2021 – my last day at Sainsbury’s Queens Road
My first, and so far only, job was at Sainsbury’s and for eleven years Queens Road was all I knew. Then an opportunity came up to move to the Pound Lane store and, despite the terrifying prospect of having to meet a load of new people, I took it. I was blown away by the send-off my friends and colleagues gave me. This was taken on the Sunday, my last day at Queens, before I started at Pound Lane two days later.
21st January 2022 – Oscar
My friend Katie’s dog and without a doubt the best boy in the world. On this particular walk on the old railway line near Aylsham I managed to capture the moment he looked at the camera and I’m rather fond of it.
28th February 2022 – the end of self-isolating with Covid
Having avoided Covid throughout the lockdowns it finally caught up with me early last year. At the time I was living in a house where my bedroom had an en suite bathroom so I remained in that room for the entirity of my self-isolation, with food being left outside the door. Being stuck within those four walls for over a week was really tough. I took this photo just as I was about to leave the room for the first time. I can remember the feeling of excitement and relief.
23rd April 2022 – before a Norwich match at Carrow Road
With mum and Dave before Norwich’s match against Newcastle last year. Our pre-match ritual tends to involve buying pasties from Morrisons and sitting on that wall before going into the ground. Norwich were thrashed 3-0.
9th June 2022 – The Killers gig at Carrow Road
The tickets to see The Killers at Carrow Road were actually given to me as a Christmas present in 2019, with the gig due to take place in June 2020. For obvious reasons it was postponed twice before we finally got to see them in June last year. It is rare to have a band as big as The Killers performing in Norwich and they put on a fantastic show, with one of my favourite bands Blossoms as the support act. In June this year a dream will come true when my all time heroes Arctic Monkeys will play at Carrow Road. I can’t wait!
25th August 2022 – my 30th birthday
There was something about turning 30 that freaked me out. On the day, plans to go on the heritage railway between Dereham and Wymondham were scuppered by thunderstorms. Then all my friends turned up on the doorstep and we had a barbecue. I didn’t think people cared about me enough to do such a thing! It was a lovely evening and, as it turns out, being 30 is a lot like being 29.
15th March 2023 – sunrise from my hotel room window in Cromer
A recent one, but I must have enjoyed my one night stay in Cromer because I’m feeling nostalgic about something that happened only two weeks ago. I had long wanted to stay at the Cliftonville Hotel, as I thought the building was interesting and I was keen to see what the promise of sea views from every room looked like. I scratched that itch during a week’s holiday from work and had a great time relaxing and getting my head together. This was taken from my hotel room window quite early in the morning, with a stunning sunrise over the town and its famous pier.
There we have it then, a small selection of photos on my phone that bring a smile to my face. Thanks for reading!
My chest feels tight. As if someone has wrapped a belt around it. I am short of breath. I need to focus on taking deep breaths. It feels easier to do that hunched over. My heart is racing. I can feel it beating. I have the constant urge to look over my shoulder. As if whatever it is I am running from will be there next time. Caught up with me. Taking me down. I want to run away. I don’t want to be near people. But I can’t. Not here. It’s not an option. Not in this uniform. Not in this place.
It passes. It always does. The pressure on my chest has eased, I can breathe normally without thinking about it, my pursuer has stopped chasing. For now.
The word “anxiety” did not cross my mind when these episodes began happening to me. When I finally told someone about them, it was the first thing they said. Was it a relief to hear that? I mean, at least there was a plausible explanation. Anxiety is medically recognised. There’s an NHS page about it. I could get help for it. People have time off work because of it.
But why am I suffering from anxiety? Why now? It comes on suddenly and goes away just as quickly. But I never know when it will strike next. It is always on my mind.
I’ve not had it before. I’ve certainly been anxious. God, you can’t be as socially awkward as me without getting anxious at some point. But the debilitating, seemingly random attacks on the normal functions of my body are new.
I thought it had gone away. A while ago, those feelings were suddenly absent. My days were clear of them. I didn’t feel like I could call myself an anxiety sufferer. I didn’t feel like I suffered enough. To put myself in the same category as those who need medication, sick notes, would be fraudulent.
