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Post by Mr Snow on Sept 20, 2017 16:09:15 GMT
I met a mixed gang of 6 or 7. We were pretty thick (sic) at University but gradually we all drifted off in different directions. Well, all except this one girl.
Who nearly 40 years later I’m delighted to report, is happily married… to my business partner.
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Post by bimse on Sept 20, 2017 16:48:57 GMT
I'm just about to hit 5 years since my first day of University. My first day wasn't emotional or anything, I was excited! I had chatted to half my housemates on facebook before so I knew of them, and I showed up early to be the first one there so I wouldn't be the awkward final guy. We joined up with three other flats and had a party and went out later in the night and, to quote Donna in Mamma Mia "...". I loved University, but in hindsight I would of switched courses to one a bit more in line with what I wanted to do. Also my final year was difficult personally, with the anniversary od a specific event coming up in two days that quite literally changed my life, so in hindsight, if I could of stopped speicifc things occuring in order to make that lifechanging thing not occur, I would go back to do that in a heartbeat. That is probably one of my biggest regrets. Aw sorry, no offence, but "would OF" "could OF"? Hate to say it but that's always "would HAVE" and could HAVE" .
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Post by Deleted on Sept 20, 2017 18:04:55 GMT
^ These univercities are'nt all what their cracked up to be...
(Your fighting a loosing battle there.)
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Post by bimse on Sept 20, 2017 18:23:55 GMT
^ These univercities are'nt all what their cracked up to be... (Your fighting a loosing battle there.) Well said @caiaphas, I'm really cringing now 🤣🤣
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Post by maggiem on Sept 21, 2017 11:41:37 GMT
When you're from the lower orders, like wot I am, it's only really when you start mixing with people from a wide range of different backgrounds, like at university, that you realise words you have used forever, without thinking, aren't actually words, but dialect, specific to quite a small geographic area. If I had a pound for every "trouble-at-mill" or Coronation Street joke I got when I studied in Plymouth, I could have retired years ago! Having said that, sometimes I recognised myself playing the "Professional Northerner" when I spoke.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 21, 2017 14:27:35 GMT
Reminds me of a University open day I went to. Got chatting to two girls from somewhere in the South
Girl 1: "Where are you from?" Girl 2: "Can't you tell? He's from Oop North!"
Can't even remember which university this was, but still remember the snooty madam's tone of voice 30 years later.
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Post by d'James on Sept 21, 2017 14:29:03 GMT
Reminds me of a University open day I went to. Got chatting to two girls from somewhere in the South Girl 1: "Where are you from?" Girl 2: "Can't you tell? He's from Oop North!" Can't even remember which university this was, but still remember the snooty madam's tone of voice 30 years later. I had pretty much the exact reverse. It works both ways.
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Post by TallPaul on Sept 22, 2017 12:37:22 GMT
It's interesting, isn't it? It is now unacceptable to discriminate or act negatively against almost anyone on campus, except if they've got a different accent to your own, when it seems to be fair game.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2017 13:04:51 GMT
I don't have a Welsh accent (if I had a pound for every time I was told 'You don't SOUND Welsh though?' I'd have at least paid off my student loans by now) But when I lived in Montreal for a year my accent was apparently problematic when speaking English to French speakers. So I found myself adopting a Canadian twang in order to make myself understood...which unfortunately developed into a semi-permanent Canadian twang that took a good 6 months at home to disappear!
