Entries Tagged as 'Mariella Agapiou'

Cinderella

Sunday, March 4, 2012

This week that imminent question of what I am going to do after I graduate has been plaguing my mind. It’s as if my thoughts are scholastically timed, because today in class, the topic became a discussion as we waited for the fire alarm to stop. All us students and our tutor huddled outside a grand new building with ridiculous art-deco design (seriously, what is that entrance about!) But yes, in my undergraduate studies, it was as if I couldn’t care less. I was adamant that some glorious position would appear out of thin air in a very Cinderella and the golden carriage sort of way. Evidently, the chance to fly to New York City and intern at a Brooklyn newspaper did present itself and it was a joyous occasion, but I have a suspecting fear that it’s not going to happen again.

If an internship position did seem to fall in my lap, I’m not sure that I would take it. I have already carried out three different internships. Yes they were all different, varying in position, length and also country, and I learnt numerous amounts, but I need money. There I said it. I cannot go on working for free, especially after I have already spent a year working full-time and know what it is like to earn a salary. Somehow, probably by stupidity on both mine and Mr Allure’s parts, when we were both earning good money, we still ended up being as skint as we are now at the end of every month. My wages have pretty much halved since going freelance and only working two days a week. Again, that has got to be our own stupidity, or glamorous shopping habits. I digress, the point is I want to go straight into a position. What position it may be, I am unsure of as I do not want to work my way up on a magazine anymore.

I somehow survived a day as a work experience girl at More Magazine, last December. There were 6 of us girls huddled, on the floor. ON THE FLOOR, in the corner, attempting to make sense of the returns and send them on their merry way. I say make sense, because each time, it looked like we might be getting somewhere, a dare-I-say snotty fashion assistant would come and lumber us with more. Now if I wanted to work for More Magazine, I would have sucked it up and done what was expected of me and more. And I would have done it with a smile, but I don’t want to work at More. It really isn’t me. To be honest, there probably are only a handful of titles that I could actually see myself working for. But now I have decided that is not the route for me anyway. This week I have been having glorious day dreams were I somehow meet a publisher and we get talking about my idea for a novel, he laps it up and throws me a book deal with a huge advance and I don’t have to actually get a job. I get to do my favourite thing – write. And make money. Maybe this would be the prince part of my Cinderella story.

So Out of Style

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Yesterday was the start of fashion week. And if you’re on Twitter, you’re either loving the constant updates or wishing you could hide in a cyber cave for a week till all the fashion dies down. I, however, am enjoying finding out about the shows and those that are in attendance. Fashion Week is a time to show the world your creations, to show how you express yourself and what you’re trying to say. But I’m not talking about the designers.

Walking along the Strand heading towards Somerset House, I could spot the attendees a mile off. Their clutch bags, and platform heels – and that was just some of the guys. One guy had decided to turn a pirate hat into a miraculous head-piece by adding a brooch on the left side. He almost pulled it off. I even saw another man with the proverbial grunge attire pair it with an Asian style nose-ring piece of jewellery that attached to his right ear. You can be as outlandish as you want if you have the confidence to pull it off.

No over-the-top head-gear or jewellery for me, I stuck to a plain maroon maxi skirt, mint acne t-shirt and black leather jacket, but was still stopped to be snapped for a street style picture – my initiation into the pack. What was even more glamorous was having my hair blown out at the Toni & Guy pop up blow bar. Although I overheard the man beside me explaining that he had been up for 28 hours and had just flown in from New York that morning. He was also insisting that he didn’t look exhausted, yet. Which is true, he did look serene but he still had a glazed look in his eye. But maybe it had to do with the fact he had just cut the queue, and had a lovely head massage while the assistant washed his hair, but as soon as the announcement that the PPQ show was about to start, panic set in, and the fear that he might miss a show, especially for a reason such as getting his hair done, was too much to handle. He rushed off without even letting the hair stylist show him the back of his head.

If you actually take a moment to read the many, many tweets containing #LFW, you can see that most are not about the design talent, but actually they are the journalists and other fashionistas complaining. Complaining about being too tired, about having to wait to long, about needing coffee or even just an update to tell us they are on the way to show. These tweets started to come into being the night before, as there were a few pre-London Fashion Week presentations to start the whole ordeal off. So the following morning, if you happen to follow me on twitter, you’ll see that I started by saying how excited I am that it’s fashion week. Although, I think that’s really out of style.

