A CONVERSATION WITH MY 13-YEAR OLD SELF

Many people who know me will know that I’ve written a complete diary entry, every single day, for thirty years. I didn’t intend to, but once you get into the habit of something like that, you can’t quite stop.

The diaries are personal. I started them in the interest of recording all the things I didn’t want to forget, but over the years they’ve been a valuable way for me to process my thoughts and feelings too. This was particularly useful during childhood, when things were ever-changing at pace.

I was very lucky to have a stable and generally happy upbringing. When I post what I’m about to post, I want to make it clear that I acknowledge and appreciate that. But – like a lot of young people – I really struggled with anxiety.

Throughout my teens, I had zero confidence in myself. I felt different to everybody else, hated my appearance, and was often ridiculed and laughed at by the ‘cool’ girls for being a bit “weird”, because I enjoyed different music and could be a bit quirky.

And I looked the way I did. I was regularly referred to as Bugs Bunny because of my teeth and – on one particularly damning occasion that I can fortunately laugh about now – Robbie from Eastenders, because of my straggly hair (as well as the teeth, again).

Some lines stay in your head forever:

You’re SO sad. You know that don’t you?! (First week of secondary school, from a girl who’d gone to the same primary school so I felt had the evidence to say this. Ouch.)

What’s wrong, Sophie? Did you look in a mirror?!” (Year 11. Same girl and her friend. Double ouch.)

I often felt that nobody really liked me because of these things, which as a child is a really nasty yet very common way to feel. In reality I had many lovely friends at school, and though time and distance can naturally cause some friendships to drift, they will always have a special place in my heart because of what we learned about life together. The problem at the time, was that I just didn’t understand why they’d want to hang around with me. I didn’t even want to hang around with me, because it would have meant having to look at my face, and I didn’t even like looking at myself in a mirror, which probably explains why I often looked a bit of a mess. Vicious cycle.

But this isn’t a ‘woe is me’, because the reality was that I was far, far from alone in being the target of ridicule.

My form at school earned a lovely nickname within the wider year group: ‘Slags and Weirdos‘. I never needed to ask which category I fell into. In the earlier years of secondary school there was a bit of an in-form rivalry between the two of us because we were so different, but by the end of year 11, we all seemed to gel. Maybe it was a mutual respect following the shared experience of being judged by others, but it showed to me at an early age the value of trying to understand and respect people’s individual stories, even – especially – if on the surface they differ from our own. The importance of recognising that all groups have their own challenges and experiences. The ‘Slags and Weirdos’ had more in common than they initially realised, and we were the best form because of it. Go the A’s.

And I know that this kind of social politics still goes on in schools today, that young people are struggling more than ever with their mental health, either with anxiety like I had or things much more serious. I feel for them, I really do, particularly in the advent of social media, where the judgement and bullying can be constant, and not just confined within school walls.

Whenever I read through my old diaries, there are so many occasions when I just want to respond, to go back in time and reassure or advise myself from the future. I obviously can’t do that, but writing this feels like the next best thing.  Who knows, maybe the 65 year old me will feel like doing similar after reading back over the 2026 diary. A lot of our life is only really understood or contextualised in time. That’s how it works.

Much of the content below will seem trivial. It is trivial, and that’s why my responses are mostly in jest, but the problem is that I didn’t know that at the time. The fact is, that it was a very upset thirteen year old girl writing some of these entries, and whilst I personally think it’s healthy to be able to laugh at ourselves – which is why I do so throughout this post – I don’t want that sentiment to be forgotten.

Why am I sharing this? Well for one thing, I’ve been trying to work out for years how to make some use of my diaries, since I’ve spent so many years writing them.  The other reason is that I think sometimes, even within the furthest flung corners of the Internet, things are found when they need to be. If any youngsters come across this page at any point in the future – my nieces and nephews perhaps – then I hope it can help to reassure you of the power of perspective and time, and why many of the things you’re stressing about now really don’t matter, or that they’ll pass.

