Tag Archives: recession

art and life

Sir Ian McKellen in Melbourne a few weeks ago, taking a break in rehearsals for Waiting for Godot, sitting on a bench behind the stage door, in costume, found a $1 coin tossed into his hat by a passerby, with the timeless words, “do you need some help, brother?”*

In London the relationship with tramps and beggars is complicated by their relentless ubiquity. You could easily spend £70 a week, even with a strict £1 cap, giving money to them. When I lived in Hackney Central there were at least ten regulars, plus others every day. There was a young Spanish guy I always gave money to and had a chat; he had been kind to my children when I was at a low ebb. I defended him vociferously one night when a smartly dressed, ostentatiously middle-class man began to abuse him, really nastily, outside that cesspit of humanity, Tesco in Morning Lane. He was always reading, and was also constantly in and out of hospital with what I later learned were needle injuries, of course. Subsidised by me.

I was taken in by some crack-addicted woman’s fake story one night on my way home, the tears, and gave her £5 (she was crying, she seemed nice, I wanted to be a nice person), only to see her comparing money with her friend, right as rain, two minutes later. It was annoying, and unnerving – a bit late in the day to be taken in! I felt betrayed, and unhappy for days. Once in my lunch hour I was put under a curse by a gypsy lavender-seller in James Street for not buying her lavender; that was in the 80s. (I’m not slating the Romani; no one told her to be a cartoon gypsy and put people under curses.)

Then there’s Big Issue fatigue, vendors on every street corner assuming that they have some moral right to your purchase of their magazine – which is not exactly unmissable journalism, is it. So you’re not really buying it, you’re just allowing them to give you something for your charity. And no one ever seems to think you might have bought it off someone else – that’s where the “selling” facade falls apart: you’re expected to give them the money and pretend you want their magazine. One guy even said to me: Well, you could buy another!” There’s a really in-your-face couple of them in the doorway of Whole Foods in Stoke Newington – you literally can’t get in, or past, without being accosted. (This particular fatigue is less brutal now we’re rid of the people who used to shove the free piece of rubbish London Lite in your face every ten feet… God I hated them. It’s a shame to tar The Big Issue with that brush but sometimes you just want to walk to the station, you know?)

People with blankets on their laps by the ATM, by the station exit, outside the supermarket. Places where they’ve got you cornered. Three guys in Old St Station the other night, as I went through it, every one of whom approached me. I had about £2. I snapped at one of them (I know: rudely, churlishly): “I’m not even working.” He said, “neither am I.” (But I’m not asking him for his money.) (And felt like rubbish all the way home.) And a woman wanting money “to get home.”

I remember years ago, when I was young and in New York
, a man came into a pizza place and started begging from table to
table. You couldn’t exactly say you had no money – but then I hadn’t,
it was my friend’s treat – I sat frozen in horror and embarrassment, unable to respond at all…
(NYC before Giuliani, I remember being chased along in midtown by a man
with no legs, on a skateboard sort of thing, with a sign saying “Viet
Nam Vet”.)

Maybe the strangest thing about tramps, beggars and “homeless people” is that no one ever talks about them. Taboo: we don’t discuss it in polite society, except as a policy issue,  or to tut it (“tut tut – so awful, isn’t it? Shall we try that bar over there?”). Why? Because no one wants to look mean. Or seem to piously brag. To expose themselves as a mug, or a prude, a skinflint or a pushover.

Someone I know was walking along with a friend, and they were approached by a beggar, and the man turned on him: “Look. My business is failing, I’m paying x amount in alimony, I’m putting two kids through school, I’m this, that, I owe this, that – why should I give you my money??

Ten times a day the rising tide, of anger – at them, for bald-faced asking you to give them your money; at yourself, for being pinched, sour, broke; at the world, for being such a shit place; at the government, because our cities are broken; then sadness – for them, for being like this, for it not being simple; then numbing brainweary shutdown. A daily gauntlet of human desperation, much of it (we’re told, we can’t imagine otherwise) self-induced (and Ms Baroque does not condone the use of drugs, which in turn support organised crime). But then, if someone hasn’t got the resources to do more than they’re doing – if someone is, after all, doing the best they can – is it their fault it isn’t more?

