Pages

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Valentines Day! (Yes, two weeks late)

As many you know, valentine's day has been and gone in a matter of seconds. Now, I don't know how many of you celebrate the day (kind of turned into a day for marketing) but myself and my other half celebrated it this year, the evening before... so we could drink... of course.

I do appreciate the fact that for couples, there shouldn't be just one day of the year that you treat your other half, or show them that you love them. That should be every day of the year. Which again, is what we do with 'date nights' and going for walks etc, normal couple stuff!

As it was my other half's birthday the previous week (everything comes at once it seems) I purchased a few of his favourite things to give him for Valentines which did in fact include a few Lush bath bombs... he is a little bit girly like that. My favourite is 'Dragon's Egg', I always think that the water is leaking out of the bath though as it crackles when it melts.

So, on the Saturday night, we both knew that we would be cooking dinner and actually dressing up to make an effort. I was sentenced upstairs to get ready, and my other half informed me that he was 'going downstairs to check on the mashed potato', after about five minutes, I could hear banging around in the kitchen and dining room. Bit odd. But, then he came back upstairs, did his hair and put a shirt on then led me downstairs.

In the dining room he had laid out a table with a single red rose on my plate, a champagne ice bucket, the works - something that I DID NOT expect, as he is not an 'out there' romantic, he's a secret romantic. Yes, I almost cried. But we did have a lovely evening, food was amazing - we made bruschetta to start with, steak, mash and asparagus for main and then apple pie and custard for pudding, along with champagne, wine/cider. Like most Saturday nights, we end up finishing a bottle of raspberry vodka between us and play UNO and board games. Such an old couple.

On the actual Sunday of Valentines we went for a walk at 'Watermead Park', in Leicester. We always go 'Bradgate Park', which is huge... but we do go there so much, so it was nice to have a change. It was absolutely freezing though and did in fact start to snow a little bit! We also managed to find a mammoth... yes, a mammoth.


Tuesday, 16 February 2016

Woburn Center Parcs Spa Day (UK) REVIEW

Center Parcs. I'm sure you've all heard of it, but for those of you that don't know I shall explain. Basically, they're parks in England that are situated in forests, such as Sherwood (Nottingham) and Longleat (Somerset). Now within these parks they have apartments of all different sizes, a pavilion which includes badminton/tennis courts etc, restaurants and a market place for food. So they do acquire for all of the guests' needs. Also within the pavilion or a separate building (it depends which Center Parcs you visit) there is an 'Aqua Sana', the spa. 
The Aqua Sana is one of the best spa's that I've visited; not that I have been to many - let's be honest. But, there is such a wide variety for each person, male or female. Multiple steam rooms and saunas with various scents and smells, foot baths, relaxation areas - or you can book a treatment! My favourite was the salt pool that led outside, which was rather nice in the February months to be in a warm pool in the cold - it did cool down toward the end of the day though. 

We ventured there on a Thursday as a 'Spa Day for 2' for a birthday, as it's cheaper in the weekdays than Friday-Sunday. We were greeted on arrival with lovely members of staff who were extremely accommodating, showing us how the locker system worked and where the complimentary towels and robes were. As the Spa Day runs from 9am-6pm (5:59pm) we had a snack which was included in the price when we were changed and upstairs. I opted for the custard and apple pastry with fresh orange juice; again, the staff were friendly and greeted us with a smile. 

For the rest of the day, we ventured into various rooms and chose our favourite! I personally loved the salt steam room (hotter than the others, and most of the time we were the only ones in there!) and the lava sauna (again, hotter than the other saunas). But, a close favourite was a steam room which heated to its optimum temperature and then it 'rained' to get the temperature back down so it can heat up again, which was rather interesting. 

