Tag: Guest Post

  • Guest Post | Rediscovering the Library | Lucy

    Guest Post | Rediscovering the Library | Lucy

    One of my fondest family rituals as a child involved hopping into my Mum’s metallic grey Golf and driving for 15 minutes to a dull rectangular building in a nearby town. It didn’t look like much from the outside but it was one of the most magical places I knew: the library. We would go every Saturday morning and spend many agonising moments trying to pick a book from the burgeoning shelves.

    I remember making a beeline for a particular hidden corner, where the children’s books lived, and gazing at the colourful spines which climbed up high above my head. I have vivid memories of a lot of Enid Blyton and wondering, with great curiosity, how the grown ups ever settled on a book when they had an entire room to choose from.

    *

    My favourite memory from my school library took place one hazy afternoon in year 12. We had been sent to do some research by our French teacher and I was paired with a girl I had only just met (but who would go on to become one of my oldest friends).

    I can’t think what we were researching now, or why, but I can still picture us clutching one another in fits of laughter, hiding between the shelves. We had just read the story of a man called Pierre, a French circus clown, and something in the tale had tickled us. I remember us trying to control ourselves, knowing we would be thrown out if we kept laughing, but finding it nearly impossible.

    For years Pierre featured in our conversations.

    *

    My relationship with the library at university was one of two halves. For the first two years, it was a place of wonder, a throwback to my childhood as I searched the rows. I would sit at one of the computers, testing my ability to track down texts with clever search terms, and jot down references in my notebook before setting off on a mission to find them.

    I studied English which meant that a multitude of subjects could help me with my assignments. I would haunt the literature section the most, but also ventured into philosophy, psychology, history, politics… I took great satisfaction from tracking down just the right book to make my case. Once found and taken out, I would squirrel them away to my bedroom where I would comb the pages for the perfect turn of phrase.

    In third year, however, the library became the hive of productivity. I remember a solid week spent with friends sat in the group spaces, hoping that the setting would inspire the focus needed to take our dissertations from our heads onto the page.

    Facebook recently reminded me of this time (now a terrifying six years ago) with a series of photos I titled: despair in the library.

    *

    In March I stepped into a library for the first time in five years. For some reason, after university, the library stopped feeling like a natural place for me to be. As though because someone else hadn’t handed me a library card there was no longer any reason for me to go there. Instead, I would stock up on books from my local Oxfam shop and occasionally splurge in Waterstones. For years, reading became a sideline activity, crammed into cross-London commutes and binging on holiday.

    So, what made me venture back into that space? Well… I’m writing my own book. The idea came to me out of nowhere in January as I was walking down Whitehall. Just like that it appeared in my head. I feverishly scribbled down my ideas when I arrived at a cafe in Piccadilly (where I was meeting a date a short while later) before grinning in disbelief at the words on the page. This was my novel.

    Naturally, I then sat on the idea for a good couple of months, terrified of starting it and getting it wrong. Then March came around and I took a week off work to do nothing at all. Life had been busy and I just wanted to relax in London and take a moment to breathe so had planned nothing. As the time off approached, I realised there was actually one thing I really wanted to do with my time off. I wanted to write and I wanted to focus on my book.

    I knew I needed to do some research and wanted to find out all sorts of things to feed into my narrative and character backgrounds but didn’t have the money to invest in all the books I would need. All of a sudden the library became an obvious choice again.

    It only took a few moments to register and I felt a flash of that familiar old excitement as I walked in, new membership card in hand. All these old memories came flooding back and it felt like rediscovering a lost part of myself. Who knew there was such a thing as nostalgia for the dewey decimal system? It’s amazing how one small room of books can evoke so much.

    That same day I hit my maximum limit of loans and put in a few reserve requests too. I’m ready to find that magic again and, who knows, maybe one day my book will sit on a library shelf.

    *

    Lucy Goodwill is a writer and charity worker based in North East London. You can find her on Twitter at @lucygoodwill (or probably in the library).

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    I’m so stoked to share this post with you guys! Lucy was one of the lovely ladies I met on my Write Like A Grrrl course in London and she’s a fantastically creative. Isn’t this piece here just lush?! I often forget what wonderful places libraries are.

    Ria Xx

  • Guest Post | Who am I? | Prithvi

    Guest Post | Who am I? | Prithvi

    I carry the burden of introspection. I carry the cultures and lives I have been a part of. We are constantly looking to identify our ethnicity and acknowledgement of belonging.

