Wednesday, 31 March 2010

March 25: Craft projects

Class two of learning how to knit. I'm excited. And do you know what, I actually think I've nailed it. UBRO. Up, behind, round, off. Up, behind, round, off. Who said knitting was hard? It only gets tricky when for some inexplicable reason, a stitch doesn't come out right, or you accidentally make a big hole, or a row decides to drunkenly and rudely cascade off the end of the needle, or something disastrous like that. But all you need is a friend to pass it to. A friend who says, 'Give it here you numpty, what have you done again.' Friends are great. Friends can fix things. And off you go again.
This week was more relaxed. There were no snakes in tanks looking at me and my tasty bump of a baby. But I did find out that at least one other member of the gang also has snakes (again, in tanks in her living room) and one has - wait for it - a tarantula. What is it about knitters?
But I also discover that this isn't just a knitting club. There is one girl, my school friend's flatmate who is very beautiful and talented and lovely, but currently keeps telling gruesome stories about lambing season (her mother has a farm in Devon; last week a crow pecked the innards out of a lamb's backside. Poor lamb. As they say.) She is making jewellery; big silver chunky soldiered-things that will no doubt look great when finished. I think one of the women was crocheting too, but I'm not sure what that is. But there was one woman who didn't do anything... though she had an excuse. She brought her tiny three-week old, elfin baby with her to show her off for the first time. We took it in turns holding her (I lie.. I didn't want to but the rest did), passing her around, cooing at her too-big-for-her-body hands and cute outfit. We can't resist. There's no competition. She wins the vote by miles - undoubtedly the best-craft prject anyone in the group has so far produced.

***

I seem to have a new lodger in my house. It is not a cat, thank-god. I think it must be a snail (or, yuck, a slug, so I'm just thinking it's a snail). Two mornings ago, I came downstairs, stood in my kitchen thinking 'fooooooooood,' glanced at the nearby rug that is stopping my make-shift chairs scrape the new floor and thought, 'hmmm'. There was a clear and definite slime trail, circling in on itself then squiggling off the side of the rug. I hoovered it off, inspected for slimy little creatures to no avail. But the next day, there it was again, this time its glistening markings on the rug and the doormat, a few feet away. I'm not sure what to think of my intruder. I'm not sure where it lives. In my one wilting plant high-up on a shelf? In my kettle? Nor what it is after in my house. Crumbs? Do snails eat crumbs? Perhaps I should leave some out and see if they vanish in a puff of smoke - or trail of slime. So long as it stays downstairs, I think it will be ok. I won't get the traps out just yet. But any sign of the slime coming upstairs to suck me and Bump in the middle of the night, then it's had it.

March 24: Don't panic

I am slowly beginning to panic about the logistics of my up-coming birth (not my birth, obviously.. Bump's birth..) This is because I live in Bristol but I'm still medically registered over the bridge in Wales. I had my operation there, and recuperated back at the old family home, and went for post-operative check-ups there (and my small baby scans). So now, I'm just in their system; the midwives know me, the consultants know me; the receptionists know me; even the man who carries out surveys each week on whether women are taking their Folic Acid or not knows me (I steal his pens). Last time I met my consultant, I came clean and told her I've pegged it to England and asked if I should switch my care here for Bump's arrival, but she thinks it's best I stay in Cardiff.
Easy to say. But how the hell am I supposed to get there when Bump wants to arrive?
'Can I drive myself,' I asked.
The consultant looked at me in one of those ways that makes you feel very small, and said: 'Contractions can last for fifty seconds. You can't drive.'
I think: 'I'd get there quick though, wouldn't I, with my foot to my floor.'
My school friend offered to be on call - then remembered she'd be in Mexico on holiday at the time.
My mum has offered to stay with me for the two weeks surrounding the due date so she can drive me over. But is an in-labour woman really geared up for a car drive? Will I leak? I've got no bloody idea.
Then there's the worry about when to get over there. As soon as Labour starts? But where do I loiter if the hospital says I'm not ready to come in. Mum's house is no-more. My sister has sold her house so she'll be out of it in a month. But as yet she hasn't found a new one so I guess she and her daughter will be staying at dad's, along with all their boxes.
Can I go there and just loll about at his house amongst the chaos? Somehow, it sounds grim.
I've also got to stay 'consultant-led care' which is also worrying as I'm not sure why.
'You've had major surgery in the last few months, that's why,' they say.
But what do they think is going to happen? Am I going to rupture? Is my scar going to split open? Am I going to burst? Are they going to want to strap me to a bed and monitor me? They better bloody not.
Then there's the problem of after-care. Midwives like to visit, don't they, to check mother hasn't murdered their newborn. Or sat on it. Or eaten it. I'm not hanging around dad's house for weeks on end. So they'll have a long way to travel to find me.
Who are these people who have easy lives all in one place?

***

At yoga earlier on this week, one of the women mentioned Hypno-birthing. I'm always slightly skeptical of such things. I imagine Paul McKenna saying, in a very relaxed slow voice, 'And now push' while you scream your lungs out in agony.
I think I might just be able to wangle writing a feature about it and so get the course for free, so I ring the woman.
She is very nice, and frankly, just too damn good at quietly and efficitiently rail-roading you into doing it. Before I know it, I've told her my whole life-story and signed up. It is geared towards couples, or a woman and her birthing partner, but I've convinced her to just let me come on my own (with Bump of course). If it works, and stops you tearing in two, or getting butchered or having some horrendous problem (one of the women in yoga had a prolapse in her last birth which left her having to - and I quote - 'carry around a Tesco carrier bag of loose vagina for two months') - I'm all for it.

I'm also beiginning to panic about names. They are very tricky when you are trying to decide on your own. I know Father-to-be won't like anything I pick. I am on letter A of my baby-naming book. So far, Bump is being called Albie (which my sister kindly said was the name of a horse she once rode that kicked her off. 'It was a nice horse though,' she quickly added).
I add up the days. I've got about two months left. How many letters are there in the alphabet? 26? I can't remember. So, what's that? A letter every two days, should Bump not arrive early? Goodness, I better get reading.

March 23: Blogtastic

Ohhh, I'm so very excited about my blog. I started this up just a few weeks ago, back-dating my diary accounts I had begun keeping while on my festering, rank-smelling death bed in January. I like to write. I write for a living, though sometimes, when I read my master-pieces after my boss has 'tweaked them' out of all recognition, I do wonder why I have not yet been fired.
My counsellor (the Big C) clocked that I was a 'creative type' (do I really dress that badly?) and that writing my thoughts down might help. She more than likely meant on a scrap of paper, to be discarded, and lost, then one day found months later, marvelled at in quiet disbelief (did I really think that?) then thrown away. Or better yet (as I am a creative type) tossed casually onto the log-burner on a night-in drinking Magners and listening to Joni Mitchell.
I thought I'd do a blog instead and treat myself to a bit of technological-advancement. I've never done one before but I loved reading Wife In the North's, so what the hell.
Today, I logged on, slightly unenthusiastic already I must admit, as blogging is quite all-consuming. And (as I said) I do write for a living so dong this actually entails yet more hours sat alone at my kitchen table being stared at by a cat.
This time, though, I noticed I had a comment. One lovely, exciting comment from somebody called RH.
Goodness, I thought. Are people actually reading this? Can people actually be bothered to skim through my endless moans and gripes. Surely, no one would have the patience. It's quite terrifying to think that this is actually out there. If Father-to-be found out, he would more than likely be very angry. Or would he cry? He would probably cry and think me very, very cruel (he may well be right, this has crossed my mind, I am just trying to block it out). He might start his own blog and fill readers in all the gaps I've missed out and make me look horrendous. 'Do you know what she did this week?' Or - perhaps, but I might be being naive, no? - it might shame him and his family into slightly better behaviour. They might worry I was doing a bad PR job on the Sikh community. 'Us, say such horrible things about a tiny little baby not yet born into this world? Us, reject our very own grandchild and deny its existence? Us, disown our son for bringing such shame into the family? Us, be so horrid about a woman he once cared for? Never.'
Anyway, I've decided it's not all about him. I've not re-read and counted-through my postings, but I reckon less than five per cent of them are dedicated to our failed relationship and the medieval attitudes of the Indians. The rest are all just my ordinary goings-on, life being pregnant, life in a new home, life knitting with snakes etc., with a bit of spin to make them sound more exciting, of course. So there we go, your honour. I have my defense. The blog is staying (just like Bump! Ha!)

In my excitement, after realising that I must have at least one reader, I thought I would try to link to other blogs. I searched for 'Bristol blogs' and found two to start with. One is written by a man who likes to run marathons. There is a big photo at the top of his home-page of bleeding nipples. Yes, that's right, blood through a t-shirt, how attractive. I do not bother reading it. The other is by a woman who clearly likes cushions. Not that there's anything wrong with that. Everyone likes a good cushion from time to time. But I think she's a bit obsessed. Her whole blog is about the exciting padded creations so I don't bother reading that one either. I think: 'Hmm, if this is my local competition then perhaps my drivel isn't so bad, after all.'

Sunday, 28 March 2010

March 22: George Cross

Yoga is a success. I not only smiled and managed not to cry. I also spoke. I said 'hello' to at least two women. On the way out, I hear them swapping phone numbers to meet for a coffee. I was very brave. And said: 'Ohhh, I don't know any mums at all. Please can I come too?'

March 21: Moves afoot

Father-to-be comes over for a scan. We avoid all discussion of his family life until I hear him on his phone later that afternoon. He is talking to someone about selling his flat and leaving London.
Upon quizzing, he says: 'I cannot live in London while keeping Bump a secret. I cannot meet with my friends anymore while they don't know about this. I need to leave, quit my job, sell my flat, start again, do a Maxine Carr and create a new identity. I've got to turn my back on the life I've been living.'
His mother has reportedly been in hospital with the stress of it all. The sister has nearly had her baby early. I sit at my kitchen table, nursing a cup of tea, thinking: 'How did it come to all this?'

