All posts by Kathryn Counsell-Hub

My passions are for fashion, style, books, music, and family.
baby

Cutesy shit: I’m pregnant!

So I’m pregnant.

Yeah, was a shock to me too.

After a year without protection, I had resigned myself to the camp of would-be parents who invest in ovulation kits and where potential mums take their temperature every morning and lie with their legs in the air after sex. After months of impatience, I was actually fine to wait a bit longer and made a secret promise to get more serious about the whole business once we’d moved into our new flat and had a chance to redecorate and get used to a life of drinking indoors because apparently mortgages preclude a social life.

Well, surprise!

I found out while I was visiting Big Sister in Wales during a rather wet Saturday (I’m not sure there are any other kind in Swansea…..). I’d brought a test that morning during my routine stomp to the shops for Coca Cola after a night of drinking the evening before (I didn’t know, ok?!) and thought I might as well get one seeing as my period has never been late before. The result was, obviously, a shock and I told Big Sister when we were sheltering under a tree while walking Ringo the dog.

Won't be doing this for a while!
Won’t be doing this for a while!

So here I am, nearly 20 weeks’ pregnant and feeling like absolute shit. Oh yes, because that’s what ‘they’ don’t tell you: nausea, tiredness, wretchedness and extreme sense of smell* are all delights of pregnancy, particularly in the early stages. I don’t remember Cameron Diaz experiencing an inability to go into her hallway due to the overwhelming stench of wood in What to Expect When You’re Expecting.

Just like weddings, relationships in general, female friendships, sex, and women’s body image, the collective media have sought to produce an ideal of what it is like for a woman to be pregnant. We all know that when we get huge, we’re supposed to be grumpy and have difficulty getting up from low chairs. We all know that at the beginning we’re supposed to be sick, but in a slightly comedic fashion because, y’know, we are women after all and not really supposed to throw-up at all. Finally, we’re supposed to blossom and glow and become radiant skinny versions of our normal selves just with a little bowling ball belly attached.

We're going to be actual parents: holy crap!
We’re going to be actual parents: holy crap!

If the last 16 weeks have taught me anything then it’s that the perception is complete crap. Ok, let me re-phrase: it’s complete crap for me. Because that’s the other thing that is conveniently not mentioned: every woman’s pregnancy will be different from every other. Some ladies will vomit, some won’t; some will go straight into the blossom-y phase, some won’t. You just don’t know until it happens to you and that’s really kind of scary.

So the things I’ve learned in the weeks since my surprise are these:

  1. I don’t actually feel pregnant. I don’t have a pregnancy-attributable bump yet (I could pass for having just consumed a large meal… and probably have done as well) and it kind of feels like I’m just ill. Which sucks.
  2. I miss alcohol. When we moved into our new flat, the first property we’ve ever brought, I couldn’t celebrate with an ice cold beer (*drool*) or even a little glass of fizz. Which sucks.
  3. Getting a cold is awful as you can’t take any cold ‘n’ flu tablets or painkillers other than paracetamol. The baby suppresses the immune system as well so the cold I got at the beginning of August is still lingering. Which sucks.
  4. It’s scary to tell people. I’ve shared the news with more people now I’m past three months but Tommy’s, the charity that funds research into miscarriage, premature birth and stillbirth, estimate that 20% of all pregnancies will miscarriage, and that 85% of those miscarriages will happen within the first 12 weeks. The feeling that just as you tell the world something awful will happen makes me a little reticent to share, and completely paranoid that I’ll wake up one day it will all have been some beautiful, terrifying, weirdly awful dream. Which really and truly sucks.

It’s a learning curve this old pregnancy game and I have everything crossed that, despite how scared I actually am and how unwell I truly feel, everything will be ok. But the one thing I really wanted to say was simply this: for any pregnant women out there, just do your best. You can’t help how you feel but you can help what you do about it. I don’t feel pregnant but I know I am and I will do everything I need to do to the best of my ability. But I will still want beer and eat chips when I know I should be craving a wheatgrass smoothie and eating kale. If you want to judge, then you’re in the wrong place. This is urban pregnancy bitches!

Now, pass me a can of alcohol-free Bavaria and let’s see how long I can sit upright before needing a lie down. Rock. And. ROLL.