I deliberated whether sharing photos from the actual diaries – as opposed to just typed quotes – would be appropriate or ‘too much’. In the end I decided to share them. That way you know the words haven’t been altered or embellished to make for better or more impactful reading, like so many other things are these days. They are a child’s real thoughts and feelings. They were never written with a wider audience in mind, and there was no reason to try and hide or fabricate anything.

So here you have it. A conversation with my 13 year old self, part 1, when we head back to early 1999. This was my first page-to-a-day diary, the first year that the entries started to properly contain feelings as well as facts. My original plan was to do a full year, but within just two months, there was already so much I wanted to say… and that alone speaks for itself.

Names have been obscured and replaced with *** where appropriate.

“I’m really depressed that it’s back to school on Monday, every day something bad and worrying happens, it’s only good on Fridays when we don’t have too many different lessons.”

“There will come a time when you actually miss a lot of things about school, even double Maths on a Monday morning with Mrs Dey (what a legend, by the way. You thought she was evil, but now you realise it all came from a place of care. And in 2024, when you find out she has long passed away, you will actually feel very sad, and regret writing that poem about her in year 9).

You ‘worked’ a 6 hour day which included over an hour of pissing around playing cards at lunch. Bin Duty was once a term as opposed to every single day. You didn’t have to worry about bills or income. The only thing you were really compelled to do was go and learn about new and interesting things all week. You’d love to be able to do that now.”

“Absolute shit day!! There was me, tootling to skool all optimistic, only to find out that ***** knew about the Steps dance we were doing. She was really upset and now the group has split in two.”

“The sad thing here (aside from the fact you were planning to do a dance rendition of ‘Tragedy’ by Steps in the school talent show), is that you had been uncomfortable about leaving her out from the start, but you didn’t have the courage to voice it. You were more concerned about being included in the dance yourself, even if it meant others – like one of your favourite friends – missing out. That’s the real ‘tragedy’ here, and it was a really shitty thing to do. You’ll eventually learn that you must always listen to your gut feeling and align your actions with your values, but admittedly it’s harder to do that at your age, when you’re still working out what those values are…

By the way, in years to come – starting as soon as year 9 – you will ALL be laughing about the fact you fell out over this. So that weekend you wasted feeling grey and sick about this, worrying you’d lost those friendships forever… you really didn’t need to.”

“I’ve heard a cool song called ‘Pretty Fly for a White Guy’ by The Offspring. It’s cool. I heard it in HMV. I’m a goth, it’s official. Chart music today sucks (apart from BSB and 5ive – who are obvious exceptions). Heavy metal kicks ass! The songs have a meaning other than, ‘Oh I’ve just decided I love U

“Oh, Sophie. Cringe. The Offspring are NOT goth, nor are they heavy metal, they’re pop punk. You’re not a goth, although you’ll try to be one in 2001 when you start wearing lots of black and burning incense in your bedroom whilst listening to Belladonna & Aconite from your big sister’s Inkubus Sukkubus CD on repeat and using words like ‘wiccan’ on internet chatrooms even though you have no idea what it actually means.”

“Ya know, as a goth, people may think I’m sad, but they’re all a bunch of saddoes anyway. Live and Let Live. Peace to goths worldwide.”

“Hahaha. You’re still not a goth, three days later. And now you’re being judgemental about other’s musical tastes too. Practice what you preach, though you’re right in expressing solidarity with a minority.”

“I’m a little depressed about something. I don’t know any boys. I mean sure, there’s ***** and that lot but no more and it’s not as if I always see them. I hate my school, if it weren’t for my friends I’d want to leave, but (Rickmansworth School) is too weird. I guess I sound like a snob now, but it’s true, go to Ricky, prepared to be bullied if you’re larger than a 10 and look ugly like me (the ugly bit only, I’m size 8). I just hope things work for me like they did for (sister).”

“You’ll start meeting boys and having boyfriends in a couple of years, and the ensuing drama and general cacophony will make you realise why you’re happy to attend an all girls school. A comparatively peaceful oasis within the nonsense.

