by Hayley Long
Contents
Part 1
I am what I am
traumatIC faCe INCIDeNts
NerD rash
DILemmas aND CONuNDrums
hOw I LearNeD that there’s NO suCh thlNG as a free LuNCh
hOw Me aND MY Mum wrOte Letters
hOw we Came tO aN UNCOmfOrtaBLe arraNGemeNt
hOw MICheLaNGeLO stOPPeD me BehavING LIke a tOtaL turNIP
aND theY DleD sCreamING
a BrIef wOrD aBOut the tOtaLLY raNDOm Nature Of sChOOL assemBLY
keePING MY eGGs INtaCt
Part 2
a temPOrarY INterruPtlON tO the GeNeraL ONwarD fLOw Of mY stream Of CONsCIOusNess Narrative
eGG CarNaGe
twO’s COmPaNY . . .
. . . But three Is a MaGIC NumBer
a PartlCuLarLY GreY tuesDaY MOrNING IN wreXham
rIDICuLOusLY riDONkuLOus
a NOt PartlCuLarLY GreY weDNesDaY MOrNING IN wreXham
what haPPeNeD IN the kltCheN at the PartY
there are BIG shIPs aND smaLL shIPs . . .
CONtemPLatING MY CONuNDrums aND DeaLING wIth MY DILemmas
aPOLOGIes . . .
. . . aND haPPY eNDINGs
Part 1
I am what I am
Just when I thought I knew everything about me that there is to know, I have gone and shocked myself. I am potentially the next Lady Gaga. I’ve written my very own chart-topping smash hit pop classic, which succeeds in being both poppy and light and deep and meaningful all at the same time. When you consider that I gave up music at the end of Year 9, this is actually quite incredible. My song goes like this:
Even though I’ve borrowed the basic idea, rhythm and structure from a song that already exists, over half of the words are entirely my own. And despite the fact that they are probably the best words I’ve ever written, I intend to keep them completely to myself. I wrote this song for my own personal satisfaction and so that I can sing it secretly whenever I’m in need of an emergency ego boost. Recently, this has been a fairly frequent occurrence because I’m just approaching the end of my first term in Year 11 and, as anybody with half a head knows, Year 11 is an extremely stressful experience.
I’m not even going to show it to my best friend, Goose McKenzie. Or to Gareth Stingecombe, my future husband and life partner. It’s not that I’m a particularly secretive and private person but some things – like my Facebook password, my Justin Timberlake lucky knickers, my Prince Harry scrapbook and all of my personal bodily regions – are strictly for my eyes only. My musical masterpiece is among them.
But I might show it to Elvis Presley. I think he’d appreciate it. I’m not talking about the real Elvis Presley, of course. I’m talking about a fat looky-likey who spends half his time asleep on a public bench in the middle of Whitchurch village, which is the part of Cardiff that I live in. Our Elvis is scruffy and scatty and drinks more cans of beer than he totally ever should. Even so, I still like him. This is partly because of his voice. It’s big and booming and completely hits all the right notes in all the right places so that when he sings he sounds exactly like the original American Elvis – just with a strong Welsh accent. Mostly though, I like him because he has introduced me to the fascinating subject of philosophy. Sometimes it’s fair to say that intellectual enlightenment can come from the very place that you’d least expect it.
It all started this evening on my way home from school. I was feeling quite buzzy and brilliant. There is no mystery surrounding my good mood. I can explain it in two very sexy words.
Gareth Stingecombe.
I’d just spent eighty quality minutes watching him run around in a rain-drenched rugby shirt.