And the fear: what happens if one day it’s you?

Ian McKellen says: “The dollar coin is now lodged between two drawing pins on the board above my dressing room mirror. My lucky talisman.”

* I’m told there isn’t really a recession in Australia; but here in London that question, with its canonical use of the word “brother,” inevitably heightens the sense that we are, indeed, going through something like the Great Depression, and is even – in and of itself – a word of encouragement.

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Filed under Hackney, important things, London, money, politics, the meaning of life

fresh beginnings?

Look at their ties! Look at all these colours!  What does it all mean?

Is it possible that something is possible? Is it fresh pickings, or is it only for them? The world’s gone mad. It’s spring, but it’s colder than March. I’m in winter clothing – and glad of it, as it means I don’t have to address the summer wardrobe issue. My clothes are grey. My flat is grey. London is grey. These guys are happy, they’re on top of the world, and with their Tellytubby ties and their cute first-day-of-school folders they look like little spring tulips, don’t they. Yes. Are they trying to lull us all into imagining we’re just kids watching TV, or is this really how they feel?? You know what – I don’t really care who they are at this stage. I just want them to spread the vibe. I don’t care how they do it.

Of course I was mildly amused to read in the Standard that it was Ed Balls who ballsed up the Lib-Lab talks, by being so bloody rude nobody could negotiate – and for this we pay him – and also ecstatic and overjoyed to see, in the redoubtable Londonist, that Respect, that parasitic veneer of opportunists, has lost both its money and its Chief Insect. But all I really want is to lose this constant feeling of dread that everything is about to buckle underneath me. Let these nice people be happy! They have lovely wives, lovely ties and a lovely new job: no wonder they look so shiny. All my friends look careworn and worried, people are out of work or even working f0r free – and all we hear is that it’s all going to get even worse, possibly forever. I can’t get Mlle B a prom dress, everything’s getting worn out, even my coffee pot has a crack in it. It’s nice to see someone looking really happy. Now let’s just get on with it shall we.

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Filed under coffee, happy, money, politics, useless

suddener and more various

Time for this again; sorry guys!

(N.b., this was written yesterday morning and posted this morning with minimal edits: however, ankle aside, it is a very nice day out and I think we’re going to the park. See, even Ms B can have a day off.)

I’m busy, and tired, and thinking. Spreading myself out all over the place like the blown petals. Or butter. Saying stupid things and too many of them.  And my ankle’s still sprained. When you get to where you feel you couldn’t write anything decent or even true to save your life, you know it’s time to go inside for a bit.

A few more busy days ahead. An old friend plus child staying. I have to do publicity for the next Lemon Monkey reading, on September 12. I have CVs to send out and students to recruit for the poetry workshop (it’s going to be a GREAT group). I have a really great blog post half-written, where it has been all week, plus a tiny hommage to the brand-new grand old man, Martin “Just don’t mention Osama his  teeth” Amis. Poems. Crap, no doubt. Half-written essays – puerile, no doubt. And unpaid. But all beside the point, really, at the moment, whatever the point is. And now it’s the Bank Holiday. Like the banks need a holiday!

Do you know, the internet is full of, it is PACKED with, “copywriting jobs” saying they want “article rewriters” for $1 an article. “Re-writers”! Or they want “original articles”. What the hell is THAT? 1,000 articles. I don’t even know what that MEANS. 1,000?!? Someone says people in India do it for the dollar but I still don’t get it. All I can think is that they want people to plagiarise existing web “content” to make money off their completely spurious websites through ad traffic.

So here you go: the Talisman. It wards off evil.

Snow

The room was suddenly rich and the great bay-window was
Spawning snow and pink roses against it
Soundlessly collateral and incompatible:
World is suddener than we fancy it.

World is crazier and more of it than we think,
Incorrigibly plural. I peel and portion
A tangerine and spit the pips and feel
The drunkenness of things being various.

And the fire flames with a bubbling sound for world
Is more spiteful and gay than one supposes –
On the tongue on the eyes on the ears in the palms of one’s hands –
There is more than glass between the snow and the huge roses.