PETA’s Anti-Leather Campaign Hits LFW

Friday, February 10, 2012

I’ve been a vegetarian for years now, seven to be exact. Although technically I’m a pescetarian as I eat fish. It’s not that I disagree with the killing of animals I just don’t like meat, although there was a time when apparently I was in a McDonald’s late at night, shouting out for a Big Mac (I never even ate them when I did eat meat!) I tried being a vegan once, but ended up eating too many carbs, so that was thrown out immediately. My diet choices, as you can probably tell, have nothing to do with the welfare of animals – I cook meat, I just don’t eat it. I wear leather and if I saw a beautiful fur coat, I would buy it; I wouldn’t toss it aside for moral reasons. Again, that’s just me. I understand people’s choices and opinions on these matters, but as a student of fashion, someone obsessed with designers, when I see a leather See by Chloe purse, I see a beautifully soft-to-touch accessory I want, which probably costs more money than I can hold in it. What I don’t see is the cow that was killed to make it.

The world of fashion has always been split over the fur debate, but this week I received and email from PETA, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Foundation telling me about the first anti-leather campaign which is being launched ahead of London Fashion Week and has Stella McCartney as its ambassador. They are urging fashionistas to shed not only fur but also leather this London Fashion Week with a viral video exposé of the skins trade, hosted by McCartney. “As a designer, I like to work with fabrics that don’t bleed; that’s why I avoid all animal skins”, says McCartney in the video. She goes on to plea with the fashion obsessed to “please join me in exploring the huge variety of fashionable shoes, belts, purses and wallets that aren’t the product of a cow’s violent death.”

Now I understand that the killing of cows in a cruel way is horrible, but aren’t the battery farms filled with feather-less chickens just as bad? If you are planning on starting an anti-fur campaign I think a target audience of Alexander Wang bags and Christian Louboutin Heel owners is the wrong place to start. These fashion loving individuals, some of whom wear fur, are not going to give up their platform heels and oversized totes because Stella McCartney says so. Unless of course there is the chance they might get a piece from her Autumn/Winter 2012 collection.

I think it’s great to feel this passionate about a cause and to have someone as influential as Stella McCartney backing it. I do hope they raise awareness, but actually being able to turn London Fashion Week against leather might just be too far out of reach. Even for a McCartney.

For more information or to view PETA’s video, please visit PETA.org.uk or click here

Wobbling In Heels

Friday, February 3, 2012

Welcome to my new idea. It’s a weekly column on Notes On Allure called Wobbling In Heels, accurately named due to my platform heels that have aided my signature stomp, but also because I find myself wobbling through life [insert visual image]. But it’s not just me, it’s my friends, my fellow MA students and even my whole generation; I might even go as far as to push it to my culture. Now I can’t hope to define my culture or generation in words, even though I may try, but I can give you all an insight into life as a struggling fashion and lifestyle student, one that would rather splash out on Acne in the Liberty sales and do the weekly shop at Waitrose then give up the pseudo lifestyle and admit I have no money. So this is my weekly space to rant, vent and tell you a little about life as a student, life as aspiring writer and also life, as I know it. Welcome.

I can be a little impulsive. I decided to part-take in a master’s degree one month before applications were due, and three months later I was enrolled on the course. But do not let this impulsiveness fool you. I am also extremely calculated and organised, so much so that I have already started scouring the internet for ideas and positions for when I finish my degree. Let me remind you I graduate at the end of September. It’s now the 3rd of February. Yes, I know my mother would be so proud, yours might even be too, but the fact is I have found myself this week applying to positions that if lucky enough to be asked to interview, and then fortunate enough to get, I would have to decline because I am still studying, and hell, I’ve paid this much, I am going to finish the course. But here’s the dilemma; you take a MA to get a job, if that job is there now for the taking, don’t you take it? I have friends who graduated the same time as me from their undergraduate course in 2010 and still haven’t found jobs. Brilliant candidates too. But I digress, I have not been offered anything, this is all in my head.