Even though it’s just turned December and pitch-black by half past three, I’d stayed behind to watch him play rugby for the school team. I wasn’t the only Dag1 hanging about. There were quite a few of us. We’d picked a good game to watch because Gareth was AMAZING. He was charging all over the rugby pitch with the ball clutched tightly to his manly chest, and the rain was soaking into his shirt and making it cling to his body in a very striking and memorable manner. I enjoyed the game a lot. But the best bit came just before the final whistle. Gareth made a spectacular swerving run the entire length of the pitch and then threw his whole body over the touchline to score the most magnificent try I have personally ever witnessed. I was so proud that I thought my heart was going to pop. Before I could get a grip of myself, I started jumping up and down and waving my umbrella about and shrieking:
‘GO GAZZY
GO GAZZY
OH OH OH OH
GO GAZZY
GO GAZZY
IT’S GETTING HOT IN HERE SO
TAKE OFF ALL YOUR CLOTHES.’
It wasn’t quite as good as my chart-topping smash hit pop classic but it did nicely sum up my feelings at that particular time.
One of the dads standing close by me shook his head and said, ‘Not appropriate, love,’ and then he called out to Gareth, ‘Nice work, sunshine.’ Gareth nodded and said, ‘Ta,’ and then he looked over at me, raised his hand to his mouth and blew me a kiss. Right there. In front of all those miserably appropriate and unsexy dads. Even though I am only five foot and half an inch, I suddenly felt about twelve feet tall.
When the game ended, Gareth jogged over to me and kissed me carefully on the cheek. ‘I won’t touch you,’ he said. ‘I’m a bit muddy.’ As if to prove the point, he put his head on one side, gave it a shake, and a clod of earth fell out of his ear. ‘Thanks for coming. I always play better when you come and watch.’
‘Wow,’ I said and grinned, tactfully ignoring the ear mud. ‘That’s so random because I’m utterly pointless when I play sport.’
Gareth wiped more mud off his eyebrow. ‘Do you want me to walk you home? I’ve gotta have a post-match team talk with Coach Jenkins and the boys and then I’ll probably need a quick shower but it’ll only take a minute.’
‘Nah,’ I said. ‘Best be off. My mum might be wondering where I am.’
‘See you tomorrow then,’ said Gareth and carefully gave me another non-muddy kiss. As our faces parted, his eyes lingered on mine and, just for a moment, I was helplessly captivated in a highly romantic eye-lock. Gareth has very beautiful green eyes and when I look deeply into them, it’s very difficult for me to keep a clear thought in my head. For that second, it was as if all the dads and girlfriends and rugby boys and drizzle had magically evaporated. Without really knowing why, I held my breath – and when Gareth opened his mouth to speak, I just knew he’d say something that would perfectly capture the moment. In a weirdly wobbly voice, he said, ‘I love Usain Bolt.’ And then he coughed and started frowning down at his rugby boots.
‘Who?’ I said.
‘Usain Bolt,’ said Gareth, coughing again and clearing his throat. ‘The athlete. I love the speed and commitment that he displays on the running track.’
‘Oh,’ I said, slightly confused. The romantic spell was well and truly broken.
‘No worries,’ said Gareth, and then he turned and jogged off towards the changing rooms.
Gareth is extremely gorgeous. He is also slightly odd sometimes.
And it was not long after this gorgeous and slightly odd moment that I spotted Elvis. He was dancing down the road towards me and singing ‘I Am What I Am’ into the pointy end of his traffic cone. I had one of my earphones in but I could still hear him because his voice gets incredibly loud when it’s combined with this particular piece of highway safety equipment.2
But it wasn’t the traffic cone trick which caught my attention because I’ve seen Elvis do this a million times before. It was his T-shirt. It had something written on it. I slowed down to a stop in front of hi
m and frowned.
‘I drink therefore Ian,’ I said, flipping out the other earphone of my MP3 player. And then I frowned again. ‘That doesn’t make any sense.’
Elvis stopped singing and said, ‘Holy Moley! Don’t they bother to teach you lot to read any more?’ He tucked his traffic cone under his arm and smoothed out his T-shirt so that I could read it better. He looked like this.
I frowned again and said, ‘I drink therefore I am. It still doesn’t make much sense.’
Elvis Presley put the traffic cone on the pavement and said, ‘Crikey O’Reilly! You kids know nothing! This T-shirt is obviously a reference to the great seventeenth-century philosopher René Descartes. Surely you’ve heard of him?’
