Category: English


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Photo Copyright Rin Simpson 2009.

Her popular blog A Year ‘Til I’m Thirty shows you just what can be achieved in one year. One year. Many challenges. One inspirational woman. Marty Meets: Rin Simpson.

Why did you decide to start a blog?

I’d been thinking for a while that I’d enjoy writing a blog, since I’m a serial journal keeper, but didn’t want to just ramble. It was only as I was approaching my 29th birthday, and thinking about all the things that I wanted to achieve before the big 3-0, that I realised my last year as a 20-something could make for an interesting blog topic. And what better way of motivating myself to actually do the things I wanted to do, than sharing my goals with an audience?

What are or were (if you’ve already achieved them) some of the things you’d like to achieve by the time you turn 30?

It’s a really random list which runs from small, easily achieved goals like baking a pie in my as yet untouched Pampered Chef pie dish (still haven’t done that one!) to getting published in a national newspaper (something I achieved just a fortnight ago, when my first, albeit anonymous, article appeared in the Guardian). Other things I’ve ticked off include completing a teaching course, knitting a jumper, and seeing the balloons take off at 6am at the Bristol Balloon Fiesta – but I’ve still got loads to do, like cycling from Bristol to Bath and cooking a three course meal for my whole family.

Are the things you want to achieve before you turn 30 recent goals or are some of them lifelong ambitions?

Getting published in a national was a pretty long standing goal, as are a few of the other, but others are more recent. I think the very act of writing down my goals made me realise how many more I had that I hadn’t even realised – and I seem to be adding to the list all the time!

A lot of people have goals they’d love to achieve but, for whatever reason, they just don’t “get round to it”. What advice would you give to someone who wants to achieve a goal or ambition but doesn’t know where to start?

Put a date in your diary. Honestly, it’s the only way you’ll do it. It could be that you need to block out just one Saturday afternoon to actually get yourself to that museum you’ve always wanted to visit, or maybe you need to pencil in half an hour each morning to train for the marathon you keep saying you’ll run. Whatever the case, having it there in black and white is a great motivator.

Is planning important? Is it important to make lists and write your goals down on paper?

I would say definitely, but then I’m a visual learner (something I learned about myself on my teaching course!) Not only will it help you stay focused, and not let you forget anything, but there’s something incredibly satisfying about seeing items on the list get gradually crossed off. Whether you prefer pen and paper, like me, or an electronic version, I would definitely recommend making lists.

It’s August and, once again, the promised barbeque summer has materialised as a monsoon (well, it has here in Cardiff anyway). How are things progressing? Have you had any major successes you’d like to share? Have you achieved many of your goals so far?

The most exciting thing I’d like to share is that, after writing fiction for about 25 years but being too scared to let anyone other than close friend and family see it, I finally sent in a short story for publication – and had it accepted! I just cannot believe that the first thing I submitted is now going to be published. It’ll be out in January – just in time for my birthday in February – in an anthology of fashion related stories called Cut on the Bias, which is being published by a Welsh women’s press called Honno.

Have any of your goals proved more difficult to achieve than you had previously expected?

Probably those that involve other people. It’s all very well motivating yourself, but motivating other people can be a nightmare. I want to go ice skating at one of the outdoor rinks at Christmas, for example, something which should be simple, but I know it will prove a lot more complicated than some of the goals which I can get on with quietly without any input from anyone else.

Achieving just one goal takes a huge amount of confidence, tenacity, motivation and inspiration. Who or what motivates you and who or what inspires you?

Different things motivate different goals. Sometimes it’s people (cooking a three course meal for my family, for example, is less about achieving culinary greatness than blessing my family), other times it’s curiosity (I really want to know what my Austrian great grandfather’s letters to my grandmother say, something I’ll never know until I get them translated). But mostly I guess it’s just a quirk of my personality – I like to achieve. It makes me happy.

Would you agree with the statement that, in terms of achieving goals: talent is nothing without tenacity?

Definitely. The world is full of talented people, so why should anyone pay attention to you? You can’t wait for things to happen to you, you have to make them happen, and you have to keep persevering until you reach your goal.

My challenge brought me many unexpected rewards: I can order a pint of beer in Cornish and I got to meet a few of my heroes. Has trying to achieve any of your goals led to any unexpected rewards and/or unexpected positive things being added to your life?

I think what I hadn’t expected was the overall change it has caused in me as a person. I’ve always been a real dreamer – full of ideas but pretty lazy – but that’s started to change now, and I’m starting to get off my backside and do more. Which was the whole point of the exercise really, so I’m glad it’s working!

Can you speak any foreign languages?

