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What does International Women’s Day mean?

International Women’s Day will be celebrated on Thursday, March 8 – but what does it mean?

Miranda Brawn and Paris Lees
Miranda Brawn and Paris Lees

Paris Lees, the award-winning writer, TV personality, presenter, and equality campaigner, will explore the day’s significance at a panel discussion organised by the University of Brighton.

The University alumni will be joined by others at the Women of Impact event including award-winning businesswoman and diversity campaigner Miranda Brawn who received an honorary Doctor of Letters from the University last year.

Panelists will also reflect on their career paths and discuss “how different aspects of a woman’s identity intersect with gender to affect their experiences in the world and the workplace”.

International Women’s Day is a worldwide event that celebrates women’s achievements – from the political to the social – while calling for gender equality. It has been observed since the early 1900s and is now officially recognised each year on March 8.


Event: International Women’s Day 2018: Women of Impact panel by University of Brighton Equality & Diversity Team

Where: Sallis Benney Theatre, University of Brighton Grand Parade Building

When: March 16, 2018

Time: 2.30pm

Cost: Free event

To reserve a place online, click here:

Sussex ME Society hold weekly Yoga classes

Sussex ME Society now holds weekly Yoga for ME classes in Hove for all ages and abilities in a warm and supportive atmosphere.

This is an opportunity for those affected by the illness and others to truly relax and enjoy gently moving with the breath, which creates calm in the mind.

With expert guidance each session aims to leave people feeling relaxed and energised.

For more information call 01273 674828 or view: www.measussex.org.uk

Residents roll up their sleeves to Spring clean the city!

Residents across the city roll up their sleeves ready for this year’s Great British Spring Clean weekend.

With support from Brighton & Hove City Council, dozens of community minded residents will be getting together to tackle litter hotspots, from parks and squares, to woodland and rights of way.

Litter picking events are taking place across the city as the council encourages residents, businesses and community groups to get tough on grime and clean up the city’s litter hotspots.

Equipment, including gloves, litter pickers, brooms and sacks will be provided for anyone wanting to run or take part in an event and help rid the city of unsightly rubbish.

The events are part of the year’s Great British Spring Clean, organised by the Keep Britain Tidy group.

One event, in Preston Park tomorrow, Sunday March 4, will mark the official launch of the council’s Tidy Up Team. The Team, which trains volunteers to run litter picking events in the city, has already been making a big difference cleaning up parks and open spaces.

The Preston Park event, will include a Silent Disco and Superhero Costume Competition with prizes including cinema tickets, vouchers, t-shirts and badges and takes place from 11am to 2pm

Organised by the council’s CityParks rangers and CityClean the event will promote the council’s anti-litter campaign and raise awareness about the problems caused by litter and especially plastic waste. Members of the Tidy Up Team will be available to answer questions and there will be opportunities for volunteers to get more information and sign up to the scheme.

Cllr Gill Mitchell

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the council’s Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee, said: “Members of the Tidy Up team are already doing a fantastic job, organising and supporting events which encourage residents to help  clean up their neighbourhoods.

“The Great British Spring Clean events provide a great opportunity for us to promote the team and attract new volunteers. I hope many residents will be encouraged to give up a little of their time to make a big difference to parks and open spaces across the city.”

Anyone interested in becoming a Tidy Up Team volunteer can visit the council website and fill in an online form. They will then be added to the waiting list for a training course.

Any questions should be emailed to cityparks.volunteers@brighton-hove.gov.uk  or telephone 01273 292929.


Other events in Brighton & Hove include:

 

Stanmer Woods

Sunday March 4, from 10am

Meeting point – Upper Lodges Car Park off Ditchling Road.