I shook my head.
Elvis looked unimpressed, shook his own head and muttered, ‘Jeez Louise!’ Then he said, ‘Descartes once famously said I think therefore I am – meaning that even though we can ask questions about absolutely everything, the one thing that we can’t question is our own existence – otherwise how the heck would we be asking all these questions in the first place?’
For a moment, I stared at Elvis in gobsmacked silence. This was a lot to take in. Especially after watching Gareth run around in a rain-drenched rugby shirt. When I’d recovered enough to speak, I said, ‘Since when have you been into all this deep stuff?’
Elvis rolled his eyes and said, ‘I had a life before I turned into Elvis, didn’t I? I studied philosophy in my younger days.’
‘Huh?’ I said. This was all just getting weirder and weirder.
Elvis looked shocked. ‘Philosophy. You know, the pursuit of wisdom and knowledge?’
I scratched my head. I had heard this word before. I think I may even have used it once or twice. But that doesn’t mean I knew what it meant. Still confused, I said, ‘We don’t pursue wisdom and knowledge in my school.’
Elvis tutted. ‘Evidently,’ he said. And then he zipped up his jacket, picked up his cone and walked off.
I watched him go. My head was spinning out like a spin dryer on a spin cycle. I wasn’t used to this. Usually, Elvis just sings songs or else dances by himself on the traffic island. I’ve never heard him talk about the pursuit of wisdom and knowledge before! I was so spun out and surprised that, all the way home, our conversation kept playing over and over in my head like a track on my MP3 player that had got stuck on repeat.
When I got back, my mum wasn’t in. I looked at my phone and there were four messages telling me that she’d be working late and that I should help myself to the remains of the shepherd’s pie she’d made yesterday. I wrinkled up my nose and wondered if this had anything to do with Detective Sergeant Giles. He and my mum work together. They’re both police officers in the same building and I think he takes up far too much of her time. He’s always making her work extra hours and phoning her up at home and, as a result, my poor mum doesn’t have any kind of social life. To be honest, I don’t like Detective Sergeant Giles. In the summer, there was a very embarrassing situation involving me, him and various pairs of stupid stolen shoes. I can’t say any more on this subject because I don’t like to talk about it.
Still wrinkling my nose, I took just enough money for a home-delivery pizza from the emergency fund that we keep hidden in an old toffee tin in the back of the kitchen cupboard. As I said before, my mum is a police officer. She does a very difficult and demanding job and has made a massive contribution towards making Cardiff a safer and more pleasant place to live. But this doesn’t change the fact that her shepherd’s pie tastes of phlegm.
After ordering my pizza, I went upstairs and switched on my computer and typed the name Rennay Daycarte into Google. A message came up telling me that it didn’t match one single document. I tried again with Renay Daycart. This time, the first item that came up had the heading I think therefore I am. It also gave me the proper spelling of René’s name –which was very helpful because, unlike Lottie Biggs, it‘s not the sort of name that is written at all how you think it should be.
I sat and read about René Descartes for nearly an hour. I learned a lot about him. For a start, he looked quite similar to this.
Admittedly, it’s not a look that would work well nowadays but, once upon a time, it was probably perfectly OK to rock this style in places like France.
Secondly, I discovered that René is widely regarded to be the first modern thinker. When you bear in mind that he wasn’t born until the year 1596, this is actually fairly freaky. I’ve no idea what was going on in the heads of all the people who were around before this date but, whatever it was, it wasn’t modern thinking.
And finally, I discovered that I actually quite like this dead French philosopher. Even though there’s a lot of very boring and complicated stuff written about him on the internet, the truth is that René Descartes achieved eternal fame and respect for stating the most simple and obvious fact that can ever be stated:
I THINK
THEREFORE I AM
Quite simply, thinking was his way of knowing that he definitely existed. I suppose it was also his way of trying to make sense of everything else.