Big, pretentious words have also been filling my head this week. I caught the deadly cold, a virus so strong it actually had the entire office, where I work freelance off sick. And so I started reading my way through the list of Fashion Theory books assigned to us this semester. There was a certain Homer element to the prose; long, confusing at times with big words that I have to admit, sometimes could have been replaced with shorter, more accessible terms. The difference being I loved reading Homer, I was taken to the far off place of my ancestors – I couldn’t put it down. The books I have been reading this week are written by fashion historians and academics that feel they have to write in this almost pompous way to express the fact that fashion is not shallow and an expensive fad that is hard to keep up with, but sophisticated and educated. Fashion is what it is. People love it, others hate it. It makes statements and sells clothes. We do not have to write in a certain exaggerated manner to make people believe there is depth in the subject. Saying that, some of the books I have looked at make valid and significant points, others I have to realise where written in past generations that probably needed to give this view to the rest of the world. Nowadays though, fashion is what you make it, everyone has an opinion. This column over weeks to come will outline mine. What’s yours?

A Note On, Well This

Friday, December 16, 2011

Notes On Allure has grown over the last few months and I have enjoyed watching my online space become a place where I can discuss, create and publish all the fashionable, musical and sometimes strange things that I discover. I have let down my creative writing when it comes to this online world of mine, but I have the chance every now and then to infuse my train-of-thought style into short snappy pieces that somehow fit into this, what seems to be now, fashion and lifestyle blog.

I have been asked a few times recently how I came about blogging, and especially how I ended up writing about fashion and beauty, so let me tell you a little secret dear readers – Google analytics tells me most of you are from the UK, but they are a few from all over the world, 2% in Russia, Zdravstvuj to you – I am not entirely sure. When I was at university I started up two blogs simultaneously. One was my cultural voice and the other was pure escapism, a place to publish my fictional imagination. In February this year I merged them into Notes On Allure and began reviewing beauty products and commenting on fashion. That’s where my fashionable mind lies; I am not a trend forecaster, I find it hard to get my head around working 6 months in advance like I had to do with long leads whilst in PR. I started this blog as a place to put all my thoughts in one place. I have one of those annoying minds, that never slows down or stops thinking of new ways to describe the mundane, and somehow – possibly due to my current masters degree – the majority of posts end up being about designers and style or the way to mix them with the music that fills my ears. I had an interesting conversation with a friend of mine yesterday, a young guy who also wants to write, and will make a great writer one day, discussing the flakiness of the fashion publishing industry. He works alongside the industry and sees how it is run from the inside out, so has many thoughts and opinions on the people who work in and also those who think they run it. I love our chats about this because as a blogger you can be seen as an outsider to this world. A person so independent from it, that to wish to be part of it almost makes your blog obsolete.

But writing was always my main goal. I know there isn’t many fashion writers that get onto the bestsellers list for fiction, but it would be nice if it happened. Don’t you think? Wouldn’t it also be nice to read pieces about next seasons runway shows written by Haruki Murakami, Jeffery Eugenides or the late J. G. Ballard. Only me? My mind wonders. So this is my point, if you didn’t quite get it yet, fashion and beauty may seem fickle to some of you out there, and Notes On Allure may seem to be targeting mostly females now, but I assure you this will change very soon as I will be welcoming a male fashion editor in the next few weeks, however there are some amazing beauty and fashion writers out there who tackle current trends and products with such intelligence and wit like Eva Wisemen, Sali Hughes and Joanna McGarry, that why couldn’t they write a stimulating piece of fiction. And for those of you still a little slow on the uptake, I want to be one of those writers.

The Neurotic Thoughts of a Little Greek Girlfriend

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Our first journalism assignment was to write a column. Below you can read the concept and also the first one in the series.

This column will look at domestic life and how inevitably each week I am becoming more like a Greek housewife. The column itself touches upon trying to please a man, while still fighting the urge to be an independent young woman, and also trying to fight the neurotic questions that fly through a Greek girl’s mind.

In the first column I have shown how far I will go to please my boyfriend. The next column will be about guilt; how my mother used to test my father, and try to make him feel guilty for not helping around the house and how subconsciously I find myself doing the same. The next week will be about Greek coffee and how being able to make it – according to my grandfather and all old Greek men – means you are ready for marriage, and so that week I will go against the grain and refuse to learn; trying to hold on to single life.

Too Much To Carry… 

There I am, waiting in line at the fishmongers in Waitrose, asking for 250g of scallops. Alone. I am carrying a basket full of all the ingredients to make him a lovely Sunday dinner, and it’s so heavy I am leaning all the way over to the left. My neck is straining and it hurts. If you would have asked me a year ago if I would have walked the 25 minutes to Waitrose (while he sleeps in) to buy the ingredients to make a Sunday dinner, I would have laughed in your face.