Tommy’s funds research into miscarriage, premature birth and still birth, but is also a source of information for parents-to-be. Check out their website at www.tommys.org. They also offer PregnancyLine where pregnant women, their partners and their families can get advice on healthy pregnancy choices and also seek counselling for those who have suffered a pregnancy loss. The line is manned by qualified midwives. If you need help or advice, call them on 0800 0147 800.

*I cannot even BEGIN to explain how awful this has been for me. The smell of treated wood, trees and plants make me want to hurl and I have had to change bars of soap because the scent has contaminated the entire room. I’m not sure that I wouldn’t take actual vomiting over this. Be warned.

 

Category: Cute
The Truth 2

Book Rec: The truth about ‘The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair’

Ooh, a book review, how thrilling!

Do bear with, this won’t last long and The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair is the first book in ages that I actually couldn’t put down. It was a proper finish-it-at-1.30am-even-though-I-need-to-get-up-early-tomorrow job.

The premise is simple: a writer from New York travels to New Hampshire in order to prove that his friend, mentor and former university lecturer, Harry Quebert, is innocent of murdering a 15 year old girl over thirty years previously with whom he was having a love affair. Cue lots of reminiscences, local townspeople getting upset, and general thrills and spills as we follow the writer, Goldman, on his quest to free Quebert.

Full of 'shit the bed' moments
Full of ‘shit the bed’ moments

This, to me, is not particularly literary – I don’t think it will be nestled between Salman Rushdie and Kingsley Amis in your local Waterstones – but it is excellently written with some genuinely, as my colleague puts it, ‘shit the bed’ moments. Perhaps what is remarkable is the fact that the novel is written by a French author, Joel Dicker, in his native language and then translated. You would never know it, and that in itself is exceptionable.

One little niggle from me is that sometimes the dialogue doesn’t feel entirely natural. The 15 year old girl at the centre of the whole thing also got on my nerves from time to time. Don’t let this stop you in any from enjoying this book; it is easy to read and incredibly rewarding.

If you commute, have recently read something bad/tricky to get through, have a late summer holiday planned, or even if you can just read words on a page, then do yourself a favour and pick this up. And let me know how you get on please! Apologies in advance for anyone who hates it.

The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair is available in hardback from all good booksellers and also in Kindle edition

Category: Life
Previous AWESOME meal at Red Dog Saloon

Burgers! Where do YOU love?

Birthdays are a big deal in my family. The now obligatory post-birthday Loz and Kathry lunch is even more of a big deal. It has to be somewhere posh or cool and involves lots of food and not a little drink. This concept could only be improved if Big Sister lived a little closer and was able to come along!

This year’s birthday lunch for Loz was meant to be a brunch, an all-you-can-drink brunch no less at the South Place Hotel, but now one of us is, ahem, up the duff, all you can drink Prosecco suddenly didn’t seem as exciting.

Our first port of call was going to be the delish Red Dog Saloon on Hoxton Square. Disgustingly big burgers, pitchers of beer and Hipster Central – what wasn’t to love? Well, actually, the lack of non-meaty products wasn’t particularly to love for veggie Loz so we decided on nearby The Breakfast Club instead. Having a cheeky branch in Shoreditch that we hadn’t visited plus a rather fabulous German beer on tap made this seem like the perfect spot but having had a quick gander at the other branch on Artillery Lane opposite Liverpool Street, and spying the queue OUT OF THE DOOR we thought that we might save our feet and head to Spitalfields instead.

Previous AWESOME meal at Red Dog Saloon
Previous AWESOME meal at Red Dog Saloon

And that’s how we ended up at Byron. Yay for Byron! Got a booth immediately AND they serve Brooklyn Lager. Score! (And being in the second trimester means that certain mummies-to-be can have one alcoholic drink a week. Double score!)

Byron burger: hot.
Byron burger: hot.

Now, Byron is emerging as the biggest train in the burger joint trend that looks unlikely to die out any time soon. People in my office actually clapped for joy at the arrival of American chain Five Guys to Covent Garden, and I have been lured in the slightly dirty, and slightly pretentious queue-only, world of Meat Liquor on several occasions.

Byron is a much cleaner brand than ML but still aims to retain the trendy aesthetic so key to the burger revolution: the interior is modern with chairs that you want to pinch for your own flat, and the burger buns are shiny brioche. You may want to discount the most visible of this brand of tasty meatwich but please don’t. It. Is. Awesome.

