The Walk of Shame

It’s easy to spot them. They effortlessly stick out like a sore thumb. Frequently sporting dishevelled hair, smeared make-up, wrinkled clothes and scabby feet, and are usually sited on early weekend mornings aimlessly wondering down the street in their unfamiliar environment, high heels in hand. This occurrence can succinctly be subscribed as ‘The Walk of Shame’.

The walk of shame (wikipedia definition: where a person must walk past peers or strangers alone for an embarrassing reason before reaching a place of privacy) is rife in modern day society; of course it’s always easier to identify the culprit by their dishevelled appearance when they're a woman. Men are more likely to go about unnoticed given the fact their clothes don’t vastly fluctuate according to the occasion; jeans in the day, jeans to the club. For most women it’s usually conservative during the day and provocative at night, which leaves them in a bit of a pickle when it comes to the morning after the spontaneous night before. What woman wants to wake up feeling like shit, with a gruelling hangover in a munters bed, and with the steady realisation (and embarrassment) of last nights antics? Well…last nights antics obviously seemed like a good idea at the time. Now, the last thing we want to do is stroll round looking like a prostitute in broad daylight, unable to catch a cab home with the £3.97 that we have left in our purse while onlookers smirk at us with judgemental glares.

I was in a dreadful pickle once. As I recall it was the morning after my school leaver’s ball. I’d like to point out that on this particular occasion, my walk of shame wasn’t the result of an impetuous, burning night of passion (although part of me wishes it had been because it would have made the walk more bearable). After staggering around scraping the linings of my handbag, searching in hope for some coins to get a taxi home, my girlfriends and I drunkenly (and stupidly) thought it a marvellous idea to catch a cab with the boys and continue the fun and games back at their house. And it was fun…until I woke up the next morning and realised I had to make my way home in a skin-tight mini-dress with no make up and no money. Not wanting to walk the streets looking like a daytime hooker, I had no choice but to borrow whatever suitable clothes were available. I ended up looking like a tramp for want of a better word. As I stumbled out the house in the early hours of Sunday morning, I received looks of distain left, right and centre. The only thing that made the whole incidence more tolerable was that I was with friends, although prancing about next to them, I looked wholly inadequate. They’d neglected to tell me they’d stuffed a spare pair of clothes in their bag the night before. While they wore trainer’s, hoodies and jeans, I had no choice but to wear an ensemble of high heels matched with ankle swinging pyjama bottoms and an unsightly, vomit-stained hoodie. To top it all off I had taken the liberty of borrowing some ‘poundstretcher’ sunglasses to shield my bloodshot eyes from the light. Unfortunately for me I was still so drunk I didn’t even realise that one of the lenses had fallen out. I looked like a pirate, but nonetheless strut with panache.


After seeing me leave their house in such a state, I decided the boys wouldn’t be getting their clothes back any time soon. The embarrassment of having to return and deliver the hoodie and broken sunglasses overrode my good will. (This is usually the case when women borrow a man’s clothes the next morning to make their way home). Men, let me tell you now, if you give your clothes to her 9 times out of 10 you will not be getting them back. Ever.  If you’re a one night stand she’ll probably never want to see you again. If you’re a friend she’d be reluctant to return them for fear of reminding you of the state she was in when she left your house, preferring instead to forget that night and her ‘mish-mash’ fashion disaster/walk of shame ever happened. So a little word of advice to you; one night stand or a friend, if you ever want to see your hoodie again, don’t give it to her. There’s no need to be a gentleman and you’re not a charity shop. At any rate, if you make a frequent habit of inviting girls round to stay and let them borrow your clothes, your wardrobe will eventually be left bare.

But the plus side for men is that they aren’t forced to borrow clothes for their walk of shame. They’re not going to need a fresh pair of pants or a hoodie to cover their modesty the next morning. They know that whatever person’s house they end up in the night before, they can roll out of bed and walk home in appropriate, albeit matted, clothing. It’s no wonder they stay at people’s houses on a whim after a good night out. They can wake up and go home without the grievance of having to endure sniggers and stares from members of the public. If they get lucky and go back to a girls house the only (potential) item they’ll be needing is a condom. Women on the other hand need to predetermine the situation and stuff items in their handbag accordingly. Face wipes, make-up, trousers, spare pair of knickers and even possibly some flat shoes if there’s any room left in our bag…which ends up looking like a rucksack. I can’t speak for all women out there, but if I end up at someone’s house on a Saturday night without all of the above equipment, I will be making my way home before daylight to ensure I avoid the walk of shame at all costs. So guys, next time you’re out wooing a girl who’s reluctant to come back to yours, it may not be because she doesn’t want to stay over, it’s more likely she doesn’t want to deal with tomorrow mornings inconvenience; the walk of shame. So go back to hers.