March 21: Dirty weekend

Despite her own troubles, my old school friend is looking after me. A while back, she invited me for a weekend away in Narbeth, a near-seaside town in Pembrokeshire. Her friends have a cottage in the town centre which we can use, she said. There is a good deli. There are beaches. It can fit four of us (her two other flat-mates and a dog). I'm sold.
In the day, Narbeth is a delight. There are galleries. One sold Rolf Harris' prints (can you believe he will be 80 this year?). One sold terrible out-of-focus photographs of fly-tipping. A pile of wasted tyres to hang on your wall anyone? Go on, it's only £200. Another sold Art made of tampons (clean ones) which were actually quite lovely - from a distance.
We found a knitting shop. I now know what to aspire to. Knitted products can be beautiful. You just need good organic, home-dyed wool and - well - a bit of talent. I especially marvelled an old-fashioned pale-brown blanket, made in one go with many different stitches. I thought: 'I will never be able to do that'.
I also learnt that there is a stitch called 'turkish fagotting'.
I'm not sure what this is but my mind is conjuring up images of turkeys, Turks and faggots. I'm not sure how they all go together.
Our Saturday night out in Narbeth, though, did not get off to a good start.
This is what happened.

8.45pm and hungry (we did not think this unduly late).
We walk to a local restaurant that is quite buzzing but clearly has free tables.
We enter:
Polite: 'Do you have room for four?
Not so polite: 'No.'
'Oh, are you sure. There are very obviously free tables?'
She goes to check - then says, 'Yes, of course, come in,'
Better.
We are seated. Ten minutes later, we try to order.
'Oh, did no one tell you? You can't have anything off the main menu. You can only have a steak off the volcanic grill (no good for us as one is a vegetarian). The chef's got to leave at 9pm you see. He won't stay any later. It's a Saturday night and he wants to leave.'
We find another restaurant.
One of our team's food is cold. The other has the tiniest piece of chicken known to man. Half way through - we are the only ones in there - they turn the music off. We try to pay but the waitress is chatting to her mate who has come through the door.

We go to a pub. This is quite exciting. I have not been to a pub for a long long time. I like pubs and I have missed them.
With my pea-sized bladder, I go straight to the loo while the others order their pints - and my bitter lemon.
No bitter lemon, it seems.
Ginger beer?
Nope.
I ask the barman: 'What non-alcoholic drinks do you have?'
He says: 'Coke, lemonade, orange juice or all three mixed together if you want. This is a boozer, in it. We sell boooooozzzzzzze.'
I don't think any of us have ever felt so unwelcome in our lives. We hide in a booth with our coats on, ready to scarper.
A man comes in, drunk, old before his time, bedraggled.
'Oi, girls. Can any of you play the piano. I'll play you a tune.'
Unsteady on his feet, he collapses on the piano stool, flips open the lid of the battered old beast, starts slowly going up a wonky scale with a few duff notes...
Then the evening gets a whole load better.
He is called Reg and he is absolutely fantastic. Steaming drunk (he'd been at the races all day and lost £150). But boy could he play.
Every tune you wanted. Old ones. New ones. Well, not Michael Jackson. Or Tom Jones.
'Bloody Tom Jones, I'm not playin that rubbish.'
Soon, all the girls were up. Singing. Dancing. A local joins in. So drunk, her belt is hanging off her trousers and she later ends up falling asleep on the bar stool.
(She's also - in true Gavin and Stacey style - called Nessa).
Then the local boys come out to play.
Tarmac Dan (who is called Dan and Tarmacs roads for a living); Harry Potter Shane (he has a scar on his forehead) and some others.
I think they spot four out-of-town birds and think their luck is in.
Got to be said, though, I don't think their eye-sight's much cop.
They'd clearly added me into the 'available' equation.
Tarmac Dan was after me (I'm not bragging, this is the truth.)
There was no doubt. Seven months pregnant. And he didn't even notice as he threw his arm around my shoulders and tried to buy me shots and make me dance.
Either that, or he didn't care.
In his defence, he was very drunk. 'I'm steamin,' he yelled.
At one point, him talking about being a Tarmacer yet again, my friend said:'Oi Dan, stop talking shop will you.'
To which he replied: 'I'm not talking shop. I'm talking work. I don't work in a shop. I Tarmac.'
Bless.
By the end, even I was dancing by the piano. Reg was stupendous.
Not only could he play for Britain, he also had an iPhone (which clearly contained lots of porn as he wouldn't let us look at the pictures), and a Facebook page.
The best bit?
When we drove back to Cardiff the next day, to return the cottage keys to the owners, we told them about Reg.
The mum, who grew up in West Wales, said: 'Reg Mathias. I know him. My father was his headmaster. Here, I'll show you pictures of him when he was eight.'
I love Wales.

March 19: I am an explorer

I am slowly exploring Bristol and my local area more. I now know where a local pizza cafe is, a local Tapas restaurant, a good pub that serves Real Ale, where to buy fresh fruit and veg and get new tyres for my car (two different places). I also know which hills are too steep to walk up, at least in my current state, which is helpful.
Today, I walked up into my park. It is a really lovely park. A few chavs that shout 'Come ere ya bastard,' after their run-away pit-bull. But I don't mind that. I'm sure I've called my dog worse at times, though probably not in such a public space.
It's also got a basketball court that actually gets used. (I want to play with Bump when he's old enough. Or even when he's not. I can just bounce a ball around his Maxi-cosi car seat, shoot some hoops, and run to him for a high-five. I can tell I'm going to be an embarrassing mother).
It's also got a children's play area, a tennis club and enough of a hill that you get decent views out over the city.
From the top, you can see up to the Clifton Suspension Bridge and all of Clifton Wood and beyond. I looked out today, and thought: 'That's where my X lives. Just up there. So close. If I look hard enough, I can probably find his house.'
It is tempting to wave, to stand on my tip-toes, shout 'here I am, I'm still alive, I'm just over here. Come on over some time. I'll make you a cup of tea. I've missed you. I miss you every day.'

March 18: Cats

March 18: Cats
I seem to be attracting cats into my life. When I first moved in back in August, I had a lodger - even though the house was a building site (she paid cheap rent). She came with two until-then house cats as she had previously lived in a top-floor flat.
I said to her: 'Are they house trained?'
She said: 'Yes.'
I said: 'Please can you throw them out in the day. I don't want a litter tray in the house as I don't have a utility room.'
She said: 'No problem.'
But there was one tinsy problem; no one told the cats. They didn't want to go. They took one look at the cold billowing Bristol winds and thought: 'Sod that. Don't you know I'm a house cat. Don't you know I like doing my do-do in a nice clean warm litter tray. Won't catch me crouching in a pile of sodden leaves. I might catch a chill.'
After two weeks - still a litter tray lurking downstairs.
Fine for her - she was out of the house all day. It was Moi who had to put up looking at a steaming crusty cat turd, and wait for the wafts to reach me.
I dared to broach the subject.
She put the cat litter tray in her bedroom.
I don't know how she put up with this. It stank - especially as I made sure her door was closed to ensnare the smell.
One day I peeped in and her clothes had fallen off her wardrobe into the tray. All I can say, is she must like cat droppings more than I do.
Then - another night (sorry, you can tell I still haven't quite got this out of my system) she invited her hunk of her boyfriend around to sleep.
Ah - well then, she didn't want the steaming cat litter tray in her bedroom then, did she.
He might think her a tad odd, no? To fall asleep to the smell of bottom-ended digested Whiskers. Not really a Lavender-scented candle, is it?
So she put the litter tray out on the landing. Right by the ladder down which I climbed from my sleeping-hideaway in the loft.
I lay in bed. Thought: 'Wonderful. I am three-months pregnant. I feel awful. I am very dumped and single and dreadfully miserable.
'I really do not want to hear my flat-mate having sex with her hunky man. I can't even shut my door as I sleep in a loft. I want to cry.'
4am, I awoke to an all-too-familiar scratching noise.
One of the cats was having a crap right by my ladder, the smell wafting straight up into my loft hatch to accompany my dreams.
Well, I've never got down the ladder to so quick to bollock the little blighter and chuck it's filthy waste downstairs (very loudly).
During this time, with the house in complete upheaval from the builders, my spare room became an Armageddon.
It was full of boxes and belongings; it was my kitchen (the kettle, microwave and toaster were there); my tool-shed, my wardrobe.
One Sunday, I dared to clear it out.
After ten minutes: 'Hmm, that smells a bit funny. What is that slightly-acidic aroma?'
There was cat piss everywhere. On bags full of clothes, on books, on towels, on my brother-in-law's pirate outfit which I had borrowed to go to a fancy-dress party.
And in one corner - a nice, fossilised cat turd.
To be fair, if I was a cat I too might have thought: 'This room is in such a mess, I'm going to use it as a toilet.'
But I didn't think that at the time. I thought: 'I am spending my Sunday cleaning-up cat piss and I am really not very happy about it.'
The best bit:
When I told said-lodger, she said: 'Oh, that will have been Maggie, the black cat.'
I said: 'How do you know which cat it was?'
She said: 'Oh, she used to do it all over my house every time she got scared.'

I now seem to have a different cat in my life. It is the neighbour's. A few weeks ago, my middle sister and dad did a Good Samaritan day's work chopping down trees and overgrown bushes in my back yard. I think we beheaded its favourite perch.
It now comes into my yard and peers at me through my French windows.
I work from home, sat at my kitchen table all alone in my quiet little house. Sometimes I look up and it is just sat there, looking at me inquisitively, watching me.
I feel like a specimen at the Zoo.
I think, 'Should I let it in. It looks like a nice pussy cat. It looks like it might want to come in.'
Then I remember.

Thursday, 25 March 2010

March 15: Just another Manic Monday...

