Monday, 29 October 2012

Nike Blazer Mid ’77 Spring 2013 Snakeskin Sneaker

Nike Blazer Mid 77 Spring 2013 Snakeskin Sneaker
2013 marks the 40th anniversary of Nike’s iconic Blazer silhouette. From the upcoming Spring 2013 collection is this Blazer Mid with a snakeskin Swoosh alongside the sneaker. Featured is a white leather upper with hints of suede appearing at the toeand classic green touches on the tongue, matching the heel padding accordingly

Nike Blazer Mid ’77 Spring 2013 Snakeskin Sneaker is a post by Brock Cardiner on Highsnobiety.

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Depression Affects the Whole Family #YouthStories

I have always looked back on my childhood and teenage years as happy memories but I know that if I turned into a mole and dug underneath those memories, I would find underneath it, times of deep worry and concern.

I was about 6 or 7 when my mums depression imprinted on my conciousness, it was dark, there was shouting and without having any recollection of what thoughts were going through my mind I was suddenly standing in the bathroom doorway, watching my mum attempt an overdose and my dad ever the calm and reasonable presence in our family trying to stop her with great urgency.

There was of course peaks and troughs, months of great, unnatural happiness. You could tell when these had started for my mum because she would be up at 5am and by 9am she would have cooked, done the house work and moved around the house like she was on speed.

 During these times she had a social calendar as busy as the royal family and although she would describe herself as ‘happy’ she had the shortest fuse, you would walk around on many an egg shell, one slip and she would fire loud hurtful things your way.

The other flip side was something a lot darker and we would all come home from school to be told by our Dad that "Mum was having a ‘bad’ day" but to go and say hello. Mum would be locked in her room, where she would of spent her whole day, week even, in the dark, sleeping, sometimes rocking herself on the floor, crying, silent, numb.

I have always been a very emotionally aware person, I am deeply affected by how others feel around me and I would spend a lot of my time as a child and teenager listening patiently, providing hugs and being an emotional leaning post for my mum.

I guess this is where the role reversal began at a young age, don’t get me wrong I have always been supported by both my parents in my life, in my choices and in crisis, both have given all their children amazing life skills and grounding so that we could flourish into the adults we wanted to become. However being the only sibling willing to listen and be leaned upon meant I grew up in some ways a bit quicker than others. I understood debts extremely well and the impact they have on your mental health, I understood how dark and scary your mind can become if you are inflicted with mental health issues, I understood how an addiction like buying lots and lots of clothes in spite of your finances can help to fill a gap, give you a rush and stop the feeling of numbness for a short moment.

I carried my own bag of worries for my mum around school, constantly thinking of ways to help her, to make her smile or laugh, to drag her away from the dark and self-pity of her mind. I also worried especially as I hit my teenage years if I would also become like my mum.

Our doctor thought the only option was anti-depressants, he didn’t really understand depression and instead of admitting this he clearly felt providing my mum with a constant supply of pills was the correct thing to do. To keep taking them until she eventually became immune to them… her body cannot cope without them now.
Do you ever get over depression completely? Do you become scarred as a family? Is it all doom and gloom?

The answer for me is no.

Depression comes back to my mum still but through counselling, support and understanding from all the people around her who love her she has never slipped so far back into that dark room.

It helped build us as a family to work together and support each other, all of us are more empathetic, compassionate and understanding towards each other and people we meet because of what we have been through together.

Like I said at the start I still have many happy memories of my childhood and teenage years, I have an amazingly close relationship with my mum and the rest of my family. The experience has helped me to have more positive values than material possessions, to appreciate my body and mind when I am well and to not abuse it, to take pleasure in simple and natural things and to have the desire and motivation to help others whenever I can.

 I cannot help but realise on reflection how much easier it would have been if my family and I had also been supported by perhaps a counsellor or our doctor. How much easier it would have been if we had not tried to cope on our own for so long, we were perhaps too afraid to speak out because of the stigma attached to depression.