Sky High

As if all of my grievances with airports weren't enough, (read Airports blog: 21/08/11), I’ve decided that I’m not quite finished on the entirety of the topic. Naturally, after airports comes airplanes. Once you’ve dealt with the rigorous airport security, over-excitable duty free shoppers and extensive delays you mentally prepare yourself for the (long haul) flight ahead. That means dodgy food; piss-ridden toilet seats and aisle seat elbow-bashing. Being in an airport is like sitting in a restaurant, eating a shit starter and anticipating an utterly distasteful main course. You’re suffering already, but you know the worst is yet to come.

For the fortunate ones, flying rarely raises a cause for concern, quite contrary, some people even enjoy flying; the feeling of weightlessness, the turbulence and in freakishly anomalous cases, even the airplane food. I find this absolutely absurd; my feelings towards flying are the complete antithesis of this. What pleasure can you get from being rigidly cocooned in a ridiculously small seat, bouncing around 36,000ft in the air, putting your trust (and life) in the hands of a pilot you've never even met, or whose aviation expertise you know nothing about? Every time I am seated for take-off, I frantically begin praying to God, hands clasped together muttering to myself, pleading for a safe landing. If I was wearing a hijab, some ignorant people would probably worry I was a terrorist. Even without a hijab I still get funny looks. Namely because I seem to be the only one sitting and dissecting the safety leaflet from cover to cover as if it was an encyclopedia and ogling the air hostess' life jacket demonstration as if she was naked and swinging nipple tassels. I can't help it, I'm utterly petrified of flying I sometimes wonder why I travel abroad at all.

Generally when travelling, I opt for the window seat to minimize the elbow bashing you get from the cabin crew's rickety carts and from fat people barging their way down the aisle. Also, having a window seat serves as a good head rest if I am trying to get to sleep, which by the way rarely happens. There's usually some obstacle to overcome if I want to doze off, even for 20mins. If it's not the screaming baby, it's the ADHD brat kicking the back of your seat. If it's not the turbulence, it's the fat person next to you (who should have booked two seats) shuffling about uncomfortably. If it's not the idiot with their reading light on, it's your fellow passenger jabbering in your ear, whom the only way you can shut-up is to guiltily put your ear plugs in and play 'dead'. But in the rare instances when I do manage to doze off into a light sleep I am either woken up by some asinine air host/hostess craning over me, loudly (and needlessly) asking if I'd like chicken or fish, or by my mindless neighbour 'discreetly' nudging my elbow off the armrest claiming ownership. The entire flight is a no win situation, that is unless you're fortunate enough to fly first class...

The only time I've ever flown first class was for free. It was a couple of years ago on a flight from Mumbai to London which had a 7 hour stop-over at Bahrain airport. As I sat in economy ready for take-off, I did my usual prayer and personal safety check (which by the way, includes reaching under my seat to check my life-jacket is still there. Trust no-one). Half an hour later and we were still on the runway with no cabin ventilation and no reason as to why our flight had been held up. On this occasion I was in an aisle seat and the man across from me had began muttering loudly to himself in his ever-growing drunken state. Understandably, the comments started off agitated because of our delay, but soon developed into a full scale rant towards the cabin crew and a tirade against the many Muslims on the plane. This man had gone from talking about shit service to 'Muslim bombers' in a matter of minutes. The racist and illogical comments he was making were evidently down to 6 empty cans of beer (bought in duty free) scrunched up around his feet. As if that wasn't enough, he looked around at me and said loudly "Well you ain't wearing them hijab thingi's, so whose side are you on? Mine!" I shuffled in my seat and turned away, trying to contain my growing fear at this whole ordeal. In truth I wanted the nutter off the plane but it was too late, after some sharp words the cabin crew had miraculously allowed him to stay on-board. Minutes after take-off the shouting started again and this time it was worse. All I remember was him shouting about 9/11, bomb plots, hijackers, and asking why 'Mussies' don't eat pork. Really not a good combination when you're 6 miles in the air on a plane full of angry Muslims.