Yet anther appointment to measure the fluid around Bump and to check he’s getting all the food and blood he needs. It seems the 'levels' are fine. No drought. No great flood. Which means probably all is well and that I'm just having a small baby for some other reason.
I see my consultant, who always seems relaxed and cheerful even when dishing out news about borderline tumours and worryingly small babies. This time she says: 'There is no need to be concerned. The baby is small. But we humans draw up these medical charts to tell us how a baby should be at a certain time and age. But God sometimes know better and decides that it won’t quite fit what we want.’
Hmm, I think. Isn’t that what people say when bad things happen? That God is on board? That God knows best? Oh, you’ve lost you only son in car crash. Oh, your mother’s been murdered by a raving schizophrenic let out on a weekend jolly. Is God really on board then? And is he really on board with this baby? After all the grief Bump’s caused, I hope so. I really do. I’m not sure I’m enough. If you’re listening God, there’s a seat for you down this end of the pitch, the whistle’s blown and they're off, come and cheer on my team and come quick; we need your help.

***

A cursory call from father-to-be to check that the appointment went ok. I wait for him to tell me whether he is coming to the next scan – which he has been invited to - but he rushes to get off the phone.
Leave it, I think. Then, two minutes later, ‘bugger it, I want to know’. I text him. Are you coming to the next scan? Have you thought about whether you are having contact with this child?
Seems the ‘I will definitely have contact’ line from last week has gone up in a puff of smoke (have I mentioned that I’m naive? I think I have...???).
Now, the line is: ‘I think about nothing else than whether to have contact or not and I am still not sure.
'We need to talk some more, much more openly and honestly.'
Bastard. Bastard. Bastard. Cruel, cruel, spineless coward. I hate him. I hate him from me. I hate him from Bump. I hate him from my family. I hate him from all decent people who know what’s right and make sure they put their children first despite all the obstacles. What is it that I am doing? Trying to include him, trying to incorporate him, trying to create some bond between him and Bump. Here, I say, come over, be involved. If we can’t be a happy couple, we can be happy parents, you can see Bump whenever you want, he can get to know you, he can get to know his heritage, he will love you and turn to you for guidance when his mother is making him tidy his bedroom and turn his music down and generally driving him mad. I will do what I can to make it work – provided you keep us both away from the cultural backlash.
I am a fool ten times over. I think: 'How can he not want to see this child or be committed to involvement in this child's life? How is he not 100 per cent biting-my-arm off to come to the scans?' Now, after all this time, largely down to my counsellor's (the Big C's) doing, he has access and encouragement on a plate - but he doesn’t want it. His family still come first, and they don’t want this. If FTB keeps becoming more involved, their dirty little secret has more of a chance of getting out. I weep for myself for being a fool. I weep for Bump. I weep, I weep, I weep.

Wednesday, 24 March 2010

March 14: Vomit

Since month three of pregnancy, I have been very lucky in having virtually no morning sickness at all. It seems God is out to get revenge. I have caught the 'gastro' bug that is sweeping the nation. First brother-in-law had it, then two weeks later, my middle sister, then big sister's eldest boy.
I've felt 'off' all day. I drove to mum's house in the countryside to wish her a Happy Mothering Sunday. I couldn't eat the beautiful M&S lunch she dished-out, nor could I walk the dog, much to his sadness. I slept in the sunshine on the drive (it's the country, even the drive is nice).
Came back, woolly hat my passenger-seat companion in case of a sudden emergency, went to sleep, then - ahh, yes....I wasn't making it up. Being sick is not nice. I don't like sick. I don't like clearing up sick. I think: 'Soon I will have to do this for someone else' as I wipe around the toilet seat with a wet cloth.

March 13: Knitting

I have an old friend from school. For the past few years, we have led parallel lives, but mine slightly in echo. We lived in Bristol, she moved to London. I followed a year later. She moved back, disilusioned with the 'wanky TV industry' that meant her driving 15 hours a day to deliver a video to some ungrateful tosser or other.
I followed her back a year later. Now we are both here and it is good. She has lots of friends, has a social network, invites me places, is kind.
I've known for a while that she goes knitting. Despite being friends, we are, in many ways, chalk and cheese. I go mountain biking. She goes knitting.
Knitting, I think - as she probably does to getting muddy on a bike. Who wants to knit? How dull is knitting? I have no desire to knit. Hear the word 'Knit' - and I think 'old people, and terrible Aran jumpers, and Easter chicks'. Knitting? Never.
This was before I became pregnant.
In the last week, I have looked around at my world, and my few-friends, and my non-existent social life, and thought: 'Fuck, if it's bad now, how bad is it going to be when Bump arrives?'
I rack my brains over things I can do with a tiny baby. I cannot go mountain biking, I know this much. Not unless I want to be jailed for causing infantile brain damage. Nor can I do any sport of an evening. Nor can I go to a pub.
'Ah,' I think, my forward creasing slightly in concern. 'But perhaps, just maybe, just perhaps I can go knitting.' I ring her up.

Knitting, it transpires, is not easy. There is something called casting on, like a fisherman should do, only it's not so much lobbing a rod into still water and hoping for a bite, but an active threading of needles and wool and trying not to pull too tight or let the little monkeys slip off the end.

It seems my needles do not like doing what my brain tells them to do. It seems my brain also has great trouble in following instructions. By the end of two hours, I have knitted two rows (and my friend did one) and this really was trying very hard. It takes a lot more effort than mountain biking.

The plan was to get into knitting, get to know this gaggle of girls and make some friends, to create something in my diary which I can take Bump to. The venue changes every week, flipping between the group's respective houses. Bump can sleep, I figure, in some upstairs bedroom while I knit.

Good plan, you might think.
Not so.
The lady who hosted this week has snakes. Not just one. But three. Big ones.
I sit on the sofa, my eye just glancing at the 'fish tank' the other side of the room.
I think, 'Ohh, that's a funny goldfish swimming out from behind that rock.'
Then: 'In fact, that's a very very long goldfish. It keeps coming.'
Then: 'Good God, it's a snake.'
There are two in the lounge tank, three-foot corn snakes of a Tipex white colour.
If that is not enough, I am told that there is also a four-foot python upstairs in the spare bedroom.
I think: 'There is no way on earth I am leaving Bump upstairs asleep while I knit among friends knowing that there is a wild hungry one-limbed monster in the house.'
Imagine the python escapes. I'm sure it would be extremely delighted to find a tiny brown baby asleep in a moses basket on top of a firm bed. What a perfect size for a one-gulp dinner.'
Perhaps mountain biking is a safer bet after all.

March 12: Fool, Fool Me

Backwards slide with FTB. I email, to say how nice it was to see him on Monday and that I was grateful to have him back in my (and Bump's) life, that I felt we had built a little bit of trust again, and that I was glad he wanted contact with Bump and that he was very very welcome, so long as he didn’t bugger off when Bump’s age five, or whenever he gets an arranged marriage.
He replies:
‘This is still not straight-forward.
‘Of course I want to be involved and come to the scans but I’m worried you will take my involvement for more than it is.
‘I’m worried you haven’t thought of the implications for you and Bump.
‘I’m still not sure whether cutting myself off is the best thing after all.’
Have I told you I’m naive?

March 12: Fire, fire

There is a park very close to my house, into which I sometimes venture. Today, I heaved my short-of-breath body up the stubborn incline to where it flattens out, and was met with plumes of thick smoke and children standing at the nearby school gates yelling: 'Fire, fire, there's a fire'.
They were right (it must be a good school). It was, indeed, a fire. And quite a big one too. Well, if not that big, then very odd. It looked like it had been started deliberately, with big chunks of wood and old furniture in it, but it was enclosed by four big trees, and was right next to the tennis club (hardly a good place for burning junk, even I know that). And the wind was up. I thought, 'Ohhhh, a few gusts to the left and this fire will engulf the building.'
I didn't know if I was being overly-concerned but others must have been too as someone called the fire brigade.
I watched, as you do, chatting to a man with greyhounds and a Digital SLR (I thought, 'really, you take that dog-walking?'), heard the siren.
The firemen were very efficient. Hopped out. Grabbed the hose. No time for chit-chat with the by-standers. They spent ages putting it out, hopping over fences, dampening down all the timbers to stop it sparking up again.
And that was that. Rolled up their hose. Hats off. Back in their truck. And off. A good day's work, I thought. Saved the tennis club. Saved the trees. I could be a fireman.

March 11: Bird Brain 2

I had arranged to meet my builder at my house at 1pm. I was a tad late. I pulled up in my car, reached for the handle of my front door, opened it.
‘Oohh, hello.’
He was already in my kitchen, looking rather at home, making two cups of tea, stiring in the milk.
‘Do you still have a key,’ I asked, surprised.
‘Yes,’ he said, ‘but I never would have used it without your permission. I drove up and your front door was open so I thought you must be in.’

March 11: Mystery Shoppers

Sister number one unimpressed with attempts to get fat. Brother-in-law says 'that's but a small snack'. Sister number two says, 'Onken is no good. Where is the cake?'
She drives over, brings four huge chocolate muffins with chunky bits in, takes out a plate and beckons me to sit at the table, lays it in front of me, says: 'You want to get fat. You need to do it in style. Now eat.'

****
Later, after I have eaten, we storm Mothercare and, brave in numbers, manage to terrify the shop assistant.
How does this buggy fold?
How does it clip?
How much is a rain cover?
Which is best, a cocoon for a new born or a sleeping-bag thing?
Is there a bag to go over the handlebars?
What can you fit in it?
What if it gets a flat tyre?
Which babyseat is best?
Will it fit in my car?
How much is a bar to transfer it onto the buggy frame?
How long will it last?
How do the straps extend?
Phew,’ the poor woman said, sat on the floor surrounded by car-seats, rubbing her eyes in weariness after our hour-long tirade. ‘You’re testing me today. You’re not mystery shoppers, are you?
‘No,’ I smiled. ‘Just clueless.’