Louis MacNeice

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Filed under MacNeice, Martin Amis, Our Crazy World

Watch out! There’s a Sting in the tale


Warning: only play this video if you think you can stand it. Srsly.

Bear with me, children. Regular readers will have been through all this before, either of the times I got made redundant and had to do lots of life-stuff. Once I get my website, PR blog, freelance career, personal finance, personal prospects and poetry workshop sorted out, I promise I’ll see a movie, go to an exhibition, read a poetry book, really get irritated about a news story, watch some reality TV with the kids, and report back to you on ALL those things.

I was at a wonderful dinner party last night with some old friends I don’t see enough of, and we talked about all kinds of fun and scurrilous things. It was just like Baroque Mansions! Everybody was shouting at once. We talked about Oxford Poetry-gate, “personal branding,” Gwyneth Paltrow’s website GOOP, how Gwynnie is like a female Sting (I laughed inordinately at that one, why did I not see it before), the web of special interest that connects Goldman Sachs to the US treasury department (did you know it was nicknamed Government Sachs?), reality TV, Twitter, iBook batteries, and finally the ridiculously amusing iPhone app Smack Talk… Must download it. And there was me thinking I needed a cat. (That is clearly not a hamster though, as you can see. It is a guinea pig.)

The only thing we didn’t get onto that could have been really good fun was the Fourth Plinth. (I haven’t even had a chance to follow that up. Well, I suppose there’s still time.)

Got home far too late, far too full of Punk IPA (yeah, we did listen to the Ramones a bit) and with a swollen foot, which has now been up all morning & seems a little better, but had a VERY nice time. Thank you, Mr & Mrs Goodcopybadcopy!

Er, and now I must do something useful. Where to start. It’s not all quite as lurvely as it seems once you’re faced with a bag of empty lever arch files and a sinkful of dirty dishes.

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Filed under coffee, food, happy, Life, money, music, parties, pigs, pseud's corner, TV

newsflash! Storm City Hall the Bastille!

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Okay, well all my out-of-work journalist and inpecunious writer and reviewer friends will be thrilled to hear that Boris Johnson, our very own Moptop Mayor, gets £250,000 a year to write a weekly column in the Daily Telegraph.

That’s the same as ten, say,  sub-editors working far more than Sunday mornings. It’s the same as me, Ms B, working from the age of, oh, 35 till now. The other difference is that they, or I, would be living on that fraction of this sum, where for Boz it merely more than doubles his Mayoral salary, which is already something like five times the average income… God, and people keep saying the journalism sector has dried up!

You know, I do love the slightly anachronistic dilettantism Boris brings to his work. He enacts the self-help dictum that you should “work like you don’t need to” (ahem!); and one can only support his support of the arts, especially for young deprived kids. It’s about time we started appreciating publicly the great richness of our culture. Plus, there is a deep suspicion here in Baroqueland of the kind of grim, empiricist appraisal-based target-&-objective sapjoy spirit that has ruined modern life. That, and plastic buses.

But here’s what the cuddly moppet says of his column, and I can’t help feeling just a little, tiny, teensy, weensy, eensy, peensy, meensy bit put out about it. He says:

“It’s chicken feed.

“I think that frankly there’s absolutely no reason at all why I should not knock off an article as a way of relaxation.

“I write anyway, I happen to write extremely fast.

“I don’t see why on a Sunday morning I shouldn’t knock off an article – if someone wants to pay me for that article then that’s their lookout and of course I make a substantial donation to charity.”

Well, it is time to man the barricades, or something. But rivers of blood, they’re a little been-there, today of all days. Do we really want to see heads on pikes for their own sake, or just so we can write about them? After all, it’s good to see there’s still plenty of money about. Maybe, bearing in mind the Cuddly One’s penchant for giving it away,  this is the moment to get crafting that pitch letter to end all pitches.

“Dear Boris…”

Or – instead, maybe write  to the editor of your choice:  a Sunday morning feature on Who Ate All the Pies…

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Filed under bagatelles, important things, Life, Living With Words, London, Marie Antoinette, politics, pseud's corner, what IS it with this lot??