But then they came back.
I’ve been drinking chamomile tea, with its supposed calming qualities. But other than that, I don’t really know what to do. I can’t get over the feeling that I’d be wasting a doctor’s time. I’m just waiting for it to pass.
By writing this, I am hoping getting it out of my head will be beneficial. By publishing it, I don’t know. Maybe someone will read it who can identify with it. Maybe they will be able to tell me that yes, I am right, that’s definitely anxiety, because I had it and here’s how I cope with it. Maybe they will see a bit of themselves in my descriptions and feel comforted that it’s not just them.
Maybe there’s no point at all. But I wish it would stop.
All the signs point to these being bleak times: a lot of us can’t afford to put the heating on, Covid is still refusing to go away – like a double glazing salesman who won’t take no for an answer – and Sky News has a permanent graphic in the top corner of the screen telling us which set of workers is on strike today. At the time of writing, it’s the postal workers.
Yet, despite all of that, I was cheerful and optimistic when I drove home from work for the last time before Christmas last night. I’d even made a playlist of my favourite Christmas songs to soundtrack my 30 mile journey. I’ve written about this banger by The Darkness before but I also highly recommend White Wine In The Sun by Tim Minchin.
For those of us in retail, the busiest period of the year is almost over. We won’t struggle to find a space in the car park, have five trolleys full of left behinds or have to put up with god awful Mariah Carey covers any longer once the doors are closed on Christmas Eve.
Ignoring the utter misery that is January, we also have the new year on the horizon – a chance to reflect on what’s gone before and what we want to happen in the year ahead.
Thinking about it, my 2022 has been about establishing a base, mentally, from which I can build on. Due to factors, I had to move back in with my mum in the spring. Having just turned 30, this is hardly something to be proud of but my mental health has improved dramatically by having a warm, loving and stable home life. I now feel that I can make decisions about the future direction of my life with confidence.
I would like a new job. I think I’ve said ‘this Christmas will be my last in retail’ every year since about 2012 but maybe this really will be it. That’s very much a work in progress though. We’ll see how that goes.
I’ll end this piece with a few photos from my year. Thanks for reading, and however you’re spending Christmas, I hope it’s a happy one.
With mum on a chilly January walk on the beachMy positive Covid tests when it laid me low in FebruaryMy first day out of isolation, MarchA car catches fire in the car park at work, MarchBreakfast outside at the now-defunct Corners near Dereham, AprilDay out in Cromer, MayWith mum in Cromer, MayAt The Killers gig at Carrow Road in JuneFriday night drink in Wells-next-the-sea, JuneWatching Norwich at Dereham Town, JulyPet-sitting Oscar, JulyWatching England women in the Euros at the fan park in Manchester, JulyMum with England batter Jonny Bairstow at Old Trafford, JulyWatching England v South Africa at Old Trafford, JulyWith my friend Gavin at Great Yarmouth Pleasure Beach in August With my friends and family on my 30th birthday in AugustOn top of Norfolk’s highest point, Beeston Bump, September My night wandering around London in September Happy bunny… receiving the new Arctic Monkeys album in OctoberAt the Blossoms gig at the UEA in NovemberLovely winter walk at Castle Acre, December
You will have to excuse the irony of this. I’m writing about how I’ve been wasting my time writing.
For as long as I can remember, I have wanted to write for a living. Since I was a child. I think it stemmed from getting The Beano and The Dandy delivered to the house, as well as MATCH! magazine. I would also have a look at my dad’s copy of The Sun on a Saturday (forgive me, I was young). I was fascinated by the different styles of writing, and how the written word could make you feel depending on how it was presented on the page. When I was around 8 years old, I made hand-drawn comics called The Jumbo for my grandad, which the wonderful man paid me the cover price for. I think I ‘borrowed’ the character of Dennis The Menace for it, too, but thankfully I never received a copyright claim from the publisher of The Beano. A couple of years after that, I was mocking up newspaper front pages.