Thursday, 18 March 2010

March 10: Largin it up

I suppose I am a natural first-time mother. The thought of labour terrifies me. Over the last few months, I'm sure I have sub-consciously crossed my fingers and toes for a small baby. I've thought: 'I do not want to squeeze out a ten-pound turkey cum watermelon. I want a nice compact tiny bundle that slips out easily and leaves my nether regions nicely intact, thank-you very much.'
But now I've got a 'small baby', I don't want one. I don't want an 'off-the-chart' tiny child who I'm too scared to pick up. I want a normal healthy baby that doesn't involve any more bloomin scans and fits into normal-size baby-grows.
I don't know whether it will help Bump or not but I have decided to go on a mission to get fat. None of this 'worried about my weight' business. It's time to large it up.
Today, I ate:
Three fat slices of toast for breakfast, with peanut butter and honey (it's good honestly.. it's not just me being pregnant).
Fried egg on toast for lunch
One big banana
A whole large pot of Onken (strawberry and whole grain)
An enormous baked potato with a huge pot of chickpea casserole
Three caramel Digestives.

I'm so full, I feel absolutely sick. I feel like I'm on fat camp, or in some horrendous, perverse torture reality TV show where the fattest wins £1 million. Each mouthful near the end, I wanted to store food in my cheeks like a hamster. I'm not sure - even for Bump - whether I can keep it up. Perhaps the fat look's just not for me.

Wednesday, 17 March 2010

March 9: Meet and Greet

It was a strange sort of evening. FTB (fresh in from an Antwerp beer-festival stag-do, lucky for some) arrived at my house late in preparation for the next-day's early morning scan. I was already in bed, one ear cocked on red-alert, listening for the purr of his car sneaking down my street.
He bought me a present - Belgium chocolates. A good start. Chocolate always goes down well, even when it's pretend-posh-proper chocolate with violent shades of colour in the centre. He gave me a hug (another good start, there was a time when that was deemed inappropriate, as if he could re-impregnate me through touch). He asked how I was. Goodness.
We went to bed... kissed, had wild passionate sex just like we did all those months ago, and all was forgiven.
THE END
I jest.
Him, firmly in the spare room, on the futon, a lingering lick of paint fumes but it couldn't be helped. Me, in my own bed (normally I'd give it up for visitors but this time, I couldn't be bothered).
At 4am, I was awake; hungry, my stomach sore and in need of calming tea. I crept downstairs but he heard me and followed. It was very surreal, sat at my kitchen table in the cold, in our pyjamas, listening to the milk-float clink bottles on my neighbour's doorsteps, and flicking through the weekend magazines that I'd discarded unread.
I spied an aubergine cheesecake recipe that looks better than it sounds.
'Ottolenghi,' I said, shivering in my bare feet. 'Is he any good?'
'Great.'

Bright and breezy, we hit the road, over the soft peppermint-green Severn Bridge, back to my 'home hospital'.
From a chair, FTB watched while a midwife squirted gel on my stomach, brought Bump into view in his black-and-white world, and began measuring. It was the first time FTB had seen Bump since the eight-week 'cyst' scan, when he said the sight of the baby made him want to vomit. This time, he just looked at the monitor, no emotional reaction to seeing his child, now in near-full form, its little hand up by its face as if ready for a boxing match. He just looked.

Then in to see the consultant. Bump's measurements are nearly, but not quite, off the scale - but not in a good 'world-record celebration' way. Just a niggling, worrying way. S/he is small.
'Why are they small? I ask. 'Did the cyst steal all the room?'
Nope, not that, it seems. Guess again.
'My diet? My bottle-a-day Vodka habit? Stress (surely not)?
The consultant is vague - or maybe I'm not listening properly. It seems some babies can just be small. Or there may be something wrong with the tubes that feed him.
'Will this mean he's small all his life?' Nope, wrong again. There's no genetic correlation to that. It is much more about the 'mother' at this stage of pregnancy. Groan. How did I know it would be my fault.
And the outcome? Yet more scans. This time, weekly. They might as well just hook me to the monitor, sign Bump up to a YouTube channel called 'Floating Fetus', and leave me strapped to the table.

***

There is a cafe, a few miles from my home-turf hospital that has become a regular post-appointment, post tumour-diagnosis staple. It does strong coffee, and a 'light lunch' of bacon, poached eggs with hollandaise sauce on two English muffins. It's gob-smackingly good. And there's a boutique toy shop over the road in which to pop into afterwards and marvel at the £30 jigsaws.
I took FTB. I'm exhausted from our midnight tea-drinking session, and upset about Bump being small. I think, 'God, not another thing.' So far, this pregnancy has comprised: a football-sized cyst; a major operation; enough Morphine to kill an elephant (or three); a potential bit of cancer; a very hostile FTB; clashes with the in-laws who may or may not want to honour-kill me and their 'bastard' grandchild. And now what, a nearly-off-the-chart once-weekly-scan small baby. Can't I just have a few weeks off for good behaviour?

He updates me on the 'Indian' situation. Things are bad. His sister has been informed of the 'dreadful' news and has put the cat among the pigeons. She is now saying what all the others probably wanted to say all along but didn't quite have the heart - or the malice - to, whichever way you want to look at it.
In no uncertain terms, she has told FTB that - regardless of whether he and I get back together or not - she is never, ever seeing this baby.
She is never, ever meeting me (thank God for that, I think).
Without shouting or screaming, she has cooly and calmly told FTB that he has disgraced his family.
The only solution - she dictates - is for him to cut all contact with me and this child and keep this a secret from the rest of their relations and wider community forever.
She, lovely she - pregnant too with her first child as well (no empathy there then) -has also compared the respective merits of the two cousins, who will be born just months apart and never meet.
In her eyes, there is no contest. Her child was planned, conceived within a marriage of love (if also convenient and established through an 'Indian find-a-suitable right cast, right creed, right colour, right tax bracket, right car, right dress-sense, right location dating site') It was done the 'proper' way, the traditional way. It will grow up knowing its Indian heritage, and be brought up by both of its parents - one a dentist, one a soliticitor. It is a much-loved planned-for perfect baby.
Mine, on the other hand, in her eyes, is something to be ashamed of, a dirty little secret, conceived out of her brother's complete stupidity (I think she thinks I ensnared him and deliberately ruined his life).
God, how I hate her. The sanctimonious, righteous, judgemental, narrow-minded, evil little cow (what I actually called her was much worse).
But any reasoned outlook that may - or may not - have been coming out of FTB's parent's mouths over the last few months has now been overshadowed by her venom.
In stipulating to her elder brother that he should have nothing to do with Bump or I, she is 'protecting' the family name.
She is determined to keep this a secret come hell or high-water.
As for me, well, in her view, FTB told me to get an abortion. He repeatedly told me and I refused. So I knew what I was letting myself in for, didn't I - a life as a single mother, raising a child on my own. He owes me - and this baby - nada. A view that is apparently supported by FTB's mother. No solidarity among women then.
Good grief.

But in all this, one thing has become clearer, he says. There is absolutely no point in trying to make a relationship between the two of us work. This would only have been possible with his family on-board, welcoming me and little Bump into the fold. It is not the case. Officially dumped then. Fait Accompli. Decree Nisi signed, sealed and delivered. If I hadn't got the message already.
Another thing, he tells me. His sister's extreme reaction is more than likely representative of the wider family and community view.
'If this does get out,' he said, 'the grief we've had so far will look like nothing. It will be 1 percent of what will subsequently come our way. It is not worth it.'

But what about cutting off me and Bump?
'Are you going to do it? I ask, staring into my coffee. 'Are you going to do what they want and pretend we don't exist?'
He says he isn't. Despite the ramifications, despite his sister, despite the cultural pressure, despite everything, he says he will not cut us off.
And that is something, for now, I'm immensely grateful for.

March 8: White Van Man

My road is a very compact dead-end of terraced houses painted all sorts of beautiful colours. Some are canary yellow, some baby blue, some hazy pink. Some have two shades – green and orange, or terracotta and burgundy. One of them has a great sunbeam painted across its back wall, which you can see from the park even on rainy days. Of course, the road would have been lovely in Victorian times when donkeys were hip. But now we all drive cars, it is chaos.
There is a turning point three-quarters of the way down, but to use it successfully involves mounting two pavements, scrapping your number plate and front bumper along the kerb, possibly creasing your back bumper on a lamppost, and straining your neck to such a degree you need permanent Osteopathy.
I left my house today at 8pm to get stuck behind an Asda van trying to reverse the entire length of my street, past vans, past cars, past skips and piles of discarded cement, all under the relative non-helpfulness of dim street light. The road is roughly 400 metres long. I timed him. It took 11 minutes to get from my house to the end, something that should take maybe thirty second. Oh, how I tried not to growl at him. Oh, how I failed. There were at least three places where he could have pulled in to let me pass. If I had been reversing - or anyone else with half a brain - I might have thought 'This will take a very long time, clearly there is someone I am holding up who is staring right at me. How about I let them go and at least one of us can along with our lives'. But no, no. He didn’t think of that, did he. He made me wait and watch and endure the whole sorry episode. Nor did he wave an apology when he finally got to the end of the road. I gave him a dirty look and sped past resisting the urge to honk or – at worst – flash him the Vs. Idiot man.

March 7: Bad Feeling

I brood. I brood. Where is the logic? I end a relationship with X, a man who is very good to me in so many ways, but perhaps not quite enough. I begin a new one with a man who I have liked for a while (FTB). Despite the pain and heart-ache of losing the old, I am embarking upon something new, something different, something that hopefully suits me better but time will tell. The ex is very sad. He wants me back. He tries to go out with other women. He sleeps with one, a woman who I’ve always known wanted him, who has been all-over him in my company, stroking his thighs, holding his hand, which he never really addressed and I suppose only cemented bad feeling on my part. He sleeps with her once. But he doesn’t want her, he wants me. And I won’t take him back. So why do I still brood? What’s it to me who he sleeps with? I have no right to care. He can do what he wants – I did, after all. But it’s because I hate her. Hate her for tainting it all, tainting the memories, hate her for sleeping with him. Hate her for always wanting him, and making sure I knew it. Perhaps this is why I went for FTB. No other woman wants him, not for as long as I’ve known him anyway. No one-night stands. No cheeky gropes. No dates. He’s asexual, keeping himself clear from all us felines, keeping away from trouble, saving himself for ‘mrs right’ – until I messed things up, of course. With X, there was more than just one after him. It felt like they were lining up, vultures circling ahead, waiting for the death-blow, the carnage, sharpening their claws to pick over the wreckage. Women who I knew wanted him, who weren’t my friends, who I was always threatened by. He is, after all, a very eligible chap. I hate competition over men. I always lose, either during or after a relationship. There’s always some woman I know who leaps into their pants to massage their pain away within days of the break-up. I’d rather dib out at the slightest whiff. You want my man, here, have him, take him, he’s all yours, you win. I’ll sign him over to you right now if you’ll only hand me a pen. Well, she’s had my X now. Hope he was worth it. I brood, I brood.

