An experiment

Perhaps I’m a little carried away with pictures of myself. A rush of blood to the head. Blame the webcam, if you must. Blame the bank holiday weekend. Blame my first Easter with no Easter eggs. But here goes:

me - an experiment

Some things you may not have known about me, but – hell – now you do.

– I am a bottle blonde.
I started dyeing my hair blonde when I was fifteen. It isn’t lemon yellow: not that pale, early Madonna, (whispers, perhaps hoping that if you think something that’s quite misogynist, it’s, you know, ok if you don’t think it loudly) cheap blonde. I like to think that it’s more of a honey blonde. Dark blonde underneath, with golden-ish streaks on top. I have no idea how it is that the colour comes out so well: all I do is buy a £5.99 box of hair-dye about every 9 months and whack it all over. It goes a slightly bizarre toffee colour for a few days, then settles down into its normal, really (I flatter myself) quite natural looking streakiness.

Even my hairdresser, last time I was there, said to me, "Your hair colour is lovely. Do we colour it here?" and I had to shrug and say, "Er. No. I do it myself for about one twentieth of the price."

All I can think is that I am somehow, intrinsically, naturally meant to have hair this colour. It’s just that due to some cruel twist of fate, I have accidentally ended up with hair which is more accurately described as ‘dark mouse’. And the universe, so often resembling someone with a really sick sense of humour, has just for once conceded defeat and allowed me to have what should really be my hair colour, on the condition that I dye it occasionally, and then don’t complain too much when, ravaged by so much peroxide, it starts to get a bit like wire-wool at the ends.

I once dyed it reddish brown. It was an amazing experience. I started to wear all black. I wore gold eyeshadow. But I went back to blonde in the end.

– Long, dark eyelashes run in my family
It’s not very English or very fashionable to admit such things, but my sisters and I are all very proud of our eyelashes. We are mascara-fiends. I am a sucker for new mascara. The more ridiculous the name of the mascara-wand, or the pseudo-scientific new ingredient, the more impressed I am. My friend Katherine wails, "But you don’t need to wear mascara! Your eyelashes are so long and dark anyway!" But that, as Eve and I both know, is just not the point. I once met an ex’s new girlfriend for the first time, and was incredibly nervous and insecure about it. I did what any normal woman would do in this situation, and spent all evening comparing myself to her. When I spoke to my sister on the phone as I left, she said, "So what was she like?" I replied nervously, "Oh, you know. Tall. Thin. Rich. Clever." She laughed and said, "Yeah, but what were her eyelashes like?" "Hah. Short." "Hah. Stubby?" "Yeah." We laughed. And I felt a lot better.

We also have dark eyebrows. Which means that occasionally, when I’ve just dyed my hair, I look in the mirror, and find that Charlie from Busted is staring out at me. (For American readers, or indeed for British readers with more of a life than me, Charlie was a member of a boyband called Busted. He has peroxide, very blonde hair, with huge black beetling eyebrows like big furry caterpillars) But these things happen.

– I cut my own fringe. Sometimes with nail clippers, if things are really desperate. Often without a mirror.
I had a thick, blunt fringe when I was little. A great mop of a fringe that hung like a curtain down my forehead. Growing it out took forever, and for what seemed like months I gazed at the world through a ragged curtain of hair that my Mum would vainly try to pull back with clips.

So it was with some surprise that I decided to get a fringe cut again when I was seventeen. Everyone tried to talk me out of it. And even now, people will occasionally ask me why I don’t grow it out. Then I pull it off my forehead and show them what I’d look like without it, and almost unanimously, they then agree that in fact, I should keep it. Fringes are fashionable at the moment, but even when they’re not, I still keep mine, because a) I am a bit of a conservative when it comes to my hair, and b) I am just a fringe person, and that’s the way things are.

– I always thought I had grey eyes.
It turns out I don’t. I have colour-change eyes. My eyes are a greyey blue in artificial light (as above). But very occasionally, they are a bright, teal-coloured turquoise blue in bright sunlight. And I like that.

So that’s me. I’ve updated the look and feel of my diary. I’ve added a profile picture, and now I’ve uploaded a picture of me. I am determined to be a more regular diarist here, and am forcing myself to write entries even when I’ve not got much to say. Here’s hoping this new verbosity doesn’t become boring,

with love
therumtumtugger
xxx

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April 16, 2006

for what its worth, Im thrilled to see you back here and I look forward to reading your verbose entries! LOL

April 16, 2006

oh my twice in one day!!! yay!

