j4: (back)
j4 ([personal profile] j4) wrote2004-10-01 04:00 pm

Sex and drugs and rock'n'roll

Sex:
Like I said, I've decided that I prefer salad. And the closest I got to salad was a spinach and mushroom quiche from the health food shop where I have to go to buy the toothpaste I like. I should eat more salad.

At lunchtime, the town centre is full of freshers, nervous and acne-sprinkled and radiating desperate self-identification, broadcasting their image in signs so simple that even the opposite sex could understand. Some of them are tentatively holding hands -- perhaps first-night flings, or perhaps the high-school sweethearts who will soon be jettisoned in the first burst of self-destructive self-discovery. They've all changed; for the first time they are men and women rather than the boys and girls who left the classrooms only a few months ago. The air between them crackles, and it's not just the static as velvet jackets brush against each other.

Drugs:
Or lack of. I've not been drinking coffee at work, and that's probably at least a partial explanation for how incredibly grouchy I've been the last couple of days. I did allow myself to have one can of coke, on the grounds that:

- coke a) costs money, and b) can only be acquired by going out of the office and round the corner to Nadia's, so I won't be tempted to just keep drinking more and more of the stuff.
- coke tastes nicer than the coffee at work, so it's a treat rather than a drug
- I needed some caffeine to stop the shaking and weird visual disturbances, okay? Cold turkey at work is not great.

They're clutching cups of coffee, cans of coke, cigarettes, anything to keep the hands busy, and they're talking fast and nervously about what they believe, what things mean, who they are, who they are, who they are. The self, the newly-awakening self, is the most dangerous drug of all; it's like having acid tabs pasted to your eyeballs, your face splitting in a grimly chemical smile as you try to make yourself heard, your self, yourself, over the white noise of a thousand bodies stuttering into existence.

Rock 'n' Roll:
Richard Thompson, "Action Packed: The Best of the Capitol Years" -- only a fiver from Fopp. Okay, so it duplicates stuff I've already got, but it also covers the good bits of the albums I don't have, and features two "previously unavailable on CD" tracks. And besides, the stuff I've already got is so good it's worth having twice.

It doesn't even matter what they're buying, I can feel the agony of decision over even where they choose to stand, what they choose to browse. This could change the course of their lives. They're picking the soundtrack -- the music that will loop on their stereo through the grey hours of the essay-shadowed night, the music that will be obliterated by intense conversation in the small hours, the music that will comfort them and remind them of home, the music they'll dance around the room to, the music they'll fuck to, the music that will always remind them, the songs they won't be able to hear without crying.

I feel like I've lived a lifetime in my lunchtime. Somebody else's lifetime, and rain on the streets of Cambridge.

This year's freshers were born in 1986.

[identity profile] andrewwyld.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 08:49 am (UTC)(link)
That makes them as old as our first home computer.

I'm now officially scared.

[identity profile] bopeepsheep.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 08:53 am (UTC)(link)
They're younger than the Reeboks I wear when I want to pretend I'm vaguely athletic. Eeek!

(And about 4 years younger than my first home computer, but that was a ZX81.)

[identity profile] burkesworks.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:06 am (UTC)(link)
7 years younger than my first, which was a Commodore Pet. How I wish I still had it, a lovely bit of retrofuturistic design. Anyone for *wartrek*?
And as regards the fact that today's freshers were born in 1986, it made oi larf to see a poster in Leeds yesterday for "80s night at the Phono". I spent large chunks of 1986 in the Phono drinking Newcastle Brown and listening to dodgy old goff music, neither of which I suspect will be on the menu for the "80s nights" of today (and who on earth would really want to remember much of that decade of untrammelled greed, High Thatcherism and Duran Duran?)

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[identity profile] j4.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:01 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, we had a computer in the house from about 1980 onwards, so the contemporaries of that ol' Apple // will have already graduated. The next officially-scared point I'm looking forward to is in three years' time, when the freshers will have been born in the year I started high school.

[identity profile] acronym.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:07 am (UTC)(link)
I'm one of them, and I'm a year to eighteen months (with a following wind) of submitting a thesis.

The 1986 thing scared me a bit: I can *remember* 1986 clearly. There's now genuinely a generation gap...

- A

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[identity profile] andrewwyld.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:09 am (UTC)(link)
I know someone who has a PET 2001 series (the original 1977 model), and my Dad programmed on a PDP-8, so the idea of old computers is not scary.

What is scary is thinking about a generation of adults who were born after Back To The Future was made, and when eight-bit computing was, in many senses, over.

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[identity profile] bopeepsheep.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:17 am (UTC)(link)
I took my GCSE options in 1986 and left school in 1988. Erk!

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[identity profile] k425.livejournal.com 2004-10-02 08:12 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, now, just wait till you start hearing yourself say "Good grief, I'm old enough to be their mother!".
juliet: (Default)

[personal profile] juliet 2004-10-02 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
[counts on fingers] Yeah, I think we had our first home computer by 1986, & I was learning BASIC (partly by writing out programs on paper during breaks at school so I could go type them in when I got home).