March 5: Mothers, Daughters

My mum and sister came today to help. I have a zillion jobs to do in the house, the chief one being to move all the boxes that are hogging my lounge up into the loft so I can make the downstairs habitable. It seems that moving into a new house is like that. You can have one floor clear at any time. Any more than that - no chance. I’ve got three floors (the top one, technically a loft but it’s got a carpet and Velux window). The estate agents described it as ‘exciting loft space’ and as sad as it is to admit it, I quite agree. When I first moved in, I lived up there, hiding away, enjoying the cold air while the builders invaded downstairs, knocking down a stud wall between the kitchen and lounge, then building me a new floor out of engineered wood (the old joists and planks had rotted), and fitting me a new spangly kitchen, with window to boot. The downstairs and bedroom floor (where the mess expanded to) were no-goes. Then, that done, I moved more clutter into the bedrooms, shut-up the loft and lived downstairs. At the moment, though, I don’t have any floor clear. There is mess and boxes, and cans of paint and tools everywhere. The plan: to shift everything to the third floor and never open the loft-hatch again.
Mum arrives. She brings yet more tools, to fix a cupboard to the wall. I haven’t asked her to. Or maybe I have. I can’t remember but I may as well concede right here and now that what happened next was probably largely my fault. We argued, loudly. I didn’t want her to screw the cupboard to the wall. For some unknown reason, the walls are plasterboard, and I want a carpenter to do it properly. I had plenty of other jobs for them to help with if they wished. But I can’t take on everything at once. And she does have a habit of trying to 'force' things on me.
I tell her – I know, I know, very cruelly – to stop meddling, to stop trying to do things for me, that I will ask for help when I need it and don’t need her taking over.
She flips. Then rants, crying as mothers do (well, mine does).
‘I don’t know anything that’s going on in your life. I don’t know who is going to look after you when this baby is born. I don’t know how you are going to manage. I don’t know what you are going to do for money. I don’t what FTB’s involvement is going to be. You don’t tell me anything. I feel completely excluded from it all. I don’t even know where you are going to have this baby. You think only of yourself and you are selfish. You don’t think about what all this is doing to the rest of us.’
God, and I thought I was stressed.

March 5: MTB

I'm awake at night, hungry. The trains at the nearby station are sleeping though. I can hear them, hear their soft lion-purring, their occasional snoring, a low growl as their engines seem to grind into life, then fall still again. I swivel onto my back, place my hands on my stomach. Bump's awake too. He kicks, then moves so ripples skate along my inside like fingers up a piano. 'How can you be the cause of so much trouble,' I think, rubbing my taught skin. 'How can you, beautiful little you, not even born, be hated so? How can the world not love you like I already do?'

Monday, 15 March 2010

March 4: Go with it

I've been thinking non-stop about the Big C's (the counsellor's) advice. Do I want to help save some sort of relationship between Bump and FTB? Yes. Do I think it's better that Bump knows who his father is, even if we are not together? Yes. Is it better for me if we are talking? Yes. Do I want FTB to cut himself off from us - purely on his mother's say so. No.
I have a scan next Monday. I invite him along. He says he will come. He is grateful for the invite. I take a deep breath, and hope things will be ok.

March 3: Caring mother

I hate shopping. For a female, I’m very bad at it. Like a moody child, I get bored. I slouch, I yawn, I scratch bodily parts I shouldn’t – at least not in public. I have no interest in it. The only shop I like is White Stuff. The clothes fit, they last, I can just about afford them. And, most importantly, it’s a small shop. You’ve only got so much choice. And there’s never much of a queue.
I suppose that’s why the thought of popping into Mothercare is not as horrendous as it might be. It’s all in the name. It implies: 'This is the shop for you - you only need one shop, and it’s us. We’ll sort you out in one fell swoop and you’ll never have to go anywhere else ever again.'
I wasn’t making a deliberate point of going. I just saw one and stopped. I had 30 minutes. Figured I could do supermarket sweep and be out without drawing breath – or blood.
I went straight to the buggies, cornered a mousy-brown shop assistant and said: 'The only requirement is that I can take it across muddy fields with my dog.'
There’s three that fit that criteria. A red one. A brown one. And one that wasn’t in the shop but is in the brochure (not much use). I like the red one. It’s got good wheels (they can cope with fields). It’s a Phil and Teds, she says, for people who want to have more than one child as it can easily be converted into a double-buggy.
'Oh,' I say. 'I very much doubt I’ll have two children' (I don’t elaborate). But I like the wheels.
She lets me whizz it around the shop, in and out of all the cots and babygrows that I am doing my best to pretend don't exist. It is fast and light and the wheels swivel beautifully. I’m in love.
How much is it, I ask?
£364.
Oh.
Plus £20 for a rain cover.
This is Britain, I think. Surely it should come with a rain cover?
Plus £47 for a sleeping bag to keep Bump warm.
Plus £42 if you want a cocoon for when he's a newborn.
Plus £30 for a bag to hang off the handlebars to put your bits in (babies need bits, apparently, though I'm not sure what they are yet).
Plus £125 for a matching car seat if I want one.
Plus £22 for the bar that makes the matching car seat fit on the buggy base.
She looks at me without blinking.
'Do you have a car seat,' she asks innocently.
'Yes,' I say.
She’s obviously seen my type before.
She asks again.
On the third time, I divulge more information. Fatal error.
'I’m borrowing my sister's old one,' I say.
You would have thought I’d have confessed to wearing her underpants.
'Oh, we don’t recommend that. How old is it?' Her eyes narrow, a low crouch, tail-flicking, ready to pounce in the long grass.
I lie. My niece is now seven. 'Four,' I say. 'It’s four years old.'
In for the kill. 'Four! You can’t use a four-year-old car seat. The protection is made from polystyrene. Like a crash helmet, it rots, it breaks down. If you crash, the baby will have no protection and its brains will be blitzed.'
I confess I hadn’t thought of this when I'd been feeling rather smug about my free hand-me-down.
There was more. 'I take it, at least, it's a backwards facing one, is it?'
'I can't remember,' I say.
This time she glowered.
'Well, let me tell you something. If a baby faces frontwards, and you break hard, or have a crash, its neck will be thrust forward to such a degree, it will snap in several places.'
God damnit, she's won. I've not come this far for this baby to die like a battery chicken.
I pause to digest this for a moment, take a deep breath, then say: 'Tell me about car seats.'

March 2: An idea..

Back to the counsellor. More 'how to deal with the FTB' situation. I run her through his supposed options and then she comes up with an idea that side-walls me.
'How about you try and include him more?'
I look at her stunned. I stutter. I stammer. Surely she's not serious.
Why on earth should I, everything screams. He doesn't want this child, he has pressed and pressed and pressed me to have an abortion, he has fed me nothing but 'shame and stigma' rubbish since I told him, he has barely asked how I am, he has been full of self-pity and has never once put Bump or I first. I have heard it all. And much more. In December, he asked me, 'How will I ever get an arranged marriage now I've fathered an illegitimate child.' Excuse me while I don't care.
I'm just so drained by it all. But fundamentally, I tell her, I am tired of being a fool. I always think things will be fine. I drove to London thinking things would be fine. I've spoken to him on so many occasion, thinking things will be fine. I do not understand these cultural problems. To me, he was a man in London, who happened to be Indian, who I got to know and liked very much. We went to the pub, got drunk, ate kebabs, talked about everything normal people talk about. Boy meets girl, girl meets boy.
But there is this 'other life' - his home life, back with the parents, back in the Asian community that I don't and never will understand and be part of. How can this other life be more important than your own child, I think. But - I'm always a fool. To him, it is more important.
'But if you let him in a bit,' the counsellor interrupts, 'then it may just swing things in Bump's and your favour. If you let him in, let him come to the scans so he can see Bump, let your barriers down just a little but, let him realise that this is going to become a reality, then you may - just may - become more influential than his family. It may swing things away from the clutches of his mother and from the whole Asian shame and stigma scene, to the reality that he will soon be a father, and that he will want to see this child and be the best dad he can be despite of the circumstances.'
But, but, but, I cry.
I look at her speechless. I'm completely flummoxed, deflated by the suggestion.
I say slowly, carefully, each syllable weighted in my mouth: 'Do you have any idea how enormous that ask is of me? Do you have any idea how hard it will be to try and befriend this man after all that has happened?'
She shrugs. 'What have you got to lose?'

March 1: And stretch...