The different sections in the Woburn Aqua Sana included; Fire and Ice, Blossom, Herb, Gem and Salt. Each of these sections included a 'rain walk', which was so cold to start with! It changed the temperature from each section of the shower heads. Quite a few times that day, we heard guests squeal as they didn't realise it was cold at first. In each section also, there are relaxation areas with beds and sofas - along with water beds in a certain section. 

The thing that split up our day and to have a break from the spa was our lunch, which was included again with the price. There is a menu in which you can choose which meal you would like and then a drink, but you can also upgrade for five pounds each which you get a glass of prosecco and a bread board to share. Instead of this, I bought us both a Mediterranean sharing platter for a starter which was amazing. A whole ball of mozzarella, olives, breads, dips, sun-dried tomatoes, prosciutto and salami... lovely. For our main which was included, I opted for the spinach and ricotta canelloni and my other half opted for the beef lasagna (with a lemonade), both were beautiful. 

You can change your robe and towels however many times you want, if you don't want to walk around with a damp robe (not a nice feeling) especially when you're eating lunch or wanting to relax. Also, there were seminar sessions which you could partake in for free, to give yourself your own facial or try out their different products that they use within the treatment areas or sell in the shop (I loved the shampoo/conditioner/body wash, which were Aqua Sana's own brand)

All in all, it was a thoroughly relaxing day and my skin has never felt smoother! The staff were lovely, the company was lovely and the other guests kept the noise to a minimum to ensure that it was relaxing. I would highly recommend this spa to anyone looking for a spa day!

Monday, 15 February 2016

Script Writing

For our most recent coursework, we have to work on our own scripts that may be performed by the acting students. For myself, I have never worked with scripts for a theater before so it was a little bit daunting, but since I've started writing - I'm loving it! I'm just hoping that it's a good idea; so I'll give you all the synopsis and I'm sure a lot of you have been through this situation if you have had a partner. I just wanted something a play can relate to the majority in the audience and will hopefully make a few people smile, or look at their other halves and give them the knowing nod.

So, my play is about a male and female, Freddie and Sophie; a couple. Now, Sophie has come over to Freddie's house for a movie and takeaway evening, so they have a catch up and try to decide what they want to eat. Now, with females (I for one) I will mostly always say that I don't mind... because the majority of the time, I don't. So this play is based from that - the 'I don't mind' and the guy getting more and more frustrated. Freddie lists all the takeaways and in the end, Sophie chooses the first takeaway that Freddie has suggested (annoying right?) which was an Indian takeaway, but Sophie keeps saying the name of the curry wrong which just frustrates Freddie more! After they've ordered, they now have to decide on a film... and we all know what's going to happen here - 'I don't mind'! Yet, Sophie has an idea of a film in her head, a guy that has great kung-fu skills. So, they both set out googling films that have a certain guy in with action and they come across 'Iron Man' and Sophie agrees that that is the film. Can we guess what happens next? The film isn't the right one! Freddie offers to turn it over and find the right film... but of course, Sophie answers with 'It's fine' (It's not fine). This continues and takeaway arrives - Freddie cheers Sophie up, but the play will end with them having to choose another film and 'I don't mind' finishes the play off.

Can anyone relate to this? I know quite a few people who would nod their head in agreement!

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Act Two: Watershed

Two posts in a day? 

For one of our modules, we have to complete a 10 page script which could potentially be made into a film - how amazing would that be? This is along with a treatment (story synopsis, tag/log line and character profiles) 

The other seminar, we had to produce a scene which involved dialogue and I chose to write a part of my screenplay where it would be the watershed - the end of act two and moving into act three. It's basically about a prosecuting lawyer, Andrew - who has been set the task to prosecute his ex-wife - Jennifer. He later realises that the defendant lawyer is his best friend, Paul so he aims to discover why Paul is working so hard to cover up Jennifer's case - and this is the scene that Andrew hears what actually happened. 

INT - COURTHOUSE SIDE ROOM - DAY

PAUL and JENNIFER rush quickly into the side room and slam the door to, but not fully shut. ANDREW follows quietly behind them and inches the door slightly ajar so he can hear their conversation. He pulls out his tape recorder from his jean back pocket and proceeds to press play.

