"Ouch!"
Angie, forty-five, pretty in a hard sort of way, is taking
care of business. She is, she unashamedly admits, the
neatest bikini waxer in the world. I've been visiting
Angie for years at my local gym. The GoForIt Fitness Club
is an extortionately priced black-and-shiny-chrome ego
centre for professionals,heavy on self-absorption,light on
self-awareness. The purposely heavy-glassed building tries
to be desperately welcoming with the Jane Packer flower
arrangements at fifty quid a twig in reception, and the
blinding white waffle towels in the changing rooms which
everyone,whether they can afford to buy their own or not,
nicks. The overly air-conditioned studios have lights that
make members look far more blotchy and fat than they are —
or as they are — I can't work out which. And the nursery
is equipped with everything money can buy except carers
who like children.Sit and listen in this place for ten
minutes and you need not buy the Sunday papers. There are
the wives and mistresses who twitter to acquaintances they
need to know rather than want to know, believing friends
are to be kept close,enemies kept closer. Their spindly
manicured fingers swooping like swifts over tasteless,
indigestible salads,furtively nibbling at the organic
cucumber when no one is looking. There are the husbands
who hide behind broadsheet papers or mumble into hands-
free phones and window-shop at the aerobicized twenty-and
thirty-somethings in their sweaty White Stuff gear. Then
you have the tanned and toned tennis coaches in their
whites, calf and thigh muscles deliciously defined, who
strut like peacocks, their every word treated like a grain
of worldly wisdom by emaciated Traceys who live in Barnes
and Wimbledon Village who want to improve their stroke, on
the court. The supersized eighty-degree heated swimming
pools are full of noisy children watched neatly on the
side by pained mothers who've just had their nails, toes,
noses, eyes done and look ridiculous in the plastic blue
bags they have to wear around their latest Manolos or
Jimmy Choos. No working class here of course, but then
that's not what GoForIt is all about.It's about
professionals and professional accessories looking good
and being watched. And it remains,despite the happy clappy
attempts of the earnest club manager to squeeze soul into
the place,as anaemic and false as the smiles on the ladies
who Pilates through the pain. I go there for one reason
only. I go there because of Angie.
Angie is sharp of chin and nose and wit. She has luxuriant
long auburn hair and is permanently tanned,but genuinely
so (no St. Tropez muck for her, she tells me) and is model
thin. Long of leg, body and arm, she looks like a sexy
spider,if there is such a thing.She's had two husbands,
numerous lovers and several abortions.I think she has
Mafia connections because she's always hinting at me
should I ever want anyone 'seen' to, I should give her a
call. I don't think she means waxing. She talks in a posh
cockney accent so she sounds Australian most of the time.
She's become my counsellor as well as my waxer. Over the
years, she's seen me at my most vulnerable,emotionally as
well as physically. And well, to be honest, as every time
I see her I'm naked from the waist down, my legs splayed
dangling in midair, like some gigantic dead fly, I feel
it's a tad churlish not to open up lyrically as well as
literally about baggage and stuff whilst she waxes away.
She's waxed through my marriage (painful), the birth of my
child (painful but worth it), and my divorce (very painful
and thanks to focused solicitors Hughes Fowler and Symth
very worth it), but her waxing always causes me glazed eye
distress. It's okay pain. It's positive pain. It distracts
from other pain, alternating between the exquisite pain
induced by my career, the men, the lack of men,the sex and
the frustrations — the latter two are invariably
interrelated. She's given me pain. I've given her a few
laughs.Luckily,she doesn't charge for the listening,nor
the advice, just the waxing.
Today,she's giving me a 'target'. An arrow pointing
abruptly upward toward my belly button.I'm here with best
friend and soul mate Fran, who's in the next cubicle
getting her finger and toenails French polished and
eyelashes permed for, I've worked out, £1 a lash.
"Hazel, now put your hand on there. That's it. And stretch
that bit. Yep. That bit. Yep. All in the stretch. And pull
that bit over there. That bit, and hold on tight…"
Rip. The green-pea-coloured tea tree wax,which is
allegedly less aggressive than the powder-pink sludge
variety, tears fire into crotch. The green sludge is
supposed to soothe away all possible pain. It still
fucking hurts.
"Aghh, that hurts even more." I whimper, surveying red
blotches blossoming all over my nether regions.'Are you
sure the men won't think I've got herpes?"
"No, no, Hazel, this is quite normal. Quite normal. The
blotches will disappear. Try not to sleep with any one
tonight darling, or if you do, do it in the dark. But they
might feel the bumps anyway and suspect something's up.
Plus,don't have a bath,so they may not want to sleep with
you anyway.Whatever,when the blotches are gone,you'll love
it. You just wait. They'll love it. They'll get all
excited when they see it."
I'm trying really hard to visualise any of my recent
boyfriends getting excited by my arrow. Their faces
grinning inanely like five-year-old schoolboys who've
discovered the delight of the latest PlayStation game for
the first time. I can't. All I see are blotches. I imagine
their faces contorted in astonishment and possible disgust
as I seductively pull down the latest lacy almost-there
pink number from Victoria's Secret to reveal one of my own.
