On Making Very Little Writing Progress.

Once again, life gets in the way of writing. In some ways, I really don’t mind – as much as I love writing, I would much rather spend a weekend with my boyfriend, as I have just done, because he means a lot to me and I want him to know how much I love him 🙂 on the other hand, some things which are either not so good, or not things I really want to think about, are also getting in the way. 

In terms of the not so good, I’ve had a lovely weekend and managed to stop myself from thinking about it for much of the time, but problems with college keep cropping up, and the most recent one is definitely the biggest I’ve encountered so far (and hopefully the biggest I actually WILL encounter considering I’ve got about 7 weeks of actual lessons left, and I don’t want anything else to happen). I’m not going to go into details about it because I don’t particularly want to think about it in too much detail, but the stress of it is not only making me ill, it’s also disrupting the writing, which isn’t a good thing. 

As for the things I’d rather not think about, it’s actually quite exciting and I’m looking forwards to it, but I’m also really nervous! Well, more anxious than nervous… I want to get it over and done with, but I really want to enjoy it and do well. It’s my drama A Level performance exam on Wednesday, and while I’m really pleased with how we’re doing – the text piece is going really well and I think I’ve got my lines sorted, and the devised piece sounds great but I’m struggling with lines a bit – I’m also really nervous, because my parents and boyfriend are coming to see it, and I really hope they enjoy it! It is distracting me from my writing, but because I’m determined to get at least a B, if not an A if I can manage it, I really want to do well, so it’s worth it! Plus, it is really fun – we’ve been doing quite a lot of rehearsals and it’s been great and really helpful.

Me + college = :(

Today has made me really rather angry. Apparently, I’m not ill enough to warrant taking a day off college, even when I’m stuck in bed with a splitting headache and feeling like my whole body is about to either explode or just die. It doesn’t matter that I’m up to date with homework and assignments and I’m not behind in my abilities, nor does it matter that I understand the work, apparently. No, apparently, it is SUCH a hardship for my teacher when I’m off college. It must cause him so much physical pain, so much emotional torment, when he walks into the classroom and sees my vacant seat as a dismal reminder of the fact that, gasp, shock and horror of all horrors, PEOPLE GET ILL.

Why do some teachers find this so hard to understand? PEOPLE GET ILL. And it isn’t just college that is the problem – they don’t realize, because they drive in, in their nice, warm, comfortable car where it’s not overcrowded or noisy, and if they feel ill, they can drive home. They forget that some of us have to get up at ridiculous o’clock, feeling like death warmed up, get on a cold, noisy bus that is full of not just fellow students, but also rowdy school students, elderly people who do nothing but complain about the rowdy school students, and the general public, who sit there looking quite uncomfortable at it all. That isn’t exactly the best thing to help a headache, is it? And neither is sitting through a ridiculously boring lecture, which lasts an hour and a half when I’m sure it could be condensed into an hour, because all we learn is the same thing, over and over again, the same way, until we all just want to forget about it and go home.

Maybe, if we all had easy lives at home and great health, we’d all be in 100% of the time. But people DON’T have easy lives at home, and they DON’T have great health. It’s not my fault that I’m ill, nor is it my fault that my doctor has seemingly no interest in helping me (or anyone else, for that matter, if what others say is true), and it’s not my fault that I don’t have a perfectly conventional family, and I think some teachers really need to get that into their heads before they start shooting their mouths of.

Jesus. And THEY’RE meant to be the intelligent ones?

Writing when ill…

Normally, when I’m ill, I get my best writing done. I mean, when you’re stuck in bed all day with a bad cold, or coughing your lungs up, there’s not really much more you can do than watch television, grab the old laptop and amuse yourself by writing. Today, however, I’m off college because I’m ill – but this isn’t the sort of illness where you can actually make use of the fact that you feel like crap by churning out a couple of thousand words in between eating copious amounts of chicken soup and watching Jeremy Kyle/other equally amusing-yet-horrifying “let’s deal with your relationship problems live on air” TV shows – or am I the only one who does that when I have a cold?

Nope, today I’ve encountered the horrible problem of BRAIN FOG. *horror chords*. Yep, as well as the fatigue, joint pains, muscle pains, headache and sore throat, my head feels like it’s been stuck in a blender and I could very well pass for a zombie out of Shaun Of The Dead (or one of the Romero “_____ of the Dead” movies if you’ve never seen the brilliant Simon Pegg parody) this morning, and I’m FED UP! I want to write, because I know what I want to write – but thanks to this brain fog, I don’t think the messages will actually reach my hands before my hands have gone “I can’t be bothered waiting for these words, let’s play on Bejewelled Blitz/stalk people on Facebook instead”.

I can’t even write my coursework! I’d actually like to get my coursework done and dusted, but it’s proving impossible because I’m looking at these words I’ve written down in my plan (it’s a comparison of the presentation of the theme of marriage in Much Ado About Nothing, and Cat On A Hot Tin Roof) and I don’t think I even remember writing them. Plus my teacher has made notes that are nearly impossible to decipher when my head’s like this. Even as I’m writing this, it’s going slowly and I can feel my fingers edging nearer and nearer to the mousepad to click on the tab with Facebook on it. Must – resist – must – keep – writing – curses, foiled again. Oh well. Facebook it is!

My Future

So, as you may have guessed, this is a blog post all about… er… my future! And the uncertainty that no doubt lies ahead, joy of joys.