Coming to terms with mental illness is a problem to be solved for the whole family, not just by the person suffering and it’s time the medical profession faced up to this

Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Joanna's Story #YouthStories

I’ve always sensed that I was a bit different from other people, like I didn’t quite fit in anywhere. I have made a lot of friends over the years but I do not see them on a regular basis and I often spend most of my time with my family. I worked very hard at school but I was never exceptional at anything. I was a keen dancer but my teachers always commented on my problems with my posture and I was always left in the bottom class, with people much younger than me. At School I got reports for effort but never anything more and I was never picked for school plays or the like. It was the same in P.E. I eventually gave up. When I was about 14 my behaviour became more prevalent. I had a massive party just before starting my exams which wrecked my house and ended up living with my best friend. I did not revise for my GCSE’s and did little of the coursework. I did no coursework for English and did the bare minimum that I could for my other exams. Luckily I had completed a lot of work in year 10 which counted towards my grades.

I didn’t get very good results for my GCSE’s but I managed to get a place in college and I ended up doing the same there. After my first year I decided to resit some GCSE’s and I did better. I then went on to University to study Nursing. However, I became very lonely and was bullied by the people I shared accommodation with and I started to stay in my room most of the time and couldn’t get out of bed. I was also self harming at the time. I ended up going to live back with my mum.

After this I started on a music course after becoming teetotal for almost a year. I struggled with the course because I was painfully shy and I couldn’t perform in front of anyone. This lead to me dropping out of the course, luckily for me I had a great art teacher at the time who took me under his wing and over the next two years, whilst I spent most of my time smoking cannabis and taking ecstasy and cocaine and drinking myself in to a stupor whenever I could, I also managed to get a merit in Foundation Art.

After that I started to get out of control, I regularly was violent to my family I would spend my day on a come down after taking drugs and write all over my bedroom walls. In the end my mum kicked me out and I stayed at a few friends houses. Then I moved to London and started on Access to Higher Education course. I made lots of friends and did really well on the course but I ended up becoming very high and staying up all night writing essays. I then moved to Soho and during this time I put myself in some really dangerous situations. I used to go out drinking on my own and end up with strangers and I’d have to figure out a way of getting rid of them before they demanded sex off of me. I finally had enough and in a moment of desperation threw my TV out the window of my flat and cut my arms open and my flat mate called the police who wrestled me to the floor and forced me go to hospital.

All of this behaviour was caused by the fact that I have bi-polar disorder, sometimes called manic depression. I have to take medication daily to keep my moods stable. I was only diagnosed once I had been sectioned under the mental health act in 2011. I sometimes feel embarrassed when I tell people because I think they might judge me as being crazy but I also want to raise awareness. I am more vulnerable I suppose but I don’t consider myself to be a danger to anyone.

I feel lucky to be me now. I’m intelligent and thoughtful and care about the people around me and the world that I live in and I’ve become a lot stronger because of the things I have been through. I also have a beautiful little boy, the best family anyone could wish for and a happy life. So I guess the moral of my tale is when faced with troubles keep on going, because there is a purpose to it all and there will always be better times.

TYLP x Cheney FC. Football and cheerleading

Our first sports incentive took place on Saturday and it was a great success! The number of children attending wasn't as great as first expected but the main thing is those that did attend had great fun!
With football for the boys hosted by the generous lads from Cheney FC, the group of boys aged between 5-10 were taught a range of skills including heading, passing, shooting, throw ins and penalty taking.
There was a great team effort and the Cheney FC lads were great with the boys, not only did they teach them to work together and help each other out, they also looked after them all really well and made each one feel important. There was a great deal of encouragement and a whole lot fun.
During the training a few lads that were watching and praising the activities even signed up for the next round of training.
Alongside the football we had cheerleading for the girls hosted by myself and TYLP trustee Emma. The girls who have named themselves 'The TYLP Angels' were a small group of girls aged 8-9 who were very enthusiastic throughout the day. They came up with a range of cheers and dance moves, as well as a name for themselves. They also designed their future outfit and coat of arms and a set of rules that they should all adhere to. Number 1 being 'ITB' (IGNORE THE BUM) this was because, during their training a young lad from another pitch was distracting them by shaking his bum, the girls were in fits of giggles for ages, especially when he came over and asked to join the squad. Admittedly he was rather good with the pom poms.
TYLP provided snacks, fruit and juice throughout the day and each child left with a named certificate and a goody bag (girly ones for the cheerleaders, sports ones for the boys).
Overall it was a fantastic day, I certainly had a lot of fun and I would once again like to thank the Cheny FC lads for their hard work and there generosity, TYLP look forward to working with you in the future.