In other news: er, hello - I think. That is, assuming you are the Andrew Wyld who was at St Olaves, & has a sister called Jo who plays the flute (well, I don't know if she still does, she did when we were in the Youth Bands etc). Long time, & all that.

[identity profile] andrewwyld.livejournal.com 2004-10-03 01:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Bloody hell.  Is this Juliet Kemp?

(I haven't yet checked your userinfo ... assume I shall do so in mere seconds.)

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[identity profile] rysmiel.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 08:55 am (UTC)(link)
This is flat-out beautiful writing. You've caught the essence of a particular life experience perfectly. *hug* Thank you.

[identity profile] j4.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:15 am (UTC)(link)
*blush*

I always find it hard to believe that somebody who writes properly should actually rate my ramblings. But I'm very flattered.

[identity profile] rysmiel.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 10:32 am (UTC)(link)
Properly ?

I appreciate the assessment, but I'll feel comfortable thinking of myself as "writing properly" only if someone pays me for some of it at some point; until then, this particular playing field is entirely level.

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[identity profile] geekette8.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 08:56 am (UTC)(link)
Amazing writing. I love walking round Cambridge in early October, watching the freshers and reminiscing. I remember *so well* what it felt like, and you've really summed it up there.

*deep sigh*

[identity profile] hoiho.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 08:58 am (UTC)(link)
It's that time of year, isn't it?
Oxford's just the same.

sigh

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[identity profile] d-floorlandmine.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:14 am (UTC)(link)
Beautiful mood-capturing writing. Although I might have felt better without the date at the bottom - and I'm not even old yet!

[identity profile] acronym.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:14 am (UTC)(link)
Love the writing. There's another class of fresher, though, and please
excuse me writing here, but this is what Freshers' Week always reminds
me of:


locking themselves into old new rooms with the books and notes and binders and memories of home, not sure who or where they are but so determined, so comically overserious, uptight; a parody of the adulthood you got on 1970s sitcoms, neatly-pressed and antiseptic...

children still, insecure and paranoid (but at least they're smart, else they wouldn't be here, right? Right?), twitching at the background noise of the new neighbours moving in (and is that a knock at the door don't be a knock at the door please, please be a knock at the door), and you don't care because if you don't care it can't hurt you, but

maybe

tomorrow...

[identity profile] j4.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 09:30 am (UTC)(link)
if you don't care it can't hurt you

I have my books and my poetry to protect me.

And I do know that class of fresher well (and no need to excuse your writing, here or elsewhere). But they're probably not the ones I see in town, or even the ones I knew at university; they're the ones I only saw creeping in and out of their rooms very occasionally, and I wanted to go and say hello but I didn't have the faintest idea how to begin and besides they wouldn't want to know me because they were the clever ones, but I lived in fear that one day they'd die in there and nobody would know.

And sometimes they do (http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~janetmck/poetry/rachel.html).

Mostly, though, they tear their way out of the cocoon eventually, and spread their wings.

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[identity profile] acronym.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 10:21 am (UTC)(link)

I wonder whether you see how very very appealing the ability to run around drinking and shouting and wear daft clothes - the freedom to let yourself do your own thing even if it involves making mistakes - can come across to people struggling with a cocoon of paralysing terror at the thought of doing... anything at all, really.


Exactly that. I was having this conversation over lunch with another friend of mine; she's just back in Cambridge with dyed hair, a holdover from the festivals, and we were discussing being sensible: I reckon she's more sensible than me, because she can dye her hair red and dance without a sense of self-consciousness because she knows it doesn't matter.

That perspective, that you can have that freedom and it won't hurt - that the worst that will happen is the psychic equivalent of playground grazes - is a confidence the people I was talking about just don't have, and though they're behaving in a parodically mature manner, it's the people down in the quad or the college bar who are more adult.

At least for me, I found - find - it's not adulthood; it's suspended animation.

- A

[identity profile] rysmiel.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 11:26 am (UTC)(link)
Not apropos of anything very much other than the title:

"Sex and drugs and rock'n'roll
Are all my brain and body needs... "

goes rather well to "Greensleeves". As does Black Sabbath's "Paranoid".

[identity profile] hoiho.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 12:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Bastard! That's musical terrorism, that's what it is..

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[identity profile] arnhem.livejournal.com 2004-10-01 02:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Oddly, I'm not seeing the new freshers at all. The people I keep noticing are the slightly older ones who've very clearly just turned up here for postgrads or RAs or fellowships or whatever, and are walking about looking very self-contained, but with a slight smile on their face.

They always keep glancing upwards.

[identity profile] besskeloid.livejournal.com 2004-10-02 05:18 am (UTC)(link)
This year's freshers were born in 1986.

Bloomin'eck, I've got a Walkman that's that old.

[identity profile] oldbloke.livejournal.com 2004-10-02 10:19 am (UTC)(link)
This year's freshers were born in 1986.

And less than 5% of them have any security at all on their SHINY NEW laptops.