You will get offered a place at Ricky for sixth form but you will be delighted that you don’t need to accept it and can stay where you are. So you don’t really hate your school afterall.”

“Right, today was fairly bad. Everything was OK until lunch. ***, *** and *** did impressions of me doing (the) Tragedy (dance), but just as (a) joke, which I’m aware of. I needed the loo so I got up and left the classroom. ***, *** and *** followed me out to see if I was okay, and I turned a bit tearful. I’m sorry I can’t do the stupid dance.”

“Okay, firstly, you need to accept the fact you’ll never get any better at coordinated dance (or any dancing, for that matter). Secondly, why on earth did they think a self-confessed ‘goth’ would make a great member of faux Steps! You don’t even like Steps. They should have just asked *** in the first place, if nothing else it would have saved the dramas of 08/01/1999. Whoever organised that bloody talent contest had a lot of tears to answer for!”

“At my party, she completely took over the CD player, we only listened to songs she liked. She knew I hated Billie music so she deliberately had that on.”

“Well thank goodness she (really nice girl, by the way) did take over the CD player at the party. Nobody would have wanted to listen to Weezer or Nirvana, just you (and possibly Emily), and you can do that in your own time. And one day, chart music will pine for something like the innocent, upbeat tones of Billie Piper. You might feel embarrassed to know that when you’re an ‘old lady’ (you know, 40) you’ll be straight on the dance-floor when that same song chimes in on 90’s nights. Because you want to. Genuinely. Pop music at the moment is the best, you don’t realise how good your generation has it. Keep her on DJ duty!”

“Hockey with Emma. There is a very fit boy there, I have a feeling he’s been noticed by me last year walking home. He’s from the Boys’ School, I could tell because he had Boys’ school gym socks on. He has dark hair in a style to Jordan from NKOTB. I’M GOING TO HOCKEY MORE OFTEN!!”

“You will never see him ever again, Sherlock. But you WILL see the real Jordan Knight, performing in Manchester in 2012. The rest of the New Kids will be there too. Yes, even Joey. The one you cried about last year because you fancied him so much but he lives in the States (and also has zero interest in meeting you, as he sits in his mansion with his beautiful blonde wife and millions of dollars).

“My life really sucks!! I’m fed up with all this arguing at school. *** and *** went off again at lunch, *** was upset, *** has been quiet all day. *** and *** feel sorry for *** and I’m just alone. If *** and *** become best friends, who am I going to be best friends with? I’ll just go with ***, but *** and *** don’t get on well. I’m sick of this. I want to be ***’s best friend. I h8 this (oh look I’m so stressed I’m repeating myself). It’s going to be impossible to have 1 good day, and I’m going to say so at lunch tomorrow. I’ll say, “look, it’s no good pretending everything’s dandy (ok, crap word). We must talk and be rational about this.”

“Christ. Where to start with this chaos… maybe just know that in as far away as 2024 you’ll go for brunch in St Albans with at least half the people mentioned in this entry, where you will spend a great deal of time reminiscing and laughing about dramas such as this one. Real friends stay, and you can look forward to meeting your very best friends in the years to come. That’s all you need to know right now.”

“I feel so stupid! Everything’s muffed up because of me! When I asked *** 2 join our group, it upset a few people aka *** and *** and I think maybe *** They were upset because I’d not asked anyone about it first. I understand why they’re upset and I feel so stupid! Now *** and *** have left the group and even sat somewhere different at lunch. I have a feeling someone is in a mood with me, well actually I know they are, the thing is I don’t know who. *** refuses to call us a group.”

“I’m glad you were considering ways to conserve valuable energy (and ink) when you wrote “2” instead of “to”. It’s a shame you expended that same energy on feeling way more upset about this than you needed to. You’ll all be friends again before the week is out anyway. Please stop crying about this. It’s really not worth it. Watch some TV instead, pick up a new book, learn to paint, spend time with your parents and make the most of the free cake on the days out at all those old houses and gardens.