PAUL
Jen, will ya fuckin' listen to me for once
in your pathetic life!?

JENNIFER
Don't talk to me like I'm a kid, Paul. You're
fine arent'cha? You're the big cheese lawyer
pretendin' to the court! Are you on trial,
Paul? No, I am. 

PAUL
I'm not losing my job over some stupid
and unsatisfactory one night stand. I'm
saving my own skin.

Silence fills the room and ANDREW inches the door more open so he could see both PAUL and JENNIFER. PAUL is pacing the room in a panic and JENNIFER is sat on an office chair with her head in her hands.

JENNIFER
You weren't saying that, Paul when we were 
sleeping together behind Andrew's back. You 
weren't saying that when I told you that I was
pregnant, and Paul, you weren't saying
that when you smashed my boyfriends
skull in, were you? So don't fuckin' tell
me it was a pointless one night stand. I'm having
your fucking child.

PAUL
That shit is not my child, and did you stop me, Jen?
Did you? You loved every second of watching
me kill that bastard. Did you intervene? Cry out 'Stop'?
No. So take a fucking look in the mirror, love. 

ANDREW watches as PAUL sits down on a chair and pulls out his mobile whilst JENNIFER is sat in tears, holding her baby bump. ANDREW's phone begins to ring and they both look to see where the noise came from - JENNIFER jumps out of the chair and rushes toward the door to close it, but ANDREW has already fled down the corridor - holding the evidence that will incriminate his best friend. 

Jobs, jobs, jobs

I feel like I'm going to blow away to Oz and join Dorothy and friends. I'm also surprised that my wheelie bins haven't been blown half way down the street (they've just fallen over)

I'm writing this after just completing a piece of coursework of, 'a graduate reflective report' - talking about two of your career options. Now, it's at this time of the year where all graduate positions are coming out and you really have to think about... what do you actually want to do?

Now within careers week - our adviser told us to just think about the next few years, the job you may get isn't necessarily the one that you'll stay in for the rest of your life - there's options, opportunities.

Being an upcoming graduate of English and Creative Writing - there's so many different job opportunities (obviously not the science/engineering based ones - unless you're a proofreader/marketing team etc) but positions usually want someone with excellent communication skills, creative energy and great team working skills with signs of leadership - all of this with no select degree!

You really do have to look. I'm looking into going for marketing or merchandising/buying - and all of these take any degree subjects - you just have to have the skills that they're looking for. I applied for merchandising and buying the other day and had to thoroughly research what the difference is between off-price merchandising/buying compared to full-price retailing. Now, obviously this isn't the subject I have taken, but as long as you're willing to put in the time and effort to research the company - you'll be fine.

It will all pay off in the end (hopefully)

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

Third Year of University (It's hell)

I have previously written about what I expected from third year at university and what other third years had said about it. Now as I'm finally mid-way through my first semester of final year, I can safely tell you that the rumors are true.

Dissertation preparation is a go-ahead with meetings with advisers, references are being written down in academic log-books and books are being attacked with sticky notes. It's the last, huge part of university so I have to take as much time to prepare for actually writing my 10,000 word dissertation. There's not only the main body of the dissertation, it's the literature review preparation and coursework - you have to compare your selected topic with other academics that have written about similar pieces of academia.

Stress.

Even further on top of this is existing coursework from different modules. My current modules for first semester are; Corpus Stylistics (stress), screenwriting, skills modules, and my dissertation help advantage. Now, the most stressful of these is corpus stylistics - the up and coming linguistic devices to examine large quantities of text and compare with others. It's scientific in a way, bringing English and some science in with one, to make language seem a bit more interesting.