I got up to go to the toilet so I could cry in peace, but all the toilets in economy were occupied. In a last ditch attempt to hide my fear and welling tears from the other passengers, I strode with purpose past the semi-drawn curtain into first class and walked all the way to the front of the plane by the cockpit to use the toilet. As I was waiting, discreetly wiping my brimming tears, a member of cabin crew noticing I was upset offered me some champagne which she was about to serve up for first class. I smiled and whipped up the glass from the tray, making sure to thank her before I knocked it back as if it were tequila. She didn't even flinch at my actions, but smiled and offered me another glass which I readily accepted. Abruptly, the cockpit door flung open and out stepped the captain broadly grinning and gyrating his hips to silent music for no apparent reason. Even in the state I was in, it made me giggle. As soon as he noticed me he asked what was the matter,  and at the same time drew across the curtain for a bit of privacy. I quietly explained about the man sitting next to me, my fear of flying and the fact that I was travelling alone with a 7 hour stop over in a country I've never been to. He cut me off mid-speech, seized a bottle of champagne from the stewardess and asked if I'd like to go and have a drink in the cockpit to help calm myself down. Astonishing. It would have been rude not to. Another 20 minutes later and myself and the captain had polished off a bottle of champagne while the co-pilot who was busy reading Maxim, had put the plane into auto-pilot. It wasn't at all comforting to know that no-one was manually flying the plane, but then again I was too tipsy to care. After a few more minutes the captain told me that there was a spare seat available for me to sit in first class for the rest of my journey. He also offered to take me on a tour of Bahrain (his hometown) during my stopover to pass the time as he warned the under par facilities in Bahrain airport wouldn't entertain me for very long. Cautious by nature, I thought of how irresponsible it would be to just get into a random man's car in this country I've never been to -especially with a connecting flight to catch- but then again all the champagne had gone to my head and I quickly came to the conclusion it was a brilliant idea. What started out as the worst flight of my life rapidly became one of the best. I sat there enjoying all the perks of first class free of charge, knowing that when we landed I would be given special treatment and whisked through arrivals with the captain, be taken out for drinks and dinner, and be dropped off in time to make my next flight. So maybe not all flights are bad...

Writer's Block

Writing my very first blog, I always knew this day would catch up with me. The day when I'd sit down to write with no clear intent as to what I want to say. With nothing but, limited concentration, unsubstantial ideas, and hazy thoughts that nebulize and evaporate into cloud of nothingness; for the first time in a long time I have writer's block. I hate it; it feels like someone has jammed and jailed my communicative skills, locked them up and thrown away the key.

Throughout the course of this week I've written and edited my ideas a countless number of times, finally shunning them into inexistence with the help of the 'delete' button. Usually I have no problem at all with putting thoughts on paper, and I'm proud to say that it's my niche, my talent, my one and only gift, but I'm currently tearing my hair out trying to string together something that I deem blog worthy. And for the life of me, I just can't do it. Each time I start, I end up with a blank page. And this week I've stared at too many blank pages for my liking. A blank page to someone who has writer's block is like a black hole to a nyctophobic. Highly disconcerting. The very fact that each time I end up staring at a white screen, the consequence of my inability to communicate, makes it even harder to write anything at all. The irony. But it's the unanticipated, uninvited, inability to do something which so often comes with ease that is the most frustrating thing. My ability for witty, effortless communication seems to have ceased, cut off dead in it's tracks with no exact explanation as to why.

They say writer's block is the result of an author's lack of inspiration. After a spout of fugacious self-evaluation I think it's safe to say I'm not in this category. Thankfully, I am surrounded by inspiration on a daily basis; blog suggestions from friends, farcical experiences, circumstantial notions all of which contribute to the development of my ideas. But as I sit here scrolling through endless, potential blog topics typed and saved in my blackberry, I cannot even make the decision to pick one idea, let alone start writing about it. I know that whichever topic I choose, my ideas will be nonsensical, my paragraphs will be ill-flowing and my page will end up blank. Again. Perhaps I'm feeling an overwhelming pressure to write something magical, to write my best blog yet. Perhaps subconsciously, I am trying to surpass my own expectations, or perhaps it's the steady realisation that my blatant lack of equanimity is precisely what's causing my current inutility. But whatever the reason, what better way to overcome writer's block then start writing about it.

A special thank you to Syience.