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Post by mallardo on Sept 22, 2017 13:16:43 GMT
I don't have a Welsh accent (if I had a pound for every time I was told 'You don't SOUND Welsh though?' I'd have at least paid off my student loans by now) But when I lived in Montreal for a year my accent was apparently problematic when speaking English to French speakers. So I found myself adopting a Canadian twang in order to make myself understood...which unfortunately developed into a semi-permanent Canadian twang that took a good 6 months at home to disappear! Love to hear that Canadian "twang" of yours, Emi. Now that I know it's in your repertory.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2017 13:19:35 GMT
I don't have a Welsh accent (if I had a pound for every time I was told 'You don't SOUND Welsh though?' I'd have at least paid off my student loans by now) But when I lived in Montreal for a year my accent was apparently problematic when speaking English to French speakers. So I found myself adopting a Canadian twang in order to make myself understood...which unfortunately developed into a semi-permanent Canadian twang that took a good 6 months at home to disappear! Love to hear that Canadian "twang" of yours, Emi. Now that I know it's in your repertory. I'll tell you a story aboot my love for Timmies and my collection of vintage Loonies next time I see you eh?
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Post by mallardo on Sept 22, 2017 13:24:58 GMT
I'll tell you a story aboot my love for Timmies and my collection of vintage Loonies next time I see you eh? Spoken (or typed) like a native. Can't wait to hear it, eh?
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Post by TallPaul on Sept 22, 2017 13:49:35 GMT
I don't have a Welsh accent (if I had a pound for every time I was told 'You don't SOUND Welsh though?' I'd have at least paid off my student loans by now) But when I lived in Montreal for a year my accent was apparently problematic when speaking English to French speakers. So I found myself adopting a Canadian twang in order to make myself understood...which unfortunately developed into a semi-permanent Canadian twang that took a good 6 months at home to disappear! You'll never get a part in Hinterland!
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2017 13:52:10 GMT
I don't have a Welsh accent (if I had a pound for every time I was told 'You don't SOUND Welsh though?' I'd have at least paid off my student loans by now) But when I lived in Montreal for a year my accent was apparently problematic when speaking English to French speakers. So I found myself adopting a Canadian twang in order to make myself understood...which unfortunately developed into a semi-permanent Canadian twang that took a good 6 months at home to disappear! You'll never get a part in Hinterland! hahaha very true! I need subtitles even for the English there...slightly OT but Hinterland is proof posative that a) nothing good happens in the countryside b) there's a reason us South Waleians don't set foot in the Mid/North/West.
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Post by tysilio2 on Sept 22, 2017 15:37:39 GMT
You'll never get a part in Hinterland! hahaha very true! I need subtitles even for the English there...slightly OT but Hinterland is proof posative that a) nothing good happens in the countryside b) there's a reason us South Waleians don't set foot in the Mid/North/West. Let's hope it stays that way!!!!!!!!!
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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2017 15:41:43 GMT
hahaha very true! I need subtitles even for the English there...slightly OT but Hinterland is proof posative that a) nothing good happens in the countryside b) there's a reason us South Waleians don't set foot in the Mid/North/West. Let's hope it stays that way!!!!!!!!! It will if you lot keep murdering-off all of us who venture up there
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Post by tmesis on Sept 22, 2017 16:54:59 GMT
My first day was in 1972 at Royal Holloway (London University.) RHC, although a college of London University, is actually in what used to to be called Stockbroker Surrey in the village of Englefield Green with parts of it fringing Virginia Water. I had never been to a posher place in my life. I come from the Derbyshire/Notts border which is usually called D.H.Lawrence Country. Virtually everyone's dad in my village was a coal-miner and when we went on holiday it was Blackpool, Skegness or Scarborough. The local MP at the time was The Beast of Bolsover, Dennis Skinner and he still is to this day. The village I grew up in won second prize on Radio 5 as having Britain's 2nd shabbiest High Street (can't remember who got 1st!)
As you can imagine it was quite a culture-shock. Nearly everyone was from the Home Counties and they all seemed to have gone to public school. I did a degree in Music and some of the other students would say things like 'Oh for the Summer concert the orchestra played Ravel and Debussy.' At our school concert we played a selection from The Sound of Music. I'd never been abroad at the time, but they were all going on about visiting Egypt and Kenya etc. I was terrifically impressed by a guy, who actually became good friend, who cooked us all a meal of meatballs in tomato sauce. He actually went to the local butcher and asked him to mince rump steak for the said balls and then bought a half bottle of beaujolais to cook them in! (Drinking wine was virtually unheard of then, let alone cooking with it.) He would then say 'When I get home my mother's going to cook me jugged hare.' I was happy with liver and onions.
