Demon children and saintly spoodles

t

Taking your child away on holiday can sometimes be a very dangerous thing to do. In only a few short weeks they can morph into a human being barely recognisable from the one you once knew. As routine, balanced diet and consistency goes out the window, everything you ever taught them seems to follow, including good manners, eating habits and general all round intelligence.

In the case of my 3 year-old, this certainly seemed to be the case. He left Perth a mild-mannered, book loving, happy eater, and arrived in England a screeching, uncontrollable terror. Who wouldn’t eat a single vegetable. Including beans. Coated in tomato sauce. Made by Heinz. Heavens above, what child refuses those?

What the hell happened up there at 33,000 feet you might ask? I’m still pondering the very same question myself – but looking back it’s easy to see where it all went so wrong.

A stranger to sugar and capable of sleeping for up to 4 hours in his afternoon nap, my son found his world being tipped upside down as he was dragged from his bed and shoe horned into the car on the way to the airport. There we were, in the middle of the night, singing to try to keep him awake. Dragging him behind us at speed, force feeding him cookies (albeit low-fat ones) to coax him on a plane he didn’t want to go on, and then telling him he must then lie down and go back to sleep, with bright lights and dinner trays clattering all around him.

It was a recipe for disaster from the start, and the rest of the holiday carried on in much the same vein. Erratic bed times, long stretches in the car, sporadic mealtimes containing all the wrong foods and a difference set of people every time he woke up. To say he was a fish out of water was an understatement. More like a little boy in a parallel universe.

As a direct result of this holiday madness, and so not really his fault at all, his behaviour often veered on the side of manic. Energy levels went through the roof, ears sealed off to reasoning and his mouth went into screeching overdrive. And all in a country where you are no longer allowed to ‘discipline’ your child in public … tricky.

He now saw eating – unless the food in question came under the food group ‘treat’ – as an unncessary inconvenience, and as mentioned before, anything that had once grown up from, across or dropped to the ground was now met with a pursed mouth and muffled cries of “Don’t like it”. A tad frustrating, especially as the week before he’d happily opened up for aubergine and olives.

The ‘highlight’ of this out-of-control behaviour came however, at perhaps the very worst time possible of our entire holiday. I’d go as far as to say, that in the collective 12 years my offspring have been alive, never have I wanted to hang my head so low in shame.

While visiting a potential school for my daughter, my son reached deep into his inner demon and pulled out quite possibly the worst behaviour that the inside of the headmasters office has ever seen. He spread crumbs far and wide (from a biscuit off the tea-tray he’d launched himself at), squeezed his juice box across the polished table and pulled himself back and forwards across the floor like the member of a crack commando team. He climbed on the window seats, threw cushions on the floor and very nearly pulled down the curtains – 4 times. He struggled when I picked him up, pulled at me when I put him down and slithered to the ground when I put him back in his seat. The entire time he screeched and shrieked and laughed like a nutter possessed.

It was pretty toe-curling stuff, as any parent could well imagine.

There we were, talking about school reports and untapped potential and trying to give a good impression. And there was  my little monster – who would also be eligible to go there in a years time – bouncing off the walls like Tiger on a mixture of crack cocaine and speed.

The only saving grace in this whole embarrassing ordeal was that the headmaster knew better than to judge the entire family based off of the actions of its smallest member. As well as being a parent,  he was also my old English teacher – the teacher who had in fact inspired me to start writing in the first place, many light years ago.

Should this worrying tale of holiday woe begin to put off any parent thinking of taking a break, then fear not, it does have a happy ending.

After the episode at the school, sugar was abruptly cut out of his diet (which was unfortunate for him as this happened before Christmas). Within days he started to ease off his high and calm down again – apparently it takes at least 2 weeks for somebody to go cold turkey where the sweet stuff is involved. Now back in Perth, my son is already back to his old self, and get this, better than before. His manners are perfect, he’s calm and controllable and best of all, he’s eating vegetables faster than I can get them on his plate.

Not that I’d ever recommend killing your child’s routine and dragging them round the world to help knock them into shape, but on this occasion, it seems to have done the job.