Now, aged 30, it is clear to me that writing – communicating with the written/typed word – is probably what I’m best at. Despite being the grandson of a respected mechanic on one side and a talented carpenter on the other side, I am entirely useless at anything practical. Actually doing anything with my hands is beyond me. On one attempt to learn how to cook, I tried to crack an egg into a jug and ended up with the yolk all over the worktop and all of the shell in the jug. I also can’t communicate easily by other means. I’m debilitatingly awkward in face-to-face situations, and irritatingly inarticulate when speaking to someone. I have been asked to do a TV show and a podcast before, but tellingly never been asked to do them more than once.
My TV debut, on the short-lived Mustard TV, in 2016. I haven’t been asked to do TV again in the six years since.
I did work experience at Archant, who publish the Eastern Daily Press, Norwich Evening News and other local titles in East Anglia, in 2009. I didn’t actually have much work to do – I got a piece in the paper about a couple’s landmark wedding anniversary – but I was able to observe this huge office putting a newspaper together, as well as sit in on an editorial meeting. I really enjoyed it, and I was left feeling even more sure that I wanted to be a journalist. In 2015, the EDP advertised for contributors to a new Fan Zone page, all about Norwich City Football Club. I went for it, not expecting to get picked, but to my surprise I was chosen as one of four columnists and I’m still doing it now. In fact, I’m the only one of the original four still doing it.
The closest I’ve ever been to getting paid for writing was when I had an interview at Archant in 2017. They were looking for a trainee reporter. Unfortunately, I failed to impress in the interview (face-to-face interactions letting me down again) and I didn’t get the job. Since then, I’ve never even applied for another job, carrying on with pretending to know what I’m doing in a supermarket.
I have kept this blog going, as I like to write, but I have never pushed it to the extent that would get me noticed. As an introvert, it’s not in my nature to blow my own trumpet. In any case, when I do share what I’ve written, I don’t get many readers anyway.
This is why I think that’s the case: TikTok. I’ve never been on TikTok myself because I can’t really see the point of it. My mum, however, is borderline addicted to it. She will spend ages scrolling through the app. I’ll often be shown videos from it. I can’t really get my head around it, though, because there is just so much crap on there. I can spend hours writing something, share it, and get maybe 50 readers if I am exceptionally lucky. Someone can record a 30 second clip of their dog farting, upload it to TikTok, and get millions of views. Short attention spans have ruined the art of writing.
I’m not bitter though. That’s just how it is. After having this dream for twenty years, I have to start to wonder if my writing is really better than anyone else’s. Perhaps it is time to change tact. Do something else. I don’t know what that might be. But maybe the first step is to admit that writing is a dead end.
I’ll be 30 on 25th August – despite my protestations about not being done with my 20s yet. Anyway, the other night I made a playlist of songs that hold memories for me in my life so far. These are not necessarily favourites (I haven’t listened to Cher for a while, I have to say), but ones that take me back to a particular time and place. I hope you find a song you really like here, and look out for the links that look like this – clicking on them will give some extra information about what I’m banging on about.
SNAP! – Rhythm Is A Dancer
The number one single in the UK on the day I was born, 25th August 1992.
Scatman John – Scatman (ski-ba-bop-ba-dop-bop)
My mum won a hifi system in a radio competition, the kind that would have been way out of our price range, and somehow it ended up in my bedroom. I remember listening to this song on it and being fascinated by it.
Cher – Believe
Brings back memories of being driven around Norwich by my mum with this blasting out very loudly.
Cartoons – Witch Doctor
Hearing it now, this song is completely ridiculous – but I can definitely remember hearing it at home, where we had it on CD. Some people had Abbey Road… I think it sounds a bit like Scatman John in terms of playing around with mouth sounds, so there could be a link there.
Dario G – Carnaval de Paris
Originally released for the 1998 World Cup, though I have no memory of that tournament (2002 was the first one I can recall). This was actually used by Sky Sports as the theme tune to their Premier League coverage in the early 2000s, and that’s where I remember it from.