The Youth Life Project, along with Cheney FC and other sporting associations will be working together to host a range of football and other sports related activities, such as boxing, netball, and skateboarding. This is a new incentive set up for youths in Swindon as part of The Youth Life Project's' SAY campaign'. (Swindon's Active Youth campaign)
We will eventually set up a TYLP mini league, along with a sqaud of TYLP cheerleaders!
So if you know someone who would like to get involved then please contact me danielletylp@gmail.com or if you are aged between 7-12 and would like to come along then please have your parent/guardian contact TYLP founder Danielle Brown- danielletylp@gmail.com and sign up today!

Here are some of the images from the day.

































Please visit the Facebook pages and hit the 'LIKE' button.
The Youth Life Project Facebook page
Cheney FC Facebook page
Thank you :)


Thursday, 18 October 2012

My story.. The fight to fit in!! #YouthStories

You as young people face many issues as a whole in general, eg puberty, exams, stereotypical judgements ~ this is besides additional things which you may encounter throughout your childhood which can impact on you as a teenager and for the rest of your lives. Many of these experiences will be highlighted via other stories in this book.
I want to focus on something that is very common and very apparant in all of young peoples lives and social circles and can for some have very longlasting effects or implications. I will use my own experience to reflect on this.
As a child I was very aware from a young age re popularity, different groups within the school and of those who fitted it and those who never. I'm guessing we were all aware of this as it would have been a different experience depending on what group we belonged to.
As I became a teenager it became more evident and more fierce. It was like being in the jungle, survival of the fittest, everyone striving to be the best. What group is the most popular, who wears the best clothes, who listens to the best music and has the best boyfriend and so on.. This hungry competition on its own is a big thing as a teenager, and if you don't belong, your self esteem, confidence and friendships can suffer. I made myself mould into this `popular person` when I was a teenager. I made out I liked certain things, which I may not have liked, I listened to nusic I thought wasn't great and wore clothes like everybody else. I conformed to what you needed to do to fit in. I ended up battling with my own personal feelings and views and suppressed my opinions in order to be part of this bigger thing. I did things I didn't agree with and felt guilty and like a horrible person for so I was not singled out. Being in the popular crowd then was more than what it appeared to be, eg the clothes, the boyfriend etc. To be popular I found myself participating in bad behaviour. I started smoking first, drinking alcohol, experimenting with drugs and sex all because of the pressure you feel from your peers and the desire to fit in. As a girl I became a complete bitch, bullying those who didn't belong and making them feel worse than they probably already did because of it. All because I wanted to boost my own ego, feel powerful and keep my stance within the group.
I didn't hate people, I understood that I was wrong, I knew I was mean and hurting other peoples feelings, I knew my parents would be disappointed in me, but as a teenager with so many other things to deal with I didn't want to be an outsider to.
As time went on I started getting into trouble with police, getting a bad reputation and the intelligence I knew I had was being used negatively and to hurt other people rather than to better myself through education etc.  This eventually started to hurt me as deep down I knew I couldn't make an excuse for the things I was doing and I could see me becoming a horrible person with a potentially destructuve future and with noone who would care because I acted like I didn't care. I knew I needed to change.
Before my exams a situation occurred which opened my eyes up to the kind of person I wanted to be as an adult and I become to realise what was important in life. Its not about how popular the crowd is that you mix with, its not about losing who you are just to fit in and its not about hurting others to prove yourself. This will only damage you as a person in the long term and you become lost and caught up in it all you don't know who you are.
Its about being who you are and not being afraid of your individuality, standing up for what you believe in and knowing what is right and wrong and treating others how you wish to be treated. In life this will help you become a stronger independent person, with good morals and able to make positive decisions.
When I changed my attitude and outlook, I focused on my education and ended up going to university and qualifying as a social worker. I did this independantly without my so called friends and I became the outsider but this allowed me to be who I really was.  I now have a small circle of close friends who I love and trust. We are all different and accept that and our differences compliment one another. I've made mistakes and bad choices but learning from our experiences in order to become a better person is what's important. And not forgetting who you are or becoming someone else for the benefit of others..