Incidentally, the same also seems to be true of Charlie. He went into the kennels as a naughty, barking, escape artist, and come out a changed dog. He is now well-behaved, quiet and far more obedient than the 2 year-old Spoodle that went in. He didn’t even make a run for it the other day, when I accidently opened the garage door without shutting him inside first.

Now, if my daughter had gone in the same direction as my son and the dog, I could have said I had a hat trick on my hands. Unfortunately the excellent behaviour she showed when away (which was enough to get her offered a place at the school) has worn off some, and been replaced with the somewhat emotional and pouting little girl of before.

Still, can’t win them all, and 2 out of 3 ain’t bad.

t

Hands off cyber thieves

I have to quickly write this, because right now I am seething and spitting and at risk of exploding all over my office walls. It would not be pleasant, it would not be pretty and quite frankly I just don’t have time to clean up the extra mess.

Now everyone knows that the Internet means it’s impossible to protect your own work. And it’s a given that some lazy sod is going to come along and simply lift stuff straight from your blog to put on their own. This I accept, and for the most part I don’t really care – that is if they at least have the good manners to acknowledge where the words have come from and preferably link back to the original site.

So when I sit down at my screen and see that only hours after posting a new post, some thieving blog has already come along and taken my post for not 1 but 2 of their magpie filled sites. And when I say taken, I mean copied the lot and posted it as their own work… I could quite happily reach through the screen and ring the neck of ‘admin’.

To add insult to injury, when trying to leave a comment on my own article to suggest a link, I found that conveniently for them, this was not even possible to do.

Why am I so mad? Because I have little enough time as it is to write on my blog, fitted in as it is around my clients work, kids and life. So I really don’t appreciate having my time, effort and words robbed right off the screen.

Stealing is stealing, whether it’s with a ski mask, shot gun or a mouse. Why can’t people respect other people’s work, or better still, make the effort to write something for themself.

Grrrrrrrr…..

Bring on the Spring

Yeah, the cold weather is finally on the way out. After a chilly and incredibly wet winter (we were on the brink of building an ark in the garage) Spring is finally making it’s way around to Perth. After months of huddling around the fire and looking pale and pasty, the sun is trying to make a come back and I can already feel my blood slowly starting to defrost.

Without doubt this has to be the nicest time of year. The sky is bright blue, the sun is out and the temperature is hot enough to warm creaking bones without the risk of flambaying your brain at the same time. The UGGS and scarfs have been packed away and the multiple pairs of Crocs brought out and brushed down. The dog no longer tries to dry his wet paws on the couch and has instead gone back to sunbathing in the corner of the garden. Noise levels in the house have dropped as children can once again be peeled off the walls and herded back out into the street to play on their bikes.

Soon my complexion will lose its Adams Family shade of pale and I will be able to expose those parts of my body to the sun that have been covered up and increasing in girth from the ‘eating to keep warm’ diet. Nothing makes a body look thinner than a little colour, though I hasten to add that while the aim will be to achieve ‘bronzed v sickly’, I have learnt well enough from one summer here, that any fanatical sunbathing without protection will leave you looking as appetising as a burnt sausage.

The return of the warm weather does of course mean that the flies will soon be back and the spiders will be going into overdrive. I must now crank myself back into gear and back into the gym if the stitching on my bikini is to have any chance of holding. My slipper soft heels will go back to being as dry and cracked as a desert floor within a week and in the interests of staying alive, it will now take an extra 10 minutes to get ready to go out, as one by one the whole family is dipped in factor 30 suncream. Worst of all, I really will have to do something about my legs. After months of hibernating under the cover of denim they have taken on the characteristics of a Yeti. Quite simply they will not be ready to go back on public show until they have been taken to task with the garden strimmer and a good pair of secateurs.

Those few issues aside, it’s great to see the sun again. The best bit being that my laptop and I are back out in the garden and the view from where I am typing away makes writing even easier to do…

Thinking and Sleeping

Why

Why is it that my most insightful time of the day are the final few minutes before I fall asleep?

During this time of nocturnal limbo, the ideas flood in and life suddenly becomes crystal clear… occasionally I even make notes to try and record my startling insights for the morning… by the morning I can’t even read my own writing.

Granted, this is certainly not the most handy or productive time for my brain to finally switch on for the day, but hey, you have to take it when you can get it!