I’m not fluent in any one language, because I’ve never really tried hard enough, but I can speak little bits (literally the ‘hello, how are you, my name is’ stuff) of a few obscure ones – German, Afrikaans, Xhosa and Japanese. Oh, and British Sign Language. I can also say ‘where’s the party?’ in Spanish, on account of one very cool holiday in the Dominican Republic a few years back!

What do you think of my language learning challenge and blog?

It’s a great idea. People think that there’s no point in learning a language unless you go the whole hog and get fluent, but I think we need to change the reputation Brits have for steadfastly refusing to learn any language other than our own. Even if you only learn how to say please and thank you, or to ask for directions, it shows willing – and you might discover you want to learn more.

Do you think it is important that all of us celebrate the things we achieve in life (no matter how small the achievement)? If you do, why?

Absolutely. Who’s to say someone’s ‘big’ achievement is any more important than someone else’s ‘small’ one? Also, if you don’t encourage yourself the small achievements, how will you ever have enough enthusiasm or belief in yourself to reach the big ones? Remember, they didn’t think ‘hm, let’s put a man on the moon’ and then do it the next day.

Finally, the recession seems to be impacting on a lot on people’s lives. One of the main things that hold people back from achieving their goals is money. Any tips for making positive changes to your life when you’re on a budget?

Actually, I’ve recently gone through a break up which means my finances are well short of what they were when I started my blog, and if anything the lack of funds has encouraged me. Where I used to eat out, I’m trying more recipes at home. Where I would have spent a fortune on Christmas presents, I’m now making my own. There is absolutely nothing that can stand in your way if you really want to achieve, so don’t let a little thing like a tight budget get in your way.

FOLLOW RIN’S PROGRESS BY VISITING HER BLOG:

A YEAR ‘TIL I’M THIRTY

This Video can be viewed on Youtube Here.

Personally, I’d call this the English national anthem. All are welcome on the Join Martin Blog but discussing the British national anthem and British patriotism on the Internet does tend to attract the interest of the servants of violence and aggression who have deluded themselves enough to think they are martyrs to a “forgotten England”.  The servants of violence, aggression, hatred and racism are not welcome here. This is the UK. We embrace all people and people of all cultures and are enriched by them. I love my country and I’m talking about patriotism in terms of compassion, understanding, kindness, respect and all the positive qualities that make Britain a great country.

The Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple)

Is Miss Marple a Timelord? Is our friend, The Doctor, really the last of the Timelord race?  Could Miss Marple really be a Timelord (well, Timelady anyway)? It’s not as frankly stupid as it first sounds.

I’m not a crime fiction fan. Usually, you pick up a crime fiction book in a bookshop, read until the first dead body turns up before turning to the back pages to see who did it. There, spared yourself hours and hours of pointless plodding through another mindless thriller. TV adaptations often bore me too. I mean, for goodness sake, Robson Green in Wire In The Blood? There was once a show on Five called: “Extreme Fishing With Robson Green”. Now there’s a title which simultaneously makes you want and then not want to watch the show.

I studied detective fiction at university but, if you’d not read the same book as the lecturer had and based his life and teaching philosophy on, you were sunk and I sank without a trace. Ok, it might have helped had I not tried to read the book in the pub but that’s another story. But no, I’m not a crime fiction fan. With one or two exceptions:

Sherlock Holmes books and Agatha Christie.

Granted, the Miss Marple stories are based on the ludicrous premise that the law enforcement people are thick as bricks and only one seemingly dotty old lady can see what is really going on. To be honest, Miss Marple isn’t the best party guest either. Every time she shows up, someone gets killed. It’s like a perpetual game of Cluedo.  But I am an Agatha Christie fan. Indeed, when I was younger, TV adaptations of Christie stories scared me silly. I could watch Doctor Who for hours and not get scared but the stuff in the Christie books could potentially happen and that terrified me. Mind you, you are reading a blog by a guy who was scared by a Words and Pictures story about wolves wearing designer suits.

So, is Miss Marple a Timelady? We never see the regeneration but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. Perhaps, after tea and biscuits and yet another silly, Murder-She-Wrote-Style scene where everybody gathers and the murderer shows ridiculous naivety by bothering to show up and be unmasked, Miss Marple takes a stroll outside…only to come face to face with the murderer she just unmasked. The Killer has escaped police custody and has a weapon pointed at Miss Marple. One shot. But, instead of falling to the floor, Miss Marple remains standing and a strange orange glow envelopes her being. Her body convulses in time with the energy and, all of a sudden, she begins to take on a new appearance and…oh, for goodness sake, it’s Angela Lansbury.

See, there’s even a Colin Baker equivalent in Marple’s incarnations. But this process is a bit dodgy.

