Wednesday 1 July 2020

Girl in Blue Blogs About...: Why Giving Blood and Being a Black Donor Matters.

Girl in Blue Blogs About...: Why Giving Blood and Being a Black Donor Matters.: Here is what happens when you go to donate blood as a black donor. Firstly, if you are not registered to give blood… go and d...

Thursday 28 March 2019

Why Giving Blood and Being a Black Donor Matters.






Here is what happens when you go to donate blood as a black donor.

Firstly, if you are not registered to give blood… go and do that here:https://www.blood.co.uk/the-donation-process/registering-online/

Below is a quick video showing you just how quick and easy registering to donate really is.




But what do I need in order to register to give blood, I hear you ask but don’t fret dear reader, I will break it all down for you, it’s a very simple process that will make a huge difference to many people’s health and lives. To become a blood donor (with the NHS of course,) all you need is…
1.      An online account which requires you to enter your email address and make a password (not too difficult please remember, this is an easy process.)

2.      Verify your email address through the link they will send you.

3.      Then you will be asked to enter further details about yourself such as Name title etc. If you have given blood before, you will have what is called a Blood donor ID, 9 characters in length but don’t worry if you either do not yet have one, can’t remember if you do or if you’ve lost it, you can still go forward with the registering process.
4.      Enter you ethnicity group (From the options listed.)

5.      Pop in your home number, mobile number and address (the first two required in order to contact you about appointments, and an address to point you in the direction of the nearest blood donation session to you,) and congratulations, you’re a registered donor!

Once you have completed all of this, you will be told where you’re closest location to donate is and when the next session will be. Blood donations are usually run every few months and the time slots vary. The nursing staff will aim to have your entire session from last less than an hour from start to finish. Now, let me tell you exactly what to expect when in an average blood donation session.

What to Expect

If you have already made an appointment over the phone ahead of the scheduled session, the week prior you should have received a form to fill out via post. Depending upon whether you are a first time donor or a returning donor, the form you get will be slightly different. The form will ask questions about the following, your sexual physical health, travel patterns, any body piercings or tattoos you may have and how long ago.
These screening questions are to ensure you are in relative good health in order to go forward (hopefully) with regular donation. Once you arrive at the actual appointment, you will hand in your sheet, be given a cup of water and directed to a seating area with some reading material about the importance of giving blood and what to expect afterwards e.g. no heavy lifting, what to do if (in rare instances) the bleeding hasn’t stopped after a certain amount of time. You will be asked to read this information thoroughly before proceeding further into the session.

Once your name is called by one of the nurses, you will be taken to cubicle where you will be asked to confirm answers given on your screening sheet. Then your middle finger on a chosen hand will be pricked and a drop of blood taken and tested for iron deficiency.

If all goes well, you be then be seated in a (very comfortable,) recliner chair and the blood donation process can begin. The area of your arm in which the needle is placed is swabbed thourougly before the needle is (gently and with precision,) inserted into a vein on an arm of your choosing and you are off to the races giving blood! (Hoozah!)

You will be asked to do some exercises while donating in order to help maintain your blood pressure e.g. balling up your fist for a few seconds, un-balling (lather rince and repeat.)

All in all the donation process (so long as you keep that blood pressure up!) will take about 15 minutes. Needle removed, small plaster to take its place and you’ll be away… for a snack (my favourite part,) where you will sit for as long or as little as you like before being able to go on your way and viola! Congratulations you donated blood for the first time!

It really is that simple and very rewarding to know you are contributing to your own community’s health. And after a few times of donation, you will receive a key ring with your blood type on so you can find out how rare (or common) your blood type is (we all secretly want to be the rarest), however all blood types are needed especially within the black community so please do not hesitate to register, find your nearest donation session and change black lives today! You never know when you or someone you love might also be in need of blood, all the more reason to donate ASAP!


The Terrifying Truths

Right now, we need more people from all minority backgrounds to register and donate blood and here is why it matters.

“There are racial and ethnic differences in blood type and composition. Your blood type is inherited in the same way as your eye and hair colour. That is why it is almost impossible to find a rare blood type that is needed to transfuse an Asian patient, for example, in a donor who is caucasian, and vice versa.”