For more details email: brightonandhoveway@gmail.co

Blakers Park Spring Clean

Sunday March 4 – 10.30am to 11.15am

Meeting point: Blakers Park Clock

Organiser: Friends of Blakers Park

FEATURE: MindOut – Not exactly strangers

One man’s story of accessing MindOut’s services www.mindout.org.uk

Jon would have said that his community was his work team, probably. He had been out as gay for many years, but didn’t socialise or go out to LGBT venues or pubs or clubs. He really wasn’t bothered. His family were spread all over the world, they kept in touch but he wouldn’t have said they were close. He had moved to Brighton three years ago, he lived in a flat and had only ever met one of his neighbours. He wouldn’t have said he was unhappy, depressed from time to time perhaps, but nothing a drink or two wouldn’t take the edge off.

Then his world shrunk when the company he worked for suddenly closed. He was shocked, hadn’t seen it coming at all. He was fairly confident he could find another job, but it would take a few months. Luckily he had a bit in the bank, he could pay the rent and eat, but not much more.
Jon had time on his hands for the first time in ages. He soon found himself feeling very low, wondering what the point was, what next. He realised how lonely life could be. He stopped going out, going out alone only reminded him of how much he lacked friends, company, someone to share things with. He started drinking more, even though that made him feel worse the next day.

One day, chatting with his brother on the phone, he started to talk about how he felt. His brother was lovely, shared some of his own depressive experiences, which surprised Jon. He’d had no idea that his brother had been through difficult times, he’d always seemed very self-contained, on the surface. His brother suggested Jon look for some support locally. At first Jon was very sceptical – he was not keen on talking to strangers. Then he saw MindOut’s flyers and wondered if going to an LGBTQ place might be better – not exactly strangers, perhaps.

First of all he contacted the MindOut online service, it was easier somehow, not to have to talk to someone directly. That went ok, the person on the other end was kind and helpful. He agreed to come in and talk to someone there about joining a group.

A few days later he went to the first meeting of a peer support group to talk with other LGBTQ people about mental health. He wasn’t sure that he would like it, or like the other people, but he was determined to give it a go.

Jon was shocked and amazed. Amazed at the stories he heard, shocked at how kind and interested other people were in each other, and in him! It wasn’t easy, some people’s lives were so hard, some of their stories so painful. But it did feel real, people spoke from the heart, there was no pretending everything was fine when it wasn’t. He came away feeling like he had been part of something, part of something useful, meaningful. He could see that people left at the end feeling better, and that had to be a good thing.

It wasn’t that Jon felt like he belonged overnight. It wasn’t that simple, but it gave him an inkling of what it might be like. It made him more curious about LGBTQ lives, about what being part of an LGBTQ community might be like, for him and for other people. It made him realise how deep his loneliness had been, it made him long to feel that connection.

Best of all was what he learnt about other people’s lives. He realised that he had assumed all LGBTQ people were fine now, coming out was easy, marriage possible, visibility so good. But he had only seen it from his own point of view…

At MindOut, Jon met people he would never have met before: women of all ages, younger people, black and minority ethnic people, all with a huge variety of mental health experiences.

He was very struck by conversations he had with people who had recently come to Brighton, some of them refugees. This was something he had not thought about much, what it might be like to be fleeing violence and persecution because of your sexuality or gender. It is such a hidden issue, and the people he met were so desperate, so anxious. He was shocked, too, at the racism they had to deal with, the exclusion they felt from the rest of the LGBTQ world.

Jon realised, for the first time, just how privileged he was as a white gay man who had enough money. He might be feeling lonely and isolated, but it was so much harder for people who really didn’t know where their next meal might be from, where they would end up, whether they would even survive.

Jon’s depression took time to lift. He got a job after a few near misses and is gradually settling in with a new team. He still attends the MindOut groups where he finds good company, some challenges and much to learn. He feels useful and knows now how important that is. He feels part of something worthwhile, and he knows that it’s precious.

MindOut offers safe LGBTQ spaces to explore mental health. We have advocacy workers, out of hours online support, peer support group work, peer mentoring and a counselling service.

