Category Archives: Costa Time

Name Day

Name Day

When I get up in the morning, I usually turn the TV on, fill the kettle up, and look out of the kitchen window. Invariably, One Tree Hill will be on, and I will allow myself to be sucked in the watery eyes of the characters, with the relief of living someone else’s drama instead of your own. In yesterday’s episode, one of the main characters forgot their own birthday, and everyone around them seemed to have forgotten too. I was sipping on my hot water with lemon, wondering how one could forget such an important day, asking myself how could screenwriters get paid to get away with such far-fetched daily facts.
Today I woke up from a call on my phone, turning around, letting it go to voicemail. Then I received a text. Then another. I opened my eyes, with a frown forming between my brows, wondering what happened so early in the morning. I stood up, walked to the dresser where I charge my phone and looked at the screen. ‘Happy Name Dayyyyy!!‘ it flashed for a second, and then went black. I had forgotten my own name day.
Now, let me explain what a name day is. In Greece, most names correspond to a Saint’s name. In the months, certain Saints have days of celebration, and if a town or village has this Saint as a patron, then there is a big celebration there; accordingly, if you are named after this Saint, it is your celebration as well. You have to treat people with sweets, and in return they give you cards, gifts, and even throw you a party. It’s like a second birthday. And I forgot mine.
For some reason I felt a bit dizzy. I put the phone down, backtracked, and went back to bed. I looked at the ceiling for a couple of minutes, then got up, turned the TV on, filled the kettle and looked out of the kitchen window. In today’s episode, a character found out she got pregnant. I wondered if I needed to pop by Tesco, and get a Clear Blue pregnancy test. Obviously, things are never too far fetched.
My phone rang twice that hour. I first spoke to my dad. He gave me his and my family’s wishes, chatted about everyday things, plans for meeting up, arranging to come by. I have not seen him for about a year, not since I last went to Greece. There was something very soothing and very sad in his voice. I found myself clutching my chest when we spoke, and I realised how much I miss him. I then talked to my mum; she gave me her wishes, made our classic jokes, asked me if I am eating well, if my brother called yet, and if I am happy. She then asked me if I remembered the times that we would make a desert for my name day. And I did. And it brought memories of our old house, and the archaic mixer, and the two teaspoons of brandy that magically turned into half the bottle, and the giggling and the smells, and the floor tiles, and the plastic plates, and the smiles, and the morning after where I would sneak to the fridge and grab a fork and eat the rest of it before she got up, when she was actually sitting in her room waiting for me to finish. And all the memories pushed the back of my eyes with tears, and I had to come to the here and now, and control my voice, and not show how much I missed her.
When we hang up, I sat on the sofa. My tea was lukewarm, and I tried to understand why it bothered me so much that I forgot. The past few weeks have been very hectic; they are very close to a merry-go-round, where you spin and spin and spin and spin, but essentially you remain in the same place, just with weak feet and blurry vision. April seemed to be a month of decisions, leaps of faith, amends, and new beginnings.
I guess the reason it bothered me so much was my fear that I am letting go of important parts of my identity; of forgetting my roots. I always had my Greek friends reminding me of any upcoming name days, birthdays, celebrations. I would see it in the news, read it in the papers, hear it in the street. I am now living in London for the last 5 years, and it has played such a big part in shaping me into the person I am. I feel at home, in ways I never did, and never could, in Athens. I consider London my home now, and I am making a life and a living here. But I would not like to lose the parts of the Greek identity I have come to love. And I think that forgetting my name day made me fear that this is happening. I worried that I allowed all the April drama to suck me in so much that I became a character in my own One Tree Hill. I realised how important it was to realise it. I understood how important it was to act on it.
I got up, wore my running shoes and rushed outside. It was pouring with rain, and minutes later I was sprinting down the street. My chest was tightening, and I found myself pushing harder, running faster, my shins stinging, the rain kissing my face, my hands moving faster, until my whole body got so tense that it had no option but to relax. An hour later, I was in the shower, the hot water washing away all the stiffness that was there 60 minutes earlier.
I got out in time to answer my phone, and it was my partner with plans for the evening. My email inbox notified me of all the well-wishers on Facebook. I looked outside. Even if I did not remember, others did.
I had some more tea, and indulged in some of my favourite chocolate. I looked out of the window, at the rain, at the people. I am now at Costa, having a lemon and poppyseed muffin, and a Roasted Hazelnut Latte. I am looking out of the window, at the rain, at the people.
Happy name day to me.