Heather Small – Proud
We all sang in this in the school hall on our last day at Norman First in July 2000. Corny? Yes. Memorable? Definitely.
U2 – Beautiful Day
You’ll notice a trend of songs I remember from being theme tunes to TV shows. This was what ITV used for their highlights programme The Premiership, when they briefly held the rights away from the BBC’s Match of the Day in the early 2000s.
MIKA – Grace Kelly
A massive hit in 2007, this seemed to be on the radio every morning on the way to school. I was surprised to see MIKA turn up as one of the hosts of this year’s Eurovision – I’d not heard a peep from him for years.
The Killers – Read My Mind
I remember listening to this a lot when I was at sixth form – 2008 to 2010. Seeing The Killers perform it live at Carrow Road in June this year was a special moment.
Arctic Monkeys – Brianstorm
There will be a lot of Arctic Monkeys on this list – after all, they’re my favourite band. The first album of theirs I actually owned on CD was their second, Favourite Worst Nightmare. This song was track one.
Arctic Monkeys – I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor
Their first single and the Arctic Monkeys song I reckon most people will have heard of.
Alex Turner – Piledriver Waltz
My Arctic Monkeys obsession led to me discovering Submarine, which is my favourite film. Arctics frontman Alex Turner did the soundtrack and this is my favourite song from it.
Arctic Monkeys – Black Treacle
Reminds me of driving backwards and forwards between Norfolk and Essex when I was at university. This is from their 2011 album Suck It and See.
Pulp – Do You Remember The First Time?
I can’t remember the first time I heard this song but it always stops me in my tracks when I hear it. Makes me feel nostalgic and sentimental. It’s between this and Babies for my favourite Pulp song.
Arctic Monkeys – Cornerstone
Probably my favourite of all Arctic Monkeys songs and one that reminds me of an unrequited love.
Depeche Mode – Just Can’t Get Enough
Was played a lot at Carrow Road during the years Paul Lambert was manager (2009 to 2012). Some of the happiest and most successful times Norwich City have had in my lifetime.
Grandaddy – A.M. 180
The theme tune to Charlie Brooker’s Screenwipe, a programme I have seen many, many times over and still go back to now and again.
Harvey Danger – Flagpole Sitta
The theme tune to Peep Show. I first saw the sitcom starring David Mitchell and Robert Webb in a Media Studies lesson at school, oddly enough, but I loved it and have seen every episode more times than is healthy.
Morning Runner – Gone Up In Flames
Another TV theme tune – this one is from The Inbetweeners. The sitcom about four lads and their time at sixth form was broadcast exactly when I was at sixth form myself and, I can tell you, it was very realistic.
The Wombats – Anti-D
I spent a fair bit of time as a uni student being miserable – this song was released around that time and I can remember listening to it in my more self-indulgent moments in the room I rented in a lady’s house a short walk from the college.
Cage The Elephant – Shake Me Down
Another song I can remember hearing a lot during my time at uni.
Underworld – Caliban’s Dream
I watched every minute of the opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympics and can remember being spellbound by this song. They were a great Olympics and they happened just a month or so after my mum and I moved to a little terraced house in Dereham. Happy times.
Arctic Monkeys – Do I Wanna Know?
From the fifth Arctic Monkeys albumAM, released in 2013. An absolute banger – I saw them live in their native Sheffield in 2018 and this sounded amazing.
Foster The People – Pumped Up Kicks
For a little while, I taught my friend to drive in the empty Sainsbury’s car park after work on a Sunday. Our musical tastes were very different. This is one of the only songs we both liked so we played it a lot while she was driving around.
Arctic Monkeys – One Point Perspective
Arctic Monkeys finally released a new album in 2018, their first for five years. This masterpiece is my favourite track from it.
Joe Cocker – With A Little Help From My Friends
As I mentioned before, I saw Arctic Monkeys live at Sheffield Arena in 2018. This song was played over the speakers just after the gig had finished and the audience were filing out. It reminds me of the complete euphoria of seeing my favourite band in the flesh for the first time.
Talking Heads – Take Me to the River
A more recent memory, I can recall driving around listening to this song, just driving for the hell of it and lost in thought.