And sometimes people just like to sit in different places at lunch to switch up the scenery. Don’t let overthinking become a habit…”

“Went to hockey with Emma. Unfortunately, the fit boy wasn’t there, but I hope he’ll be there next week or else!”

“Saddest love story ever known. He won’t be there next week, and neither will you. You and Emma will start bunking off from hockey club and cycle around the park for an hour instead before going back to her house to play Paperboy on the Sega. You’ll lie to your parents but the probability is they know this already. The shite hockey skills and lack of bruises kinda give it away.”

“At lunch some girls came up to me and implied that I looked like a boy they knew. I’m insulted!”

“Yeah. Comments like this don’t really help with the hang-ups, and the fact you’ll still be able to visualise this exact moment – some year 10s near the stairs by the modern language department – in 2026 isn’t great. But whatever, hopefully it was a fit boy at least. Or one that will grow into a hot man. Maybe it could be worse.”

“Confusing day. I felt that *** and *** were both in a mood with me and I had no idea why. I think it’s because I didn’t tell them what *** told me yesterday about *** and the legs.”

“Trying to second guess what people are thinking and feeling is – and will always be – exhausting. Just ask them, instead of overthinking. Chances are they’re thinking about Wagon Wheels and German homework as opposed to some idle gossip about some ‘legs’ (wtf).

“*** lent me her old mobile phone, it’s so I can look all cool in front of ***”

*Slams head on desk*

“Ooh! Today was scary! In PSE Miss Brown caught me writing, ‘I HATE PSE’ in big pink writing all over one of the pages of my rough book. She had a go at me after school.”

“Put the pink pen firmly back in the cylindrical Bang-on-the-door pencil case and stop defacing your rough book. You won’t realise it yet, but PSE is actually one of the more important of all the classes. You might find the Resusci-Annies mildly terrifying – who doesn’t- but this is more important than learning about tectonic plates, and more important than learning about parabolas (word last used in 2002). Just because there’s no exam on it, doesn’t mean you mustn’t listen. And that’s exactly why Miss Brown shouted at you about this, because she knew how important it was too.”

“I received my fake Valentine card. The poem inside is sick man!”

“You’ll remember it word for word for years to come, because you keep it:

‘Dear Sophie, your eyes are like shining grapefruits. Your lips bloom like Venus fly traps. From HB

Fair play to whichever creative genius wrote that. Even though it was sent in jest… still one of the best you’ll ever have.”

“Valentines day, the one day of the year that is the same all the time – I never receive any cards! I mean, I don’t exactly expect people to dish out money on a crummy looking card for me or anything, but it just adds more proof to my famous hypothesis- I’m UGLY”

“You have literally just received a Valentines card from your childhood crush. We can ignore the fact it was a joke. You can’t be that ugly anyway, your eyes are like shining grapefruits, apparently.”

“*** told me that *** thinks I’m annoying – because I help people with their problems.”

“It will never matter what anyone does – or doesn’t – do. Somebody, somewhere, will always have a problem with it. Even in adulthood. But the useful thing is that they’ll never be the sort of people you wish to have in your life anyway, so stop caring about what they think and only concern yourself with the opinions of those whose opinions you actually value. “

And to end with something light…

“Went to Tesco’s. It was sooo embarrassing!! I was walking down the frozen food aisle, fiddling with my retainer in my mouth – when suddenly it fell out and went rolling along the floor – bouncing too. I knelt down (on) the floor and I couldn’t find it then this lady comes along and points to it, ‘Is that what you’re looking 4?’ “.

“I’m telling you this after two whole rounds of braces and an ongoing interest in Invisalign, because if you were still in school right now you’d probably still be getting referred to as ‘Bugs’:

Stop.Fiddling.With.That.Retainer. And wear it EVERY night. Forever”

To be continued…

MAD ABOUT HIDDEN MADRID

What’s nice about visiting a foreign city for a second time, is that you really see it then.

