Experience
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Originally published | 2000 |
---|---|
Authors | Martin Amis |
Genres | Novel |
Biography | |
Memoir | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2066399 |
About Experience
Experience is a book of memoirs by the British author Martin Amis.
Former Chancellor Alistair Darling dies aged 70
... He was always at hand to provide advice built on his decades of Experience - always with his trademark wry, good humour...
South Africa crime: Thieves put gun to Transport Minister Sindisiwe Chikunga's head
... " I m in one piece, but the whole Experience was very traumatising, " Ms Chikunga told MPs...
Disability and sex is still a taboo, says Mared Jarman
... I want to be unapologetically a version of a disabled person that I think so many of us in the modern world are, " From kissing the wrong person to accidentally joining a table of strangers in a pub, how much of what happens to her character Ceri s is autobiographical? " It isn t solely my Experience...
The Matrix reloads again: Danny Boyle dance version opens Manchester's Aviva Studios
... Co-writer and co-director Lilly Wachowski has said the film was intended as a metaphor for the transgender Experience - but " the world wasn t quite ready"...
Justin Timberlake and Tiger Woods hope to open St Andrews sports bar
... Our new venue is so much more than a typical sports bar Experience - it s a place you can go to be entertained without sacrificing quality or comfort...
Barbie director Greta Gerwig calls film's success 'so moving'
... It was released in July, and Gerwig went into cinemas to see the reaction and ensure audiences had the best viewing - and listening - Experience, she revealed...
Racism: Mental health impact of profiling and trolls
... " Being a visible, racially-minoritised person makes it kind of an everyday Experience and you can t do anything about it - you re there living with the colour of your skin, " she said...
Quobna Cugoano: London church honours Ghanaian-born freed slave and abolitionist
... The descriptions come from Cugoano s own published book in which he argues against slavery, drawing on his Christian faith and his own Experiences of the trade...
Racism: Mental health impact of profiling and trolls
By Nicola BryanBBC News
Susan Cousins was hurrying around a shop, eager not to be late for work when she noticed she was being followed by a member of staff.
Minutes later, at another shop in Cardiff, she heard herself being described on The Store 's walkie-talkie.
" [They'd] racially profiled me', " said Susan, an author and counsellor.
From being spat at by strangers as a child, to being refused service at pubs in her 20s, racism is something Susan has endured all her life.
" Being a visible, racially-minoritised person makes it kind of an everyday Experience and you can't do anything about it - you're there living with The Colour of your skin, " She Said .
She has made a career of Standing Up to racism: first as a counsellor working with clients from ethnic minority backgrounds in Bristol And Then as an author on the subject and as Cardiff University 's senior compliance adviser for race, religion and belief.
The Shop incident earlier this month left her distressed.
" I left and I was really anxious, I was just very frustrated with the whole thing, " said Susan.
She Said she spoke to The Store detective and the managers in both shops but did not feel she got through to them.
" I said 'I've been coming into these shops for 30 years, you all know me, what is going on here? It's ridiculous'. "
She has many stories like That .
'Really shaken'During Covid lockdown she called police after being targeted by racists online.
" It was a very difficult Experience . . it really did impact on my wellbeing and My Life , " She Said .
One Saturday she woke up to what felt like hundreds of direct messages on X, formerly known as Twitter, from people offering support.
Confused, she checked her account and was stunned to discover six different people had got together and each tweeted her one letter which spelt out a racially-offensive word.
" I was really shaken by it, I was really upset and I was concerned for my safety, " She Said .
" I was thinking: 'Are these six people in Cardiff? Am I safe Walking Out on The Street ?'. "
She called The Police , who arrived quickly but The Investigation That followed led to nothing.
Susan recalled Another Time when she complained to Swimming Pool staff after hearing others in The Pool say some nearby Asian swimmers wearing full cover swimwear were " disgusting, awful and unhygienic".
" When I first came to Cardiff over 30 years ago it was overt, people wouldn't actually serve you, " said Susan.
" I've been situations, like going to a pub, and I wouldn't be served but my white friends wouldn't do anything about it. "
'Traumatised'Then there are traumatic memories from her childhood.
Susan was brought up by white Catholic parents in Kettering, Northamptonshire, who adopted her from an orphanage in Mumbai, India, as well as seven other children from different parts of The World .
" One of The Most awful incidents I had was when I was about nine or 11 or something, " She Said .
" I was in my school uniform and a grown-up man tripped me up, put his leg between my legs and I fell flat on my face.
" I cut my head on the side, both my knees were bleeding, so I lay there for quite some time, and nobody helped me, which was Even Worse actually than The Incident . "
She chose to hide The Incident from her parents, fearful they would call The Police and a " big fuss".
" It was a terrible, horrible Experience and I was really, really traumatised by That , " She Said .
" Although That was the worst physical assault I ever had, as a Child I was continuously spat on in The Streets . I just became extremely anxious as a child. "
She worries for children today. " Those kinds of incidents are Still Going to happen, " She Said .
These Days , she believes racism is sometimes less overt, but still " kind of everywhere and every day".
" Some of it is micro-aggressions, some of it is a lot more overt, some of it is Hate Crime , " She Said .
" These things often happen when you're on your own, and there's a reason for That - you don't have A Witness and That 's when people can target you. "
From her work as a counsellor she has seen people so traumatised by racism as they develop conditions such as agoraphobia, depression and anxiety.
She is passionate about helping those who Experience racism to protect their Mental Health and has written two books on the subject - Overcoming Everyday Racism and Making Sense of Micro-aggressions.
Susan wants people from ethnic minority groups to learn to cherish their identity, " which is difficult when a majority of society is quite negative about it".
She has advised clients traumatised by racism to take up an Interest - " I paint and I find That 's a huge kind of antidote to anything for me" - and also to Focus On diet, exercise, routine and friendships.
" When I talk To My black and brown women friends and White People aren't in The Room , I don't think White People would quite believe the conversations, " She Said .
" It's such a relief sometimes to be in That place where you just feel a sense of belonging, and you feel like you can Say Something and you don't really have to describe it and you don't really have to justify it and face the kind of defensiveness around it. "
She Said defensiveness was a real barrier to progress.
" There are Some People , friends I've known for years, and I never talk to them about race because I just know they will Say Something silly and I don't want to be involved in That conversation, " She Said .
She wants White People to listen properly when others open up about racism.
" White People can accept the stories That racially minoritised people bring to them, " She Said .
" That doesn't mean you have to really deeply understand it, it just means That you have to listen, develop The Listening skills and not reach for defensiveness. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com