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Writer’s block

Anyone

Anyone who has ever come up against Writer’s Block will know that for something that is entirely a state of mind, it is the hardest obstacle to climb over, even with the aid of a mental step ladder or a pogo stick…

k…

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Published Book

****** HOT NEW RELEASE! ******

THE PRACTITIONER’S DEFINITIVE GUIDE:
SEAFREIGHT FORWARDING

ABOUT THE BOOK
Shipping is the most popular method of transporting goods today, with around 90% of all freight transported acoss the oceans and through man-made waterways. Now you can find out everything about seafreight forwarding, in this comprehensive volume that explains the workings of the industry, including up-to-date information on liability, cargo handling, tariffs and hardware such as the different types of vessels and containers.

The Practitioner’s Definitive Guide: Seafreight Forwarding is written with seafreight industry personnel in mind, including those intending to join the industry and those who simply need a reference. This book provides a complete, practical overview of seafreight operations, which can be readily applied in actual field settings.

*** Note from the author ***

Well, what can I say? Apart from perhaps that this could possibly
be one of the most sleep inducing books ever written.

An absolute must have for any raging insomniacs…


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Work – Launch and Brochure Copy

Oriental Blend of Interiors UK
& OBI Lifestyle
Singapore
Oriental

Brief: Launch of Urban Resort range

Oriental Blend of Interiors UK and OBI Lifestyle Singapore offers a complete interior experience and a totally unique service for all of our customers. From our suppliers across Asia we source a select range of affordable home interior accessories and design led gifts, all hand crafted to the highest standards using a creative blend of materials, form, function and design, to reflect the perfect blend of distinctive Eastern influences with a contemporary western style.

With the fast pace of modern day lifestyles and increasingly hectic schedules the need to create the perfect home environment and a personal oasis of calm is now more important than ever.

To cater to this growing demand, OBI has expanded on our successful ‘Modern Living. Resort Lifestyle’ range and taken the concept one step further. We have drawn on and recreated the idea, image and emotion of high end resort living and from this, developed our new ‘Urban Resort’ range.

This stunning collection of stylish home interior accessories has been carefully chosen, combining the perfect materials, products and packaging to offer the style, sophistication and simplicity of contemporary SE Asian design. This range opens up the opportunityfor every customer to create their own personal and unique look, so that they are able to benefit from the calm, tranquility and beauty of Urban Resort living within the comfort of their very own home.

Brief: Brochure Copyrb

Urban fusion Summary

Whether you long to start your day soothed by the hypnotic sounds of a secluded Balinese beach, re-energise your body and soul for an afternoon in the minimalist surrounding of a luxurious sanctuary in Bangkok, escape for the evening to refresh and recharge your mind in the idyllic surroundings of Singaporean garden or perhaps to rediscover your energy and passion for life in the vibrant tropics of a Borneo night..

When you wish to fulfill every emotion and desire and live your life to the full, the urbanfusion range allows you stay in touch with all of your senses and escape to your own personal paradise at any time of any day.

urbanbeach

With swaying palm trees, untouched sandy white beaches and the hypnotic sounds of the ocean, few settings can match the pure romance and natural beauty of a secluded beach resort.

It is this very essence and the laid back ambience that the urbanbeach range perfectly captures, conjuring up images of a truly relaxing surrounding; a place where it is possible to unwind and escape from the stresses of everyday life, where all senses are awakened and the body, mind and soul are allowed to completely recharge.

urb

urbangarden

The very attraction of a resort garden is in its introduction of simplified structure into nature, the creation of a space that subtly blends the exotic with the practical. A place that offers tranquility and peacefulness, filled with the soothing noises of trickling water, the striking beauty of the lotus flower and the heady bouquet of lavender.

The urbangarden range depicts the very essence of such an organic refuge, one which offers the chance to refresh and revitalise tired minds and create a perfect escape from hectic modern day lives.

urb

urbantropical

Few places offer a greater source of energy than the pure abundance of untamed nature found throughout the tropics. These areas are so alive and steeped in natural raw beauty that they
bring with them a spirit and force that will rejuvenate the soul and renew a passion and vitality for life.

