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29 October 2014
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    Julia Hames - Mum's the Word!
    Julia Hames.
    Julia gives us her view of life, the universe, commuting and nappies in the Three Counties.

    The Hertfordshire woman who has it all but can't remember where she put it!

    In a world where the perfect mother juggles work, home and a bloke, Julia manages to keep a pint of lager, a pizza and a baby all in the air at the same time.

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    Julia has lived in Hertfordshire for 12 years. She is currently working as an untrained and unsupervised mother of one in Watford, living every girl's dream as the partner of a fire station commander with his own blue light and suspended hydraulic platform.

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    LOOKING BACK IN ANGER

    Everywhere you go these days, someone is angry. Whether it’s road-rage, shopping trolley rage, 'nsurance claim rage (yes - well they lost my car!) or pushchair rage (OK, I hold my hands up to that one too), someone somewhere is puce with fury and losing control. Usually me.

    Julia Hames.

    We are led to believe by the experts, who obviously never get cross, that this is purely a symptom of our compound fractured society with its near-death respect levels for everything and everyone.

    Only today, as I strolled happily (I lie, it was a torment) round the Harlequin shopping centre, I saw a young woman verbally attack another woman. I think it was her mum - so let’s call it 'offspring rage' just in case any experts are reading.

    Anyway I stood open-mouthed as the young lady in question suggested her mother perform self-impregnation and then stormed off towards Top Shop. Thanks to the unusual acoustic qualities of the precinct, lots of us watched this sorry spectacle and then we all tutted, congratulated ourselves on having balanced kids and carried on with the pitiful business of Sunday shopping.

    "I stood open-mouthed as the young lady in question suggested her mother perform self-impregnation and then stormed off towards Top Shop"
    Julia - on a Sunday in the Harlequin Centre

    This girl wasn’t just a 'bit moody', she was wild with rage. Her face was like a half-mashed beetroot and she meant business. Had I been her mother, who incidentally looked petrified, I would have chucked her down the escalator but thankfully for her and me I am not.

    However it made me nostalgic, if that’s the right word, about the memorable rows I had with my mother during those Top Shop years.

    They fall broadly into four main categories: the big shouting and door slamming one, the chasing round the house and jumping out of the window one, (me, not Mum, and no it wasn’t second floor), the being ejected from Mum’s Chevette in the middle of nowhere one, and of course the packing my bag with make-up and school uniform and hitching to Grantham one.

    I think the only reason Mum drove the 40 miles to Grantham to pick me up was her fear that I might turn into a Tory. Anyway these rows would take place fairly often, usually triggered by her looking at me in a way I deemed offensive, and we would behave like a pair of hormonal banshees until something else distracted us.

    "....it’s not that we are angrier, it’s just that we do it more aggressively, publicly and theatrically."
    Julia on the Jerry Springer age!

    I recall one particular humdinger that was brewing up to another trip to Grantham when a large spider shot out from somewhere under my mother’s sofa rendering her mouth and mine quite paralysed.

    So what’s the difference between anger in 1985 and 2002? Well, I think it is the lack of an audience. In those days we got cross in a private, suppressed, "indoors", and above all singularly English way.

    Teenagers have always abused their parents, it’s just that thanks to an interminable diet of Jerry Springer and Rikki Lake, they now vent their rage in a pseudo Bronx patois, waving their arms around like any gangsta rapper you care to mention.

    Not surprisingly they are far more terrifying than I was, spitting and lisping through my brace and steaming my glasses up with indignation. So I have concluded that it’s not that we are angrier, it’s just that we do it more aggressively, publicly and theatrically.

    As the girl in the precinct hit boiling point, she probably believed she had been interviewed by a researcher and was in close-up on a pine and stained glass stage somewhere. I’m surprised she didn’t demand a lie-detector test, or a DNA test or both just to add to her performance.

    I think she was hoping a minder might separate her from the target of her anger but disappointingly for her there was just me trundling past with my pushchair trying to look disinterested.

    And it’s not just teenagers either, I saw a woman ram another with her shopping trolley during a fracas about bacon a few months back. So do we really believe that our ancestors with their ration books didn’t get just as het up in the banana queues of ‘43? I doubt it. They just didn’t worry about camera angles and selecting the biggest hoopy earrings that earlobes can sustain before going into battle.

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