Saturday, 17 January 2015

Home is where the heart is, and mine is in Stamford Hill


A bit more of a serious tone this week folks, and I do hope you won’t object as sometimes life can take serious turns.... and this year has started off on a very serious note. As I’m sure has escaped nobody’s notice, on the streets of Paris some rather horrendous events took place recently, and while the streets of Paris aint exactly round the corner from Sophington Towers, the streets of N16 certainly are. How is this relevant? Well, such matters of international terrorism affect everyone in different ways, and one of the results of these events is coming right to my doorstep as the UK counter terrorist police have just announced that there is an increased threat to Jewish areas, and subsequently they are considering stepping up patrols.

Now, I may not be Jewish (as previous blogs have mentioned I am a rather rubbish & now lapsed Catholic) but Sophington Towers is slap bang in the middle of one of the largest Jewish communities in Europe, Stamford Hill. And following the recent Paris attacks, the police have announced there is "heightened concern" about the risk to the UK's Jewish communities and they will subsequently be increasing patrols in those areas. Worrying times I think you’ll agree, and not just for Stamford Hill, but the entire country. The actions of those terrible few threaten us, they seek to divide us, but we should not let them.

You see, I know about threats. Growing up a proud & faithful Londoner I am well versed in them. First of all there were the IRA ravaged years up to 1997, I still remember very clearly in my dad’s car hearing the news on the radio about the Bishopsgate bomb in 1993. I remember even then as a 13 year old far removed from the politics of Northern Ireland, how it saddened me so, shattering the shakey road to peace that was just beginning to be trod. I remember as a young child taking the disappearance of bins from tube stations as just another normal occurrence. Bins were no longer a receptacle for my easily discarded twix wrapper, they were somewhere to stash something that could kill me and my family. I can recall bomb scares in school, unnerving at the time but no doubt called in by some beavers eager to avoid their GCSE exams that were going on at the time. Threats became normal in my beautiful city, and that was just the way it was.

And of course I remember the 7th July 2005. I remember how my city rallied that day. I remember walking home from central London where I worked, past pubs handing out free drinks to cheer the spirit and the aid the stumbling path of us shell shocked Londoners. Not for us was the (quite understandable) weeping and wailing of New York on September 11th, after all we were Londonders and, unfortunately, already well used to being attacked. The stiff upper lip was de rigueur that day, for we were stoic Londoners, and no jumped up terrorist was gonna beat us down. I remember gathering with my friends at our home from home, the local pub beer garden, gathering pints in the sunshine as we were running headcounts of our circle. I also remember the grip of fear when we found ourselves two heads down. Fortunately, those two heads reappeared in subsequent hours and my tight knit group of chums emerged not entirely, but relatively unscathed and thankfully in mostly working order.

You see, I love where I live, I am damn proud of it. It’s diverse, vibrant and interesting. And well bloody done for diverse! It’s what makes my fair city one of the most wondrous places in the world. Just as we have architecture from the 10th century rubbing up against that of the 21st, we have people from the whole other side of the world, nestling up against people from Africa, Europe, the Americas and everywhere else, and they do a damn fine job of getting along on the whole. I remember reading stories at the time of the London riots, of Muslims and Jews in Hackney standing together to protect each other’s mosques and synagogues. Well done them I thought, THAT’S the big society in action Cameron! Take that, put it in your pipe and take a damn good suck of it.

I can only hope in coming days, weeks and months we take the same attitude. That these events bring us closer together instead of setting us further apart. So whether it is on the streets of Stamford Hill or on the streets of Paris, we stand up together. And neighbours of mine? I may not be a regular visitor to the kosher aisle of Sainsburys, and I may get somewhat confused by the plastic rabbi on the flatbed truck blasting out music outside my bedroom window every Purim, but I also care about our little part of town, and I care about my neighbours, no matter what their religion. So if that increased police presence appears, please remember, that its not just the police that has the best interests of you, the threatened minority, at heart but it’s your neighbours too and especially the one at Sophington Towers. And together we won’t be beaten down.