All MindOut services are confidential, non-judgemental and independent.
• See their website www.mindout.org.uk
• email them: info@mindout.org.uk 
• or ring them on: 01273 234839

Matthew Todd talks alcohol, drugs and the mental health crisis in the LGBT+ communities

Matthew Todd has a long-standing association with Attitude magazine of over 20 years, most recently as editor.

Ahead of the paperback and audio release of his hugely successful book, Straight Jacket, Craig Hanlon-Smith caught up with the journalist, novelist, playwright and stand-up comedian, no less, to talk Attitude, career highlights and the mental health crisis amongst the LGBT population.

Crisis seems a strong descriptor, why do you think we’ve reached that point? 
“Because of the amount of people we’ve lost. I write about the short period of time where we lost a group of famous gay people to drugs or suicide including Alexander McQueen and my friend, the TV presenter Kristian Digby. Since then we’ve lost George Michael, the young bisexual American rapper Lil Peep and more recently Storm Chasers presenter, Joel Taylor, died from a ‘G’ overdose on a gay cruise.

“The amount of us who die through suicide or drugs overdose is astonishing and not just famous people. I regularly hear of friends of friends who are in serious trouble or hear that this or that person has passed away. Most of my long-term friends have seriously struggled. That doesn’t even take into account the other issues significant numbers of us have with self-esteem and self-worth and the numbers of us who seem to struggle finding or keeping serious relationships.” 

Matthew is keen to stress that he’s not being judgemental. “I include myself in that. This book is about my struggle as well. I hope people can relate to it because I’m talking about my own experience too. Of course there are more happy LGBT+ people than ever before but prejudice has taken its toll and there are too many of us not thriving as we should be. People seem to believe young people have it easy now but I don’t believe that’s the case. I met a young man last week who told me how he’s struggled to accept who he is, has issues with other gay men and so on. These issues are so common that I think we don’t see them; we just accept that’s the way we are. We can heal and it’s time for us to support one another to do that.”

But are these issues specifically gay ones? 
“When I first met my therapist (also gay), he said to me, ‘Of course you’re f***ed up, you’re gay,’ and it was like a lightbulb moment for me, a moment of relief. He then went on to say, ‘It’s not that you’re gay but because you’ve grown up in a society that has told you you are wrong at every turn.’ My play, Blowing Whistles, which we’re touring later this year, was a precursor to Straight Jacket. Something isn’t quite right with people, despite the advances we’ve made, a disproportionate number of people are simply not doing well.” 

Is now a particularly difficult or different time? 
“In a way. Kids coming out now are rejecting labels and not following the rules that we’ve set. It’s as though we don’t know what gayness means. There is a clear cultural language that we speak with similar experiences, yes, in terms of our film and music references, but in the past we’ve been on the attack because it was necessary but in some ways this needs to be re-examined. I also freely accept that this book is from a privileged position in the west, in particular the UK and US.” 

You’ve said you believe the mental health challenges LGBT people may face are connected to the levels of shame we experience when growing up. This year is the 30th anniversary of Section (Clause) 28. There hasn’t (to my knowledge) been much of a discussion of the long-term impact of Section 28 on people of our generation, and those younger who were in education during its 15-year tenure.

What role do you think it played in this sense of shame? 
“I think shame has always been there because society has told us being LGBT is shameful in itself. But I think that late 1980s period was particularly difficult. That’s the time I grew up in and it still affects me. It’s come up a lot in therapy. I was reading the tabloid press in those days and the homophobia was relentless. There’s a chapter in my book about it which seems to shock young people who had no idea how bad it was. For instance, one of the scores of homophobic cartoons in The Sun showed a man hanging his gay son with a noose from a street lamppost. There were messages in the press at that time of the emergence of HIV and AIDS and the hysteria that came with it, that we should literally kill ourselves. It doesn’t surprise me that lots of us are doing just that at a subconscious level with drugs and self-destructive behaviour because those messages went in.”