The ‘must do’s” have already been done, the main sights have already been seen, and your itinerary feels a little bit more free because of it.

You’ve seen the ‘best’, now you can unlock the rest.

It didn’t take long for Madrid to feel familiar, as my taxi wove around the city towards the La Latina district where my best friend now lives for a lot of the year. I recognised the impressive gates of Retiro Park opposite the big arch of Puerta del Alcalá where I’d had the custom tourist photo taken back in 2022. You know the one, that stilted pose where you clasp your hands in front of you and smile awkwardly at the stranger taking the photo, before having to be polite and pretend that what they took was great even though they basically decapitated you in the picture, and subtly ask somebody else so you can repeat this whole sorry process again and again.

“I wouldn’t mind repeating a trip to Retiro, actually”, I thought to myself, comforted by the fact I knew I didn’t need to. As it happened I had no choice, the park was closed throughout my stay due to bad weather and the risk of falling trees, a precaution in place following a tragic fatality involving a child in 2018.

The weather had been much kinder in March 2022. I had been able to spend the week in a pair of hot-pants and flip flops and even develop a tan back then. I was quite poorly at the time and the vitamin D had been the perfect medicine. This time round, despite only being a few calendar weeks earlier in the year, I’d spend the duration looking like a giant sausage roll about to hit the slopes.

Turns out the rain in Spain doesn’t just stay mainly in the plain. Liars.

In a perverse way though, the poor weather actually added to the experience, as did spending it with a ‘local’. They both made for a very different kind of adventure than the one usually dictated by guidebooks or the perfected sunny curations on social media.

View of Casa de Campo from a central rooftop bar.

I was smitten with Casa de Campo, once a 16th century royal hunting estate and – for the past hundred years – a public park outside the city centre which is about 5 times the size of New York’s Central Park. A large man-made lake forms one of the focal points, surrounded by numerous eateries. H and I chose one and spent a nice couple of hours sat on a table by the window that the slightly abrupt waitress had seemed reluctant to let us have, and after warming ourselves up on coffees decided to see if we could hire out one of the rowing boats we saw parked up on the water. The advantage of it being wet and windy meant that there was nobody else using them. This not only meant that we had the entire lake to ourselves, giving us the freedom to roam wherever we wanted, but more importantly, it limited the opportunities for us to crash.

The cold, choppy waters and my inability to operate a boat took me back to my sailing days at Seasalter. Eventually, H hinted at her frustration with my rowing skills by stating that it “might be nice to see a different part of the lake”. I’m not sure what her problem was. We’d only been spinning around by the boundary buoys for about 15 minutes, but if we were to have any chance of returning the boat within the allotted time then we would need to rely on what H could remember from her rowing classes. In the end we were about 20 minutes late returning the boat, but nobody cared. Do the same thing in Hyde Park and you’ll probably be charged for an additional session or sent an intimidating letter in the post, complete with grainy time-stamped CCTV image of you haplessly buggering about with an oar.

“They don’t really care about time here”, H advised me, and she was right. My watch was a bit redundant for those few days in Madrid, and that felt nice.

The “mercados” – indoor markets – were another highlight. H‘s local in La Latina was Mercado de la Cebada. I had browsed some of the more touristy ones in the city centre during my last visit, but ones like this felt that little bit more real. There was – of course – the encapsulating smell of fish upon entry, but it was overcome by the sense of sight: the rainbow of fruit and vegetables on display, including the biggest tomatoes I’ve ever seen. Can’t get those at Tesco in Faversham.

A man whose stall consisted of piles of chocolate-coated nuts and dried fruits called us over and offered us some free samples. He spoke a bit of English, and seemed to be proud (as he should be) of being able to name the items he was selling:

“This one chocolate covered sunflower seed. This one: coconut. This one: strawberry. And here: papaya”

Papaya.

He’d said it.