My counsellor keeps telling me I need to make some mum friends so I won't feel isolated when Bump is born; so I begin building a support network. I know this myself. I don't have any who fit the bill. All my friends are still foot-loose and fancy free, out for evening bike rides or impromptu lengthy pub sessions. That's all behind me now. I need to bond over bugaboos, baa-baa-black sheep and back ache. It sounds grim.
I have made the first step, however, and signed-up to antenatal yoga. I think, 'do I really need to know how to stretch?' Surely there's just one thing that needs to stretch during birth, and I don't think you can practice that one.
It is - however - absolutely blissful. Slow, easy, peaceful, run by a woman who exudes calm and serenity and an aura of contentment which I'm always sickeningly envious of. The classes always make me cry. I don't know why. But suddenly, as I manoeuvre my hulk of a body into a half-squat or the 'cat' position, tears will spring from nowhere and drip, drip, drip onto the carpet. I hope no one notices. If they have, they've not said anything.
Normally, at the start of the sessions, the teacher goes round the group, asking each of us how we are. The women all sit there, stroking their various sized bumps, talking about this or that concern. A swollen ankle. A sore hip. A problem at work. I don't join in. I feel very out of place. I just say 'I'm fine' and hope she doesn't press for more.
This week, one of the ladies is due to give birth soon, so we go through yoga positions which are good during labour.
They all, in some form or another, involve the birth partner supporting you, under your arms, or as a cushion, or seat, as you try and squeeze the baby out. The positions are all so intimate. I'm not sure who my birthing partner is. Probably my middle sister - she's a nurse. But I'm sure as hell not doing any of these moves with her.
I wonder if you can pay someone anonymous to come with you. There must be some sort of business specialising in it. Professionals who sign up to see you at your worst, help you through it, then bugger off out of your life without breathing a word. These classes are wonderful but they also just highlight what a mess I'm in. I feel so alone in the group. The women are lovely but all seem very stable, married, partnered-up, on kid number two or three, happy to prolong the class by half and hour each time chattering away with excitement. I don't talk. I smile. A pale-faced smile, thinking 'this isn't how it should be. It shouldn't have been like this.'

February 28: Sweet Dreams

Bump is nearly 28 weeks. Normally, I lose count of the weeks but I know I’ve got a scan coming up, and that it’s a 28 week scan, so even with my confused, pregnant brain, I can do the math. I’m awake in the witching hour (wind again) so I lie on my bed and google ’28 weeks’ on my phone. How big are you now, Bump? What can you do? Can you jump? Can you skip? Are you happy? Suddenly, I need to know.
Who’d of thought it. Apparently, he can hic-up (though I’ve not felt any yet) and – get this - he can dream. I don’t know how scientists know this… tracking brain waves, I suppose, but there it is in black and white. Bump can dream. But what does he dream of if he knows nothing of the world? We adults can’t dream we’ve died apparently, because we don’t know what it’s like. What does Bump know, besides the darkness of my womb?
I know my dog dreams. He lies on his side after a long walk, stinking; muddy. First his paws begin twitching slightly, then gradually the movements get bigger and bigger until his legs are galloping wildly along the carpet. Somewhere in his fuggy brain, he must be chasing rabbits or sheep, or snapping at the sea waves.
Is this what Bump’s dreaming about, I think. Chasing rabbits? Or are his dreams the same as mine? I hope not, for his sake. I decide I should give him a party – swig a can of fizzy pop and scoff a block of cheddar before bedtime. Hic-ups and crazy dreams - a baby’s equivalent of White Diamond and a couple of E?

February 23: On my side

I'll come clean. I've been seeing a counsellor. Not something to be ashamed of, I know. And it's the first time in my life I've ever been. But there's always that thought in the back of your mind, isn't there, when people say they are seeing a counsellor.. that they're just a bloody whinger, or want someone to pay them attention, or just like to go over and over things again and again and none of their friends will listen any more. My counsellor was recommended by a friend who is neither a whinger or attention seeker. She (the counsellor) is, what, in her forties? Doesn't wear make-up. Wears clothes (like me) that are good for dog-walking in. A good start.
I would have thought, prior to going, that it would be very odd handing over £50 at the end of the session, sort of a bit like paying a prostitute for a very personal service that they don't quite want to give, that there would be something seedy about it. But it's not really like that. I don't believe she thinks I'm wasting her time and am mad for going. I don't believe she goes to the pub on a Friday night and says to her mates, 'had a right bunch of moan-bags in this week... still going on about their bleeding exes... I've given up listening.' I do, honestly, believe she wants to help. So that's another good start.
The first session (the week before Spain) was very very hard. I felt so awkward. There is just nothing natural about it. No polite talk about the weather at the start. No two-way street. Just, bam, get in there. The clock is ticking. Ready - and go.
I don't think I looked her in the eye once. I just clutched my stomach (which always seems to hurt more when my brain is in pain) hid behind my un-brushed hair and tried to explain the tangled mess of FTB, my X and the baby in between very loud uncontrollable sobs. She asked me what the aim of my sessions was. Why had I come? What did I want to achieve? I think that's the only question I could answer. I wiped my snotty nose and said I wanted to sort my head out before Bump arrived. I categorically do not want post-natal depression, which I'm sure I'm probably a prime candidate for given the mess of everything and a pre-existing tendency to slide into the dark stuff. I don't want to be a mental wreck when this baby arrives and needs his mummy. I want to give us both a fighting chance. I want to enjoy it (a possibility that at the moment seems as remote as Chelsea winning the FA Cup - I made that up, I know nothing about football).
In the second session, we talk about X as I am so distraught about it all. He was a main reason I booked myself in. Bump or not, my head still had to figure out my feelings for him. But now that X has removed himself from the equation, the focus has flipped to FTB. I exhaust her with the whole sorry soap-opera - his reaction to the pregnancy, the relentless pressure and fighting that has gone on since, the unending barrage of 'Indian issues' I had absolutely zero idea about before I went out with him. I exhaust myself. How do I feel about him now, she asks. What do I want? God, I tell her, I just don't know anymore. How can you know how you feel about someone who dumps you while you're pregnant? Sometimes, I think, yes, wouldn't it be lovely to patch things up and be one big happy family. More often, no, my barriers are up. I've been hurt too much. I've been a fool. Every time I have thought that all the cultural baggage would fade away, it's intensified. I can't envisage a happy ending, I say. It's just got too bad.
She is extremely kind and supportive but also practical. She says it's completely fine that I feel totally shit-scared, vulnerable, hurt, angry, betrayed and let-down. I'm dealing with all this on my own; I've moved house, moved to a new city, had major surgery, fought for this baby against its father's wishes, and now taken on the world - or if not the world - then the Indians who seem determined to stamp out this child's very existence. Don't worry, she says. It's 'primal' to want to protect yourself while pregnant. It's primal to put up barriers. It's primal not to want to get stressed - that's the baby's way of looking after its mummy.
Really? The thought, for some reason, briefly cheers me up. Bump is on my side, at least. And I thought I was on my own in all this.

February 22: Baby steps

My friend is in Bristol for the evening. Hooray, I have something to do. I have a place to go, a person to see, a friend, a reason to exist. I leave my house (a rare occurrence.. especially as I can barely get to the front door as the whole lounge is taken up with boxes) and drive to the restaurant to meet her. She has been so very very kind. She's bought me a gift of some cosy knitted slippers (for when I go into hospital to have Bump.. clearly she's not in denial about what's coming up, even if I am). And, better still, she's bought Bump some tiny bright blue shoes with scary orange monsters on them - his first, and most-beautiful present, bar all the second-hand stuff my sisters have already dumped on me. 'I'm convinced it's a boy,' she said, explaining the blue away with a cheerful swig of her wine. 'And anyway, the pink shoes had cup cakes on them. You're much more of a monster girl.'

February 21: Run Baby Run

Now for something unusual: I ran the Sport Relief Mile today - and it was fantastic. The best mile I've ever run.
Ok, I'll come clean. I tried to run it. I accompanied my father (who signed me up on the off-chance I'd be mad enough to join him). I'm not mad enough. I don't want to run a mile. Bump certainly does not want to run a mile. He is feeling heavier just at the thought of it, which I am taking for baby-sulking. But - as all good, dutiful daughters do - I agreed as I felt guilty leaving him to do it on his own, especially as we (his dutiful daughters) give him such a hard time for being obese and refusing to do anything about it, except eat half a crunchy bar instead of a whole one.
We parked up - very late - me in my usual day-outfit of leggings, baggy jumper and big coat, plus trainers (my attempt at effort). Dad, on the other hand, for this marathon, has forked out on snazzy new Lycra joggers (£70), new trainers (£60) and a new hi-vis jacket (£50). I don't say anything. With our numbers pinned proudly to our chests, we strut - like peacocks - to the starting line...
But where is it? Surely it should be around here somewhere? Surely it should be here, right here, where we stand looking - dare I say it - a tad foolish in our raring-to-go, nothing-can-stop-us-now gear? But there's no one in sight, just relaxed weekenders, some chewing sandwiches, some walking leisurely hand in hand, some chasing kids on scooters...
'Hmmmm, I wonder.... have we got the right date?' dad muses.
I pull out the starting instructions from my coat pocket (clearly, I wasn't going for the stream-lined approach on this epic run).
And there, in big bold letters, under the starting instructions, it says March 21st. That won't be February then, will it.
Fantastic (bar the slightly foolish feeling but I can cope with that). Talk about being off the hook. Now we really get into the zone. We do a quick 'jog' to the nearby cafe, order two Americanos with milk, and four full-fat creamy raisin-filled welsh cakes coated in crunchy sugar. We take a seat by the window, watch sea-gulls swoop for discarded chips, watch the wind whip people's scarves, watch a disabled boy laughing in his wheelchair.
See much more this way. Who wants to run a mile?

February 20: Home, Sweet Home

11am flight back to Britain - I don't want to go. Snow still over Dartmoor and Exmoor as we scoop up over the south coast. Arrive back at dad's house, and I'm buggered. Every square millimetre of my strength is taken up in trying not to cry. It's not just that the family home is gone (dad's house is lovely but was never home), it's just that I feel completely homeless and lost. I moved into my own new house in the south west back in August. But - bar my hidy hole in the loft - building work has made it inhabitable, and early-pregnancy made socialising a no-go. I'm as unsettled as a feather on the breeze. Then I spent much of December back home visiting gran in hospital every day and helping clear the house. And then all of January on mum's sofa. Now though, there are no excuses. For the first time, I can drive again since the operation. And I need to start sorting my own house, and getting back to work, and creating a life me and Bump can be happy with.
But, I just can't face it. It seems such a cold lonely option, especially after spending the best part of the last six weeks with my family. I need to be brave, to accept that I live on my own in a city I'm not terribly acquainted with. To accept I'll probably have no company the rest of the weekend. To accept that that's my lot. But I just hate the thought of it.
I plan to go back. I do. I really do. I plan to get in the car and drive the 40-minutes to my lovely terrace that is not yet quite mine, and be strong and find something to do that will occupy me. Heavy-hearted, I climb in behind the steering wheel, start the ignition...
Dad brings out something I've forgotten and catches me sobbing my heart out. He takes out the keys, talks me in for a cup of tea, tells me I don't need to leave, that I can stay the night, have some dinner, get some rest, go to sleep.
Wearily, I do just that. Reality can wait another day. I'll be stronger then.