You describe yourself as a recovering alcoholic. When did you recognise that you had an issue that needed to be tackled?
“It’s weird to have that out there. Before I realised I had a problem with alcohol, I thought anyone who did was a lunatic who needed to be locked up. There are lots of people in recovery for drugs and alcohol issues, from doctors and nurses to lawyers and people driving buses. Famous people too, some of whom have been public about it; Elton John, Robbie Williams, Russell Brand, Boy George, Robert Downey Junior, John Grant (who wrote the foreword for my book), and many more. I realised eventually because a friend went into recovery and said he thought I had a problem too. I couldn’t see it. I didn’t drink in the morning or in parks on my own but I did drink most, if not every day. 

“I’d have one pint in the pub after work but would be there till closing time or find myself waking up with a stranger the next day. That happened a lot and it was getting in the way of my life. My rock bottom happened when I was late for a photo shoot with Daniel Radcliffe because I was hung-over. It all makes sense to me now because addictive behaviour like sex, booze, drugs etc are often a reaction to anxiety. I’m happy to be sober now as I have been for nearly four years. Life is much easier.”

How did you go about addressing it?
“I went into recovery in 12-step groups which are massively helpful and had therapy and started to change my life. Compulsive behaviour is never about the behaviour. So I wasn’t drinking just because I loved to but because I couldn’t bear the feelings of anxiety and self-hatred that were underneath. But I’ve had support to deal with those feelings. I’m not perfect now – we’re all a work in progress, right? – but I’m in a much better place than I was. It isn’t easy but it’s totally worth it. I never want to go back.”

The popular gay scene, especially but not exclusively in the UK, is very alcohol driven. How far do you think our cultural identity is embedded in an over consumption of alcohol and, of course, drug use?
“Absolutely. We’ve traditionally been only able to socialise and feel safe in bars and clubs. The gay scene was huge fun for me at times and life-saving in many ways. But I also wasted a lot of my 20s on it, trashed all the time, thinking my life only had meaning if people fancied me or wanted to sleep with me. When I see people posting selfies for ‘Likes’ I know that won’t make them happy. It makes you feel worse because it’s fleeting approval. It’s terrifying going to your first gay bar and so we get into the habit of getting drunk. Drinking can be great but it can easily overtake your life and it is a depressant in itself. If you’ve some self-esteem issues, drinking heavily is the last thing you should be doing.”

And sometimes the ‘gay-scene’ can be a challenging place?
“Exactly. In Straight Jacket I talk about our being unkind to each other. The scene isn’t always the friendliest place. We can be absolutely horrendous to one another and that’s one of the most painful parts of it all. We think we’re coming out onto a gay scene which will be supportive after we’ve gone through growing up in a heterosexual world and it can be fantastic but it can be unfriendly, shallow and alienating.” 

Of course young people, and in some cases all of us, now have the apps to navigate through, which is something we didn’t have to worry about in our 20s…
“The apps can be incredibly damaging. If we’re already feeling insecure and unattractive and there are people judging us on solely what we look like or we’re seeing that message that ‘if you’re not masculine enough, you’re not good enough’ over and over, then that can be really bad for our self-esteem. We’re meant to be a community and we can be really vicious to each other online including the racism that happens.”

Prior to the success of Straight Jacket, you were probably best known for your time as editor of Attitude magazine. What were your memorable highlights during that time?
“There were so many. It was an incredible ride. The best part was meeting all the everyday people who make a difference by campaigning or just being themselves – gay policemen, soldiers, teachers, parents and so on. It was also amazing to meet Prime Ministers and have a little influence on some of the agenda. I grew up obsessed with Madonna and got to sit down with her for an hour and 40 minutes on our own to interview her so that was amazing. Convincing Prince William to appear on the cover of a gay magazine for the first time was an incredible experience. Also co-creating the Attitude Awards and Attitude Pride Awards was rewarding because I think it’s positive for society to see a high profile event that celebrates our achievements similar to the GQ Awards. That would have been helpful to see when I was young.”

