I'm so excited to finally be seeing Best Coast tonight I thought I'd write a little post for anyone who has somehow managed not to hear their summery vibes yet. Formed of the beautiful Bethany Cosentino (her initials are BC=Best Coast - it took me a while to get that) and the equally beautiful Bobb Bruno, Best Coast have just released their third full-length album, California Nights. All songs written by Bethany, the album tracks the highs and lows of a turbulent relationship, with lyrics like 'We've been taught to get along,respect one another and after all this time we still fight over the small thing'('Jealousy') and 'Guess you spent all your life comparing yourself to her, eventually you will find there's no one like you in this world' ('Fine Without You') , there's likely to be a track that resonates with you whether you're blissfully happy or recently heartbroken. You can hear 'California Nights' in it's entirety here; my faves are 'Fine Without You' and 'When Will I Change?'
Prior to 'California Nights' came 'Fade Away', a seven track EP that bleeds 90's California Pop-Punk. With tracks like'Baby I'm Crying' and 'This Lonely Morning' it seems Cosentino has allowed her self-confessed insomniac nights to influence her lyrics more than ever. Her songwriting could still be disregarded as unsophisticated ('I don't feel fine, I can't walk in a straight line') but Bethany's honesty about her anxieties, whether it be losing a love or growing up make 'Fade Away' one of Best Coast's most progressive releases yet. Get past the rather mundane start of 'I Don't Know How' and you'll be rewarded with one of Bethany and Bobb's best songs yet...
My favourite album of theirs (so far) is their second, 'The Only Place.' While writing this I looked up a few reviews of the album and came across a fairly scathing one from Pitchfork (which you can read here). Richardson complains of the album being 'robotic rather than relatable.' I couldn't disagree more. Yes, the lyrics may be simplistic and the songs predictable, 'verse/verse/chorus/verse/chorus/verse/chorus' is a formula that Cosentino seems to favour, but that doesn't make it a weak album. It's familiar and comforting, the catchy vibrant songs stuck in your head hours after you've heard them. It transported me away from a rather grey, rainy Leeds in the midst of third-year blues and took me to the sunny world of Best Coast, wherever it was they had the ocean, babes, sun and waves (Bethany's lyrics, not mine). Here are my favourite tracks form that album:
Last but not least, the debut album - 'Crazy for You.' Setting the scene for albums to come, 'Crazy for You' is classic Best Coast, whimsical lyrics and indie-pop that breaches into surf-rock for a few of the tracks.Bethany's songwriting is simple and honest, you can't help but feel endeared to her - 'I wish my cat could talk' ('Goodbye') - well, don't we all?! Also, the video for 'Our Deal' features the amazing Chloe Grace Moretz and is directed by Drew Barrymore. 'Crazy for You' wins hands down for me in terms of videos though, it's directed by cats and features a cheeky bag of 'cat nip.' Watch both below!
It’s my year anniversary today. I’m not likely to get any
flowers for it, Hallmark definitely don’t do cards for the occasion and I could
well be the only person who remembers it. The past year has been a weird one; I
moved home from Leeds, broke up with my first real love and left a job I
cherished. The things that got me
through were caring texts from friends, spontaneous trips to the seaside and
copious cups of tea. This day last year was the day I was admitted to Ward One
of the Becklin Centre in Leeds because I was in the midst of a psychotic
episode.
I wish I could say it was the first and only time it has
happened to me, but those of you who know me from school will remember a
similar thing occurring in the run up to the GCSE season. I’d always been a happy, cheery girl with a
pretty positive view of the world. I believed in the kindness of strangers and
liked my happy go lucky lifestyle. School was fun; I was in the selective class
(Pine sluts, wheeey) and predicted A*- B’s in the forthcoming exams. I had a
part time job selling shoes, hung out with my friends on Saturdays and was
seeing a boy I’d been crushing on for months.
I was a pretty average girl, until suddenly I wasn’t.
Stress is one of the key triggers of a psychosis; traumatic
experiences can also contribute or as it can occur as a result of drug or
alcohol misuse. In fact, when my episode begun at the tender age of sixteen
everyone around me was convinced the bizarre behaviour I was exhibiting was due
to drugs, until my cousin stepped in and reminded everyone that I was utterly
opposed to them! It just didn’t make
sense, one week I had been doing a Sociology project on the objectification of
female figures in the media (I was a feminist before I even knew what the word
meant) and the next I was in a secure hospital taking medication to keep me
from becoming ‘elated.’ My life was in tatters, the foundation of my world
crumbled and reality had, quite literally, escaped me. Psychosis is a mental health problem that
causes people to perceive or interpret things differently from those around
them. I personally felt like I was in the Truman Show; everyone was analysing
my every move and staring at me behind my back. It was the most horrible,
uncomfortable feeling – I have a great deal of empathy for celebrities
now! I seemed erratic and weird,
babbling about things that made no sense, peculiar and very ridiculous. It
wasn’t until I saw my dad (a mental health nurse) that my family realised what
was happening. I was hastily driven to A&E where I was assessed and
sectioned. I cried and cried and cried, told my dad I hated him and begged him
to take me home.
