Hello February!

And so the month of luuuurve has graced us with its presence!

February we welcome you with open arms, and I know we will wave goodbye to you with wallets empty too!

You see, it’s not just the Valentine’s Day we have to contend with in this family, let’s face it, with everything else, Valentine’s Day just becomes another day!

It appears June must be a special month, an extremely love filled month in my in laws family, as pretty much all babies arrived in February!
My BIL celebrates his 40th first, then it is my MIL and Hubby Dearest celebrating theirs together (what a great 21st birthday present my MIL had!) then it is my FIL, who also got a lovely birthday present 7 years ago, as Lil Princess is born on the same day too!

Trying to get cards and presents barely 2 months after Christmas…It’s not easy, but still, a lovely month!

And as for Valentine’s Day, well, I love him every day that we are together, I don’t really need a special day to say “I love you” and neither do I need confirmation from him, just on that one day…

(But I’d never refuse a gift😜!)

Happy 1st Birthday Sonu Singh!

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How he's grown!

Happy Birthday Lil kitty cat!
No longer a kitten, finally he must be reffered to as CAT!
Never thought to get a pet of the furry kind before.
One evening it just happened. We’d talked about it, discussed pros and cons, but no decision.
I went to a parents evening… Came back to this gorgeous bundle of fluff!
The adjustment was a Lil tricky, but he firmly nestled himself in the heart of our family. The kids call him their younger brother!
We wouldn’t have it any other way, now he’s here with us!
Sorry mummy, daddy and the slightly bigger monsters aren’t here with you all day, Lil Man thinks it should be a National holiday! But after work and school, we’ll be back with lots of lovely surprises!!
Now go, enjoy your birthday brekkie in your new grown up bowl!! (It no longer says ‘Kitten’ on it, but ‘Top Cat’, because you are!!)

Pics of present fun will follow this evening!

Acquaintance vs friend


“So called friends are like the leaves of a tree;
Scattered all around.
But true friendship is like a diamond;
Very rare.”

If you ask someone how many friends they have, numbers really vary. What? Are you talking about the Facebook ‘friends’, or Twitter ‘followers? The friends from years ago who you see once in a while, if ever, at gatherings, or bump into in town? Those school, or university chums who meant everything to you at the time but then you all drifted apart. There was nothing that disintegrated your contact, no fight or argument. Just distance and/or and situation.

Or those people you see regularly, who know the ins and outs of your present life?

It also depends on the age of the person you are asking. If you ask a 5 year old, they’ll tell you the number of children in their class, or sit and count everyone they have ever met. A teenager might have ‘none’ because they are going through that difficult stage where “no one understands me!”. Or they will have 798, because that’s their social media count. Then, as you get older, well, those of you that are older will understand…

I’m talking about those friends who know you inside out, know your heart and soul, those people who you might not see all the time, but who you have a connection with. That person who you can call or visit, after months, or even years, and fall straight back into that relaxed relationship with. You don’t necessarily have to have known them all your life, these diamonds can appear at any time in your life, when you least expect it. And these people are the ones you find you can share everything with, knowing you’ll get honesty back, and support.

Not counting some very close family members, if I think very hard, I would say 2. Two people, one who I posted about before, my gorgeous best friend, and one more recent. (I say recent but we met over 9 years ago.)

That sounds crap really, doesn’t it? After over 40 years on this earth, I feel like I have 2 really close, good friends. Not to offend any of my other friends, I have many people who I count as friends, from different times in my life, childhood, school friends, university friends, friends from various places of work, mum friends. All people who are special to me in some way or another, but they know one facet of me. They know the me of that time, not the evolved me, and the whys and wherefores of who I am. All these people are my leaves…

But I thank my 2 diamonds, they are always there. Sometimes they might not know, or realise it, but they are the tonic I need to carry on, at times.

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In Law, Out Law

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I’ve already told you about my own parents, Hubby Dearest, my little monsters, my brother and mentioned my new nephew. SO the next in the roll call of my family is Hubby Dearest’s family, my In-laws.

Some people have real issues with their in-laws, but I can honestly say, I have been really lucky for the best part.  Growing up in a typical Indian family, with a huge extended family myself, I saw many weddings, familiar faces leaving us, and new faces joining.  As a girl, in the teenage years it was regularly mentioned that when we got married, we would need to know this, and that, and that we would leave our homes as we know them to a new family.  It was a scary prospect, as I am so close to my own family, but something I knew would happen.

The time came.  Hubby Dearest and I met.  It was a love marriage. We fell in love at university, and it was a quiet relief for both of us, that yes, we were Sikh, and of the same caste.  ( I know that is not important, a discussion for another time perhaps, but still, it was another positive for our relationship.)  One thing that was not quite a sticking point, but something unfamiliar, for me at least was that his family were proper Indian.