I’ve been a fan of Attitude and on a personal level it has played a significant role in my own development not only as a member of the LGBT community, but as a man. It was of great comfort to me 20+ years ago and for some years after – I learned a lot. Media publications, and how we access these, have changed enormously in the past five to 10 years. There sometimes seems to me to be a gulf between the intellectually demanding content of Attitude that’s in print and shared online, and the almost ‘locker room’ social media posts concerning the endowments of a certain Olympic diver or heterosexual reality TV contestant. How do you square that circle between Attitude playing an important cultural role and seemingly buying into the Grindr-esque Twitter posts? 

To what extent will a mainstream gay publication struggle to meet the needs of everyone it hopes to serve? Does or did that responsibility interrupt your sleep at night?!
“It totally interrupted my sleep. It was the most difficult thing; to try to make a magazine that was socially conscious but still sold copies and kept going. It’s probably a big part of why I left. Young people especially would write and tell me that the magazine was life-saving to them but others would complain about everything we did. 

“These are complicated questions, which I address in the book and could write a whole other book about. I’ve been part of the evolution of Attitude having joined in 1996. Back then it was meant to reflect the new confidence in the gay community and as a style and celebrity magazine that was different from the political magazines of the time. That appealed to me when I was 22, but as I got older I had some issues with that idea. By the time I became Editor I felt that the magazine should be more serious and political as well as being fun. I tried to do that whilst keeping that fun edge. 

“People like looking at sexy bodies. That’s human nature. We all do. So the Naked issues were the bestsellers. Harry Judd flew off the shelves. Often people complain about the sexy content but when gay magazines do something different the sales go down – the people who complain don’t support the covers, which are different. So we had David Cameron on the cover, grilling him, Stephen Fry, Attitude’s first out black gay man on the cover, the first lesbian, the first lesbian of colour, the first trans woman and so on. I don’t think we ever got much credit for that. I do think there’s a problem with the gay media being so flesh heavy but I genuinely think Attitude has been the best in that respect and we never got much credit for it. 

“I started this ‘Real Bodies’ feature inside showing normal guys, fat, thin, whatever talking about their bodies and no one ever seemed to notice. People also forget that most gay magazines operate on a fraction of the staff and budget that mainstream publications do, and they’re reliant on internet hits. They also miss the hard-hitting features we did like features on being gay and Muslim, the Chemsex issue which we led on, being gay in prison, cover interviews with Prime Ministers and politicians and so on. Someone complained about the current Body Issue of Attitude and said they’d much rather see a guy in his 80s, who was inside the magazine, on the cover than the sexy model. I would too but a commercial magazine that put people who weren’t famous or conventionally attractive on its covers wouldn’t survive. That’s the reality. I think people should support magazines like Attitude, especially when they do different covers that aren’t just shirtless men. Attitude only started because some guys decided to do it so I’d always recommend if people don’t like what they see, then to create something new themselves. I think that’s part of the message that change needs to happen – individually but also in the community and we can all be part of it.”

Straight Jacket by Matthew Todd is available in Paperback and from Audible from March 8.
@craigscontinuum

INTERVIEW: BAFTA Award-winning composer Jessica Curry chats to Nick Boston

BAFTA Award-winning composer Jessica Curry has championed the genre of video game music in her highly successful ClassicFM show, High Score, as well as composing works for the London Gay Men’s Chorus and others, and collaborating with Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy. Her recent successful tour of Dear Esther Live concluded last month at the Brighton Dome.

Jess is a Brighton resident and keen fellow choral singer Nick Boston caught up with her to find out more.