Really? I thought most men like something there. Well,
there is something there. An arrow. And it looks sexy. If
I were a man, I'd sleep with you, Hazel. And men don't
like it messy. They're lazy. They like a challenge only if
they think it's achievable. They don't like to forage for
anything too long, Hazel.
Some men like a challenge.
You just wait.
Angie winks at me, as though she knows I'm about to be
pounced on, tigerlike, by a prospective date as soon as I
leave the room. I'm not convinced but say,'Thank you,
Angie. You're sweet."
"So, what made you go all the way, love?" Angie asks,
gently rubbing cream into my crotch while I try
desperately not to get turned on. I'm not gay, but at
moments like this, I wish men could stroke women more like
women stroke women, if you know what I mean.
Not realising what she's referring to initially, I pause
briefly and then realising she's referring to my decision
to have a Brazilian wax, I answer.
"Oh, I wanted a tidy up. Something different. I'm the big
Four-O this year, so I want to change a few things. Take a
chance, I suppose, and I might as well start here," I say,
pointing to my crotch.
I look down at myself. My almost forty-year-old crotch.
Not bad. Doesn't look its age considering what it's been
through, but I don't know what an old woman's crotch looks
like. Not the sort of thing you stare at in the changing
room. Not the women's one anyway. I expect men compare
size but women don't have that. I've occasionally asked
boyfriends if women are 'different' down there. They've
all said, they are. Shape, size and taste. Some hair is
soft and downy, others, you could cut your chin on. Some
taste, er, strong, others like strawberries. Yeah right.
They've reassured me mine is lovely and soft and I taste
wonderful, bless them. Not that I would believe any of it,
of course. They would say anything to get good head.
"A fine place to start the new decade as any, I suppose.
Must say, you don't look forty. You're in good nick. You
don't have many grey hairs."
"I have highlights." 'I'm not talking about those on your
head, Hazel." Oh, right. "Plus, you don't have lines on
your face." (Looks more closely at my eyes) 'Well, not
many anyway. Helps I suppose, you not being married."
I smile.'No, happily divorced. Must be five years now,
Angie."
"Yep, must be about five. Watched you go down two dress
sizes, giving me a running commentary as it were.
Spontaneously bursting into tears halfway through the
facials. Angry one minute, sad the next, in mourning one
day,full of excitement the day after.But now look at you.
You're constant, well, as constant as I think you're ever
going to be, Hazel, and you're happy. You're a right
SARAH. Single and Rich And Happy."
"I'm not rich. I'm comfortable. Happy? Yes, I'm happy and
happily single. When I had the energy to make space for a
man, they couldn't handle a single mum with a young child.
Now Sarah's all grown up and off to university soon, I
don't know if I want someone else to care for."
"They could care for you, Hazel." 'No,it doesn't work that
way, Angie.You end up caring for the man. They're all
little boys — whatever their age. Frankly, I can only see
the downsides to marriage these days. None of the upsides."
Angie looks at me like a mother looking at her child whom
she knows is fibbing. She knows me too well. She knows I'm
a divorce lawyer and a very successful one at that.When it
comes to talking to prospective clients about their
relationships, I find a negative in every positive if I
want to, and a positive in something negative. So perhaps
I've started to believe my own bullshit over the years.
She says my views are warped and harsh and cynical.I say
they are realistic and based on observation and listening.
A lot. But I have hope. And my colleagues tell me that
hope I have, that single ingredient, makes me human. I
think it just makes me weak.
"No boyfriends then?" 'No boyfriend, right. I don't have
boyfriends anymore. I think when you're over thirty they
become lovers. How can you call a forty-or fifty-something-
year-old a boyfriend."
Angie looks at me again, giving me a wry smile. She's
penetrated my façade of ambivalence. The one I've become
so good at nurturing and practicing over the years. She
knows, Angie knows, I would like to meet someone, but it
sounds so pathetic. That phrase 'Dear Agony Aunt, I want
to meet someone." As though I don't meet another human
being in my daily life. Of course I meet men. I meet loads
of eligible deeply unhappy men. They also happen to be
deeply and overtly embittered and at that particular time
of their life, usually openly misogynistic. And the
wanting to meet people bit sounds strangely adolescent or
alien or both. And it's taken up so much of my thinking
time in past years. A waste of thinking space when there
is so much more to do and think about and care about in
this world — bigger issues, like, well, like world peace
and the cure for cancer, than 'wanting to meet someone'.
I'm thirty-nine, for Christ's sake. Not nineteen. Yet I
want that singular selfish rush to the brain — and be
honest with yourself, Hazel — to other parts of my body as
well. That buzz of electricity when you're within three
inches of the person's arm that I always misguidedly
diagnose as love, and is the more short-lived but no less
potent virus known as chemistry.