I was always one to push away and rebel from the stereotype of becoming a Greek housewife. A life that is filled with cooking, cleaning and preening. But over the past six months, a subconscious shift has occurred – I have become my mother. On the days where I am not in the office, I find myself making the bed – one occurrence I have not done since my over eager, anal retentive years before puberty – clean the house and put some washing on, all before I even sit down to check my emails and work out what I have to do that day. Once I do finally sit down, I feel betrayed by my heritage and these big questions start flying around my mind. Is this what married life is like? Or am I just like this because I am Greek?

Sometimes I even go as far to think if I would be like this if I had no man to dote on. Do my single friends have it better? I do know how sweet, kind and caring he is, but this does not make things even in my mind. It doesn’t matter how much he claims loves me, if he really did he would have gotten up at half 8 on a Sunday, helped me tidy the house and then driven me to Waitrose to carry the basket – on his birthday. Wouldn’t he?

A Note On The Mid-Twenties Crisis

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Over the past few weeks I’ve become more and more aware of my age. I’m 22, but this being in your twenties thing, it seems to be baffling people everywhere. This is the decade where we go from children to adults (supposedly), from students to full time 9-5ers (again, supposedly) and the dreaded settling down, kids start to creep ever so slowly (SLOWLY) into the back of our minds. This has even coined the mid-twenties crisis hash tag that’s currently trending on twitter.

So why are we finding it so difficult? Why do we focus so much on it and not just do anything about it? I think it might have something to do with the fact that our generation, those of us that were teens in the noughties, are used to getting everything we want when we want it. Guilty! We live in an age of instant gratitude, where if we want to hear a song, we find it on the Internet, download it illegally and within minutes it’s on our iPods. If we want to see a film, but don’t want to go and pay the ridiculous charge of cinema tickets, we can stream it online, again probably illegally. So when you think about it, we are all guilty of it. But it’s not just this, we were also brought up in Britain; grew up in Britain, so lets face it we have been partying since the tender age of 13 or 14, maybe younger for some of us. So we are used to going out and getting ‘smashed.’ The thought of growing up means we have to stop this constant partying, so why choose that?

This transitional period can cause major conflict within ourselves for reasons such as this, and then there’s the whole ‘what to do with your life.’ Not everyone knows they want to be a director or a writer when their 15. There are the few lucky ones, but most of the people I know have fallen into their positions at work and some make the most of it, others, well they don’t. So they get stuck in the rut of escaping those questions with what we’re good at, getting drunk enough to foget those questions.

I’m not pretending to be all high and mighty, like I can step out of my age group and look down on the rest of you, giving you advice and what not. I’m there too! I’ve taken a ‘fuck I need to do absolutly everything I can, right now’ attitude. I want to write so I started a blog. But I’m so frantic my blog doesn’t have one focus, like they should, its basically a massive online path of consciousness! I blog about anything and everything that interests me, in a magpie sort of way (if I think its shiny, I post it.)  And as well as this blog, I work full time in PR, I copy-write and do internships from home as well. Has this instant graditification given us a false sense of accomplishment? Has it made us think as well as getting everything now, we can do everything we want, right now? For me, I think it may have.

So my long drawn out point is this, if your feeling a bit shit, a bit stuck; maybe you want to move out of your parents house; maybe you want to get a better job; maybe your sick of living on a students wage, don’t fret too much. Your just going through a mid-twenties crisis.

And remember, we’ve got our thirties to look forward to … fuck that!

Psycho-Therapy

Monday, July 4, 2011

Part four of a novella series

Chapter Four 

She’s half an hour late. I’ve been sitting in my office waiting, going over yesterday’s session, making notes. I feel as though I’m really starting to understand her condition. All the past psychologists just passed her off as psychotic, sociopathic because they didn’t take the time to try and feel for her. She has depression, that’s evident, I write, borderline personality disorder, slightly. Confused as to where she fits in with her family. Not exactly unheard of with her age-group. Her obsession with control is damaging, to herself and those around her. Feelings of self-control are mixed with the want to not have to feel. Can’t make sense of her emotions so resorts to mind-altering behaviour. Sex, drugs and alcohol are what she finds comfort in.

She’s now forty-five minutes late. Without really taking the time to think about it, I dial Mrs. Rosenberg. I let it ring for a few minutes, not giving up before someone answers the phone. I hear a voice I have not heard before.

“Hello?”

“Oh, Hello. This is Dr. Harrington, Micha’s psychiatrist.”

“Oh, yes. Hello Doctor.” I can hear crying in the background. Screaming almost.