Love,

G

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Banned from YouTube: Girl gone Riled

Banned from YouTube: Girl gone Riled

I am at Costa. I am sitting on a long table, sandwiched between a couple that is talking about the Cambodian Market, and a man in a suit reading comic strips in his iPad. My hazelnut latte is burning the back of my mouth with every gulp, and as I open my YouTube app, I nearly choke.

You see, I first read about Madonna‘s new album in the last issue of Attitude, where Matthew Todd did a song-by-song review piece. It seemed promising. I then read the pieces that Mincey Strider wrote with an amazing level of dedication, from the playlist and the changes it endured, to the video release of Girl Gone Wild, Madonna’s second single.

Directed by fashion geniuses Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, the B&W video sees Madonna nodding to her big gay following, and feature super models Sean O’pry, Jon Kortajarena, Simon Nessman, and Rob Evans, along with Kazaky, the gender-bending Ukranian group, that gives a masterclass on how to work a stiletto heel (when I first saw the video, their single LOVE came in mind). The video is sexy, raunchy, and genuinely breathtaking. Scenes where the two male models share a bite from one apple, or Sean O’pry posing on his own, could be coming straight out of a fashion shoot.

I will not debate the Lady Gaga similarity with Alejandro, or stealing, copying, and being inspired from styles. There is no parthenogenesis; art evolves, develops and mutates, and if the spectator is trying to determine its origins, he is missing the point.

I am personally bothered from the fact that the clip was banned from YouTube as it contains ‘nudity and dramatised sexual or implied sexual conduct’. I fully understand how it is important to shield minors from scenes of heavy sexual nature, but I fail to understand why it is only important on gay imagery.

There are tons of clips with semi naked girls washing cars, licking lolly pops, wearing pieces of string that double as swimwear, and grind against sleaze balls that have big chains of misspelled adjectives. Why don’t we enforce the ban there?

I recently stumbled upon another banned video. When I logged in and watched it, it was centred around two guys kissing. Nothing more. Just kissing. And it was flagged. I then saw about ten clips of guys making fun of homosexuality, from pretending to have sex with each other (so not gay), to actively talking to the camera about why gay people will burn in hell. I did not have to log in to see these videos. They were not deemed offensive.

All I am saying is that there might be a heteronormative, if not slightly homonegative aspect of YouTube. And yes, right now Girl Gone Wild is bringing it in the forefront; it is said that the main issue is Madonna grinding and gyrating, but how is this different from any of her other clips?

The couple next to me is now talking about The Voice, and the man in the suit has switched to the Financial Times Website. People change. Mediums change. Attitudes change. The question is when.

Love,

G

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Hello Magnificent Stranger!

Hello Magnificent Stranger!