Blossoms – Your Girlfriend
I first heard Blossoms in 2016, when their single Charlemagne was played a lot on Radio X. I really got into them when I heard this song for the first time, sitting in my car at work during my lunch break a few years ago. They are now one of my favourite bands and I’ve got tickets to see them live in Norwich this November.
The Rolling Stones – She’s A Rainbow
During the first Covid lockdown, the Wednesday night trip to the pub was replaced by drinks and music in the living room. This song was one of the highlights.
If you’ve got this far, thanks very much! This was just a bit of fun for myself really. If you want to carry these songs around with you, I put them in a Spotify playlist.
I just looked it up. It’s 52 days until my 30th birthday. Entering my 30s feels like a big deal. It feels like I should have my life sorted by now. I look around me and everyone seems to be on the right track – my friends are all either in relationships, engaged, have bought their own homes or started families. I haven’t done any of that. I am nowhere near doing any of that.
I’m well past the days when I would get excited about my birthday (I have a vivd memory of telling someone “it’s my birthday tomorrow!” when I was about to turn 10 and that feeling like the best thing in the world) and I wouldn’t say I was dreading turning 30. It is a milestone, though. It’s as if I could still claim to be youthful at 29, but 30 is where sensible adults are. At work, I still associate myself with colleagues who have just come out of uni. I mentally attach myself to that 18-21 age group. I left uni in 2013! This is a natural time to take stock and wonder whether I am where I want to be in life.
Well, I mentioned work. I’ve been doing the same job for the last 12 years. It was only ever meant to be a little part time job I did to give me a bit of extra cash while I was at uni, but it has been my only meaningful income since I was 17. Gradually, I was given more responsibility at work – god knows, my brain would have melted through boredom if I was still doing the same thing after all these years – and I go around trying to make it look like I know what I’m doing when really I feel like a total impostor. I have low self esteem anyway but bad experiences have made me believe that my best isn’t good enough and it would all work a lot better without me. Minor things that go wrong will play on my mind for days.
I am acutely aware that my colleagues probably see me as awkward, uptight, maybe even a bit weird. I wish they could see the real me, who is actually easy going, prefers deep conversations to small talk and likes silly jokes. I just feel like, when I put that uniform on, I have to be serious and I know that alienates people.
Of course, I’d like to do something more interesting. I went to uni for 3 years and left with a journalism degree, even if I have been known to say it’s not worth the paper it’s printed on. I have always loved writing, it is my only discernible skill or talent in my eyes, and would love to make a living out of it. It’s a very hard industry to get into, though, and as I approach 30 I have never been paid for a single word. I do browse the job sites on a regular basis but am yet to find anything that sounds better than what I already do. Maybe I’m too comfortable.
If I got a job that paid more, I might able to afford to live alone. I do wonder why women never show any interest in me, but at the moment it isn’t bothering me and I would say my relationship status was “single but not looking”. I’ve got a lot of work to do on myself before anyone will come close to me. My mum is wonderful and her other half has been very accomodating since I had to move in with them recently, but ultimately I would like my own place.
My passions are things that define me: football, cricket, music, comedy. These pursuits have all made hero figures in my life, and I think that’s because they are the living emodiment of what I would like to be. I want to be as good at what I do as Joe Root, I want to be as cool as Alex Turner, I want to be as funny as Dave Allen. I can’t help but think I should just make the most of what I actually am and it’s possible I might be happier for it.
I have never smoked, I hardly ever drink and I have never been anywhere near drugs. My vice is junk food. I eat way too much chocolate, crisps, biscuits and sweets. I comfort eat. This was alright when I was more active but since the pandemic started I am going on fewer walks and have stopped playing cricket, so I am noticing my increasing weight. It sounds like an easy thing to address – just stop eating rubbish – but to me it doesn’t seem that simple.
Well, to bring this ramble to a close, it’s been cathartic to get these thoughts out of my head and onto a screen. Am I where I want to be in life? No. Is there any reason why my 30s can’t be the making of me? Absolutely not.