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Save me, glossies, save me!

Tag:china toys,glossies
From:http://www.buy-china-toys.com/

A year ago, US writer Cathy Alter was a binge-drinking, sugar-sucking wreck,

shagging a feckless colleague called Bruno. Now she is happily married and

eating vegetables. How did she did do it? By following the advice of glossy

magazines. Every word. She had Elle in her ear, Vogue at her throat and Oprah (O

magazine) up her nose. She describes it all in her book Up for Renewal.
On reading it, I puke and puke again. I have agreed with my editor that I will

emulate Alter, spending a week following the advice of women's magazines - my

nemeses. I despise Tatler, Harper's and all their evil spawn. Whenever I hear

the words Style Bible, I reach for my garrote. I blame them for all the evil in

the world: greed, bulimia, blusher, but I duly go to the newsagent and find them

on the shelves, preening with self-love. I take them home, spread them out and

howl, "Save me glossies, save me!" and immediately I see a list of impossible

demands. Take your Brain Shopping! Linger over Love Time! Say Goodbye to Fungi!

Stop Stress Making you Fat! Think Yourself Happy! Wear a Romper Suit! Decode

Your Sex Dreams! Feng-shui Your Arsehole! (OK, I made the last one up.)
And the more I stare at the pages, the more surreal the advice becomes. Cosmo

suggests I stop emotionally dumping on my cat: "Is Your Cat Your Counsellor?"

Prima suggests that, when tidying, "gather up items left downstairs and take

them all up in one go". Thanks Prima! There is, according to Company, a correct

way to board a plane. Step 4 is to "eat an avocado".
I suddenly feel disorientated. Am I in my bedroom? Or am I standing in the

middle of Wembley Stadium, with 86,000 Jewish mothers shouting at me?
I start at the top, with Tatler. Admittedly, Tatler doesn't really give advice.

That is not the point of Tatler. The point of Tatler is to float above you,

taunting you with your disgusting plebbiness. This month, Tatler says I should

go and buy a solid silver lid for my Marmite, and a 14-carat gold bra. This is

not so much a "tip", as an incitement to burning down the Cond Nast building,

while wearing cheap clothing, no lip gloss and a smile.
But wait. Tatler also recommends a "Fabulous on High-heels Master Class" given

by an ex-ballerina called Sarah Toner. She teaches women how to walk in heels,

saving super-stylish fembots from falling over and bashing their brains out on

their occasional tables. Now, this is interesting. I have had a pair of 4-inch

Gucci spikes in my wardrobe for five years. They are what my sister calls "car

shoes". I don't wear them; I use them to kill flies. I put them in my bag and go

to see Sarah in her studio near King's Cross.
She is slim and smiling. I wave the shoes at her. I don't think I can possibly

learn to walk in them. "We're not going to put the heels on yet," Sarah says,

and makes me do some stretching exercises. Afterwards, my body is so relaxed

that when I put on the spikes and try to walk, I can do it. Easily. I feel

exhilarated. I didn't think that Tatler published anything worth knowing about.

I thought it was all Buffy de la Fluffy Muffy marrying Baron Von Wank and

laughing at the proles all night long. So I feel slightly angry too.
I turn to that manifesto for malevolent pencil-women: Vogue. Vogue doesn't

really seem to have any advice either, except to buy everything you can lift

with your spindly arms. This month they are pushing tartan, denim and romper

suits, but there is absolutely no point in browsing for designer clothes. They

don't make them in my size. How do I know? Because I once walked into a Louis

Vuitton store with 1,000 and demanded a dress in a size 16. "Sold out, madam,"

they sneered. "Don't you want fat people's money?" I screamed back.
Perhaps I should do something with my hair. A friend once told me it resembles

the ears of a friendly dog. "Dual texture is one of the season's biggest hair

trends," declares Vogue, in its customary splice of malice, advertorial and

idiot-speak. The accompanying photograph shows a woman with two hairstyles on

her head. The first has been stolen from the corpse of Maria von Trapp. The

other is the bottom half of a squirrel.
So I call Toni and Guy, and a few hours later I am dashing through their doors.

The stylist snips and blows and tongs, and two hours later my hair is half soup

-bowl, half poodle. I look like Jean Harlow. I love it. But as I cycle away from

the salon, it rains. My hair whimpers, sobs and hurls itself under a bus. By the

time I get home I look like Animal from the Muppets.
But no matter. A new mistress is whispering in my ear. It is Elle. The magazine

splays open on a page about breast treatments. The first suggestion is to inject

my breasts with "filler". This will inflate them for a whole year. No. So how

about a "Thalgo bust modelling treatment"? This involves "the application of an

intense thermal mask designed to enhance elasticity and maintain bust firmness".

Please, no. I am afraid of beauty therapists. I was once awoken from a massage

in Switzerland by one playing a xylophone.
But I go to the Aquilla salon in London's Knightsbridge, where another

incredibly smiley woman takes me to a windowless room. I imagine it is the sort

of room that Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria tortured people in. I strip off and she

exfoliates my breasts with long, sweeping motions, as if she is playing the

piano. Then she wraps my breasts in gauze, and smears it with clay. The gauze

hardens and when she pulls it off, I have a piece of gauze with an imprint of my

breasts on it. Wow. My breasts feel soft. (I cannot believe I am typing this. I

cannot believe I am reviewing the elasticity of my breasts.) It's nice. It's

fine. But what does it do? What is it for?
And so, onwards, wilting, to Cosmopolitan, the sex-crazed best friend you want

to stab in the face. Cosmo does at least have a work ethic between multiple

orgasms, between meetings, and she recommends calling Ros at

thecareercoach.co.uk, for advice. Ros is an intensely sane sounding Scottish

woman. I confess to my chaotic work habits and she analyses them. Apparently, my

chaos is "a badge of honour" that makes me feel like "a miracle worker". So we

devise some mantras: I choose the slightly Stalinist "Order is Joyful". At the

end of the session, I promise to have my printer mended, and to buy some

lightbulbs.
And now, to my final glossy - to the pint-sized, arse-kicking, hyper-aggressive

dwarf of the magazine world - Glamour. She beckons me with a bright red claw. "I

want", she whispers, "for you to call the Glamour Psychic Hotline for a personal

and confidential reading with a real psychic for a mere 1.50 a minute from a BT

landline." So I telephone the Psychic Hotline, and a man answers. He speaks very

softly, and he sounds very tired. "Hello," he says. "I am Martin." Martin says

he is going to read my tarot cards. I ask a few questions about marriage

prospects, career and my chances of developing lung cancer. He mutters, "Stay

where you are at work; I can see double rings in your love life" and he advises

me to stop smoking. "You shouldn't smoke. Animals don't smoke". Then he says my

energy is "bright". I wonder if he ever tells Glamour readers that their energy

is "dull"? What would they do if he did? Buy a new face?
The week is dead. So how do I FEEL? Did the Glossies Eat My Life? Did I Think

Myself Mad? Did I Linger Over Suicide? Take My Arse Shopping? Well, the

glossies, I have decided, come in three toxic strains. The ones that say you are

ugly. The ones that say you are stupid. And the ones that say both. I don't want

to be told why I dreamt I shagged Gerard Depardieu; ask yourself what's missing

in your own life. I don't want to be told "the top half is the only part of your

body seen in a crowd - so make it main priority". I don't believe in the

redemptive power of scatter cushions. So goodbye breast exfoliation and romper

suits. And hello again, grim life. Oh, how I've missed you.

Tags: avocado, glossy magazines

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