April 17, 2006

yay to more regular entries!

April 17, 2006

Maybe I should do something similar. I have long dark eyelashes as well. My mum told me that as a little boy her friends used to say my eye-lashes were wasted on a boy. Thankfully I have glasses which hide my long eyelashes. Secondly, my sister’s mate of mate went to school with Charlie from Busted. He lives quite local to where I am from! 🙂 Myleene Klass and now Charlie from Busted!

April 18, 2006

I am very glad to see more regular entries from you. I cut my fringe once at about 13/14 – I think it’s a rite of passage for teenage girls. It ended up about 1cm short and after that embarrassment, I grew it out completely.

April 18, 2006

Oh, how beautiful are you? I can tell just from that itty snippet of your face. Beautiful eyelashes, by the way. -x-

April 18, 2006

That is such a prettiful picture, rtt. I’m loving the regular updates.. it feels like old times 🙂 xxxxx

April 19, 2006

RYN: Thanks very much for the comments. I really appreciate them, and I think I agree with most of them – especially the thing about the adjectives, which I’ve been trying to work on. The thing about it being for NaNoWriMo is that I have a feeling I just threw in as many words as possible to make up wordcount! Cheers,

this is a very different type of entry for you…but i like it 🙂 and you are so pretty!

I look like a horse without some fringe; I have a loooong face. I cut my own, too, and single blade disposable razors work like a charm. *wink* Hardcore.

April 20, 2006

Colour of eyes? Don’t know. That’s the right answer!

April 21, 2006

RYN- you think my daughter is cute? Oh, you can definatly hang around my diary place more! 🙂

I’m so jealous of the eyelashes! Mine are the opposite. X

May 2, 2006

RYN: Oohh!! double bonus!! Not only will you update, something I wrote gave you the nudge!!! Hey – did you ever finish the ‘Maid’ story?

Mns
May 2, 2006

i like this.

May 4, 2006

RYN – I think youre just being kind! LOL But I will keep writing… even if its just to send myself to sleep!

May 4, 2006

Hi. Just did a random search of diaries in London since I’ll be going there with my friend Amy for a week. I was hoping for some tips on restaurants/bars/clubs. Can’t really be sure with websites and especially with clubs since they can be hot one day and cold the next.

May 4, 2006

by the way, we are going mid to late May. any festivals in that time?

May 5, 2006

ryn i dont know why it didn’t load for you. can you see it now? (perhaps my server was down)

May 5, 2006

Hey! Thanks for the links. We’re staying in Kensington so I thought it might be good to go to the Kensington gardens for the first night. Trying to pick a restaurant up there since apparently it’s that or be a member.

May 5, 2006

YAY! It’s RTT! I’m happy to see you writing again (um, yeah, like *I* have been hah!) and am looking forward to your entries. I, too, am resolved to do better. And, may I say, WOWZA, you have beautiful eyes. 🙂

May 6, 2006

Hang on a minute – have I read this entry? I don’t think I had read this entry! How did that happen?? *slaps self repeatedly*. Ahem, anyway, I also have “dark mouse” hair (actually lighter mouse in the summer!) and used to dye it regularly. At the moment that seems too much effort when my hair is long. I must get it cut. And that seems too much effort too. Oh dear! When I had a fringe, I also cut

May 6, 2006

it myself, but I was never any good at it. I probably look marginally better with a fringe (it hides more of my face which can only be a good thing!) but I rather like having as little dangly hair as possible around small children who tend to get head lice. (Long hair is easily tied back, unlike short hair – ok, there’s a less lazy reason for not getting my hair cut!) Anyway, Ryn: Have a lovely

May 6, 2006

weekend. Going away is almost as much fun as cleaning!!!!

May 10, 2006

Nothing wrong with using nail clippers to cut your fringe, nothing at all.

May 11, 2006

teal colored turquoise sounds just splendid, and with purple mascara you’d look like you had walked into my rucksack! Toad was tired of my much to shabby one and got me a purple with a teal dolphin one on it. 🙂 and me, i almost always wear the ‘bangs’ or fringe in a slight little curl or poof. Just twice i’ve been out with them tucked to the side. It’s just not ME!