I actually soon became accustomed to it all and really loved it in the end. I've hardly moved out the area since and currently only live about 5 miles away.
Edit: reading this back sounds a bit Monty Python!
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2017 12:34:30 GMT
After a trip out for coffee/shopping this morning I can confirm the students are back in force. Favourite overheard at a bus stop 'Does this bus go to Cardiff? are we in Cardiff?'
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Post by TallPaul on Sept 23, 2017 13:01:00 GMT
The worrying thing is, these people are our future. They'll be making our laws and paying our pensions.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2017 13:39:44 GMT
The worrying thing is, these people are our future. They'll be making our laws and paying our pensions. A lot of these people are our present! You've only got to look at The Apprentice to see the types who think they have something to offer, and the worrying thing is they very often get the positions they want. Gone are the days when you needed a brain to get on in the world...
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2017 15:18:03 GMT
Of course it seems like only yesterday. The older you get, the more your vivid memories seem like much more recent experiences…
After months of excited anticipation, I was dropped off on a Sunday by my parents, who’d taken me in the family car, and in it with us were boxes of things I wanted to take along to make my room feel like home. Nothing was newly purchased- no Primark, Ikea and the like in my day. There were some mugs that were no longer wanted at home, a very small kettle, and some old pots and pans to use in the communal kitchen along the corridor.
I can’t remember what clothes I’d taken or what in, but I don’t think I had many. Just one jacket and maybe two pairs of shoes. An item of clothing I do remember taking along was a unitard as it was listed as a ‘must have’ for the practical drama classes we’d be having. Mine was maroon and I daresay I looked a complete tit in it, although at the time I thought I must be incredibly trendy. The lady in the shop (Freeds) told me I must also buy a “dancer’s belt” to wear under it, which she sold me at some ridiculous cost. This kept everything out there and well contained but God, was it uncomfortable!
I also remember taking a load of rolled up posters which would be drawing-pinned to the huge pin-board in my room; most of them were badly damaged at the corners having been pinned and repinned on different walls of my bedroom at home. I had a rather nice grey and silver one of A Chorus Line, an Evita one with the names Elaine Paige, David Essex and Joss Ackland on it, and the obligatory Jesus Christ Superstar one to remind me of my favourite show which had not long closed at the Palace. The biggest poster I had was of Kate Bush singing Wow.
I decorated the only shelf in the room with the set texts we’d been told to buy, and I thought I was twice as clever as many of my fellow students as I was doing a joint degree. It didn’t seem to bother me that half of them were written in medieval, seventeenth or eighteenth century French and I couldn’t understand a single word of them. Oh the follies of youth!
A record-player was, of course, an essential too. Far more important than the set texts. For our young readers, this was a large plasticky looking piece of equipment with huge speakers. You could play your 33rpm records on it, scratched through overplaying and causing the occasional jump in the song. I had eclectic tastes (I still do) and f*** knows what my new neighbours made of Trail Before Pilate, The Miller’s Son and Julie Covington singing Kurt Weill’s Barbara Song. I balanced this out occasionally with Abba’s Super Trouper.
After getting the room sorted it was time to explore and make new friends. You latched on to anyone really, asking them if they fancied a drink in the Union Bar that evening. Some, I found out, had double-barrelled names and didn’t speak like me at all. I quickly promised myself to learn how to speak posh to fit in. Many had been to schools their parents had had to pay for; all I can remember my parents paying for at my school was a dictionary and a slide-rule. Both severely underused, even by the end of my school career. Quite a few of them were on anti-depressants, which I thought made them seem very grown-up and bohemian.