ITV- do not get me started- butchered the Miss Marple stories. Mostly by employing the “dodgy” acting ability of Jamie Theakston and any other “celeb” they could get their hands on. Mind you, to be fair, the Joan Hickson stories did have that whole: “Last of The Summer Wine” thing going on.

The Geraldine McEwan incarnation did grow on me after a while. For one thing, she’s a good actor and for another, she managed to portray a character that looked like an old lady on the surface but masked a powerful intellect underneath.  But it wasn’t to last. We didn’t see the regeneration but the strange energy has returned and Miss Marple now looks like Julia McKenzie.

A Pocket Full of Rye (Miss Marple)

It’s always been about the quality of the writing. That’s why I make an exception for Christie. Because few writers- never mind crime writers- can hold a candle to her. Still, maybe ITV will go nuts and take their lead from Doctor Who and make the next Miss Marple a sex symbol? Will we have something ridiculous like Miss Marple regenerating into Sarah Michelle Gellar?  Food for thought.

Torchwood Photo

Iato

Torchwood Photo: I don’t live in a black and white universe. Blame the temperamental camera phone for that one. I’m not sure whether I look half dead from staying up into the small hours of Saturday morning or star struck. I’m not really great in photos. The amount of times people have met me in the flesh and said things like: “gosh, you actually don’t look that bad.” Seriously, you have a second to get the smile right and there was a load of screaming girls in the queue behind me making a lot of noise. And, let’s face it, we all have those photos that didn’t quite go to plan. But, to be honest, it isn’t that bad.

This is me meeting Ianto Jones from Torchwood. Well, Gareth David Lloyd, obviously. I have a lot of photos on my Facebook profile but very few of them actually have me in them. I’m often camera shy and I want that to change in the coming months. That’s not an invitation for people to follow me around with cameras. I just think it’s high time I released that sense of humour I have about myself and felt good no matter how I look in photos.

Thank goodness it wasn’t Eve Myles. If it had been, the picture would have been of me being on the floor having fainted. Gareth was cool and he had a legion of screaming female fans but…well…Eve Myles: gorgeous, talented, intelligent and has a Welsh accent. Enough said.

Gareth was signing copies of Torchwood: The Sin Eaters Exclusive Audio Story:

Buy It Here

Head over to I Love Literature  to catch up on the activity of the pre-launch. It’s a blog for all you bookworms out there and anyone and everyone who enjoys reading.

Coming Soon: I Love Literature Blog.

There’s a long running gag amongst my family and friends that if people want to find me for whatever reason they should always head to the nearest bookshop. Chances are, I’m in there. Why? Because I love books. I’m a bookworm. My best mark at university was in the “Critical Interpretations Module” (otherwise known as: The science of reading too much into things) and I love a good discussion/debate about literature or about any type of book. Books inspire and- whatever else I may be- I am a writer so launching a blog devoted to books was sort of a natural progression. Indeed, people may wonder why it took me so long to come up with the idea. I realise I Love Literature will not be the only blog about books on the net. But it certainly is going to be fun. So, if you’re a bookworm too, check back here next week for more information on the launch.

Marty is happy:  I do feel a bit guilty admitting to this. After all, people I care about are going through tough times at the moment and- whilst I do not wish to intrude on that which is private and personal- I wish I could help make things better and I hope they realise how much they have enriched my life and the lives of everyone they know. But yes, as it happens, I am happy. On a personal level, I am happy. There is so much still to be done and the story is by no means over (I’m not sure which chapter this is but let’s call it: “The Cardiff Chapter”). Great things are happening here in Cardiff and I just wanted to share and say thank you to all those wonderful people who have guided my career, guided my development as a person and guarded me throughout troubled times. Never will I forget how lucky I am.

Normal Service

Normal Service:

The inspiration that is Dave Lee has just pointed out to me (gosh, that could actually end up being a poem, couldn’t it?) that it might be an idea to publish my poetry on one of the other blogs in my network because they are not about language learning.  He has a point. Whatever one may think of the poems, they are not, strictly speaking, about language learning. About language? Yes.  Demonstrations of the exploration of language? Yes. But about language learning? No. And yet, there have been no comments of complaint from regular readers. So I’m going to throw this one open to the readers of this blog. I am going to be launching a literature themed blog in the coming days and I’m leaving it up to you, the reader, to decide whether my poems should continue to be published on the Join Martin blog or whether they should instead be published on the literature blog when it launches.

I will welcome all comments. Keep it constructive and clean. And, while you’re at it, visit Dave Lee’s blogTo a certain extent, Dave inspired me to launch this blog in the first place. The young man has so much potential in him that you could probably power the national grid off it. If you’re interested in blogging, media, journalism and that kind of thing, Dave’s blog is one of the best out there and you should certainly check it out.

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