I spent the day walking down empty streets. It was cold, so I kept tucking my chin in my duffel coat, lost in the latest Emmy the Great Album.
I jumped on the 59, climbed on the empty upper deck, and sat in the back. I kept looking out of the windows, as if it was the first time I saw the streets I see everyday. We passed Waterloo station, and then hesitated for a minute before the bridge.
Passing over Thames, the light started creeping in, filling the front rows, making the inside of the bus glow with tones of orange and gold. I turned my head towards the sun on the very last possible second, and my vision was blurred, a big white hole in the middle of the most beautiful view in London. It was as if the sun crept in me, and warmed me up. I found myself smiling.
I decided to skip my visit to the Grayson Perry exhibition, and hide in the British Library instead. Armed with an Americano, a gingerbread man, and the latest Julian Clary novel (guilty pleasure :) ), I discovered a dark corner in the cafe, and read incessantly, until they closed.
I am now at Costa. Creme Brûlée latte at hand, I realise it is the first time in the last two weeks that I had the chance to get out of my own little world and appreciate what is around me.
Apart from a rather magnificent Christmas day, the last 15 days consisted of stressing over the future, ignoring the past, and getting through the present as fast as possible. And today, I took a deep breath; and stared at the sun; and danced in my living room at 80s cringe pop; and dunked a gingerbread man in coffee; and wore a ring with a moustache on; and acknowledged my 2 week-long pity party.
Does this make everything ok? Probably not. But it makes today better. And tomorrow looks a bit more …magnificent.

I hope you all had a lovely festive season, and did not fret over present selection, turkey preparation, or reindeer sweaters. I hope you reconnected with someone you haven’t talked in ages, or told someone you loved that they are important in your life. And most importantly, I hope you took a moment for yourself, just for you, to sit down, and do nothing, think nothing, say nothing.

Love you all,

G

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On Friendship

On Friendship

I am not sure if I am a good friend. I am not sure what constitutes a good friend, or even a friend for that matter.

From childhood friends to Facebook friends, and work friends to frienemies, I feel like I am reading an IKEA instruction manual: looks so easy at the pictures, but you can not help but feel that you are missing something.

This whole subject started on a rather bleak afternoon, as I was freezing with a friend on a bench at Trafalgar Square, looking at people feeding pigeons, and children playing in the empty fountains. She told me she thought I have a lot of friends; I did not agree – I have a lot of acquaintances. When she shrugged, I asked her what constitutes a ‘friend’ to her: ‘well, if you do not have your wallet with you at Pret, they will lend you money for a sandwich, or if you are sad, they will try to cheer you up’.

That for me is not the definition of a friend, but of a human being. Behaving in a friendly way is not a sign of friendship, but of manners. Listening to someone or cheering them up is a natural part of the everyday, not a badge to be earned.

You see, I personally do not open up easily. I am friendly with everyone, but I would not necessarily consider them my friends. I seem to be a magnet for people on bus stops who want to escape their truth by sharing it; who want to share their problem at a party without wanting to hear a solution. To them, I am their friend. To me, they are people I know.

It is about what meaning we want to assign to the word ‘friend’. Are we expecting our friendship to be a snippet of a sitcom like FRIENDS, or One Tree Hill? Or are we realising that each person understands the title in his/her completely different way?

For me a friend is a person that you call when you don’t want to talk to anyone; a person that takes a chair next to you when the shit hits the fan; that will love you despite and because you are yourself; that is happy for your happiness, and sad for your sadness. A friend comes without an agenda: s/he loves and accepts you for who you really are, and not who you could be; someone you can co-exist with in an effortless way.

While I have more than 500 Facebook friends, I have no more than 5 true friends. People I call on my lunch break or amidst a breakdown; smiles that make me feel warm inside; memories of falling asleep together on uncomfortable flat-pack furniture, and discussing reality shows as if they were international NATO summits over rose tea and home-made cakes.

My point? The superficial is lovely (I am generally a big fan of it), but staying there is not the beginning or end of the world. Dig deeper, and you might find a human connection under the code that makes your like button.

Love,

G

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Looking at the Stars Instead of the Water: feeling sad on a Friday night