 
My home


P.S Please forgive this errant departure from my usual flippant wittering on about nonsense topics. I just had to get this off my chest. Normal blathering to resume shortly.

Tuesday, 6 January 2015

The joys of flatsharing

Damp courses. Mmmmm, everyone loves a new year damp course story don’t they? All full of the joys of spring and the potential for …. ok, maybe not. However this rather underwhelming yet essential procedure (is that even the right word? DIY aint my strong point) has brought to the fore something about which I have been ruminating over recent days… that of flatmates. Quite the jump I know, but bear with me.

Sorry, but the cleaning rota says
it's YOUR turn to do the bathroom 
You may have gathered from previous posts that I am now a Grown Up. With capital letters and everything. I say this as one of the traditional signs of maturity that I always supposed as a debt heavy, worry free, flat sharing twenty something, was possessing a mortgage. And a mortgage I do have, for my teeny weeny one bedroom flat where I live happily alone, ensconced with a chunk of solitude and a cleaning rota for one. That living alone was presumed to be a permanent state until earlier this week when the matter of damp courses arose. You see, one of my very good friends has a damp problem, poor chap. No, I don’t mean in the undercarriage department fortunately for both he and his wife… with a newborn son recently arrived I think they have enough nappies to be changed thank you very much. No, instead their home is riddled with damp, and with the arrival of both said newborn and the new year, now is the time to fix it. The builders are booked  and while the wife has the freedom of maternity leave to deposit herself elsewhere far away from dust, noise builders and all the other tell tale signs of getting your damp dealt with, poor Adam has to remain somewhere close by in order to commute to his daily grind, and Sophington Towers has come to the rescue. I shall have a flatmate again!

Please note, not my actual phone number 
Now flatmates has been a subject on my mind of late. On New Year’s Eve, the subject came up, (spurred on by a quick round of cards Against Humanity where ‘flatmates’ should definitely be an answer if they aren’t already) and some of my worst flat share stories came to the fore, including, but definitely not limited to:

    1. The flatmate who was overheard bellowing “milk me, MILK ME!” in the throes of passion one evening.

    2. The flatmate who was rumoured to enjoy a ‘danger wank’ on the stairs while we, his unfortunate fellow house sharers, were sitting mere yards away on the other side of a closed door, watching TV in the living room.

    3. The flatmate who had taken it upon himself to misappropriate some of my underwear because he “liked the smooth silky feel of them against his shaven balls” (QUOTE!) 

The 'danger wank' face, I can only presume....
    4. The flatmate who, upon my discovering him in our kitchen jar of my peanut butter in hand, (peanut butter scooped onto his fingers – he didn’t even have the decency to use a spoon!), responded not with the expected “I’m sorry”, but instead the brutally honest “Oh. I thought you’d gone out”

    5. The flatmate who refused point blank to buy loo roll, while using plenty himself leaving myself and my fellow female flatmate with the permanent fear that we might at some point have to resort to our bathroom housed cotton wool pads if we weren’t careful with our forward planning.

A pretty unfortunate run of stories I’m sure you’ll agree (once you’ve picked your jaw back up off the floor), and please don’t be surprised when I tell you this was all the, ahem, dirty work of just one flatmate. Ahhh university communal living, those halcyon days eh? No. Quite. Pity me people, I’ve been very, VERY unlucky.

Now, I’m not saying that I’m a perfect flatmate myself. That would be a claim that could be VERY easily refuted by the flatmate who discovered that in a fit of pique & PMT rage (never a good combo), I had locked all of my crockery and kitchen implements in my bedroom as revenge against constant food thievery. But I am pleased to say, I have now Grown Up (and moved out) and while I may not have anyone to share the cleaning rota with, I also don’t have to live with the constant fear of peanut butter thievery or wet patches on the stairs. So Adam, I say when the builders are in, COME ON OVER! We shall eat peanut butter together (spread with a knife, not our fingers), and revel in the constant presence of loo roll. But if I ever hear you declaring that you need to be milked, buddy it’s over. Us grown ups do have standards you know…