What’s a proper Indian? Ok, well, this is as I feel it. My ancestral family, though Indian by heritage, had a long stint in Kenya, resulting in both my parents being born there, then moving to the UK after marriage.  Most Kenyan Indians, have a more modern attitude to life, more adaptable.  I guess, after having to adjust from India to Africa, which was a huge change, the UK was no biggie!  Whereas Hubby Dearests family were from India.  Both his parents had been born there, and came here, and his brother and he were born here.  There is usually a lot of old fashioned ‘back home’ thinking in many families.

What would it be like, living with them? I mean they even talked differently! My Punjabi has a softness to it, almost akin to Urdu, but the proper Punjabi, the village Punjabi, makes event the most endearing comments sound like you are picking a fight!  We litter our Punjabi with Swahili, and I was even unaware of the correct words in Punjabi for many things!

When our parents were first introduced to each other, it was a funny meeting, held in Hubby Dearest’s university digs.  They weren’t sure what to talk about. My father had no clue about India, my father-in-law- to be had no inkling of what to say about Kenya… they discussed the weather.  Well, at least they were talking!  The two of us made tea, and giggled in the kitchen!

After that meeting, it appeared that though there were a lot of differences, there were many, many similarities.  Both our parents had the same morals, and thinking and wanted the same for their children. They saw how much we loved each other, and, despite the fact that I was older, wedding plans commenced.

Over the couple of years before the actual wedding I was given so much advice. What to do, how to act, what to say.  One person’s words, who I met shortly before the wedding, stuck with me, and to this day, I even say the same to other girls.

It’s traditional for us to live with the family once we get married.  Yes, things are changing, there are many who don’t nowadays, choosing to start their lives as a couple, rather than within the extended family.  Sometimes its due to work commitments, or just because a girl knows she won’t be able to live with ‘the in-laws!’  For me, it was a forgone conclusion.  I would be moving in with Hubby Dearest, and his family.  This person who I spoke about previously told me of her own aunt. She had lived in India, and got married there.  for over 15 years she wasn’t allowed to visit her own family, but she carried on regardless, respecting her in-laws, doing as they say, and finally someone relented and allowed her to go home to visit.  The lady said to me that yes, this was very extreme but the key thing… “The other name for marriage is compromise.”  And honestly, this is so true.  I know I was going into a very different family, but went into my marriage willing to change a lot, in order to fit in, but I didn’t want to lose ‘me’ either.  I would hopefully change them too, with love.

And so, it started.  After the wedding, once the honeymoon period was over, there were many things that were SO different! Not least the fact that this house had not had a female other than my mother-in-law, living in it for over 10-15 years!  Silly things, from décor, to how my mother-in-law (or MIL, as I will refer to her from now on) cooked, but slowly we started to gel.
I got lucky, I have to say. MIL is fantastic! We had a few times where we might not have seen eye to eye, but, after talking things through, we reached a happy medium. We’ve never been the types to argue. MIL is very reserved, and I am one who cannot keep quiet. I hate a quiet room, needing to fill it with conversation. When something is bothering her, I ask, indirectly, and manage to get to the bottom of things. We have a laugh, she tells me stories from the family past.

Someone I know would always try to wind me up, questioning why we were living with them. Wouldn’t I prefer to be in my own place, able to do what I wanted, come and go as I please, but to be frank, no. We lived in a lovely house, shared all responsibilities, from housework, to financial. I felt like I had really got to know my new family, living with them. I was not a guest, or newbie, but part of the family. Ok, so I couldn’t run down the corridor half naked, but I think I could contain myself!
MIL was a rock when the kids were born. We were still living all together at that time, and sleepless nights are always tough, but when I had had enough, I couldn’t physically do any more, she was never annoyed when I knocked in her door. In fact she loved it! She relished every moment of those middle of the night grandma moments! The first few weeks, I wouldn’t be allowed out of my bed, left to tend to my new baby, while she cleaned the house, shopped, and cooked. I was even given meals in bed!

As the kids grew up, she has, along with my own mum, been a fountain of knowledge, full of tips with regards to them.
And my father-in-law (FIL)… A hard working man, who had always done his level best to work so hard to give his family all he could. FIL wasn’t educated, but he came over from India and worked his fingers to the bone, until he retired so his family had a roof over their head, and food on the table. He hardly spent much time with his own kids, as he was out on 12-14 hour shifts. When I joined the family, it was a real change for him… Oh My God! A GIRL in the house!! But he managed to adjust, and I know he loves me like a daughter. When my son was 1 he suffered a heart attack and this resulted in surgery. Subsequently, he had to take retirement. This meant that he was able to give the time he never could to his own boys, to his grandchildren. In fact Lil Princess was born on his birthday, so there’s an extra special bond! He’s always been there as support too, when in any financial straits, or to give advice, and we thank him for it.