“Is Mrs. Rosenberg there?”

“Yes she is, but, I’m Mr. Rosenberg. My wife can’t exactly come to the phone right now.”

“Oh, ok. Well, see I don’t know if you know but Micha’s is quite late for her appointment today.”

“Yes we know,” he utters in a rather ominous tone. “Nathaniel died last night.”

“Oh! I am so sorry.” I freeze, unable to process the information. “How did it happen?” I hear myself asking.

“Car accident.” I realise now that tone, is one of pure pain. My mind starts to race; I picture how I would feel if anything was to ever happen to Sam. I can’t even contemplate those feelings. “It has really affected my wife.”

“I’m sure. I am truly sorry for your lose.”

“Thank you”

“I won’t bother you any longer.” I slowly put down the receiver, and stare at the door. What they must be going through. What Micha must be going through. I hope she is ok.

The phone rings. I don’t wait for Tina to answer, my mind on auto-pilot.

“Hello?” I say, trying to sound as professional, and as calm as I can just hearing news such as this.

“Dr. Harington? It’s Mr. Rosenberg.”

“Oh, Hello.”

“I know this is unheard of, but are you able to help us, do us a very great favour”

“Well, I…If you would like to come in and see me yes I would very much like to help. I think a family grievance session may help everyone, especially Micha. I’m sure she is devastated. I know how close they were.”

“Yes, yes. Well actually we were hoping you would help us find her.”

“I don’t quite understand. Is she not at home? Does she know?”

“Oh yes she is aware of the news. She was at home, when we found out. We were in shock, and thought that she had gone upstairs. But when I went up to check on her, she was not there. And her phone is just ringing, she won’t answer. I drove around trying to find her, but did not want to leave my wife for too long. She has not taken the news very well. You understand.”

“Yes, I see. But I didn’t really see what he was asking me to do. “You want me to go and find Micha?”

“I know that is not what is expected of you”

“No it really isn’t” Would I be breaking a rule, getting too involved? “I’ll see what I can do.”

“Thank you so much Doctor.” And with that he hangs up the phone.

What have I just let myself in for? Agreeing to go all over London to find her. She could be anywhere. I search my notes a telephone number. Type it into my phone and hit save; Micha.

 

“Tina! Tina, cancel the next appointment if I’m not back in time. It is only Mr. Harris, he will be ok. I’m going out.” I rush out the door, before she even has the time to answer. Almost run down the stairs and shut the door behind me. Facing out into my little street, where do I look? I head in the direction of the underground station, thinking that a map may help me focus my thoughts. I go through my phone, and find her number and press dial. It rings but there is no answer. By this time I have walked to few minutes it takes to get to the station. I stand still, unsure of what to do, where to go. I dial again. Again it rings nothing.

“Micha, this is Tom, Dr. Harrington. I understand that you must be devastated at this time, but your parents are very worried about you. They need you to go home. You all need to be together at a time like this. Please call them, or call me. Just get in contact with someone, so we know that you are ok.” I head down into the station. It is still, calm, before the storm that occurs at five o’clock. There are only a few tourists staring blankly at the underground map. Green park; it’s not somewhere a teenager would go, unless you live off daddy’s credit card. Camden! She has mentioned before. I board the escalator down into the platform.

Rushing around on the underground is not going to help me find her. Rushing underneath the life of it all, speeding past the stops on mechanic wheels; I’m missing out on where she could actually be. She won’t be hiding down here. I go over the sessions I have had with Micha, pin point my thoughts to places. Camden is where she would go for gigs. She had mentioned how she felt walking around London was calming, especially South Bank. I change my direction and head towards the Jubilee Line. Again it’s quite, unlike my thoughts. The constant fear that what I am doing is wrong, mixed with my want, need to find her. What would Kate say? What would Tina think? How I would feel if Sam died, that I would want anyone and everyone to do what they could to help me.

I exit embankment station, and feel the unlikely sunshine on my face. As Londoners we tend to forget that the sun exists, during the winter months. However, the sunshine is not backed-up by warmth; it’s freezing and the wind is blowing in my face causing my grimaced face to widen. I cross over the bridge and stop half way, looking out into the London Skyline. I know she is out there somewhere. The flatness of London allows you to see the beautiful bricks glisten. If only it would let me find Micha.

I walk along the river, pass the BFI, pass the National Theatre, walking slow, then fast all the way to Blackfriars Bridge. I start to walk up the steps towards it, see a pub and walk in.