It is this perception of an undiscovered paradise that the urbantropical range effortlessly captures, drawing on emotions that encapsulate the spectacular power of a cascading waterfall,
the soaring canopies of leafy trees and the sheer abundance of tropical flora growing wild beneath.

urb

urbansanctuary

To spend time in the stripped back minimalist surroundings of an urban sanctuary is to immerse oneself in a place of complete calm and perfect serenity. With clean contemporary lines, deep pools of the clearest water and the most delicate scents filling the air, this haven from the outside world offers the ideal place to inwardly reflect and re-energise.

The urbansanctuary range reflects this feel of simplified luxury and the chance to indulge in total contemplation for the body and mind.


A little CONTENT can go a long way

Since man first learned the need to communicate, words have been used to record, predict, influence, educate and create. They have helped to shape society into what it is today and been used as a powerful tool by some of the greatest (and most infamous) political, religious and human rights leaders in history.

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We shall fight on the beaches. Six little words that uplifted a country.

I have a dream“. Four little words that changed the lives of millions.

Yes, we can. Three little words that rallied a nation.

In much the same way (though obviously not on quite the same historical scale) using engaging, relevant and well-written words on your website is crucial if you want to succeed – which obviously you do, or you wouldn’t be reading this article.

Having great web content is so important, it probably ranks up there as the top 3 priorities to be taken into consideration when building a successful website – way ahead of flashy intros, arty photography and complicated navigational systems. In fact, it’s probably safe to say that ‘content’ is as essential on the Web as ‘Location’ is to the property market. And we know how important that is don’t we. Just ask Phil and Kirsty.

So why are the ‘words’ so important?

Whilst the initial ‘wow’ factor of a well-designed site can still grab a surfer’s attention, it is the ‘words’ that might provide enough of a lure to prevent them from moving swiftly on. Or at least they will if they are written in such a way as to provide is easy to find, relevant and interesting information – something that is sadly missing on so many websites out there today.

When the Web was first ‘born’, flashing logos, rollover graphics and animated icons were often enough to impress. But times and expectations have changed and Internet users are now a much more sophisticated and tougher audience to crack. They’ve all seen enough dodgy sites to know that appearances can be deceptive and many fancy websites really are only ‘screen deep’.

So now if you have a hope of succeeding, not only must your content be king, it must be the country and whole continent to. Web content needs to be provided and written with two very different kinds of audience in mind.

The first audience is the surfer, the Web window shopper and the potential customer. Gaining customer loyalty goes along way in this game. It can take years to establish trust, but only a minute to lose it, so whether you are there to sell, to service or just to inform, you must not only meet the visitor’s expectations, you must surpass them.

So if, for example, your sites sole purpose is to sell ‘the worlds smallest, most technologically advanced fishing rod’ then make sure that your content gives the visitor all the information they might need.  If you’ve managed to get that interested fisherman to your site, now is not the time to be burying the technical specifications in 3 page of irrelevant sales spiel. Or having an animated Billy Bass greeting them as they arrive and singing along in the background. This is it the time for guessing games and complicated menus. A site that is too hard to fathom or simply lacking in the expected content will quickly be left with a click of the mouse and replaced with a hundred others all selling ‘the worlds smallest, most technologically advanced fishing rod’.

Whenever you decide what content you’re going to put on your website, its important to remember that the right ‘words’ can lead to your visitor feeling interested, educated, inspired by whatever it is that you offer. And if they are impressed with your website they are more likely to bookmark and return to buy.

The second audience to bear in mind when writing content for the web are the search engines. They send out their ‘spiders’ to give your site the quick ‘once over’ before deciding on its suitability to be ranked. Now anyone who’s ever used Google will know that achieving a high place on the first few pages of the major search engines is like stumbling across the Holy Grail. It can certainly open you up to a whole host of new possibilities be instrumental in supplying you with a large percentage of your client base.

Years ago web designers tried to trick the search engines, by overloading the meta keyword lists or repeating relevant keywords in the background colours. Needless to say, these methods no longer work and such tricks should never be employed. And this brings us nicely back to that question of why the ‘words’ so are important.