Looking at the Stars Instead of the Water: feeling sad on a Friday night

I find myself in a dark alley, holding the phone closely to my ear, massaging the point between my eyebrows. It is freezing cold, and my tears are making their way to the corners of my mouth, as I am trying to stop my voice from breaking.
I feel exhausted; I am fed up with seeing people that I don’t really like more than the ones I do; I miss having real fun without worrying. I miss my family. I am tired of people smiling like they mean it; people not being honest; people being too honest; I am tired.
I spent the day listening to Elbow, drinking lukewarm tea and crying. After taking a hot shower and putting on comfortable clothes, I made my way out of the house, towards my favourite coffee shop; and it was then that I decided to call my dad to tell him I miss him.
You see, living away from my family is a small thorn on my paws, small enough to be unnoticeable, but an inevitable pain when my feet hit the ground.
It always makes an incomparable impact hearing your dad saying that it will all be ok. It makes your shoulders go down, and you feel yourself breathing a bit deeper, a bit easier. And the moment I did, all this stress turned into tears.
After hanging up, I kept walking, allowing my tears to dry on my face, puffy and full of recovered sadness. with Fredrika Stahl’s voice on my earphones, I passed the trees with the fairy lights and the crowded pubs, got in the Book Warehouse near Waterloo station, browsed around, found the lowest-brow book in store and bought it.
I am now sitting in Costa, drinking my Creme brûlée latte, and having my classic mini-muffins. I am happy I allowed myself the space to feel sad. I am glad I was looking at the stars instead of the water when everything was flooding around me.
There is something magnificent about truly embracing a sad feeling, and not shrugging it away; and yes, you can change it, fix it, improve it, destroy or evolve it; but allow yourself to feel it first. This feeling is telling you something about yourself; listen to it.

Love,

G

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Sunday rewind and unwind

Sunday rewind and unwind

I will let you in on a secret: I have a rather unusual habit (well, I have many, but I will share this specific one).

I love reading the Saturday paper on a Sunday. Sitting in a cafe, with a creme brûlée latte and a slice of lemon cake. Listening to acoustic versions of popular songs. Flipping through the inserts, ensuring myself that I will definitely revisit this article after I finish scanning the whole paper. Making plans for the day. Doing only half of them.

I love it when I have the luxury of time on a Sunday to dip my feet into the past while gazing at a future I want to believe I have control over.

Love you all,

G

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A magnificent November: the Month at a Glance

A magnificent November: the Month at a Glance

London is paved with brown leaves, Maria Carey reassures everyone that all she wants for Christmas is them, and a happy looking Santa is looking at home in all the shop windows across the high street.

Yes, we are officially in December, but before we go in a full Christmas mode, let’s have a look at the magnificent month that just passed:

We started by hopping on Edgar Martins’ time machine from the Wapping Project, and landing in a prison cell at the cell project from the Rideout group.

I showed you some of the tools of the trade, took a peak at the giant head in the edge of Southbank, and looked down from the heights of happiness.

We then walked on a thin red sole, looking at the magnificent Shoes for show exhibition, and stared at a house cut in half in the middle of London, as well as observe the suited tribe in the jungle of the city.

I also shared some personal events: from an unfortunate event that happened in the middle of Soho, to my 27th birthday celebration.

Finally, we wondered around one of my London crushes, Southbank, to see your ideas flying away, and crave for a summer that is not very far away… The month closed with a quote on friendship, and a question: would you still love me anyway?

The month was amazing in other platforms as well; I realised that resistance is futile, and got a twitter account; and I was absolutely touched from the IG crowd, reaching 6166 followers, 3540 likes, and 160 comments for November:

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a huge thank you to everyone for that!

December looks very exciting as well, with a lot of features popping up:

From relaxing on a bench at Cleaver Square (02/12/2011), and giving inspirations for the new year’s resolutions (and do not tell me you do not make new year’s resolutions, because I will just not accept it), to giving up and giving in to the festive food consumption (Harrods, Selfridges, Hummus Bros, Brawn, Bodean, and National Gallery (!) will all be reviewed) and presenting the best art exhibitions in town (from Pippilotti and Tacita Dean, to Gasworks and Pop-up galleries).

So, good or bad, you will be getting plenty of your magnificent-sized blog bites for the rest of this month!

Lovely to have you all in my life,

G

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Being Happy-Slapped in the middle of London: ‘you are better than this’

Being Happy-Slapped in the middle of London: ‘you are better than this’

This blog is all about finding the magnificent in the everyday; celebrating the moment. Turning things around and finding moments that make you happy.