February 17: Kick me baby, one more time

There’s a cosy restaurant up in the mountains that has become a firm family favourite. It's in a tiny village, at the top of very very steep steps. Each time we've been, like a faithful dog, there's been a man sat at the bar who wears a fur hat. He laughs as we pant our way through the door. In pigeon English, the best he’s come up with is, ‘Ha, this is not Mount Everest, you know’ which is quite funny, considering the language barrier. Then there's the staff, who give away free shots at the bar, should you want one. But, the best bit, without doubt, is the food. Honestly, if it’s a choice of Gordon Ramsey’s or this, I’d be sorely tempted.
Tonight, I had my favourite; a huge bowl of avocado and spinach salad with a warm sundried tomato, walnut, honey and balsamic dressing (and a side of chips). Muy bien!
The coat remained on (I’m still freezing) but half way through, Bump began kicking the hell out of me. I wolfed it down. He kicked some more, big bootylicious kicks exploding in all directions. He kicked all evening, all the way down the twisty windy mountain road, all that night as I lay still in the dark with my hat on.
I think he must have liked it. He has never, ever, ever kicked so much. He seemed to be saying, ‘Yes, yes, this is what babies are meant to eat. Feed me more of this healthy, nutritious, green-leafed iron-filled fooder and I will grow into a beautiful handsome Adonis.’
Perhaps my diet over the past month hasn’t been much to write home about. All we’ve eaten largely – given the state of the moving-house operation and everyone’s general state of exhaustion – has been egg and chips, beans on toast, pasta splodge….
I write down the salad ingredients on the memo-pad of my phone, in a bid to replicate it when I get home. I’ll try harder, Bump, I think. I’ll try.

February 16: Heartbreak Hotel

I don’t know why I come to Spain really. It always seems to be tied up with heart-break. I remember being dumped by my first-love at University and coming out here for three days with Dad. I don’t think I said a word the whole time, just shuffled from place to place, from the beach, to the shops, to the car; trying to smile.
Now too it’s like that – only with a tad more noise from the seven-year-old and her jingly jangly DSi. Just me and my dark and gloomy thoughts. Since moving back to the South West, I've been back in touch with my X, who I was with for a long time before FTB. A good, good man, intelligent, caring, loving, generous. But, what can I say, we lived in two different cities for a long time, there were issues, an age gap, opposing gravitational forces pulling us in different directions. Was I not mature enough to commit? Was I too scared? Was it just not right?
Since moving back - and telling him about FTB and the baby - he has been (despite his deep, deep understandable hurt) overwhelmingly supportive. He would take me back, take Bump as his own, look after us, keep us safe and warm... if I want it. But the pressure's been on to decide - a month off for my operation but come the beginning of February, he wanted answers. And I couldn't give him any. I'm in too much of a mess, too confused, too hurt by everything, too muddle by the thought of navigating two men in my life (should FTB remain in it), too unsure about what will happen next. I just can't commit. So that's it. Bam. Contact-cut (his doing). No more communication. No more coffees / dinners / half-glasses of wine. No more hugs and tears and laughter. No more anything. He is my chief friend in the south west. My life here, until now, has been one with him in it, with him by my side, and I don't know my footing without him.
I'm appalling, overwhelmingly sad. About hurting him. About losing him from my life. About losing some possible future that might just work out as the best possible scenario for me and Bump - and him (seen as FTB has dumped us).
There is nothing to make the pain better. No phone calls for distraction. No job to consume time. No where to go. There’s just space and nothing-to-do quiet, jam-packed full of gut-wrenching sadness and worries and what-ifs. That’s the problem with holidays, I decide. You can leave all the casing of your life behind. But the core still travels with you, haunting you among the air miles and big sky. There’s no where to hide.

February 15: The rain in Spain…

The week in Spain at dad's villa was booked a while ago. Just dad, me, my middle sister and niece. It is pretty much the last week that I can fly due to the pregnancy (though that was more design than accident.. I didn't know babies stopped you flying). And it's six weeks since my operation. ‘Last blitz of recuperation,’ dad said. ‘A bit of sunshine’.
My boss was more honest. ‘Enjoy it, it will be the last peaceful holiday you ever get before you have a child who wakes you up at 7am, regardless of where you are in the world.’ I hadn’t thought of that.
Sister pulls-up Stig-style at 5am. I am packed (she is scary, you don’t want her to arrive if you’re not packed). I climb in to be greeted by an overly-awake excitable seven-year-old in the back-seat asking why I have packed such a big bag. She is right. It’s ridiculous. I am normally very restrained and just take only hand-luggage on trips. This time, however, I have borrowed mum’s enormous battered old suitcase and thrown in pretty-much everything I own – unwashed, un-ironed. If I had any energy, I'd have felt ashamed - but I don't. I only hope customs don’t check it, I think. They’ll arrest me for being a bio-terrorist.
In my early-morning haze, I don’t even look back at the house as we drive off down the dark street, hurtling over the speed bumps and around the corners we can probably navigate with our eyes shut. This road, the speed humps, the fields, the house – it’s all someone else’s now. By the time we get back from Spain, it will be gone.

Malaga is not sunny. I knew this would be the case due to my telepathic intuition and knowledge of sun spots. I lie – dad had checked the weather forecast. And it said 'rain for a week'. It is not really Spain but some dark, gloomy, uninviting land. There’s not even a peep of sunshine but cold, wet rain lashing down onto the runway and heavy, thunderous clouds hugging the mountains like unruly tufts of old-man hair.
Forty minutes to the villa, then straight past it up the mountain. It’s just not the Spain I’m used to – the red rock and dry soil , prickly gorse and clip-clopping mountain goats. It’s lush green and, despite the rain, somehow more inviting. We stop for a cafĂ© con leche overlooking our valley of tiered cliffs, banks of avocado and mango trees, rows of tiled roofs upon white and the murky sea beyond. I think of my friend’s wedding in Cyprus in July and how much I’d been looking forward to it. It would have been a week of sun and fun. Me, FTB, our friends, lots of gesticulating Greeks and aunts and grandmas and donkeys. Smashing plates in the fire place. Isn’t that what they do at weddings?
I can’t go anymore, I’ve decided. It’s too difficult. I feel too vulnerable to be exposed among neutral friends. I can’t take Bump, who should have arrived by then. I can’t bear the thought of FTB being there, of us trying to be civilised over our baby’s head as our respective friends pretend they aren’t watching. Isn’t it lovely, they’ll think. Isn’t he good dad. Isn't it good they are getting along. We always knew they would.
It doesn’t work. He can keep them all. Keep our friends. Keep the wedding. Keep the holidays. But cor blimey, it doesn’t half make me miserable. No doubt one of many casualties of this whole sorry affair. I’ll find something else to do in July, I think, as I watch dark swathes of rain sweep in from across the ocean. I’ll come back to Spain, I decide. It will be sunny then.

***

There is something wrong with me – besides the physical pain from the operation - that is making me ice cold and completely exhausted. At dinner that evening in a local pizza restaurant that’s not as good as it used to be, I keep on my bright red fleece-lined Gortex, its hood up over my woolly hat with jester spikes, my body squeezed together for warmth. I’m so cold and tired I literally sleep at the table, slumped over my table-mat, ignoring the others as they jibber-jabber on. I must look a state or I’d have normally been bollocked by at least one of them for appallingly rude and anti-social behaviour. But I simply can’t get warm. I’m a frozen block of ice and exhausted from it. Worse still, the Villa is freezing. And the electric heater I pilfered for my room doesn’t work. Sunny Spain? This may as well be Base Camp Everest.

February 13: The Move

We moved today from the old family home, taking furniture and boxes and years of junk that I haven’t had time to throw away, to my new house over the seven bridge. Awoke to chaos and a big white van on the drive and the smell of bacon sandwiches.
Somewhere between lugging boxes and chasing the run-away dog back from up the street, and packing and clutching my still-in-agony stomach to stop it from bursting, and trying to stop mum from crying at the prospect of leaving, and talking in bad Welsh accents (because that always makes us laugh in my family) I missed a phone call. FTB. He’s got good timing. I was polite, sent a text saying sorry I’d missed him, that I was off to Spain tomorrow, had a long day ahead of me moving house, that I was needed to help.. and that, if it was alright with him, could I talk to him after my recuperating holiday.
When are you back?
In a week.
Begrudgingly – Ok, if you’re sure we can’t talk today?
I didn’t reply.

February 12: Last Supper

Final dinner in the old family home. Unsurprisingly, my middle sister gets pissed. She digs out a photo of mum which she has found in the clear-out. It’s of her in her bad-perm and round owl-like glasses days, on holiday somewhere in eastern Europe, and taking a bite out of a very long sausage in a very provocative manner (the tart).
We’ve got hotdogs on the hob to make sandwiches with for tomorrow’s god-awful early flight. The said-pissed sister whips one out and makes mum reenact the pose and we all laugh very loudly.
Earlier, I had walked around the house, taking photos, wondering what life would be like without it, dredging up old memories from childhood. Mum’s greenhouse and vegetable garden, where she used to grow cherry tomatoes, now ruined through years of old-bone neglect; the overgrown laurel hedge which used to hide the double-decker treehouse before it was dismantled; the blue weather-frayed now-cut rope hanging from the willow tree which I used to climb; the granny flat where we spent so much of our time as children being loved, and fed and spoilt; our bedrooms; the window-sill I used to sit on to overlook the fields opposite our house. I weep, though I’m not sure it’s about the house. Somehow I feel as if I’ve got enough other stuff to weep about at the moment. Losing the house is sad but there’s sadder stuff going on. And it’s time for mum to move on with her new life and into a new home; time for us all to move on. It's not all bad, I reason. But perhaps I’ll feel differently when we don’t have it.