Search engines are now heavily influenced by the content of a site. They are looking for quality and relevance over ‘copy fodder’ and excessive linking. Of course clever patter or witty play on words won’t sway these visiting robots. They won’t even care whether you go for the hard sell or the emotive soft sale. What they do care about however are the right combination of words and phrases that reflect the purpose of your site. They are looking for effective SEO – Search Engine Optimisation.

So to sum up: To achieve a successful website you need to provide well-written content that appeals to both human visitors and search engines a like. The ‘words’ must attract and sustain attention. They must interest, inform and engage. They must satisfy the requirements of search engines. They must portray the product or service with persuasive sincerity. They must position the company in a positive light. They must send out a convincing call to sales.

And one last thing, just remember you only have one chance to make a good impression, so if in doubt, use spell check. Or better still, ask a copywriter to give you a helping hand…

upo’ip’

i

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Slippery fish and astronauts

Slippery fish and astronauts

Working from home is great. I can arrive at my desk within minutes, breakfast still in hand. I can look like the ‘before’ shot, on a ‘fright of the week’ makeover. I can wear fluffy slippers, have a chronic hair day and still not worry about public humiliation. If I resist the overwhelming urge to climb back into bed, along with the contents of my fridge, then I can even pass for a pretty dedicated writer. I work, as and when it suits me and I only have to answer to my conscience.

Well, that was how it used to be anyway and then Ella was born.

Before I could say ‘sleep depravation’, I had two fulltime jobs, no pay rise and a CV that suddenly seemed painfully inadequate. I felt as though I was strapped on a treadmill, jogging uphill while juggling six slippery fish and getting nowhere fast. A 24 hour day was no longer enough anymore. It soon became as obvious as the stretch marks around my receding belly that writing and motherhood might just be as incompatible as oil and water.

Both cause sleepless nights, endless worry about development and the capacity to stretch the boundaries of the Patron Saint of Patience. Both demand undivided attention, one with a blank screen and the other with a high pitched squeal. Both throw tantrums, but only one can be shut down. Both give you a reason to get out of bed in the morning, but only one can drag the duvet off and peel back your eyelids.

As the years tick by, the harder it becomes to hear myself think and sometimes to think at all. I work to a backdrop of endless questions and the deep and meaningful conversations of Nemo and Dory. I stop and start more times than a clapped out car; it’s a wonder I ever get to the end of anything.

What saves me? I think perhaps that wonderful female gift, the ability to multi-task with the expertise of a NASA astronaut. So just as I can drive (minus the map reading), carry on an intelligent conversation and apply liquid eyeliner, all with military precision – so I can perform a number of child-orientated tasks, while barely interrupting the flow at the keyboard.

Unfortunately this gift stops short of phone calls. It’s incredibly hard to sound professional and on top of things, when accompanied by the honeyed tones of Barney and his fabulous rendition of ‘Wheels on the Bus’. To make matters worse, never am I more at the mercy of my devilish child, than when she is just out of cable’s reach. I am forced to indicate silent warnings of untold punishment with my free hand, whilst keeping the telephone voice intact.

My turned back and pre-occupied mind offer an open invitation, to cause the maximum amount of trouble in the minimum amount of time. As I write this, I can sense trouble brewing and the lumpy curtain twitching. I learnt long ago, that danger is heralded not by noise, but by a deafening silence. It invariably means that something is being opened, emptied or eaten. The longer it takes to drag your eyes from the screen, and hunt down the culprit, the bigger will be the crayoned masterpiece across your shiny white wall.

So, throughout the chaos and tantrums, I try to work. Using a tried and tested combination of gentle persuasion, bribery and thinly veiled threats, all in the quest for enough peace and quiet to finish the sentence I started the day before.

Then, as I sit here, lost in verbs and typing at speed, my pint-sized editor climbs onto my lap. With crumbs flying and greasy little paws banging away at my keyboard, two big, brown angelic eyes blink up at me. “I want to hug you Mummy” she says.

With this, I remember why I love working from home. Although it may be testing at times, it allows me to be there every day, to watch her grow and learn and play. So when my brain is frazzled, my fingers are sore and I need a break, I can’t think of a nicer reason to stop, than to get a little TLC and alot of love from my little girl.

girl.

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