The more people from minority backgrounds who donate, the more people from minority backgrounds suffering from disorders such as sickle cell are able to receive the blood type they need in order to live their lives as fully as possible. Despite making up 14% of the population, fewer than 5% of the ethnic minority population are donors, this is a huge issue as a large percentage of people who suffer from blood disorders such as Sickle Cell (90% in black British patients) and Thalassaemia are from ethnic minority backgrounds. 1% of those donors are from black backgrounds.

It is estimated that 1,000 people in the UK have thalassaemia, and between 13,000-15,000 people in the UK have sickle cell disease.”

The NHS has a goal to register at least 40,000 more black donors, will you help by becoming one of them?

Please register to give blood today and help bring these shocking statistics down.

For more in depth information about blood donation within black communities and the effects of disorders such as Sickle Cell, click the link below.





Wednesday 30 January 2019

Middle Age Men.


This post is going to be an angry one so buckle up.


I am so sick of middle aged men who can't decide whether they want to fuck me or parent me. I'm also sick of the amount of shit my generation gets for being selfish, weak and any number of other negative adjectives and descriptors. The generation above us is pathetic. Childish, at times sexist men playing dress up as open minded to get younger women lurk around every corner. Not because they want to relive their youth or even maybe (and sadly,) because they wish to prove that they quote 'still have it' but because they think we are easier to manipulate, degrade and control. Not I said the cat (me being the cat in this situation). Fuck that and fuck them. Don't get me wrong, males my age can be immature and flaky as all get out but by gum if older men don't give them a run for their money in who can act the least like their age.


Recently, I have seen an increasing amount of men hiding behind a more laid back and open minded facade, reveal their true colours. It may only have been a flash of anger, a hint of bitterness but I saw it and it was enough to raise a red flag. Being older shouldn't mean your world view is given more merit than that of a person younger than you mostly because it doesn't mean your view is any good. Take for example the very ugly prejudices that older people are more likely to carry around in their back pockets, bringing them uninvited to family parties and falling back on the age old excuse of 'it was a different time back then.' Your age doesn't make you better than anyone, it doesn't 100% of the time mean that you have all the right answers, sometime you're just too old and too bitter to get it and that's fine but there is a difference between wisdom and age and for some folk, never the twain shall meet.



My body, my mind, my mouth. Don't like it, fuck off  because I have a father and he doesn't act anything like any of you lot.


Rant over.

Wednesday 10 October 2018

World Mental Health Day. 6 Things I Want You to Know


It's World Mental Health Day. So let's talk about it.

But since I'm not in the best mental space myself to and I've never been much for long posts, here are 6 things I want you to remember or know (if you don't already.)

1. Your mental health journey is completely your own.

Sounds painfully obvious but I think that we forget while we're sharing every bowel movement on social media, that no one is entitled to know where your head is at. It's perfectly okay to admit that you are struggling, just please don't feel you owe an explanation to strangers on the internet. You don't.

2. Feeling alone is normal.

Again I bring up social media because it is such a wonderful invention. Connecting with people all across the world it can feel like you're surrounded by friends. And not to belittle that feeling because I honestly think it's a genuine feeling to have, this doesn't always mean that you feel seen and heard. Actually, this is true of the literal people around you too, I live in a house filled with people and yet there a times (now especially,) when I feel so unbelievably alone, it's hard to cope. When you start to feel this way, please remember to reach out to someone, even if in your current mindset you believe they won't care, chances are, they've been waiting to feel seen and heard too.

3. Fight the darkness.

When you're in that dark place your mind takes you to from time to time, the easiest possible thing to do would be to submit to it. Stay in bed because who will honestly miss you? Drop that hobby because it was never really going anywhere in the first place. I get that feeling and I am guilty of giving in to it on occasion too. But here's the thing, when you get out of bed and do something as simple as have a shower, you are showing yourself that you can't be beaten and you don't wish to occupy that dark place for very long. Easier said than done of course but that is why you have to do before you can dismiss it. Never stop fighting.