February 12: Mid-wife Crisis

Saw the midwife today. The last time I went it was horrendous. A, they messed up my time slot which was enough to tip me over the edge in the first place. B, it was run by a student who said ‘Fab’ to everything.
Planned pregnancy? No. Fab.
Feeling healthy? No, I want to vomit. Fab.
Father’s details? I’m not providing any at the moment, sorry. Ok - Fab.
I think she upset me more than anything has for a long time. Just what you need when life is at its bleakest. No nice, friendly, caring supportive midwife. But a hung-over, twenty-something year-old in a push-up bra and killer heels. Yes, they may need to practice. But for God's sake - not on stressed-out first-time single mothers.
This time, I checked there wouldn’t be a student present. Thankfully, my luck's in. They don't train on Fridays. Too busy having a ‘Fab’ time with their ‘Fab’ friends drinking 'Fab' cider and black presumably.
I don’t know why but it seems I walk into a midwife’s room and something happens that makes me act like a complete twat. I didn’t need to go for Bump (having seen the consultant already this week). In a bid to get organised (well done me) I just wanted the form that entitles you to a £190 pregnancy grant. Every little helps and all… and you need to get that… from your midwife.
But why couldn’t I have been polite? Or at least made an attempt at chit-chat? Or at least smiled and talked about the weather and how much I was enjoying pregnancy and twiddle-y-dee, isn’t life wonderful…. I think I was just in such a ‘I’m very busy today, I just need my grant form then I’m going to run out of the door,’ mood that – shame on me - that’s pretty much what I said as I walked in (idiot, idiot girl).
Clearly the midwife wasn’t very impressed. I think she thought I wanted the money to purchase a Prada handbag and a 100-box of Marlboros. She looked at me, looked down at her desk, twiddled her pen, and said: ‘That’s fine dear but how about we see how the baby’s doing first, give it a quick measure and that sort of thing?’ Ouch, god, I felt like a mercenary bitch. I took off my coat and sat down.
She did her stuff – took my blood pressure, inquired about my health, then made me lie on the bed while she yanked down the top of my tights (so undignified this mother business.. consultants don’t do that) and measured Bump from top to bottom with a tape-measure. Excellent, I thought. How very high-tech. Is she going to make me touch my toes and look at my teeth next? Is that it? Can I go now?
But, no, no. She sat me down. Did I know about antenatal classes in the area? Had I signed up to any? Had I joined the NCT? Did I want to go to breast-feeding classes?
I was polite and took the forms but they suddenly made me want to cry, cry, cry. I don’t want to go to classes on my own. I don’t want to be around couples and all those people who ‘plan’ pregnancies. What would I say if someone asked where dad was, or are they all too PC to do that nowadays? I could pretend he was away on holiday. Or - even better – business. Where could I send him? India? I could say very very loudly, ‘The father is away in Delhi on very urgent business and that’s why he can’t be here today learning how to bring up his child.’ I’m a crap lier. Somewhere along the line I would sob and end-up confessing the whole sorry story to a bunch of strangers who just want to learn about changing nappies and how to clean up baby yack. I just don’t want to go to such a thing when life is so awful, awful, awful. I don’t want to be on show. I want to hide, hide, hide like a woodlouse under a rock.
If I could fit under a rock, I honestly think I’d try it. I left the surgery, forms buried in the bottom of my non-Prada handbag. Fuck the classes, I think, as I start up my car. I’m not going. That’s what the Internet’s for.

February 9: Thief

Mother has buggered-off on holiday. Why she has done this when she moves in a week’s time, I do not know. I think she planned to move house beforehand, and pencilled in this week in the sun as a relaxing treat post all the stress and chaos, but then all the dates slid. As it is, middle sister is less than impressed and has entered full chuck-out mode (she thinks that if we leave it all to mum for when she comes back, she won’t manage it). More boxes arrive from Pickfords. We pack. And pack. We dream of packing; unfolding the flat-pack boxes, running duct tape along the seams, packing, folding, labelling. Somehow, it's easier when it is someone else's stuff. My sister takes the granny flat, now empty of people but still chock-full of possessions and memories. I take the drink's cupboard, start lifting out the glass bottles, laying them on their sides on the kitchen worktop, wrapping them in paper, placing them in a huge box labelled ‘New House – Booze’. Then the devil in me can't resist. If mother’s going to bugger off and leave us to do the work, I’m taking some payment. I pinch one bottle of Bombay Sapphire, one of Baileys, one Bruichladdich, half a bottle of Vodka, two bottles of lemonade, one of coke, and two tonic waters. She’ll have forgotten by the time she gets around to unpacking everything. I may not be able to drink them at the moment. But June's not so far away.. and they'll be something to celebrate, won't there.

February 8: There, there

I saw the consultant today. Not a scheduled visit but an impromptu one to see what the pain is. I arrive at 8.30am. The receptionists are very kind. Of course we can sneak you in, they say. The consultant pokes and prods me but doesn’t really have a diagnosis. Post-operative, yes. Anything more precise, no. It may be an adhesion, a band of internal scar tissue that can tighten and sometimes hurt like buggery.
But, as she points out, it is only six weeks since my operation. Pain, unfortunately, is a side-effect. She scans me, oohhs and ahhhhs over Bump. But there’s nothing that can be seen that could be responsible for the it. She packs me off with some iron tablets. They must be the lolly-pops for grown-ups. There, there dear, run along home. There’s nothing wrong with you. Take some iron. All will be better.

January 31: The Aftermath

January 29: Preparation

Despite it being January, and very cold, we have decided we are having a BBQ-party, as mum is simply too polite and kind-hearted and generous-of-spirit to invite people around without offering them food - and we don't know what else to do. I watch from the indoor-warmth as my mum’s man rigs up a gazebo on the back patio and manhandles the rusty old gas-fired barbie into position. We sweep clutter from tables, dig out recipe books and bowls from carefully-packed boxes, turn the stereo up. My sister's friend, who hosts lots of charity dos, supplies plates and wine glasses. We've already got a stack of M&S burgers but we need more.
I've never in my life been to Lidls - too much of a snob. But today's the day. We sweep around with two trolleys, piling in the foreign sauces and cakes and pickles that are wonderfully obscure and untried and tested. We stock up on big jars of sundried tomatoes for a quid and raid their booze shelves.
If we'd been in Sainsbury's, it would have come to the best part of £300. As it was, it was just over a hundred. There's a teenager on the counter, amused by our high-spirited antics. We chat him up - invite him to the party in exchange for a discount. It doesn't quite work. Think I better dig out my eye-liner that hasn't seen the light of day yet this year. I must have lost my sex appeal.

January 27: Tuna update

A different hospital this time - back to where I had my surgery – and a different consultant. Middle sister my crutch again. As we wait to go in, she says she’ll give me a quid if I get the word ‘tuna’ into the conversation.
It's perfectly clear, as we enter to be greeted by a serious, bespectacled middle-aged male, that this is no time for kidding around.
The plan of action, it seems, is to keep scanning me every six months me so they know whether ‘borderline tumour’ has come back or not. The chances of it returning are less than 10 per cent, so that’s good. If it does return, they cut me up again, whip it out and take the ovary with it. Maybe give me a dose of radiation to blitz it too, like a double tequila slammer to make sure you’re totally finished off at the end of a boozy night. The thought of them re-opening my war-wound makes me want to vomit on the doctor’s shoes. But even if this is the case, nothing will need to be done while I’m pregnant, he says. Hallelujah praise the Lord.
My first scan is booked for September, four months after Bump is due.
We leave, somewhat upbeat and very relieved. Perhaps I won’t die after all. Perhaps ‘borderline’ is not such a bad place to be.
‘Well, that’s much better news,’ I say, as we stomp out into the car park.
Yeh. You didn’t get tuna in the conversation though, did you?’

January 27: Wedding Bells

Dark today. The blues have got me. A friend texts. She’s getting married to her long-term boyfriend. He didn’t buy her a Christmas present (lucky she didn’t dump him right then and there) then popped the question in the new year on a long, windy coastal path on the south coast. Of course, I’m happy for them. But I’m also making loud unhappy bellowing noises, like a lost, lonely whale in the deep blue – at least on the inside.
I remember in sex-ed in school, we were once posed a question by our paedophile-esque, white-vest-wearing teacher: What should come first? Marriage? Sex? Children (obviously after sex)? Or love?
A gang of boys went for sex first. Fair game (think I was too much of a prude at the time). I can’t remember what I voted for but I think there was a general consensus that the traditional way might just have something going for it. I’ve ballsed things up, and I know it. I’ll never do the ‘traditional route’. Even if I one day find a man to marry, I’ll have Bump in tow, incorporating him into some misshapen step-family set-up. S/he will be fine, I try and reason. It will all be fine. But it’s not the best and I know it. I’ve never had step brothers / sisters… don’t know how that scenario plays out. Can’t imagine it’s a barrel of laughs. What if I have a whole Brady-bunch of kids with a new man? Bump will always be the odd one out. Then there’s the step-parent problem (which I know far too much about). Bloody awful, the lot of them. Alpha males with their bright ideas, coming in, taking head seat at the dining room table, carving the turkey. Sod off, the lot of you, I say. We girls can carve our own turkey perfectly well, thank-you very much. But have I inflicted a life-time of that on Bump? A life of different men (or even one man) around the kitchen table, trying to forge some unnatural relationship, tread the terrible tight-rope of parent and friend. I know how awful that is. I know that feeling of excitingly rushing home to visit mum, to be met by a stomach-full of disappointment when I see another car parked on the drive and I realise 'he's there too'. The thought of inflicting that on Bump is just gut-wrenchingly awful. I think, for me, that is the worst thing about all this mess. It makes me feel quite sick with sorrow.