Hubby Dearest has an older brother,so after marriage, so did I! A lovely teddy bear of a guy, who is such a softy. We have got on since the beginning!

The time came to move out, when my BIL was getting married. We’re not far from them so it wasn’t too bad, but it has been nice, having space, especially now that we have the kids. We still go there more or less every day, after school. MIL loves to cook, so the kids get their fill of indian food at least 4 nights a week (and I don’t have to cook!). When we want to go out, we have babysitters on call, more or less whenever we need too!

And since BIL got married, I have also acquired a big sister. My sister-in-law (SIL) and I are very different people, but we get on great! And now she has taken up the mantle of daughter-in-law in situ. No kids yet though, so my two are thoroughly spoilt from all angles!

They might be different to my family, but they are just as special. And I have something so amazing to thank them for… I wouldn’t have my Hubby Dearest if they weren’t who they were, and we wouldn’t have these two crazy monsters either!

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For my MIL

Equally, my Hubby Dearest has also acquired his own set of in-laws.. I can’t comment on what he thinks of them though!  Well, actually, I can… he loves my mum and pops, brother and sister-in-law, and our new nephew like his own family, the extended one.. yup he loves em too, but I think when we are all together, it is overwhelming, as there are rather a lot of us, and everyone is just slightly doo lally!

So yes, I do think I landed on my feet when I married ‘im indoors, with regards to his family, as well as him!  There’s not too much interference, but support is always there, and I  go and spend time with them not because I HAVE to, but because I want to.  I only hope I can take, from them, the wisdom they have used, as in-laws, and be the same, towards my own children’s spouses, when the time comes, but that is far Far FAR away yet!

Sage advice for any prospective in-laws nowadays, I think!

Sage advice for any prospective in-laws nowadays, I think!

The Buzz to my Woody

“You’ve got a friend in me.” 🎶

It wouldn’t be right for me to omit posting about someone who has been a key part of my life for over 20 years.
There are a lot of people in my life who hold great importance for me, with in the family , and in my friend circle, but we all usually have that one person that stands out.
She’s my best friend, my partner in crime, my sounding board, the sister I never had…
We met on the first day of university, and to this day she tells anyone who asks how we met, that I chatted her up by the pigeon holes! Two shy girls, away from home for the first time (well I was away, she was commuting initially!) great big world out there, new experiences to be had, scary lectures in HUGE lecture halls!
We were two of a handful of brown faces at the first course meet, and though I had always studied in a white majority, we seemed to gravitate towards each other. Our initial conversations weren’t going to be about social life, bars, getting drunk, and hangovers etc, they were more, where are you from, first time away, the nervousness of this new situation.
It was love at first sight 💗
And also, for some of our university life, one fraught with certain stigmas. You see, I am Sikh, and she is Muslim…SHOCK HORROR!!!
The amount of people who found this a strange thing, that my best friend was Muslim, was astounding. There has always been conflicts within our religions histories, and it still used to rear its ugly head around us at university, the Punjabi Society and the Islamic Society taking up residence in opposite corners of the Refec, staring each other out over the sea of heads in the canteen, regularly.
But, hey, I don’t ask for someone’s CV before chatting to them, remember, with me, all it takes is eye contact to start up a conversation!
We instantly clicked, and there was a bond forged then that grew stronger and stronger over the years. Eventually she moved out too and for the best part of 4 years we lived together in various hovels, oops, I mean student houses.

Yup, I was Woody, she was Buzz!

Her family let me into their fold with open arms, as did mine to her, so I have a whole other alternative family who I love very much too!
She was there for me throughout so many new experiences, from love lives to social lives, studying to surviving.
Through Uni, graduating, first jobs, my wedding, my conceiving struggles, my becoming a mum, all those important times, and the unimportant ones, she’s there, my rock.
She’s had her own share of personal ups and downs, and I’ve tried to be there for her, in the same way too. Though I never feel I can do half of what she has done for me…
But there is something so special about this woman, and I know others will echo this sentiment. No matter what or where, if you need support, she’s there, for us all. She’s kept in touch with so many folk, where many times, life means you no longer have time for everyone.
We hardly get to meet nowadays, due to life, but are always in each others hearts. A phone call after ages feels like we just spoke yesterday.
She’s been my constant for over two decades, and nothing I can say can really explain her importance in my life…
She just is…
Thank you for being you Buzz, I love you so much! Xxxxxxx

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