“Have you seen a young girl, brown hair, blue eyes, dressed, erm dressed scruffy in here today?” I ask the bar tender.

“Yes we have.”

“Really?”

“About twenty of them, this is a student pub Mr., what do you expect?” I turn, a little defeated and leave the door, but not before scanning the room for her face.

As I cross the bridge I feel as though I have been transported to a different city. It is so different here, than the London you find in Mayfair. The sun is blocked out by the tall, daunting buildings. The tourists have disappeared and business men and women are left, on their blackberries, Iphones, listening to Ipods and even the brave ones reading the Financial Times as they get to wherever they are going in a hurry. Some smile at me, others frown and there are others that have no expression at all. Micha’s face is printed in my mind as I walk the short distance to St Paul’s Cathedral. I remember there was a pub she mentioned to me, where she had gone with Freddie. There are so many tourists, so many restaurants, and more pubs. As I walk the cobbled streets I try her phone again, but get the same response, nothing. One looks promising, but it is full of working men and women, enjoying their lunch. Another is packed and so I enter, but the bar man hasn’t seen her and there is no sign of her in the toilets.

“Look miss, you have had too much.”

“Fuck off! I haven’t had enough! Let mm-me back in.”

“Sorry can’t do that.” Turning around I see a bar man ushering out a young girl, but she doesn’t look like Micha, her hair is shorter.

“Oh come on, pl-please,” she begs, whimpers. I start to walk on over and realise that the bar man is holding what looks like Micha’s bag, something I would not have noticed if it wasn’t for Tina’s jealousy of it. I run over to her, take the bag from the bar man and put my arm around her.

“Tom?” she says, in a state of utter shock, or is it the vodka that is distinctly on her breath?

“Yeah, it’s me. Come on Micha, let’s go over here.” I start to move her in the direction away from the door, but she collapses in my arms, hysterically crying. I move her again, but we don’t get very far before she falls to the floor.

“He’s gone. Actually dead. He left mm-me!”

“It was an accident,” I say as I sit down next to her, “it wasn’t his fault, he didn’t leave you, Micha.” I try to stay clear of clichés, knowing that they will not be of use in a time like this.

“What the fuck can I do now, wh-wh who am I going to st-talk to. I needed’ed him!”

“You can talk to me, Micha. It’s what I’m here for.”

“You get paid to listen to mm-me! That doesn’t fucking count!”

“Yes, but that doesn’t mean…”

“He died, Tom he’s dead!” I realise this state she’s in, isn’t going to do anyone any good.

“Look, let me get you some food, or water. Do you want some water?”

“Vodka, I want Vodka!”

“I don’t think you should drink anymore today Micha.”

“Why?”

“Why? Because you’re already quite drunk, and I know it feels like it’s making it better, but it’s not. In fact it’s just going to make things worse in the long run.

“What fucking long ru-run, there won’t be a long ru-run. I don’t want a run. No ru-run!” I realise she isn’t talking about running.

“Ok, Ok. Stay here a minute and I’ll go get you a drink and something to eat, ok?”

“Vodka!”

“Ok,” I agree with her.

 

I order a glass of tap water and packet of crisps, but when I leave the pub, her bag is sitting of the floor, without Micha. I hear stumbling; she has tried to walk away but failed. Grabbing her bag, I walk over to her.

“See? No more vodka.” I hand her the water, but she only takes a sip and holds out her hand for me, gesturing me to join her on the floor. I hand her the packet of crisps as I sit down. Her facial expression changes, from one of distraught pain, to sadness.

“Nathaniel died Tom,” she whispers as if telling me for the first time.

“I know, I know.” She moves closer to me, and takes my arm, putting it around her. At first I’m reluctant, but she is a patient in need. I must help in any way I can.

She turns to look at me. She has mascara down her face, her nose is runny but she still looks beautiful, innocent.

“You cut your hair?” I ask, noticing the un-even chunks missing from her long, not short shaggy hair.

“Yeah. I didn’t want to recognise who I saw in the mirror. Is, is that stupid?”

“No, not exactly Micha. Wanting to change your appearance is a form of acceptance, a way of trying to deal with change.”

“But I don’t want to have to deal with it,” she says realising finally that I am here to help, for her to talk to, “I don’t want him to be dead.”

“I know. Nor do your parents. I think you should go home and see them. Do you want me to take you there?”