What I can say for any second years that will be making the transition next September, is read. Make academic journals (write down all of the references you want to use and reference them ready to go straight into your essay/dissertation) Get ahead of the game, ahead of your coursework so then you can focus more of your time on writing a well-structured essay and you never know, higher marks! Everything you do now is going to that final degree classification, make everything count - don't be lazy!

When you come out of university - of course you want to have a job! This is where my university is excellent in helping you out. We have a select career two weeks where we focus on CV writing, cover letter writing and putting you in psychometric test centers (most graduate jobs ask for you to complete one - revise it! There's logistical test, numeracy and literacy testing - me and maths don't mix, hence why I do English, so revise!) Also, putting you in group interview situations and to give miniature presentations, which again - is what you'll have to do in a real graduate test center. Make sure you work on your communication techniques, your presentation techniques - you need to get over the fear of presenting in front of people.

I'm looking for graduate jobs/schemes at the moment, and it is extremely time consuming. Each job you apply for, you have to cater and change you CV/cover letter to their requirements and needs for the select position. It shows when you haven't put much time and effort into your application - research the company! Now, for my video interview that I had - I revised questions that would likely appear and research within that along with writing down the key points. When these questions came up, I was able to look at my already planned out answers which was a huge help.

All I can say is be organised. Be prepared for non-stop work for your final year, of course make time for a social life - it's not nice being a recluse all of the time! But get it done, get it done before the time limit so there's less stress, Yet, enjoy it! Enjoy your final year as much as possible.

Thursday, 15 October 2015

Egypt - Sharm el Sheikh

Coming back from my Egyptian holiday, I realised that I hadn't actually wrote about it yet! It's been three weeks now since I returned back to the UK and completely forgot to make a blog, so here goes!

Our flight was scheduled for half one, UK time and would arrive in Sharm at around nine pm, their time (only one hour ahead). My hand luggage miraculously fit onto the plane and there were no delays - brilliant! (I say my hand luggage miraculously fit, as it was about the size of a normal suitcase... just with books in it, shh.) After five and a half hours on the flight, we finally made it to Egypt - after indulging in some plane food... mixed boxes of Mediterranean snacks. 38 degrees hit you smack bang in the face when you stepped off the plane onto the shuttle bus. After getting our passports checked, we waited for our luggage - which took about half an hour as they seemed to have forgotten about out plane! Then, moving onto the other shuttle bus to take us to our hotel - The Aurora Oriental Resort.

On arrival, the staff were all extremely friendly, taking our bags, helping us check in and take you to your room. They informed us that they loved the British people... but hated some nationalities! Unpacking our suitcases for the 10 nights ahead - we received a ground floor room with an outside seating area, comfy queen sized bed and a very spacious room! As it was around ten pm and we had only just arrived - we decided to explore some of the grounds.

It was around 500m to the beach, but all of the grounds to get to this area were all gorgeous green gardens. Not what I was expecting when we started walking! It was so quiet and peaceful with benches scattered around, along with bridges (good photo op) to make the place feel special. Coming back inside - we decided to make the most of our all inclusive wristband and order a few cocktails! Now, in Egypt (along with most European countries and probably African too) they don't measure how much alcohol they put into the glass, so most of the time - I was slightly tipsy from one vodka and coke!

In the morning, we set out early to put our towels down and get some breakfast - little did we know that our phones had set two hours forward and not one. So going down at 8am when it was actually 7am (no wonder it was so quiet). We found this out when we went to meet our rep at 10am... it was actually 9am at this point - but we figured it out and booked some excursion with our rep, who was in fact lovely and not pushy in the slightest. An glass bottomed boat had been booked along with a desert safari!

Most of the days were spent lying by the pool where we managed to grab the same spot every day because it was so quiet! Crossword, word searches and reading were done by the plenty - along with hundreds of dips into the pool and sunbathing going on. Before lunch, the pool bar opened for drinks and pastries/ice cream if you got peckish in the late morning as lunch wasn't until 1pm. Lunch was either served at the pool bar - hamburgers, hot dogs, salads etc... and then inside where they did a wider selection which was varied everyday - always lovely, along with the waiters.

