Monday, 9 July 2012

Royal Exchange

The Royal Exchange is one of my favourite buildings in Manchester.
It is a theatre built within a much larger room. The building used to be the cotton exchange and was the largest room for commerce in the world.
I've been there twice for performances this year, to see the play Two and to see The Unthanks play .
I really enjoy going partly as the theatre is in the round which makes for slightly unusual performances.
I took some pictures there on the photography course this last Saturday.



Saturday, 7 July 2012

Movement

I went on a really helpful photography course today. I have a DSLR but have been mostly guessing. It was really great to have guidance on what I could do and what I could create.
Here are some pictures from around Manchester today.
There were a lot of people skating and riding their bikes.
















Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Fandom

There is always going to be something of a struggle if you a fairly sensible person and you are a fan.

Whether its being a fan of a particular football team, actor, musician or film, when your happiness and joy is closely linked to the object of your obsession, it becomes a bit unreal.
You know logically that it really doesn't matter one bit to your team if you don't happen to wear your lucky pants but any football fan worth their salt wouldn't  dare take the chance when their team has a big match.
You are completely aware that your tattoo of your favourite actor marks you out as slightly odd but you don't regret it for a second.
I know that the members of my favourite band; a band which  I have loved with the power of a thousand fiery suns since I was a wide-eyed 12 year old, a band on whom I have spent an unknown amount of money (probably totalling several thousand pounds) going to see are not suddenly going to become my best friends.
 Somewhere wedged  in between logic and fantasy comes reality.
Your team wins the cup, your favourite actor plays in your local theatre, the next book in the series comes out.
It is Amazing!!

What I'm trying to say is that being a fan is half a fantasy of what could be, and, if you are at least mostly sane, the crushing awareness that the reality will never quite match the dream.

Except sometimes it does. The stars align, Karma pays you back, God gives you a present and for one perfect, shining moment it's exactly what you dreamed it would be.

My name is Helen Stoker are I'm a Hanson fan.
Last November Hanson played 5 gigs around the UK. I went to 4 of them.
This chalked up my Hanson seeing experiences to 25.
They also happened to give a lecture at Oxford Union. My cousin was the then editor of the Oxstu, the student newspaper. I begged her to see if I could firstly get into the lecture and also possibly to interview them. She worked magic and arranged, between the facebook message I sent  her at 2am and the lecture at 8pm that I could do both.
I spent the 1 and a half hour train journey from Birmingham where they'd played the previous night and where I'd been seeing family, down to Oxford consciously telling myself to calm down.
Their talk was great; funny, insightful, a closer look at the music industry that we mostly take for granted, an updated version of a similar talk I'd seen them give at North Western University in 2005.

Then we went upstairs.
There is something startling about being in the same room as people whose image you had on your childhood bedroom wall 100 fold, a slight buzzing, as if your nerve endings can suddenly generate electricity. 
We met, shook hands and sat down to chat. It was perfect.

When I was younger I did definitely want to marry a specific Hanson brother. While I was commending my 12 year old self for having really excellent taste, I am now older and they are all already married to people who are not me and what I really wanted was for them to be lovely. For them to be deserving in some way of my adoration. To have a nice chat and for them to be interested in talking to me.

I walked out of the room half an hour later feeling amazing.
My main thought as I left the building was that it had been worth it. That I hadn't been wrong or deceived in any way to have devoted so much time and thought to them.
Now several months later I play back parts of the conversation in my head, thinking about things I could've said differently that might have had a slightly different outcome, a greater chance of them remembering me . But when I walked down the stairs and away from them leaving them still in the room, it felt perfect.
I remember sincerely thinking this is it. I can stop now.




Tuesday, 3 July 2012

June












1) a lovely walk with my parents
2) Salt's Mill in Saltaire
3) dinner at home including lentils and quails eggs
4) aftermath of Manchester Day parade
5) costume department at the V + A
6) courtyard at the V+A
7) fire station display
8) Nadia is beautiful
9) all of Snow White's dwarves at Brick Lane market
10) Andy always wears fair isle knitwear
11) Monday morning Dalai Lama teaching
12) coffee in the Triangle with Emily whos usually in France- such an interesting space and almost completely empty
13) Patrick's Humanist naming ceremony- tears were shed
14) the Olympic Torch at the bottom of my road

Been a bit busy really

Monday, 2 July 2012

Peonies

This past month has been lovely and a bit mad; I've been all over the place seeing friends in different cities and working at many different schools.
It doesn't show any signs of slowing down for awhile.
Two weeks ago I went down to London to catch up with some friends I haven't seen in a good few years. Such a lovely time.
On Sunday we went to Columbia road flower market. I got these beautiful peonies, they lasted so well but I was a little sad to get rid of the last ones this morning.

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

A big hair cut

For over a year I have been planning to get my long, long hair cut off to donate to the Little Princess Trust. My hair was long enough last summer, but procrastination, spending a couple of months in Italy and difficulty finding a hairdresser meant that I only got round to getting my big chop a couple of weeks ago.


 I raised money for both the Little Princess Trust and the Alzhiemer's Society by having people vote on my final hair cut, there were three choices;

Option C won and I had my elbow length hair chopped into an approximation of Michelle


Unfortunately I had my phone stolen this weekend and the finished photo was on that so I can't show the final results

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

(home)

Since moving back home last year, I've felt a little lost, a little confused about where I fit in this place. I haven't lived here since I was 19 and first moved away for uni. A lot has changed in those 7 years.
I've changed, a lot.
When I was 19 and last living here, I was all about moving forwards, moving away, moving on. Now I feel a deep need for community and home and love and belonging.
I know myself a lot better, I give myself permission for a lot more. I allow myself to be happy and if I'm not, then to pursue happiness, something that I definitely struggled with at 19.

I had a rather rubbish weekend two weeks ago, a series of disappointments including a job I'd really enjoyed and felt enthusiastic about, finishing a couple of months earlier than expected.
This last weekend I really wanted to change that glum, sad feeling that had been lingering on, lengthened by the weather
I did the main thing I think of when I want to feel happier and sorted.
I went to Bradford.
I sought out people who are important to me.
I spent Friday night with my dear friend Ruth and her lovely daughter. We'd hoped to go to Bradford Mela on Saturday but due to the rubbish weather it had been cancelled. I love a good Mela so this was disappointing however it did give me the chance to spend longer with another friend Lizzie and to wonder around Salt's Mill in Saltaire; one of my top favourite "it'll be alright" spaces. Somewhere I go to just have a wonder and a think and always walk away feeling better.
 



On my way back I bumped into a friend I'd not seen for about a year then when I returned home, my mum had her god-daughter and her mother staying whom I hadn't seen maybe for 15 years.

Sunday was something completely different.
I've been part of Sanctus 1 a small spirituality based group since about February. I guess its my church.
We meet in Nexus art cafe, a really interested, not for profit place in the northern quarter of Manchester.
Nexus had a float in the Manchester Day Parade, I'd not been particularly involved with the making of the float or the costumes and props but I love a fun time.
I arrived a little late (as is my want) and walked past a lot of the floats and groups getting into position before finding the workshop.
I had the most fun time, I love feeling involved and being part of the parade with Nexus made me really feel that I had a place in this city.
aftermath of MDP, float traffic jam


I guess what I'm trying to articulate is that my sense of identity and joyfulness, having been so long linked to Bradford is starting to slowly become intertwined with Manchester and Stockport again.
Its not always what I think I want, but it is good for me at this time at least.