4. Take care of you.

I don't know that people take the time just be with themselves enough without feeling self conscious or guilty. Sometimes you just need to not be around people. I know that this is true for me, people drain me, I feel anxious and switched on. There is no shame in switching off for a while and it doesn't have to be anything extravagant. It could simply be watching a show you enjoy, reading a book or taking a walk. I personally every now and then like to go to the cinema in the middle of the day, sit in the dark sparsely attended theater and just switch off. It's a good way to look after your mental health, whether you are suffering at the moment or not, everyone needs a sanctuary.

5. Look for joy.

Seeking out things that bring us joy seems impossible when we feel like joy is avoiding us. No body like rejection. It might sound odd to associate laughter with depression but I think there is an important point to be made. People often assume that because someone is laughing, they are happy overall, true in that moment they are experiencing joy but who is to say that once that moment of sunshine is over, that the clouds won't descend upon them once more? But here is my main point, be that person who experiences even fleeting moments of joy, watch an an entire YouTube playlist dedicated to cute and inspiring animal videos, watch a shit tonne of TED talks, try ASMR (if that's what you're into, I won't judge,) just find something to make you believe if only for a moment, that the entire world isn't a flaming ball of shit. You might be surprised how nice it is to find yourself laughing.

6. Let. It. Out.

Lastly but most importantly. Do NOT bottle up your feelings. When has this ever helped anyone in the long term? Answer never. How you feel is how you feel, there is no use denying, suppressing or ignoring it. It won't go away and even if it does, don't expect it not to come back all the stronger and in a way you have no control over. If you're not a big crier (like me,) find a form of expression that works for you (and doesn't get you arrested.) Throw some chipped plates at a wall in your back yard, write it out (Hello!) sing, rant to yourself (another favourite of mine) rant to a friend or a family member (one who is willing to just listen) but whatever you do, for fuck sake don't push it down and pray it'll move onto the next one. You feel this way for a reason, addressing it is the only way to ensure that the next time it knocks at your door, you're armed with tools to tell it to fuck off.


So there it is, my 6 (odd number I know,) World Mental Health Day tips I want you to know. You are not in this totally alone, there is always someone who will understand and want to help you, you just have to find one of them (honestly there are loads!)

Linked below are a few websites to help you on your road to a healthier mind.

Be kind to each other and to yourself.

Love,

The Girl in Blue
xoxo

World Mental Health Day website: https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/campaigns/world-mental-health-day

Mind, for better mental health: https://www.mind.org.uk/



Monday 24 September 2018

Dear God Please Lets Talk About: Cultural Appropriation...


And how it's not a thing. Well at least not in the way hyper sensitive and often 2nd generation immigrants think it is anyway.

 My grandma beams with excitement and enthusiasm whenever she is able to share her West Indian heritage with people, the food she enjoys cooking, the music she once danced to as a youth "back home" and all that enthusiasm clashes so harshly with the concept of 'cultural appropriation'. As though an openness and willingness to invite other people from other cultures into your own is some kind of abuse. That they by entering into it, ready to soak up the beauty, are invaders bursting through the locked gates, rather than welcomed guests. It's so odd.

 Odder still is that whenever I see the phrase used, it's seldom by immigrants or natives of the culture but instead their spoiled 2/3nd etc generation kin. And as an aforementioned grandchild of immigrants, I wonder if it's a disease of my generation that we're constantly looking for something to fight against, an injustice to march for, an itch to scratch... but we have nothing and so we nitpick.

 One moment it's who can wear braids in their hair, the next it's rewriting the age old definition of racism to mean power + privilege. The similarity between all these 'issues' is that they pail in comparison to the fight our parents and grandparents had as unfamiliars in a new country, dealing with the insults and the whispers and the mistrust. Now we walk down those same streets that we've likely grown up on and think nothing of looking differently than the person who passes us by. I'm not suggesting we live in some post-racial paradise but we're a hell of a lot closer than our grandparents were and it's because of them. Does it ever occur to the champions and gatekeepers of 'other cultures' that perhaps our grandparents and the natives of the countries they moved to, used the act of sharing and learning about cultures other than their own to integrate into communities that transcended cultural differences? No of course not.