I’ve always been quite envious of the people who have a firm idea – or even any idea at all that doesn’t change almost daily – of what they want to do when they’re older, finished school/college/university/whatever. I know that it sometimes makes it harder and makes the disappointment worse if you’ve been planning for something your whole life, and then suddenly one bad exam session or one bad piece of coursework, even, and you’re screwed. I think that might be why I was never really drawn towards the idea of Oxford/Cambridge/medicine courses… one mistake and you’ve got no chance. There’s also the fact that I’d never be good enough at the sciences to be a doctor… although, if I’d tried harder at school and got better GCSE grades (I didn’t do badly by any stretch of the imagination, but Oxford usually demand something ridiculous like 7A*s and I got 1 A* so that was the end of that idea), I might have applied to an Oxbridge University, and potentially gotten an offer.

So I never really had this amazingly firm idea of what I wanted to do until I was about fourteen. Before that, I’d gone through all the options – fireman (I used to want to be Fireman Sam), teacher, doctor, nurse, princess, all the usual careers that little girls tend to want. Then, when I was nine, I got an interest for history and I wanted to be a historian for a while. When I realized that I’m good at English, I decided that I wanted to be a journalist. Then I joined the youth and community theatre groups that have made my life so enjoyable the past few years – it’s where I’ve discovered a passion for acting and also where I met the man I’m madly in love with.

Acting had never really seemed like a career choice. I liked it when we did drama in school, and in Year Eight I was in the school musical and had quite a lot of fun playing one of the bad guy’s “minion” type characters, but it had never been something that I’d considered doing for real. I always used to love dressing up, playing imagination games like in the little toy house at school, playing Mums and Dads – but that’s a bit different to performing onstage in a theatre – but that’s what I ended up doing. I was in a production of A Christmas Carol, which was great, and then the next year, when we did a pantomime at Christmas, I was given the role of principal girl – the girl the hero falls in love with, and I absolutely loved it! The rush I got from acting and singing onstage, not in a chorus but actually on my own, was immense – it was pure adrenaline to me. It was around that time I started properly singing too – actually practicing and finding songs I was good at rather than just bopping around my bedroom with Pop Princesses 2 in the CD player and a hairbrush in my hand. I entered competitions including Park Resorts’ Karaoke Championships – I got through to the park finals, which was brilliant because we got a free holiday and I got to sing onstage (“Mamma Mia” and “Let It Be”, if you were wondering. Don’t worry – I still sing Beatles, but not so much ABBA these days!).

It just kept getting better and better – the next year, I played Little Red Riding Hood in the pantomime of the same name, and although that was a stressful year, I loved the performances. The best part is that I get on really well with the members of the theatre group, which is why I’m going to miss them so much if I go to university this year. In between pantomimes, I performed in revues with the youth theatre – acting, singing and dancing, sometimes on my own and sometimes in a group, but no matter what it was, I always loved it. And like I said, I met the man I love at theatre – the adult’s group were doing a serious play, and I was in a bit of a crappy relationship at the time, and that’s when our friendship became stronger – we’d known each other for a while, but then we did Aladdin for pantomime and got even closer and I love the fact that the first time I held hands with him was backstage during the pantomime. If nothing else, I owe the theatre group a lot for introducing me to him – although I know I owe them for a lot more, for everything they’ve done to me.

In short, I love acting. I love that my confidence has skyrocketed since I started acting, that I’ve made new friends from it, it’s something that I always look forwards to and it’s encouraged me to try new things, to step out of my comfort zone and to improve my skills (although I can sing and act, my dancing leaves a lot to be desired) but I’m getting there!

So, you can probably see where this is going – I decided I wanted to be an actress. Not just any actress – a musical theatre actress. I wanted to perform numerous shows every week in the West End, singing and acting my heart out and ending to rapturous applause. I figured it would be easy – after all, all you have to do is act and sing, right?

Last year, a lot of things combined to help me change my mind (unfortunately too late, because I’d already submitted my UCAS application to study drama, which wasn’t even the subject I particularly wanted to do, I just figured there was no way I’d get into an Acting course so I may as well try for Drama instead). I did “BLISS!”, a 60s musical directed by Russell Grant at Theatr Harlech, and being in that – having lots of lines to learn as well as solos in songs and dancing (I was one of the main cast) was exhilarating and I met so many new friends and learned so much – but it was also exhausting, and I was introduced to just a smidgen of how tough I imagine being a professional actress must be.

I helped with the props and stuff for the pantomime this year (Sleeping Beauty – I played the prince) and it made me realize just a bit of how much work goes into these shows that, as an actor I’ve just taken for granted the past few years and assumed that it comes from nowhere or something. It hasn’t made me resent acting – but I’ve realized just how easy it is, as an actor, to not appreciate the people backstage, the tech crew and the propmakers and wardrobe, and I think that if I was to become a professional actress, there’s every chance I’d turn into a person who people wouldn’t want to be around.

I like acting as a hobby, but if I had to study it every day for three years, I think I’d grow to resent it, and I wouldn’t want to do it again, as a career or as a hobby, and that would be a shame because I do love performing. So, I cancelled my UCAS application and decided that I wanted to be a children’s nurse. Or a midwife. But if that doesn’t work I’ll do creative writing. Or I’ll become a journalist. Or maybe I’ll just do drama….

These next few months could be fun.