What happens when things that make you unhappy end up finding you?

I organised a completely different post for today. However, on my way to Costa (my café of choice for endless scribbling), I saw a group of youth coming towards me. When the first person passed, I felt a blow on my head – not painful, but surprising. The others broke in laughter, and were trying to see an expression on my face: anger, surprise, hate, fear, or whatever would satiate their expectations. I gave them nothing, and kept walking.

The phenomenon of ‘happy slapping’ is supposedly a dead fad, however I have saw two different events in the last year: today, being hit with an oversized pillow in the middle of Soho; 7 months ago, when someone screamed in a tube corridor, while his friends were filming the reactions of the unfortunate passers-by.

I am not going to comment about the people who actively scare or hurt others for their own entertainment (check the urban dictionary definition for a more humorous view on them). However, I will talk about the effect their behaviour might have to the unfortunate victim.

When you are already having a bad day, things like that can make it even worse. And I will not hide the fact that for a moment there, it made me feel really low. I was walking, and I could actually feel my eyes well up. A part of me wanted to turn back, and tell them how stupid they are -however this would not solve anything, and could get me hurt-; another part wanted to abandon the whole coffee and writing endeavour, and just go back home. Something mind-numbing will be on TV. I could just settle for that, get the day over, and wake up feeling better tomorrow.

And then I stopped; took a deep breath; and said to myself ‘you are better than that’.

I am sitting in Costa now, and I decided to treat myself to the magnificent mini muffins (if you have not tried them yet, run in your nearest Costa NOW and get them!) and a large Creme Brûlée latte. Sia’s ‘I Go to Sleep‘ is playing, and i am typing away on my iPad. I am writing because I know there are 6000 followers, and just in case this happens to them, they will know they are not alone. I fought the urge to keep everything cheery happy-go-lucky, and be truthful, as I promised on my earlier posts. And most importantly, because even now, after a difficult week, after an unfortunate incident, I know that there are still people and things in my life that can make the everyday a bit more… magnificent.

Love,

G

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The Magnificent Something gets Real: Naturally Magnificent

The Magnificent Something gets Real: Naturally Magnificent

Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.

Oscar Wilde

I decided today that I do not need a mask.

I was about to post a piece yesterday about me feeling down. And then I stopped. My finger hovered above the publish button for a few seconds, before pressing ‘delete’. I then went on to working on the (actually very exciting) piece on Halloween.

However today I woke up rattled. The Magnificent Something is not about forcing yourself to find everything lovely; it is about recognising that even though life is not always perfect, the things that make it wonderful are still there, just a bit hidden.

It is so much easier to put smile on, brace it out, and hope people like you. To wear a mask, fit in a persona, and sometimes lose who you are in it.

Being yourself is harder than people give it credit for. I quoted Oscar Wilde before, and I will again (just because I absolutely love him): ‘To be natural is such a very difficult pose to keep up’.

Do not be natural. Be yourself, whoever this is, because I can bet you are magnificent.

Love,

G

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How was your week then?

How was your week then?

Let’s be honest. There is nothing magnificent about having a bad day; or in this case, a bad week.

A week that I find a constant frown sitting on my face, a smile that seems more like a reflex, and a broken record with the message ‘I am fine!’, as unconvincing as my thumbs up (yes, I did give the thumbs up to someone; it was that bad).

However, I am now sitting at Costa, sipping on my usual caramel latte, and taking a deep breath. I realise how much I am investing in all the negative parts of the week, that I seem to forget all the positives.

Trust me, I do not want to sound like an “everything is positive, let’s hold hands, build a fire, and sing cumbaya while toasting marshmallows” kind of person (actually, this is my version of hell on earth, especially if you add a Britney Spears acting marathon).

It’s just that I believe there is value in living the moment, and experiencing the negative feeling. I have spent so much time saying ‘it is fine’, that now ‘fine’ feels stressful.

Let’s see how the week pans out. Until then,

Love

G

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