My family's ability to be so open to everyone they meet regardless is perhaps why I have such a 'relaxed' view on culture and who can have what. I just don't think it matter whether a little girl on holiday in Jamaica wears braids in her hair or if a high school student goes to prom in Chinese attire. You know why I don't think it matters? Because I don't automatically assume that either are doing so with any malicious intent, curiosity isn't ignorance and it isn't a crime. I also am not so arrogant as to assume that the things within 'my culture' belong solely to or  originated from said culture. These people don't even bother to do any research before they attempt to snatch the chopsticks from your hand. They never seem to know all that much about their precious and protected cultures. It's like mate your culture is x-box and kebabs, chill out. Maybe they cling to their parent's culture so hard because they are further removed from it, they have grown up eating different food, speaking a different language alongside eating their parent's traditional food, speaking their parent's native tongue etc. Either way, if you act like you are the only one who can enjoy your culture guilt free, you're a dick.

 I find people who act as guard dog to their grandparent's culture and think of themselves as some sort of defenders of a homeland they've probably never been to more than once, pathetic. What makes you think that if the people who left their home countries so that their future family (YOU,) could have better opportunities are un-bothered and actually excited by questions about their culture, interest in clothing and food, that you should be? What makes you so fucking special? Stop being so precious because chances are, you're not doing it because you actually give a monkeys about 'your culture' but because you enjoy punishing people and engaging in tribalism and calling it progressive. You just end up looking like a total arsehole. Why are you trying to discourage people from taking an interest in other cultures? Surely you're aware of all the awful events that have happened over the course of history because people were insensitive to other cultures, after all you do love to spout on about the oppression in YOUR history.


Rant over, hopefully we all learned something.


Stop being a culture hog, they are (most of them,) are beautiful and worth learning about.


Love,

The Girl in Blue
xoxo

Monday 28 May 2018

'13 Reasons Why' is a shit show.


Okay, I have so many thoughts, feelings and concerns about the show '13 Reasons Why' that I can barely think straight.

I watched it quite a few months ago and almost every one of the 13 episodes left me agog and aghast. I shit you not, this post has been on the books ever since. And now OF COURSE THEY HAVE A SECOND SEASON! I'm torn between the urge to hate watch just to see how they could possibly justify it's existence and not giving this dumpster fire of a show anymore attention (bar this post of course). Not only is the writing questionable but the plot and the motivations of most of the characters play out like they were thought up by angry 12 years olds.

So here it is.

SUICIDE IS NOT A FORM OF REVENGE!

Honestly I could just leave it there and the people who have suffered through the show will know exactly what I mean, whether you agree with me or not is irrelevant but you should know what I'm talking about.

Since I doubt that if you're reading this and you haven't seen the show by now, this post is not going to sway you to watch it, I'll give a brief summary of what goes down in this fucked up show.

*Side note: I can't actually believe how much praise this show has been getting, it's fucking awful.


The show focuses on the central character Hannah, who when we join the story is already dead of suicide. Now we all know what suicide means but apparently the writers of the show, the character of Hannah and all of the other idiot characters (especially Clay bless his heart,) seem not to know what the fuck it means.

Clay (our other, far more likable main character,) is left feeling all kinds of gutted that his friend is gone, then he receives a box of tapes that Hannah made shortly before committing suicide. Roll credits '13 Reasons Why'. When I say tapes I do indeed mean cassette tapes, you know those things that were around (for the very start of my music consuming career,) in the 80's and 90's that got all tangled up in your mum's tape player? Yeah she records her '13 reasons' on cassette tapes (front and back of course). Maybe this is the cynic in me but am I the only one who rolled her eyes at this concept, like OF COURSE IT WOULD BE ON A CASSETTE TAPE! How else will anyone know how different and out there the character of Hannah was!? It just screamed pretension to me and trust me that was just the beginning.

And at this point dear reader you may be thinking, 'Hmm 13 reasons why what? Why she loved her dear friend Clay? why she felt so low and desperate that she took her own life? 13 reasons why he shouldn't feel guilty about her death?' Yeah no scrap all of that because what Hannah does instead is create a box of blame and then peaces the fuck out.

