Recent Posts by Nicole McLachlan

Bouncing Off The Walls – A Guide to Squash for the Middle Aged Lady

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Two days ago I played squash – for the first time since 1997. I am an idiot.

I would have blogged about it yesterday, but I underestimated – wildly, as it turns out – my fitness level.  As a result, I spent yesterday moving like Robot from Lost in Space.  It’s especially hard to type with arms that no longer bend.

So anyway, my girlfriend Moira and I decided to bring ourselves out of squash retirement, and give it another whirl. It seemed a top idea at the time.

Back in the day – way, way back in the day, when we were in high school, Moira and I and a group of our friends spent every Friday night at the Juniors Night at Corinda Squash. Also, we could meet boys. (We went to quite a stitched up all-girls Catholic school, so we took any opportunity.)

Anyway, 30 years ago (gah!) squash was pretty popular, and not at all uncool. It wasn’t achingly hip (it wasn’t the Zumba of its day) but lots of people played it – business men, housewives, school kids – and there were squash courts everywhere.

As well as Friday night squash, we played junior fixtures, and – allow me toot my own horn – we were pretty good.  If I’m being honest, Moira and the others were truckloads better than me – they had been playing for a few more years than me – but I wasn’t far behind.

And I was waaaaaaaay better at squash than I was at tennis.  Still am. After playing squash, a tennis racquest feels so enormous you’re dead certain you’re going to topple over if you try to hit a volley.

Squash had many of the benefits of tennis without many of the disadvantages. It wasn’t weather dependent, it was cheaper, but most importantly, you got to wear cute racquet sport fashions.  Back in our heyday, it was all about the pleated skirt (also seen on netball courts at the time). Obviously, given our tender ages and hotness (truly we were), we didn’t think twice about wearing flippy little skirts and singlet tops. Hell, we barely needed to wear bras back then, we were so pert.

Things have changed. A bit.

First of all, where the hell are all the squash courts? They always seemed so omnipresent – ugly blonde brick buildings with a giant “Squash” painted on the front wall, and often with a massive squash racquet perched atop a pole at the entrance to the carpark.


In 2011, I found a total of 4 squash courts on Brisbane’s northside, only one of which opened before lunch because they weren’t busy enough. Honestly, mid-morning was peak hour at Corinda Squash. You had to book weeks in advance, and even then you had to work around fixtures.

But Moira and I only had a certain post-dropoff window to play so we schlepped to Club Coops at Carseldine for our 9.30am booking. Turns out we didn’t so much need to book. The once state-of-the-art glass courts at Coops (glass courts were way cooler than the ummm, not-glass ones…) were deserted – all six of them. Still, it meant that our sons (on holidays, they’d been dragged along with the promise of a movie afterwards) could faff about with their various devices without annoying any serious players. The boys were just pleased there wasn’t anyone else around to witness their mothers humiliate themselves.

As it turns out, we didn’t humiliate ourselves. Not straight away. That didn’t happen until, oh, 5 minutes into it. when we nearly passed out. Not before we high-fived each other for “still having it” – i.e. the ability the hit the ball – and pretty well as it happens.  We just needed a little lie down between each point.

 

To clarify - we looked nothing like this

And there are the fashions.

The only flippy skirt I’ve worn in recent memory was attached to the plus-sized but comfy bikini bottoms I wear in the privacy of my own pool. And obviously, this time around, there were major supportive undergarments involved.

Not realising we could have played naked, given the absence of any other players, we both chose to wear 3/4 leggings and polo shirts. The leggings were a crap idea. Wearing them helped me finally understand the difference between those “compression” skins and my Country Road leggings which might be flattering under a winter swing coat, but they hold bloody nothing in place.

Our undergarments were more supportive than this

 

After the match (and I use that term lightly ) we were far too shagged to even consider showering and changing, so we decided to embrace the “post-gym yummy-mummy look” and head to Westfield Chermside as we were. With deodorant on board.

By the time we deposited the boys at the movies, the endorphins had kicked in (even they were exhausted) and we headed straight for Rebel Sport to kit ourselves out more appropriately for what we decided would be a twice a week squash habit. Obviously we had to replace the leggings. With skorts. Skorts are genius – skirts with built-in shorts. In flattering suck-in fabrics. How good is that?

Well, not as good as the PINK FLIPPY SQUASH (ok, tennis) DRESS I found. Yes, I’ve gone from playing squash in almost-trackie pants to frocking up like Maria Sharapova. I was a little disappointed that one can no longer buy frilly undies (unless you’re 3), so I also bought – are you ready – compression bike shorts to wear under my pink dress!