When did you first start composing music?
“I don’t come from a musical background at all but my mum bought a piano for me and my brother. I started lessons when I was four and absolutely loved it. I was always writing little songs; the first Mozartian classic being ‘Jessica Curry is in a hurry, she’s going on holiday/Hip hip, hurray, she’s going on holiday’. I think you can spot the innate talent right there. So it’s fair to say that writing music has always been part of my life.” 

How would you describe your musical style? Who are your musical inspirations?
“My music is often described as being melancholy but with a great deal of hope within it: there is always the chink of light in what I write. I wasn’t classically trained and I wonder sometimes if that frees me from convention. I always start with my emotional reaction and then work from there. I don’t take on many projects so each one that I commit to gets my full heart and soul – having that time to explore and question is invaluable, I think, and it gives you the headspace to experiment and to avoid those easy tropes. My musical inspirations are varied and ever-shifting but at the moment I’m listening to a lot of Joni Mitchell, The Bird and the Bees, John Harle, Saint Saviour, Charles Ives and Zbigniew Preisner.” 

So how did you get into composing music for video games?
“I can honestly say that composing for interactive music was never on my agenda! Husband Dan asked me to write the music for his first game, Dear Esther (developed by Brighton-based The Chinese Room). It was also my first game soundtrack – it’s not an interactive score: I had never played a game when I wrote it so I just wrote the music that I thought fitted the game. In retrospect I do think that that naivety played in my favour. Because I wasn’t aware of the conventions of game music, it completely freed me just to write. I wouldn’t advocate ignorance as a best practice technique for everything by the way but I think it worked for us because Dear Esther itself defied so many gamic conventions. I never intended to write music for a game because, if I’m honest, I didn’t think that that world had anything of interest for me as a composer. I’m exceptionally glad to have been proved very wrong on this matter.” 

BAFTA Winner: Music for PS4 'Everybody’s Gone To The Rapture'
BAFTA Winner: Music for PS4 ‘Everybody’s Gone To The Rapture’

What’s it been like bringing Dear Esther to life on stage? 
“It’s been amazing and it’s been challenging. When I originally envisaged it I always thought of it as a pure live rendition of the game, not a theatrical interpretation. It also struck me that there was the really interesting concept of experiencing a game whilst sat with so many other people, most of whom are strangers. Players have had such a strong emotional experience to Dear Esther over the years and I wanted that to be experienced collectively, which I think adds another deep, sometimes profound, layer of immersion and emotion, especially when the game is so concerned with isolation and solitude. The best part has been experiencing the audience’s reaction – you look round and they are spellbound.” 

You’ve brought game music to new audiences with two successful series of High Score. How was that for you?
“I’ve absolutely loved writing and presenting High Score. It’s been so much fun and I’ve loved bringing in new audiences – the gamers who don’t listen to ClassicFM and the ClassicFM audience who maybe haven’t experienced game soundtracks before. There is another series in the works and I can’t wait.”

In her speech at the 2016 European Women In Games conference, Jess said: “If someone’s doing great work, reference their name, shout about them. A lot of women who write to me say that they don’t feel heard, they don’t feel seen and they don’t feel valued. Always think about how you can be signal-boosting your colleagues and shouting about their achievements’.”

So who out there would you shout about right now?
“I have been championing the work of three amazing composers for a couple of years now. Tess Tyler, Rebecca Dale and Luci Holland are all doing amazing work and I can’t wait to see where their careers will take them. I feel passionately about not pulling up the ladder behind me. I was fortunate to have people give me a helping had when I was beginning my career and it gives me great pleasure to be able to do so for others now that I’m more established.”

And what’s in the future for you? 
“I’ve just signed with Faber Music, which is incredibly exciting, so all of my back catalogue will be available to purchase as sheet music which is amazing! Dear Esther Live is going to be performed internationally and I will definitely be writing more game music for The Chinese Room. I’ve also just started work on a new classical piece, so it should be an exciting year.”

Dear Esther
Dear Esther

For more information, click here:

 

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