As you probably guessed the 'reasons why' is referring to reasons why Hannah dead. And let me tell you I sat through the whole bloody show and only one (one and a half at a push,) of the reasons were serious enough to create so much despair and anger in Hannah.

I forgot to mention that this show is set in high school, I know right? Bloody school, a shit time for most, a hell scape for others but here's the thing, life is hard, school is a part of that and most of the reasons on Hannah's list are average high school experiences that in an emotionally stable teen would cause no more than a week or two of commotion.

In no way am I trying to downplay teenagers who do actually suffer from mental illness and suicidal thoughts, I am simply stating that Hannah was not an accurate depiction of one.

Let me explain.

Firstly, the character of Hannah is far from a sympathetic one. You would think that in a show aimed at impressionable young people (myself included,) the writers would try and dumb it down for us by at least making us feel empathy and or sympathy for ONE OF THE BLOODY PROTAGONISTS. But alas, Hannah is cold, judgmental and kind of a bitch to her friends. What is there to like about her? I couldn't tell you, if the writers were hoping her death alone would be enough to make me like this girl, they really shit the bed on this one. Not even her being dead made her more tolerable.

Secondly and this is my biggest problem with this show, the way Hannah goes about her own death, planning it out, taking the time to pin point each and every problem (and I mean the slightest gripe,) with people she thought had done her wrong (honestly if you looked at this chick sideways in the hall one day, you're going on the tapes.) I wish I was exaggerating dear reader but it's true, there was indeed a character who was put on the tape simply for publishing a poem of Hannah's in the school paper. And the show acts like this kid is the devil and we're supposed to take it seriously as one of the reasons why she committed suicide!?

Not only does this demonise a teenager for behaving like a teenager, it praises Hannah for reacting like a drama queen. Why would this ever be a reason a person would become suicidal? It's honestly a joke. Like I mentioned earlier, something serious does happen to Hannah something very serious and just awful and that for me was the singular moment that justified her despair however even that raised some issues because she goes on to the blame a teacher for not being a mind reader.

I'd rather this post wasn't too long and so I'm just going to cut to the chase (and maybe follow with a part 2.)


The biggest reason that this show sucks is that it puts this dead girl up on a pedestal for killing herself, not asking for help and worst of all seeking revenge through her own death. Just think about it for a moment, taking the time to sit down (supposedly in a suicidal haze,) and direct blame and responsibility for you deciding to take your own life, to your peers for the dumbest most trivial things? That doesn't sound like Hannah was suicidal, it doesn't sound like it should be a preachy Netflix original about actions having consequences, it sounds like a fucking horror movie.

Imagine being so vindictive and immature as to spend time not reaching out to your friend or your counselor for help but to craft cruel tapes of shame doling out responsibility for the way YOU feel and taking none for your own actions (because a lot of the situations she blames people for she is NOT as innocent as she would have us believe her to be.) What made my jaw drop even more though was that, among the people who had also watched the show (mainly my friends,) I seemed to be alone in my thinking. They were so blown away and empowered and angered by Hannah's actions while I just wondered what the fuck I had just watched.

However and surprisingly when I turned to the internet for sanity, I was met with well, sanity. Reams and reams of articles, vlogs and even studies about how harmful the messages being sent on this show were to it's intended audience. Studies indicating that suicidal people should never be shown depictions of suicide (of which there is a very graphic one in the show) People who mirrored my dismay at the disgusting notion that your suicide should be motivated by a 'I'll show them' mindset.
I don't know of many suicidal people who plot the downfall of the people they blame mostly because they are busy actually being suicidal not verging on sociopath like Hannah.

I will finish off by saying that I've been following the responses to the second season and I am pleased to say that they are not good. There has been much controversy around certain other brutal scenes depicted in the show. But what I mostly saw was exactly what I had thought when they announced season 2 and that is...

What the fuck for?


God this show is a train wreck. No hate to the actors of course they seem passionate about the message which makes it even more sad that the only messages it sends are bad ones.


If you watch this show, goddess help you, if you don't, I hear Brooklyn Nine Nine has just been saved from cancellation... just putting that out there.

Suicide is NOT a form of revenge, say it with me people!

Love,

The horrified and angry Girl in Blue

xoxo