Some of us went to the University shop to buy provisions. These included the cheapest instant coffee you could get your hands on, powdered milk and rich tea fingers. Tasteless but also very cheap. Someone rather enterprising bought a waxed carton of fresh milk and a packet of sausages (“for breakfast”) but as our rooms came unequipped with a fridge, and anything left in the communal fridge was taken, such people took to hanging their purchases out of their bedroom window in a carrier bag. I thought this was very common…
There were no lectures, tutorials or classes for a week. Freshers’ week gave you an opportunity to become a member of a club for about 50p a term (I liked the sound of the Cheese and Wine Society and thought it would give me ample opportunity to practise my new posh speaking voice.)
I took to university like a duck to water (I don’t ever remember calling it “Uni”; I think we all called it “college”, as it was one of many dotted around London at the time.)
Alas it is no more. It’s now posh flats, and the name of the college has been given to somewhere else in the capital that couldn’t be more unlike its former self. I feel a bit sad that it’s no longer there, where I pitched up all those years ago, but I’ve still got my memories, my closest friends I made there, not to mention all the set texts on bookshelves in my home now. They remind me that I must have been a little bit intelligent once. Oh, and I still have the “dancer’s belt”! It’s one of those things I just can’t throw out…
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Post by kathryn on Sept 24, 2017 7:54:12 GMT
tmesis I went to Royal Holloway too! I was there 2000-2003, so Eminem was all the range and all the posh kids spoke like rappers from a dodgy bit of London until they got on the phone to mum and suddenly developed plums in their mouths. This was back when the payphones in the stair wells in Halls still got some use. Having gone to the local comp in Essex and never met anyone from a private school before it was startling to find so many of them had been - not that people would actually tell you that, it being very unfashionable, but I soon figured out that if they'd studied classics they'd almost certainly gone to private school. I loved uni. Looking back I worked far too hard and didn't go out nearly enough, but then I was first-generation uni so I really wanted to do well to justify my parents paying fees and taking out a loan (in retrospect both tiny!) to be there.
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Post by tmesis on Sept 24, 2017 19:16:32 GMT
tmesis I went to Royal Holloway too! I was there 2000-2003, so Eminem was all the range and all the posh kids spoke like rappers from a dodgy bit of London until they got on the phone to mum and suddenly developed plums in their mouths. This was back when the payphones in the stair wells in Halls still got some use. Having gone to the local comp in Essex and never met anyone from a private school before it was startling to find so many of them had been - not that people would actually tell you that, it being very unfashionable, but I soon figured out that if they'd studied classics they'd almost certainly gone to private school. I loved uni. Looking back I worked far too hard and didn't go out nearly enough, but then I was first-generation uni so I really wanted to do well to justify my parents paying fees and taking out a loan (in retrospect both tiny!) to be there. Yes, once I got used to it I really loved it and have barely moved out of the area. The strange thing is, although I found the public school vibe very alien, I actually thought all universities were like that, because the whole concept of university was so off the radar for someone from a very working class mining village in Derbyshire. No one in my family had ever been to university and no one I knew had either. Luckily I shared a room with a nice guy from Liverpool, but even he seemed a bit posh because his dad was an accountant!
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Post by Tibidabo on Sept 24, 2017 20:00:20 GMT
THREE trips this weekend to and fro to uni and Mini Tibs is now installed and, apparently, currently being shown the best pubs by 4 second year male medics. (It's in the guise of some sort of 'buddy' system.....😵) She's on the same course with her best friend from school and they have already been nicknamed 'The Sisters!'😷🚑💉🍷
And, probably because her room is quite small, something strange has happened. She has hung up her clothes. (Well, she kind of handed them to me to hang, but still..) At home she's always used the floordrobe.👚👗👠👖
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Post by couldileaveyou on Sept 25, 2017 14:58:23 GMT
Today was my last first day of uni
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