In the evening, we would usually arrive at 'our' sofa at about half five as the sun goes down at around half four. We would sit with our cocktails and watch the world go by! Most nights there was either a violinist or a guitarist that would be situated next to our sofa and they were both extremely skilled in what they do. Going down for dinner, it would be around half eight as we wanted to let the initial 'arrive on time at 7pmers' eat and leave so there wouldn't be a queue for each counter. There was a wide selection every night - outside there were various BBQ'ed meats and fish and inside there were various breads, salads, soups, pastas, curry, side dishes - something that would fit everyone's tastes. One night we did actually venture out to Hard Rock Cafe which was £20 for boys, £14 for girls (sexist I know) but it was for all inclusive drinks and we had an awesome time! Met some lovely people, danced to some good songs and drank with an amazing atmosphere. I regretted it highly in the morning... and most of the day after.

After dinner (continuing the cocktails) the animation team would usually put on a show, so there was a karaoke night (in which we denied to enter many times as we made friends with some of the animation team). Other nights they would be dancing and putting on a show in the amphitheater or there was a cultural night also, different each night which was entertaining.

Our first excursion was the glass bottomed boat... which was incredibly hot! There were so many different fish and coral to see with the sea being so blue! There was a guy on board who would inform us of the various fish names and the certain types of coral. One coral - a fan coral (looks like a fan) could give you third degree burns if you touched it! That's one good defense mechanism. For the way back we were able to sit at the top deck of the boat with a soft drink. The views were amazing and it was so much nicer to be able to sit outside in the shade with the breeze from the boat.

Our second excursion was a desert safari. First of all, we all got a quad bike (made sure we could handle them properly) and then rode to our first destination of the camel ride. We were on the quads for a good half an hour and my thumb hurt from pressing down the accelerator, but it was good fun and went quite quickly over the sand! Of course, mine decided to break down when everyone slowed down for some bumps so then I was stuck at the back. Along the way there were some spectacular views of the mountains in the desert and the sun was going down which made it look even more beautiful. Parking our quads in a line, we made our way over to a Bedouin tent to sit in and wait for our camel ride. Mine was no hassle, but my boyfriends camel really did not want to move and was grunting and making strange noises for the whole 15 minute ride. The camel owners even stopped us all and took our phones to take pictures of us - which of course we tipped for. After, we got back on our quads and rode around to the actual Bedouin tents for the show and food they were putting on for us. Firstly, we stargazed and saw the moon and Saturn in the high-tech telescopes which was quite cool - Saturn look like a polo with the inside still in it! Secondly, we sat in our designated section in the area and watched the show of African dancing, traditional dance and fire show in which I got pulled up onto the stage to dance with them all. The food was lovely afterward, even going up for seconds! Finishing the show, we hopped back onto our quads and rode back to the camp (in the pitch black) so our headlights were on and you had to try not to lose people as you would probably get lost straight away! It was exciting heading back in the dark and everyone was riding much quicker so it was much more exhilarating.

We visited the beach twice - the sand was a bit stony and of course hot if you didn't have your flip flops on! But there were plenty of sunbeds with palm shelters and you got given towels with your towel cards. The sea was like bath water, along with hundreds of fish that swam next to you and one tried to nibble my boyfriends toes! Plus standing on a flat fish... which wasn't a nice feeling. It was crystal clear and you could walk for ages with it just staying mid thigh height. We figured out also that there was a pool bar where you could have lunch, and they did the most amazing Greek salad with the feta just melting in your mouth - top verdict from me!

The plane back was sleep time. My huge hand luggage got accepted free of charge to be taken on as normal luggage... which was incredibly handy. So we got a huge slice of pizza and made our way back to the UK - boo, hiss.

I had the most lovely time and I would love to go back again, holiday blues have kicked in already!