Sunday, September 24, 2006

The Churchillian Connection

Lucy modelling the Autumnwear collection from Mothercare. Cigar range and teat suitable from 3 months +




On good days (when I can still feel my nipples and have managed to prize Lucy away from her cherished Norris Mcquirter Annual), my daughter and I sometimes make it along to the local baby music group.

To say there's an odd eclecticism about these gatherings would be, well, something of an understatement. They're a bit like going to your first ever non-school disco: you're there with a complete mish-mash of people all gagging for a healthy slug of 20-20 to ease things along. Then you realise there's no way they'll serve you at that time of day, and all you've really got to play with is a load of crap music and, um, babies.

In my group, the Barely Teenage mothers sit in one corner; a cliche of government statistics dripping in oversized trainers and 9 carat hair gel, with each pore straining for a sneaky fag as soon as the strange woman with the guitar isn't looking.

To the right there are the Breastmilk Knitters, steadily growing their green-rushed tights and mistily wondering how soon baby Appleogeon will take to produce the next batch of fertiliser.

Swaying jerkily around this group you'll find the nervous token man blushing into his song sheet. And then there, somewhere in the middle, are a few like me: early thirties-ish and each of us completely bemused as to how the hell we ended up sitting cross-legged in a cold church hall singing songs about bananas.

However, wherever you fit and whether you're fully aware of the actions to Tie Me Kangeroo Down (Sport), one thing you absolutely can't avoid is comparing your offspring to everyone else's. Politeness naturally forces you to coo and compliment each child, whilst secretly tightening the screws to your jaw and mumbling sweatily about Winston Churchill when faced with the, er, uglier babies. And trust me, if my group of misfits is anything to go by, there are some real howler monkeys out there.

For, after no longer than it takes to sing Row, Row, Row Your Boat, you'll swiftly learn that those who herald every baby as an identikit of old Whinny, have never even seen a child; let alone sat amongst an entire wailing wall of them on a blustery morning in North London.

Now then, don't get me wrong. Our Winston undoubtedly had his good points: tremendous at flicking backwards V signs at the odd paparazzo, and unrivalled in semantic play on the ends of beginnings, so I hear. But, not exactly a looker, and definately not the one-size-fits-all baby cast that some would have you believe.

It is true that most babies are bald and a bit squashy. But that really is where the connection ends, and anyone that even whispers the WC word in front of you is in no way being complimentary. Yes, there may be a few that are referring to Winston's infamous Hello makeover, published shortly after his VE day celebration photoshoot. However, most have in mind the slightly less glamourous side of our wartime hero: a Churchill tortured by rumours of Ribbentrop's superior mastery of the Playstation and suffering after one too many consolation drinks with Chamberlain in the Dog & Duck.

So, which Winston is Lucy? Well I'll admit that she does often look more boy than girl and is rarely at her best in the wee small hours, but I can honestly say I've yet to find a hint of our Greatest Briton about her either.

Mind you, if I did...I'd still love her. Hell, I'd probably love her if she looked like the love child of Frida Kahlo and Brian Blessed. In fact, yes, I'd love her even if she had 27 hair lips, a full-on beard and 'tache and went around smelling of the Folies Bergers.

After all, Mothercare do a nifty line in pastel burqas these days, and there's absolutely nothing in the lyrics of the Banana Boat Song that precludes even the most hirsute of babies from joining in.

Monday, September 04, 2006

I Am Become Broadband

Talk Talk's new "Quit your jibber jabber" tariff. Installed free, forever, at a maternity unit near you.



Had you met me a mere 4 months ago, you'd have been forgiven for thinking that the phrase "British reserve" had been coined exclusively with me in mind. I've never really been a great one for small talk you see; tending to clam-up, all sweaty palmed and blushingly confused, if asked by strangers to part with anything more personal than the time or the most efficient route to the train station.

But then...ah, then. All of a sudden, along comes Lucy, and I've found that I can't actually stop talking. Perhaps it's something to do with the fact that I'm confined with a 3 month old baby, but it now seems I literally can't help chatting to people I barely know. My local newsagent, for example, knows the names and peccadillos of all the sexual partners I've ever had, the postman knows my dress size and some poor woman at the bus stop will probably be haunted forever by my sorry tale of a morning's hard labour, removing mould from my bathroom grout.

One of the other things that has happened in the realm of this new, oddly talkative me is the fact that I now spend hours in conversation with Lucy. Given her young age and her understandably incomplete grasp of English, we often adopt Babyspeak; frequently and merrily "agoo-goo-ing" and "agida-wida-ing" together for hours.

Slightly perplexed by this, and concerned that I might actually be talking nonsense to my most precious creation, I ran this morning's conversation with Lucy through Babelfish. Fortunately, as you'll see from the translation below, I have nothing to worry about: I have a little to learn on the goo-goo grammar front, but in general, my grasp of the language seems sound.

However the results (although warped slightly in translation), may serve as a contraceptive warning to you all:


ACT 1, SCENE 1

A bedroom at about 6.45am, somewhere in North London. The action centres on a cot and nursing chair. Various baby equipment (nappies, wipes and strange mono-coloured toys) can be seen throughout.

ME: Good morning, my beautiful daughter. What a fine head of snails you have on you today.

LUCY: Morning, Mummy. I have done a big poo in my nappy.

ME: The sky is a lollipop, and I am your uncle.

LUCY: Listen, I'm not joking about the poo: it's really quite big and sloppy. Any chance of a change. Kind of nowish?

(Nappy change commences)

ME: Have you seen the big dolphin, in my head?

LUCY: That's better. Mind if I do a large fart now? Oh sod it, I'm gonna do one anyway...

ME: Beef has gone up to £3.47 in the circus pavillion.

LUCY: Oh, and another one. Any chance of some food? Your breasts do look lovely, Mummy.

ME: You are a sloppy giuseppee, gobstopper smackhead...

LUCY: Yeah, yeah. Could you possibly stop talking bollocks soon? I am hungry you know.

ME: ...the light of my liver, and cunning to boot.

LUCY: Where's my bloody food?

ME: Juicy. Lucy. Wooosy.

LUCY: If you don't stop jabbering and feed me, I'm gonna cry 'til I go really, really red. You've got about three seconds...

ME: Food, you say? The harvest moon rises in the North.

LUCY: Are you drunk again, Mummy? Ah, here's the food; can we have a bit of silence now?

(Finally, breakfast is served. Only weird, snuffly sounds can be heard)

ME: I love you

LUCY: I love you too, Psycho.


CURTAIN
More blogs about poo diaries.