Monday 13 February 2017

Mrs Picklebottom Is Properly Horrified

Well hello, groovers and shakers. Or shakers and groovers, either way works. I'm back to talk all about LUURRRRVE.

Today is the 13th of February. See how sharp I am? This means that tomorrow is the 14th (razor sharp!), and you know what that means?!!

Yep, it's just another day. Well, it is to me. But for some folk, it's the most romantic day of the year: Valentine's Day. 

This means that Mickey Blue Eyes will be getting some very special treatment tomorrow. I might even make him a sandwich. And, when I serve up the burnt sausages and veg for dinner, I'll even do a little tomato sauce love heart. I'm thoughtful like that. 




Why am a such a cynical little soul? I mean, considering I love the Carpenters who usually sung about love. Birds suddenly appearing, sharing horizons and all that shit.  I guess I'm a weird mass of contradictions. 

The thing is, I don't really need a bunch of over priced roses to know that  my husband loves me. After all, why would he put up with my Carpenters addiction. That shit must be maddening.  Poor bastard. 

I will, however, take a million dollars and a life time supply of chocolate. I'm not greedy. 

Truthfully, I did fall in love for the first time at the tender age of around seven or eight. As soon as we touched I was besotted. My eyes met with the object of my affection and it was love at first sight.

I couldn't wait to meet with my new love for our daily trysts. We were together all the time. In bed. At school. Under the desk. In the playground. Parting was always heartbreaking. It was like leaving a piece of me behind whenever I forgot my books. Yes, books. What did YOU think I was talking about?

Forget about playing kiss/chasey in the playground, when you can sit in the corner with a book! Besides, fictional boys are better. Case in point: Gilbert Blythe. Swoooon. I wouldn't have minded if he'd called ME carrots! 

Books were definitely the first love of my life. This continued into my teens. When I was in Year 9, I had this English teacher. As you do. Honestly, I can't even remember her name, so I should probably make something up.

Let's just call her Mrs Picklebottom. Because if you're going to make up a name, it might as well be something ridiculous.  Now, since this blog is just me repeating myself ad nauseam, there's a good chance I've told this story before. But it's a good one, so here it is again...

It was during this particular time in my life that I enjoyed reading Mills & Boon romances.  Before you judge me, bear in mind that we didn't have the internet in 1985, so I had to find out about sex somewhere. I certainly wasn't the type to be off 'pashing' and being fingered behind the demountables. No judgement whatsoever if you were. I certainly hope you enjoyed it. Just wasn't my thing. So I stuck to the books. 

Mrs Picklebottom was completely horrified by my choice of reading material. So much so, that she immediately contacted my mother and demanded a meeting. The next thing you know, my bewildered mother was being informed by Mrs Picklebottom that allowing girls to read these type of novels would make them grow up to think that if they have sex and have an orgasm, they're in love! 

As my late aunt pointed out when Mum told her, you can have an orgasm masturbating, and it doesn't mean you're in love with your hand! I wish mum had sent my aunt to the meeting. Would have been interesting. 

At this point, I must apologise to my mother, some thirty odd years later. I certainly cannot imagine having to have such a conversation with a teacher. Mum replied that she disagreed. She thought it was just a phase I'd grow out of.

This proved to be true, as I no longer read Mills & Boon  novels. Enid Blyton and LM Montgomery on the other hand... 

Shhhhhhhh, don't tell anyone! 

I can't help thinking that if Mrs Picklebottom is still out there teaching high school English, she would have imploded at the Fifty Shades series. Not to mentions teens ready access to internet porn these days. 

However, maybe Mrs Picklebottom had a point. It was just a clumsy delivery. It's entirely possible that romance novels DO set people up for unrealistic expectations about love. 

That is my whole problem with Valentine's Day. It's so phoney and commercial.  Personally we don't celebrate it. We prefer to leave it for our wedding anniversary which has more personal meaning to us. We'll celebrate our 22nd wedding anniversary in November instead. 

One other thing, if you're single and feeling a bit crap because it's Valentine's Day and everyone is posting all their loved up stuff on Facey. Don't. Or, at least, don't feel crap for longer than five minutes. Feel the crappy stuff, then move on.  

Those couples enjoying a romantic meal near the beach will be the same ones who'll be pissed off with each other the next day for forgetting to replace the toilet roll. Incidentally, it's me who always forgets to replace the toilet roll in this house, not Mickey Blue Eyes. Oops. Sorry! 

So I think I finally understand what Mrs Picklebottom was saying. Love isn't about hearts and flowers on one arbitrary commercial day. There is so much more to it than that. It's all the little things your partner does every day.  And the HUGE things; like supporting each other through cancer. (That's a whole other blog post...) It's been a wild 22 years, that's all I can say...

And tomato sauce love hearts are cute sometimes, too.

Maybe I'm a romantic after all? 

What are your thoughts about love, Valentine's Day and Mills & Boon novels? 

9 comments:

  1. Oh... poor misunderstood Miss Picklebottom. :-)

    Reading was one of my first loves as well... but I think it destroyed me and I expected love to be like something in a fairytale, or Sweet Dreams book or Mills & Boon. (And this is why I haven't read romance in a decade or two!)

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  2. I used to devour the M&Bs. I've read a few recently as I had a weird notion of trying to write some (under a pen name, of course) & really was amazed how much more ummm graphic they are these days - & seriously painful for the me who had permanent ....well, you get the idea. Anyways as for your post? Yep, books were my first love & nope, don't do Valentines.

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  3. What a wonderful aunt!! Surely we have all been through the Mills and Boons stage until the predictability became boring rather than sexy.

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  4. Great post! I think Valentine's Day is way too commercialised nowadays. I plan to make a nice dinner and dessert for my hubby and our three daughters. I also bought some little love heart chocs to put in the lunch boxes :) But I don't expect any flowers, in fact, I'd much rather a good book!

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  5. I didnt mind the Mills and Boon but I eventually went down the bigger names' books..whose titles escape me, but they were at a level higher than M&B back then. I was a voracious reader and library borrower but back in the day, schools and local libraries had 'police' checking you only read what was deemed suitable. Lucky I could borrow from friends. Great post, Ness! Happy NON Valentines Day. Thanks for linking up for #lifethisweek 7/52. Next Week: A Pet Story.

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  6. You crack me up! Lucky micky blue eyes getting a sauce heart. My significant other will be luvky to grt dinner tomorrow night let alone any fancy plating up!

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  7. I have made Valentine's Day about my kids, with no love interest or interest in having one, I use the day to reinforce how much as a mother I love them...just a special meal at home and handmade heart cookies, nothing flash! By the way I agree that Mills and Boons is terrible but LM Montgomery of the other hand is amazing!

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  8. Oh the toilet roll! Mr Imperfect is quite famous for his forgetfulness around that and it pisses me off no end! I need to become a zen-master. Also, I don't do V-Day. Never have, never will.

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  9. I doesn't hold a lot of significance for us either. However husband did buy me flowers and some choccies that we all ate in about two minutes, yesterday. He said it was to make up for forgetting our wedding anniversary last year. I'll take it. We really don't celebrate that either!

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