28/10/2020
14/10/2020
I’m a writer based in South Wales, with an unhealthy obsession with stationery and baking. I mainly blog for my own sanity, but I’m also working on a novel. Still.
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A Visit to Roald Dahl’s Square
On Monday, El Husbandio and I went to Cardiff for a boring life admin appointment. I had 20 mins to myself so being a big Roald Dahl fan, I wandered along to ‘Roald Dahl Plass’ on Mermaid Quay.
Lockdown – the new normal?
It’s been just over three months since I returned to work after my Maternity Leave, during Lockdown, and I’ve been reflecting on what feels different – and weirdly normal.
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Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it.
— Roald Dahl, The Minpins
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Quick facts about Roald Dahl, my favourite childrens’ writer…
– He was born in Cardiff to Norweign parents. – Dahl wasn’t just a story writer – he was also a fighter pilot in World War 2. – He would have been 104 years old if he was alive today. – And my favourite book? The BFG! I believe in magic, but there was certainly none of the Dahl magic here on Mermaid Quay.
The quick trip to Roald Dahl Plass may have been a let-down, but I did however enjoy a tasty cookies and cream cereal bar from Lidl that happily I found in my handbag, and I did find (an appropriate memorial of) Ivor Novello. All was not lost. And then the heavens opened and I got soaked! What a random, curious, disappointing and wet 20 mins! Back to the car I went! Lou x Find me on Facebook
My lockdown buddies
Really, returning to work post Maternity leave felt like a release from Lockdown. Of course, I am still socially distancing and respecting the ‘number rules’ for meeting people, but having a new focus of going back to work after 13 months of Mat Leave felt like a big change. It wasn’t unwelcome, just because of the freedom it felt like, however much I wanted to stay being a full-time mum. I also enjoyed using my brain in a new way!
Also, Lockdown had moved on a bit since then. Gone was the three month total Lockdown where we were not supposed to leave the house apart form a daily walk and medical/food supply runs. Things definitely felt more normal. I only really have missed the cinema, and only a little. When I was pregnant I basically slept for nine months (!!) so we didn’t go out at all really, and when baby arrived we had other things on our plate, obviously. I’d like to say I’m missing gigs and theatres, but experiencing that part of city culture was rare for me, however enjoyable they were before Lockdown. I think how I’m feeling now, like many other people, is we are firmly in a ‘new normal’. And this ‘new normal’ isn’t temporary, like the ‘normal’ we were subjected to in the early summer. Thank goodness that didn’t last an enormously long time (and that the weather was so great!), and let’s hope national Lockdown doesn’t happen again. I appreciate many people are fearing job losses, suffering health issues, and worried for their children mixing at school, but for us, we’re feeling lucky. This form of Lockdown isn’t so bad. It’s all relative, isn’t it; comparing these days to days back in April, it’s a totally different situation down here in Bristol. London and the north is struggling in particular, and comparing my situation to people who have family members with Covid or who need to shield isn’t really fair, but we’re doing ok. What has really helped is all the socially distanced dog walking with a friend or two, and having one of my closest mates support bubbling with us. She lives on her own, so it’s totally legit, but honestly, I feel like the support is more for me!!! What has been quite different in the last three months is my day job. I work part-time as a PA in a government department, and every day, in normal times, I’d take the Park & Ride into the city centre, working in an open plan office with over 1000 desks. Now I’m working from home indefinitely, which is totally different. There’s a whole blog on that subject alone, but it’s mainly a good thing, and I feel much safer than having to use public transport and mix with people I have no idea how well they are following the government safety guidelines. I am blessed to have a job I can work from home with, keeping a routine is so helpful. Two weeks ago I started a new role (same department). This was a strange process with a video interview and starting work on day one in my spare room. El Husbandio and I both work in the same room Tuesdays and Thursdays – I think that’ll be the biggest challenge!! We’re already kind of on top of each other day and night. Of course, I’m saying “roll on that vaccine!” and I miss my friends and family – and the warm weather!!! – but honestly, I’d love to keep working from home. It’s so easy to fit in walking the dog, receiving deliveries, managing nursery drop offs/collections, it’s (mostly) quiet, I have my home comforts… I even managed a haircut on my lunchbreak back in August! I do miss the company of my team some days, but it’s fast becoming the new normal that we catch up on video and have social check ins. And if my work situation stays this way for a while, I shan’t be complaining. My lockdown buddies and I are staying safe. We’re not being risky (nursery being the only wild card really) and we’re hanging in there. Stay safe yourselves! Lou x Find me on Facebook |
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To be brutally honest, I was extremely disappointed with the landmark dedicated to the brilliant writer. If I get so famous people want to memorialise me, plant a tree or lable a bench. Don’t follow Cardiff’s lead and lay concrete.
Poor Roald Dahl… Such an important part of many childrens’ lives, a lovely man, and an author well deserving of a decent memorial – and what did he get? A few concrete pillars erected around a concrete flat on the edge of the docks. The William Pye Water Tower (the taller silver structure in the photo was a decent enough installation, but it made Dahl’s tribute even more shabby an effort. Poor show, Cardiff. Can anyone tell me what the square (the ‘plass’) is used for? Do they hold events there in non-Covid days? It was hard to tell, there were very few pedestrians around, given the restaurants and cafes on the quay were all closed for the Welsh ‘fire break’ lockdown. |
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