    When I was growing up in the middle east, I was awkwardly attempting to learn more about India, my ‘motherland’. I went to an Indian syllabus based school, hung out with the most popular girls who seemed to have it all and binge watched Indian movies to see and learn as much as I could. To get it right, somehow.

    But I was a coconut; white on the inside and brown on the outside. The casual statement ‘how would you know, you are not a REAL Indian’ will haunt the aftermath of my continuous path to self realization.

    Recently upon reading ‘The Good Immigrant’, I got thinking. Here we all are, questioning who are we and where are we going. But we stand together, as a group of people who have been hurt or lost, in one way or another.

    This year, I had to renew my Tier 2 visa UK work permit. And it hurt. It hurt a lot, to answer questions and suppress the desire to constantly apologise to everyone in charge of the visa application. I heard it in their voices and I saw it in their eyes. I had to apologise. I do not blame or accuse people for their ignorance of what it is like to feel like an immigrant, but I am jealous because it is truly bliss. Coming to a country and steal jobs from the other deserving native people is apparently what we do. I apologise.

    And yet you run into an odd person who would like to share their views on how difficult it is for people from countries like India and Pakistan, to get a visa. Thank you. Again, I apologise.

    I see an elderly white man shout out ‘muslim shoplifter’ to an asian woman wearing a headscarf cause she is walking out of Zara, carrying a shopping bag. I am so sorry.

    The sorrow and guilt we carry binds us together, that is what makes us feel alive and empathetic. I wish I had answers for where we are going, but I can tell you who we are; We are Immigrants.

    A writer who had the most impact on me and whose words I remember, is Warsan Shire. Here’s an excerpt from a poem called ‘What they did yesterday afternoon’.

    ‘i’ve been praying,

    and these are what my prayers look like;

    dear god

    i come from two countries

    one is thirsty

    the other is on fire

    both need water.

     

    later that night

    i held an atlas in my lap

    ran my fingers across the whole world

    and whispered

    where does it hurt?

     

    it answered

    everywhere

    everywhere

    everywhere.’

    — — —

    Oh boy, I’m so happy I have the wonderful privilege to share posts like these with you guys. Prithvi, for those of you who don’t know, is one of the five lovely girls I live with.  She’s actually on this trip to India with me but deserves some comment love none-the-less so let me know your thoughts below. She is sans Twitter – working on that fam ;) – but she has just started her first blog, so go follow.

    Ria Xx

     

  • Guest Post | Postcards from Cornwall | Anastasia

    Guest Post | Postcards from Cornwall | Anastasia

    “Cornwall is very primeval: great, black, jutting cliffs and rocks, like the original darkness, and a pale sea breaking in, like dawn. It is like the beginning of the world, wonderful…”  – D H Lawrence, Letter 1916
    I know Ria is the one who’s on holiday but who ever said you can’t send postcards from your own home?

    I’ve lived in Cornwall, albeit a little further inland than the beginning of the world, all my life. However, it’s only in recent years, since moving barely an hour away to Devon for university and then back again after graduation, that I have really started to appreciate the beauty of the place. I guess I just took it for granted when I was growing up that my town was only a short drive away from the stormy seas and misty moors that have inspired so many writers and artists throughout history. I think at the time I was too busy being annoyed that most of my friends lived in neighbouring villages and valleys, too far to walk to, to really think about it.

    From Geoffrey of Monmouth naming Tintagel as the place of King Arthur’s conception in the twelfth century, to Daphne du Maurier’s novels, John Betjeman’s poems, and, yes, Winston Graham’s Poldark, there is almost no end to the writing that has been inspired by this wild coastal county. Creativity doesn’t just seem to thrive here, it seems to be in the very dirt of the place. I’m positive that growing up here, between ocean and fields, is the reason writing and photography have always lived in my bones. Who could live in a place like this and not have a desire to capture it somehow?

    I couldn’t resist taking this opportunity to share a little of it. If you’d like to see more you can find me, my photography, and my writing at stasialikescakes.

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    Thanks a bunch to Anastasia for the lovely post and gorgeous photos. I’ve never ventured down as far as Cornwall but these photos are utterly dreamy! Gotta love the good ol’ British coastline.

    Ria Xx