And then, because I needed to make sure that I definitely existed, I opened a new document on my computer and wrote my I am what I am song. And when I’d finished writing that, I opened another new document and started writing about Gareth’s wet rugby shirt and my journey home from school and Detective Sergeant Giles and various other random reflections and philosophical thoughts.
Now normally when I write, it’s because I’ve been told I’ve got to do it. By my English teacher. Or by Blake, my mental health counsellor, who has been helping me sort out all the weird stuff that sometimes gets cluttered up in my head.
But this time, I don’t need any excuses.
The words written here exist only because I have chosen to write them.
I suppose I might even go as far as to conclude this:
But that’s enough deep stuff for the moment. I’ve just heard the doorbell and, quite frankly, it’s a tragic person who fills their head with mind-bending philosophical ideas when they could be filling their stomach with an eight-inch chilli beef pizza instead.
traumatIC faCe INCIDeNts
My friend Goose McKenzie is an extremely cool individual. Like Elvis Presley, she is also capable of random moments of startling wisdom. Goose once told me that everybody in the entire world can be neatly slotted into one of the following three style categories:
Type A people are masters of fashion.
Type B people are slaves to fashion.
Type C people are actually from another planet and have no idea what the word ‘fashion’ actually means. René Descartes was probably one of these.
Goose said that she is definitely a Type A person. At the time she told me this, I could only agree with her. We were sitting inside Pat’s Plaice sharing a plate of chips, and Goose was wearing some crazy new leg-wear and a hand-knitted Peruvian poncho. She’d also given herself a massive comb-over and blow-dried her hair until it was so huge that she looked like a Woolly Mammoth in wet-look leggings. In comparison, everyone else in the chip shop looked rather bland.
When I asked her which type of person she thought I was, Goose had paused for a fraction too long before deciding that I’m probably on the cusp of Types B and C. After she’d told me this, I’d called her a crusty hedgepig and sprinkled vinegar in her hair and then Goose had stood up, yanked wide the neck of my school jumper and shaken half a tonne of salt down my back – and then Pat had shouted at us from behind his fish counter and told us both to get out. If I’m really honest though, it’s hard to totally disagree with her. Whichever way you look at it, Goose is a very fashionable individual. And a free thinker. And a Kool-with-a-K-Coolio-who-is-cooltastically-cool-for-cats-and-way-too-cool-for-school. She is even an Existentialist Absurdist. Which basically means that her outlook on life can be summed up like this:
In my experience, not many fifteen-year-olds even know what an Existentialist Absurdist is, bu
t Goose does because she blatantly is one. That’s how clever and cool and A-Type fashionable my friend Goose actually is.
But I have to say that even Goose has shown that she is unable to appreciate the finer aspects of philosophy. This morning, as I walked to school with her, I told her about my conversation with Elvis Presley and how he’d introduced me to the fascinating theories of René Descartes. I was feeling quite bright and energized because it was a Friday and I was feeling that funky Friday fever. Also, I’d just eaten a piece of chocolate in the shape of a shooting star I’d found behind door two of my Advent calendar. It’s possible that I was a bit over-emotional about Descartes. I talked about him almost all the way to school and then, finally, as we neared the school gates, I summed up my thoughts by saying, ‘I mean . . . can you imagine it, Goose? One day, René just decided that the only thing he had to believe was that he existed – and everything else was potentially a load of hogwash. Can you imagine writing something like that over all your exam papers? That would be well funny!’
I don’t think Goose was as interested as I was. She said, ‘René who?’ and then she said, ‘I’m not being funny, Lotts, but are you aware that you’re having a Traumatic Face Incident?’
‘Huh?’ I said.
‘An unidentified facial object has landed on you – just here,’ she said, tapping the end of her own nose as if she were my mirror. ‘It looks helluva angry. Honestly, it’s like a panic button. Do you want to borrow my concealer stick?’
I said, ‘What? No way!’ And then I touched my nose and experienced that upsetting bruise-like sensation that could only mean one thing – a freshly emerged evil red zombie had taken root on my face.
So I wailed, ‘Oh my God, how the heck did that get there? It wasn’t there when I washed my face this morning.’