For some reason, I only mentally tap in to my fondness of papaya when I’m in Spain. I hadn’t really thought about papaya for four years, when the same excitement – again in a Madrid mercado – had prompted me to pay way over the odds for a giant papaya that I didn’t even manage to eat most of (sore topic. I’ll leave it there). But here I was again, the terrific tropical goodness being flaunted in front of me. I immediately advised the seller that I would like to purchase a selection of his goods. At 12 Euros a bag, I felt the price pretty steep for some fruit and nuts but – papaya.

“I’ll take a bit of everything, but I especially like papaya please.”

He speedily bagged up a range of items and priced it all up. It was a little over the set weight, but never mind, because papaya.

Except he hadn’t included any.

“What about the papaya?”, I asked sadly after looking in the bag, like a scene from a modern-day Oliver Twist.

“No papaya. You want papaya? I charge more.”

Sometimes you just have to accept defeat and move on.

But I have to say, the rest of it was completely delicious, and I was still pleased to have made the purchase overall. Lasted me until my journey home and beyond.

A papaya similar to the one I purchased in 2022, which went to waste.

The wonderful thing about the rest of the time in Madrid was that were no set plans. Pretty convenient, in a place where time doesn’t seem to be a thing. I adored being able to take my time breathing in the back streets: the cute cafes, the crafts and the inviting tapas bars that are ready to welcome you with a plate of local, mouth-watering jamón.

A place that made me realise, I actually do quite like shakshuka (although a home-cooked attempt a week later was nowhere near as nice). The video game bar where just the addition of cigarette smoke could have made one feel like they’d travelled back to the halcyon days of the 1990’s. The juicy green olives and peanut mix served with drinks. The world’s biggest Zara, where I bought some lovely beige trousers because – you know, I’m forty now. Even the Venezualan restaurant which H – bless her – had been incredibly excited to show me but at which I experienced an unfortunate case of food poisoning (the tequeños were still worth it).

I don’t always believe in visiting a place twice when there is so much of the world to see and – were it not for H – I’m not sure I’d have gone back to Madrid. But once you take the time to go beyond the crowds and tourist hotspots, and really get into the veins of a place, it takes a hold of you a little bit. Some places just know how to clutch at your heart and awaken your senses, even if all you’re doing is exploring their hidden sides. The bits that don’t make the guidebooks or TikTok.

I’ll definitely return.

But I’m not going to try and buy papaya again.

THE WHEEL THING

Photo by Erik Mclean on Pexels.com

In a couple of weeks’ time, I’m going to be saying goodbye to the car I’ve been driving around in for almost eight years and saying hello to a new one. And though – on the surface of it – this is just a case of trading in one costly clump of metal, rubber and plastic for another, I think it’s going to feel a bit sad pulling up the handbrake for the final time and stepping away.

ThecarthatIalwaysintendedtonamebutneverdid and I have had a lot of adventures together over the years. It’s enabled me to get to many destinations for many different purposes, from rubbish dumps to mountain ranges, and all the places in between. It’s been privy to the worst of my language and the worst of my singing (which is also my only singing). It’s put up with my varied taste in music without casting judgement, and has never really let me down.

In recent weeks I’ve been driving a little more than usual (apologies, environment, I promise it’s just temporary) to enable some final adventures with TCTIAITNBND, and some of my favourite times to do this have been at night, when the roads are emptier. There’s something quite stimulating about it, and when you get a good long stretch of motorway it can almost feel quite meditative. No choice but to focus on the road ahead and nothing else. No phones. No emails. No aimless scrolling. Just the warming glows of blurring lights and the names of nearby destinations passing by, with the occasional illuminated views of people eating burgers in service stations overhead. You think about each of their stories – where are they heading to, and why? – and wonder what the wildest reasons are.

You are locked in the present in ways which can be hard to achieve during other activities, practicing mindfulness without even realising. It’s not always about breathing or colouring.

And when the tunes are blaring there’s the temptation to skip the junction that will take you home and just carry on driving, no particular destination in mind, and just seeing what happens. And you won’t, because you need to get back and fuel costs are still ridiculous, but you promise yourself you’ll definitely do it someday.

When’s your favourite time to drive?