You might have a Byron on your high street but the burgers are good, the sides are very good (onion rings and chipotle mayo are musts), and the Oreo cookie milkshake is the perfect way to finish. There are very few veggie options, as with most of these places, but the Portobello mushroom burger was pronounced to be the proverbial hit.

Lozzie enjoyed her gargantuan meal, evidently.
Lozzie enjoyed her gargantuan meal, evidently.

Incidentally, Loz rates Gourmet Burger Kitchen quite highly as a veggie destination. It doesn’t feel quite as much like a restaurant as Byron (it’s a bit closer to Nando’s in that you pay at a counter), but as well as offering a vegetable-based, goat’s cheese option, there’s also a bean burger and a falafel one. A bit of variety is never a bad thing, although a meat-substitute burger would be even better, my vegetarian relatives tell me.

God I love a dirty burger. If a topping isn’t oozing out of the rapidly disintegrating bun then frankly it’s just not worth the effort. Funnily enough, Whitechapel’s aptly named Dirty Burger is next on the hit list with Camden’s Hache being named the restaurant of choice for when me and hubby have London overnighter when celebrating our wedding anniversary in November.

I want this all again, NOW.
I want this all again, NOW.

I really wish I had written this post after lunch as I have started to drool on my desk. Ah well.

If you know a great burger place in London or Essex then give us a shout please!

Category: Life
Fotor0906160258

New coat joy

Woo hoo! There’s a chill in the air (occasionally) and the September issues have been bought and consumed. I am ready to move forward and experience new coat joy. And what joy is in store!

Chillin'
Chillin’

Not only is the coat pink trend from last year carrying through into this season – confirmed by none other than Elle’s Lorraine Candy - but I managed to snap one up for a mere £14 from Matalan. OK, I bought it in July and it was a complete punt, but still, a coat for £14? I think that’s an epic win in anyone’s book.

filtered photo 2

This is most definitely a fun coat for me, as in all likelihood I won’t be able to wear it in a few months (or even next week, judging by the current pregnancy appetite) but also because it is so trendy, being pink n’all. Having said that, it does some rather snappy detailing.

filtered photo 3

The collarless shape and zip fastening help to streamline the coat so it doesn’t appear too fussy. Adding a blunt shoe, like the Birkenstocks I’m sporting or another ugly-style sandal, will help to de-girlify the coat if sugary isn’t your bag.

Fotor0906160258

Clearly, I’m in casual mode here but I’m looking forward to the first real nip in the weather so I can sling this on with some tailored black trousers and a brogue. A statement handbag, such as a fabulous structured handbag, would complete the look rather nicely thank you very much.

Get ready, autumn: I’m coming to get you.

Category: Style
Kathry (one in a million) 2

Five things to avoid after you’ve been to your therapy appointment

You’ve ranted, you’ve raved, you’ve probably cried and loved and hated your therapist in equal measure. Time to dodge these emotionally-baffling bullets.

  1. Joggers. When I’m walking my tear-stained face home, don’t be standing next to me at the traffic lights stretching and looking all smug. I could jog too y’know; it would probably just make me cry is all.
  1. Off-loaders. You’ve had your moment to off-load so now they think it’s their turn. Friends, partners and family beware: I pay good freaking money to get rid of my rubbish and I suggest you do the same. Plus, I’m more likely to be feeling drained than renewed after my therapy session so just leave. Me. Be. Thanking you!
  1. Very, very happy people. Reading an article after my session about a yoga teacher who spends ten minutes being grateful each morning because “you can’t be depressed if you’re grateful” (wrong, by the way) wasn’t what we call A Good Idea. Anger ensued pretty quickly.
  1. Facebook. Guaranteed, there will be something to piss you off: attention-seeking status updates, pictures of dramatic weight loss, and Candy Crush notifications on your timeline, to name but a few. Be kind and swaddle your emotional self instead.
  1. Any movie or TV show where every problem is solved as if by magic. You may think that this will cheer you up but you’ll most likely end up feeling really rather bitter, especially because you’ve just spent all your beer money on an hour’s ranting while these guys only had to cry for the duration of a montage before everything was just dandy again. Save the show for tomorrow; you can delude yourself happily when you’re a little stronger.
Category: Life