How I will look in my dress

Obvioulsy, given the seriousness with which we intend to take the squash caper, I can’t be using manky old hire racquets, so I also needed something more suited to our style. And this century. So I also shelled out for a new racquet that bore absolutely no resemblance to what I used to play with. I had been outraged when the Councillor put my old squash racquet in the Council Cleanup Pile (and even more outraged that it hadn’t been picked up by the cleanup trawlers looking for awesome stuff to offload on Ebay). But it did give me the justification I needed for a new racquet – yay me.

Yeah, not all that different

 

So, I may be $190 poorer, partially crippled, but I will look the business next Tuesday.

What sport or activity from your youth would you like to revisit?

 

 

 

There’s No Such Thing as a Feathered Friend

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So I’m ok with spiders (alright, ok-ish) I have no problem at all with heights, but put me within oh, say 25 metres of anything feathered – no matter how small – and I will almost certainly have a 10-on-the-richter-scale anxiety attack.

I don’t actually remember when or how my bird phobia started – but I suspect it involved a trip to the Currumbin Bird Sanctuary during my childhood – ta for that Mum and Dad. Obviously there’s no chance I’ll be making the same mistake with my own children, thoughtful parent that I am. No Bird Sanctuary for you kids.

And let me tell you, having a phobia about birds is exhausting – they are bloody difficult to avoid. That is part of the reason I am not so much an “outside” person. Unless my worst nightmare happens – a bird flies inside (more on that later) – I can be pretty secure in the knowledge that as long as there are 4 walls, a roof and closed windows (derr – that’s what airconditioning is for) I won’t have a feather-induced freakout.

Of course, it doesn’t always go that way…

Many moons ago, before The Councillor was a Councillor, he was the Public Relations Manager at Brown Brothers Wines in Wangaratta in north east Victoria (not at all a crap job).  Anyway, at the time, I was living in Brisbane (long story – a whole ‘nother post) and we were flying between Wangaratta and Brisbane every few weeks.

The Councillor was living in a little cottage on a big property just outside Wangaratta, sharing with a 19yo girl (I know, I know) who kept chickens.  It was the country after all.  I was down on one of my visits, and The Councillor and the flatmate were both at work. I woke up late (well, I didn’t have to go to work) and wandered into the kitchen, where I was faced with – literally – my worst nightmare.  Someone had left the back door open, and every single one of the flatmate’s 20 chickens was in the kitchen. To make it worse, the back door had swung almost closed – but stupid chickens, having wings instead of arms, hadn’t been able to pull the door open to get back out.

So not only was the kitchen full of chickens, it was full of freaked out chickens trying desperately to get the hell out of there.

Not as hard as I was trying to get out of there though.

I’m surprised The Councillor didn’t hear me screaming from his office 10km away, but the residents of “the big house” on the farm heard me, and came flying down the drive brandishing a shotgun to deal with the axe murderer they were sure had me bailed up.

I was not at all embarrassed to tell them that a kitchen full of mad-eyed chickens was every bit as bad.

There is one other defining moment in the story of my bird phobia.

Several years ago we lived in Manly, in Sydney. I was walking to the ferry, which generally meant navigating my way around dozens of “flying rats” aka seagulls. I usually managed this by walking as though I was full as a boot on moonshine – weaving my way between the various gatherings of seagulls on the path.

On this day however, when faced with an enormous flock of seagulls (I didn’t like the group either) on the path, I decided it was time to harden up, and walk straight through them.  As long as they didn’t take off (just typing this sentence is sending shivers down my spine) I’d be ok.  It’s the flapping that freaks me out.  So head down, I soldiered forth.

All good until I got to the perimeter of the flock – at which point a hot chip came sailing through the air from the direction of a picnic table next to the path.  The chip landed in the middle of the flock – at the exact same time as I stepped into it.  All 15,000 seagulls (yes there were) took off at once, and I was in my own personal hell.

I screamed, obviously, and then marched directly to the picnic table from whence the chip had come and began a rant that went a bit like this:

I can’t believe you threw a chip to those birds!! Can’t you read the signs?  Don’t you know you’re not supposed to feed the birds?! You’re obviously not local, or you’d know that the seagulls are just vermin! No local would ever feed them! I can’t believe you’d do something like this.” An on and on…

Now, I hadn’t taken any real notice of the occupants of the table, such was my indignation.  Until a lady from the table came up to me and quietly apologised for the errant chip, before going on to explain that the people at the table were physically and intellectually disabled, and one of them had just been trying to eat the chip, when he had inadvertently flung it in the direction of the seagulls.

No, there are no words.

And it’s proof that birds are the work of the devil.