“Not really,” she says as she looks into my eyes, needing me. Kate has never looked at me like this before. Micha moves a little closer to me, I smile to reassure her but she kisses me. Shocked, I move back, just looking at her for a few seconds. She is so lost, so beautiful. And without thinking, without knowing, I lean in, and kiss her.

 

Psycho-Therapy

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Third part in a novella series …

 Chapter Three

The underground is strangely quiet this morning; there are still the busy type of personalities rushing around and all the other personality types, trying to get to their lives, but I didn’t have to wait for four trains to pass before I could board one. Maybe it’s a sign; a good day. I exit the train at Green Park, it always smells that little bit nicer than other London train stations, and walk the five minutes to my practice. It almost doesn’t feel like London, less dirt, less noise. It feels more like Paris with English subtitles. I turn the corner and notice there’s someone sitting on my steps. Great the tramps have established a bit of class. As I get closer I notice she looks sad, she’s never looked sad before. Crazy, stoned, maybe even hysterical but never sad.

“Tom!” she runs up to me, wraps her arms around me. Is this a violation of patient-therapist conduct?

“I didn’t know where else to go, is it ok? I know I’m a lil’ bit early but…”

“It’s fine. Come on up” it’s not fine, what are you saying. I’ve got a lot of stuff I needed to do before our appointment today. Well guess that’s out the window. I fiddle around in my pocket but she won’t let go, her arms are still around me.

“I just need to err, get the keys.”

“Oh, sorry yeah.”

She slowly releases me and is following my every movement. She doesn’t say another word as we walk the stairs up to the third floor. As I let us in she rushes past me and sits straight in my office. Tina is late; usually she is here before I am. But today, I’m glad she doesn’t get to see how unprofessional I can be. I take my time, sorting out Tina’s desk, grabbing anything that might be of some importance, before I join Micha in my office.

I see she has made herself comfortable; sitting cross legged in my big leather chair, picking at the varnish on her nails, leaving it to fall on to my floor. I get my notes out, not that I need to be reminded of the case. Micha has been seeing me for about a month now, and not much seems to be happening in the way of recovery, or even in the direction of it. Every time she just tells me about the night before. How wasted she got, how she got kicked out – mostly justified I believe – who she was with, what they took and sometimes she even lets me in on who she fucked. Not that I really wanted to know these details. Especially as I have come to find her rather graphic in her story telling. We have not even begun to discuss her childhood, despite the amount of times I’ve tried. One time we spent half a session talking about a pink leather jacket she had just bought, how she knew it was too expensive, that her father would definitely not approve, but how that made it all the more attractive. How she went about stealing her father’s credit card and the looks she got when using it. I may in fact, now know how the mind of an eighteen year old works when shopping but of the mind that exists in Micha, I’m unsure I, or in fact anyone will ever know. The only conclusion I have come up with is that she is extremely intelligent. Any time she so much as suggests something that would in any way let me in, give me a clue as to her diagnosis; she changes the subject and starts to talk about empty emotions. I have put her on duloxetine, a subtle anti-depressant that should mellow out her erratic behaviour, although I don’t think it has, due to the stories she tells me. I also gave her a prescription for diazepam, in case she felt anxious, but again I think she has just misused it.

“So how you feeling today Micha?”

“Like dying.” I find myself wondering whether she’s being sarcastic or not, as usually she is, but by the look on her face I don’t quite think that she is.

“I met this guy, the other night, his name is Freddie. We seemed to hit it off straight away. He is so hot! Got that rugged look going on and he wears the coolest sun glasses. We spent like three days straight together; he took me to the zoo. Yeah I know that seems lame but I loved it. Then we went to a pub near St Paul’s cathedral and talked about all kinds of things. I think I really like him.” She looks out the window, trying to dismiss the fact that she may have portrayed some kind of real emotion.

“Anyways, last night he couldn’t come out, said he had some work or revision, something to do that meant he couldn’t go to The Cribs gig. So I went anyway, I love The Cribs and other people would be there that I knew. The Cribs were wicked, and we were having a great time. That guy Matthew was there, the one I told you about.” The guy she was referring to was the boy she had lost her virginity to, at the tender age of fourteen in a park. I smile, knod and give her clause to continue.

“Well I was fucked, took some pills and drunk about six JD and cokes when he started kissing me. It felt all too familiar, maybe safe … I dunno well yeah we ended up in the girls’ toilets and Freddie walked in and saw us”

“Kissing?”