In total I stayed in various mental health hospitals for
about three months, encountering people with far worse conditions than I. I witnessed
my friend crying as she cut into the tops of her legs, saw a boy wander down
corridors all day as he patted his head mumbling and a girl with schizophrenia
afraid to leave her room because of the monsters she saw. I felt lucky in
comparison, yet still felt that my life had effectively ended because of my
illness. I hadn’t finished school; I had no GCSE’s and had no clue how I was
going to integrate back in society. My
positivity had been crushed, I felt like I’d been punished for being too
hopeful. The reality was I hadn’t coped well with the pressures of school and
the disintegration of my parents’ marriage; a few small factors had combined
and overwhelmed me. Doctors said my illness was almost inevitable; I was the
type of person who was bound to experience this type of illness at some point
in my life. I should at this point add how incredibly supportive my friends and
family were. Whilst also coping with the shock of what had happened to me, they
put their best brave faces on and reassured me that everything would eventually
be okay. There was a small party held
for me on the last day of my stay in hospital (June 2017), I was given cute
cards from the other patients, there was a cake and best of all my mum was
there to finally take me home. I remember Roland (another patient) and his
lovely mum being there; she leaned in and hugged me and whispered in my ear
‘this is the first day of the rest of your life.’
What she said was truer than I could ever know at that
point. For the first few weeks of me being home I pretty much slept constantly,
leaving the house seemed ambitious and I watched waaaay too many episodes of
Friends. I became a kind of recluse. By this point I was grossly overweight (a
combination of medication and being in hospital for so long) and my confidence
was non-existent. However I so badly wanted my life to be better I enrolled at
a college to study for my A-Levels come September… It was awful! My brain was still reeling from
everything that had happened so concentrating in class felt impossible, my
medication made me fall asleep every afternoon and I just desperately wanted to
crawl back into bed every single day. By Christmas I had dropped out. Instead
of retreating back to my duvet and admitting defeat I set myself the small, simple
task of leaving my house once a day, every day. I started off simple with
popping to the shops and eventually built that up to taking long walks. Walking
was a form of therapy for me; the book ‘The Philosophy of Walking’ states that
‘by walking, you escape from the very idea of identity, the temptation to be
someone, to have a name and a history… The freedom in walking lies in not being
anyone.’ The further I walked the more I forgot about what had happened to me. After
a few months I decided to get a job until the next academic year begun. I got a
job (which felt like a big victory at the time!) and was paid something like
£3.92 an hour. I eventually left that poorly paid position and joined a
workforce of girls, got 50% off clothes and finally begun being happy again, a
feeling I once thought had forever escaped me.
Fast forward a few years and I had gained my distinctly
average A-Levels, hurrah! I secured a
place at Leeds Metropolitan University (now known as Leeds Beckett) to study
English Literature and it felt like my hospital days were way behind me, my
life was finally back on track. University was amazing, the best thing I’ve
ever done. I met my lovely boyfriend, went to India twice and travelled to
America for summer camp (where said lovely boyfriend met me after in New
York). There were times through my
degree when I worried I might be getting poorly again – a combination of late
nights, essays and scarcely eating – but I got through my degree unscathed. I
wrote my dissertation on how the figure of the mother in nuclear families had
changed from the 1950’s to the present day. I gained a 2.1, which I’m more than
happy with.
The worry had always been that university would be the
catalyst for me getting unwell again, so when I completed it with my sanity
intact there was a surge of relief. If I could survive university, I could
surely survive any other kind of stress, yes? It was this dangerous kind of
thinking that got me into the 13th of May 2014 predicament. Once I
stopped looking for the signs of becoming unwell they became rife, oblivious to
me. I was blissfully happy living in
Leeds post-uni, I had the most amazing housemates you can imagine, a cute
vintage bike to get me into town, lovely boyfriend had asked me to move in with
him, I volunteered at the local cinema every Friday fortnight and I literally
thought things couldn’t get any better. Then cracks started to appear. Money worries were abundant, I rarely paid my
rent on time, I ate infrequently and I received a hefty bill for council tax
that reduced me to tears. One of my amazing housemate’s mother passed away, an
awful thing to happen to someone so young and my heart broke at seeing her go
through such a loss. It made me miss my own mother terribly and I yearned for
home. That’s when the final thing happened. As much I loved the ever so lovely
lovely-boyfriend I couldn’t move in with him. I just couldn’t. I hated myself
because I loved him so much, and by this point I was in a job I adored (and was
good at!) but something felt off. Little did I realise I was days away from
suffering my second psychotic episode.
How often a psychotic episode
occurs and how long it lasts can depend on the underlying cause. I believe the
cause for this episode (besides money worries and career pressure) was the
complete and utter fear that I had failed lovely boyfriend because I didn’t
want to live with him anymore. After telling him my decision, and after lots of
talks and tears, I went full blown batshit crazy. The damage of making such a
consequential life-changing decision propelled me into mania and I once again
lost my grip on reality. One of the main symptoms of psychosis is suffering
from delusions, believing things that are obviously untrue. There were
horrible, completely terrifying moments when I thought both my parents were
dead. It wasn’t until I was sitting in the back of a police-car, handcuffed,
barefoot and crying I realised I was suffering another episode, but by this
point it was far too late. I couldn’t do anything to stop the episode, all I
could do was recite my parent’s phone numbers and hope that the episode would
be over soon. The next few hours of my episode are hazy; I just vividly
remember being pushed by the policeman, so I pushed him back. He grabbed me by
the back of my head, smashed it against the door we were standing next to and
pinned me to the floor. All I remember is screaming in pain. After a few hours
of frantic calls I was transferred to the Becklin Centre (you can read some
reviews of the ward I stayed in here) and my parents had been contacted; they
rushed up to Leeds immediately.
This stay in hospital was brief; I recovered quickly and was
out of hospital within a fortnight after being on day release for a week.
Strangely I wasn’t worried about this episode – I’d been through it before so
felt like I knew what it took to recover. I spent these days quietly playing
scrabble with my friends, cooking dinner with lovely boyfriend and celebrating
one of amazing housemate’s birthday. All seemed well and everyone was impressed
with how quickly I’d recovered. My family decided it best that I moved down to
London temporarily to be looked after and cared for under their watchful gaze.
However, when I arrived home my support networks (boyfriend and housemates)
weren’t there, I was left alone for long periods of the day while my mum was at
work and for whatever reason, I suffered another manic episode. This time, it
devastated me. I felt like I had (unwittingly) sabotaged my life and I, once
again, couldn’t piece it back together. Coming out of an episode is like waking
up after the most raucous, destructive night out and realising you’ve sent
everyone you know naked photos of yourself (no, I never did that). I was
mortified at my actions, blushed at Facebook status’ and cringed at letters I’d
scribbled. Worst of all, mid-episode I’d felt compelled to tell lovely
boyfriend something so heinous, completely reprehensible that he’d been forced
to break up with me. I truly had lost everything I valued dear to me.
Recovering from the most recent episode was most definitely
hardest of each of my encounters. When it happened at sixteen it was a new
experience, no one could have predicted it coming and I was blameless. This
time, I was an adult; I felt I should have known better and looked after myself
properly. I blamed myself, persecuting myself every day for how stupid I’d been
to overlook the signs and push myself into a manic episode. Only now is that
guilt beginning to subside. There’s a
song lyric I love, ‘it’s hard to accept yourself as someone you don’t desire,
as someone you don’t want to be.’ I had turned into someone I desperately
didn’t want to be: I was negative;
miserable; overweight (again, bloody medication) and permanently lethargic.
Family and friends promised that I would feel like ‘myself’ again one day but I
couldn’t see it coming. Things
definitely got worse before they got better and over Christmas and New Year I
had my real first depressive episode (which means I’m now categorized as being
Bipolar, a label I don’t really agree with – who wouldn’t be a bit depressed
after all that happening?!) which was most definitely the lowest point of my
life. I lacked direction- when I was sixteen I knew the plan was to get to
university, I had a goal to achieve.
This time I knew the only option I had was to get a job, which I didn’t
know how I was going to do as I couldn’t get out of bed and talking to people I
didn’t know was incredibly overwhelming. I don’t know what pulled me out of it,
maybe seeing how much I was upsetting my poor mum, but I finally got back on
track. I spent a few months recuperating, reading books I loved, spending time
with my family and watching Gilmore Girls on 5* (good thing I have a job now
cause the series is nearly over, boo!).
That time was absolutely vital to my wellbeing – I tried to stop
worrying about what I was going to do next and just focused on one day at a
time and slowly, very slowly, my condition improved. This brings me to the
present day. I don’t feel quite so much regret now; I’ve come to accept my
illness isn’t my fault but it is a part of my life and I need to take certain
precautions to ensure I never get poorly again. I’m about to start a job that
is something I believe passionately in (it’s a place for men with mental health
problems who aren’t ready for society yet but aren’t ill enough to be in
hospital – it’s a place to prevent a relapse, like what happened to me), I have
a good circle of close friends and I’m on good terms with the lovely
ex-boyfriend. I’m feeling happy again, cheerful
and hopeful for my future!
I often wish that I
could talk more openly about what happened to me and how it impacted on my
life, but there is unfortunately a lack of understanding that shrouds mental
health issues. I’ve lost friends who not knowing what to say, have said nothing
and distanced themselves from me. In order to combat this, I’m sharing my story
in the hope that others won’t feel so alone if they’ve experienced (or know
someone who has experienced) a mental health problem. What I went through was truly traumatising,
this essay doesn’t scratch the surface of what happened to me and how truly
awful I felt – but things do get better. I never thought that I was weak, but
what happened left me completely vulnerable. It was the small joys of life that
made me eventually smile again – letters from friends, long walks and listening
to my favourite songs on repeat. Never underestimate the power of being kind if
you know someone in a similar situation; just knowing that friends were thinking
of me made me want to get better, because I had people to get better for. Thank you so much for reading my story.