“Fucking! I mean he said he wasn’t gonna’ be there. It’s not like we were going out. I ran after him and we ended up having this huge fight outside. He called me a slut, and I guess I can see why he would think that.” I try not to show any emotion on my face, so as to show her I don’t think that. Not that I do, who am I to judge.

“But he called me ugly, like on the inside. That’s the part that’s meant to count right? Says that I use my outside beauty to draw people in, manipulate them. That I thrive on my problems, without them I’m screwed. He said that he did like me, cared for me but that it doesn’t mean shit to me; that everyone cares about me, even my parents and that I’m just too stupid to see it. That I’ll never succeed because I don’t care or try hard enough…and it all just made me feel sad, like really fucking sad.” I didn’t really know what to say. It seemed to me that this eighteen year old boy, Freddie, had figured out in three days, what I had failed to accomplish in a month. Maybe the only way to get to know Micha, is to get physically close to her.

“Have you felt like this before?”

“Yeah, all the time, why do you think I like to get so fucked? I hate being in control, it means I have to feel these feelings. Feel sad, depressed, like I just want to fucking end it all… I mean I do try sometimes and see it from my parents point of view but then it hurts and I go out get out of control and I feel better … well for a little while. The drugs and the drink, they take over and give me a rest from being me, they take me away from myself. You’d think it would let me see myself from the outside, so I could realise what I am doing but it doesn’t. I see me and well, I hate me.” I try as quick as I can to jot down all that she’s saying, pick out the emotions and translate them to paper, but the more my pen moves the less she talks. I can see she’s starting to feel uncomfortable, that this era of openness about her is not something she’s used to. So I stop trying to analyse it, put my pen down and just listen. Something I doubt anyone has done for her for a long time.

“It’s like, you know that saying, seize the day, and well I’ve always believed that. I try to live everyday because tomorrow I might be dead. I’m not afraid of death, I don’t necessarily want to die … all the time.” She smiles nervously and I want to hug her, something I’ve never felt before, for any of my patients and I’ve heard my fair share of sad stories.

“One thing I’ve always wanted to do before I die though. Find out what it feels like to kill someone. I know that sounds crazy and really dumb but I have a feeling that I actually will. The person I think I’ll end up killing, is me. I know if I did die, people would care. But if I carry on living, will anybody even notice? Like my family, yeah they love me and all but they don’t see me. Nate is probably the only one that I can talk to, but I can’t talk to him about things like this. He tries to act all strong but he’s not, he’s really sensitive. This stuff would kill him. Freddie got one thing wrong, I do care about Nate. He manages to be in both worlds though. Like the other day, I woke up and it was four o’clock so I went down and they were all smiling, laughing, acting like a real family, I walk in and it stops. No smiling, no laughing, they all just looked at me. Their eyes full of well something I couldn’t read…”

“Thomas, Thomas, your 11 o’clock is here.” Shit! Is that the time. When did Tina get here? Fuck, just when we were starting to get somewhere.

“Ok Micha, today was good, I feel as though we are really starting to get somewhere but we are going to have to call it a day. Why don’t you go home and try and spend a little bit of time with your family today, I am sure they would appreciate it.” I stand to give her the hint, but she seems reluctant. Slowly she rises and heads for the door. She reminds me of a puppy that’s just been told off, with its tail between its legs.

“Look, how about you come and see me tomorrow, I’ll try and fit you in and get Tina to ring you with the time.”

“Uh, ok. Thanks.” With that she’s gone. I look out the window to try and she her but before I catch a glimpse Tina is in my office.

“What time did she get here?”

“Early. Where were you, late night?

“You can say that. It won’t happen again. I’m really sorry.” Usually I would be on her case but I just didn’t seem to care.

“Nah, its fine, don’t worry. But Tina?”

“Yeah?”

“Can you try and fit Micha in tomorrow, I don’t mind if all I get for lunch is fifteen minutes, it’s just really important. I think I’m starting to get somewhere with her.” Tina goes to leave but whispers something I don’t quite hear.

“I’m sure you are…”

Take Me Dancing (First Edit)

Friday, May 13, 2011

So here it is. What we have been working hard on. The first edition of Take Me Dancing, the first film produced by Haus of S&M. Directed by my rediculously talented little bro Stavros Agapiou.

We are going to be working on the Director’s Edit over the summer. Which will include more scenes that didn’t make it into this version…

Click Here! to have a look at some of his other work. TAKE NOTE – He hasn’t even had any training/studied film yet. He will be leaving me to go to Uni in September :(

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