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

New Music Video: The Weeknd - Rolling Stone


Music Video The Weeknd - Rolling Stone 02  

The Weeknd has finally released his second official music video. The video for “Rolling Stone,” off of his second mixtape Thursday, was just debuted on his website and Facebook page in anticipation for the upcoming release of Trilogy - his highly anticipated commercial debut. The Videofeatures Abel Tesfaye-- who directed the video himself-- sitting and singing straight into the camera.

The album is set to drop on November 13th, via Republic Records, but you can pre-order it now; Trilogy will include three brand-new songs, on top of the three previously-released mixtapes.
You can watch the video here

Kanye West x Giuseppe Zanotti’s ‘Cruel Summer’ Sandals

GiuseppeZanottiKanyeCruelSummer 540x409 Giuseppe Zanotti x Kanye Cruel Summer Sandals
Somehow I managed to miss the launch of this shoe last week. Giuseppe Zanotti posted his latest shoe collaboration with Kanye West on his Facebook Page and here is a closer look at the shoe titled “Cruel Summer,” and it’s been noted that they match up with the design aesthetic of the West-produced compilation album of the same title.




Monday, 1 October 2012

How Domestic Violence Affects Children.. #YouthStories

Last night a close friend asked me a very personal question to help with her uni work. She asked me- "how domestic violence had affected me from childhood up until my adult life"?
No one has ever asked me that before so I found it quite interesting. I answered and then I spent the whole night thinking about it and thinking, I am the founder of The Youth Life Project

, a charity that runs the campaign #YouthStories. I encourage young people to tell their stories, share their experiences of violence, bullying abuse etc., and yet I have experienced some of these things as a youth and have never spoken out about it. How can I expect and encourage people to write about their experiences when I have not done the same?

So I've made a decision. I am going to publish my answer to that question.
I'm not going to write a whole story about things that have happened to me as a child, I am just going to publish my answer to the question- 'how has domestic violence affected you'?

I'll admit that I'm feeling very anxious about it. What sort of reaction would it provoke? Most people I know wouldn't have a clue about my childhood, my family may not want me to talk openly about my mother experiencing domestic violence, (I have asked for her permission before I've gone ahead with this). It may come across attention seeking or even that I'm emotional. The worse affect would be if people felt sorry for me. Anyone that's friends with me would know I'd hate that.
I'm thinking, even if all that negativity did come of it, I'm sure maybe some positive would to?
If not at least I have done what I am encouraging others to do and tell their story (or an answer to a question in my case).

so here goes..

My answer-
"As a child, domestic violence affects you in many ways. I feel It affects your confidence mostly and weakens you as a person. It makes you feel insecure because as a child your mum is the strongest person in the world, your mum is an idol. So to see her being slowly broken down as a person, and demoralised, beaten, mentally abused on a daily basis, as a child you feel the affects of that too because in your eyes your mum is stronger than you and to see her go from a lively bubbly confident person to a weak, scared, emotional insecure person, you kind of feel the same too. Most children mimic the people they love, and are in tune with their emotions so their feelings have kind of a rebound affect on you. It also rocks your confidence and affects the way you socialise with people because its harder to interact or form relationships with other children when you're hiding a big secret and carrying loads of things emotionally. You can't be yourself, and you don't trust many people and sometimes envy other families.
As you get older and are in adolescence, its a crazy time. I felt angry at the world and just wanted to rebel. My mum left her abusive partner when I was a teen (14) so I felt a freedom that now I could finally do what I want because we're not controlled anymore, but I took that too far and went off the rails. I also got into a lot of fights with men and was easily provoked because as soon as a male made me feel intimidated or scared in an argument or fight I would lash out and would not stop until I had gotten the better of them, and worse of all was that it made me feel good.

Later on in adult life, there are positives because it makes you a stronger person and a better parent in the sense you know you will never let any harm come to your children, you'll never let them have any sort of life you have had. You treat people better and are more caring because of what you've seen as a child and I always make sure I tell my friends when they look good and are doing good because I want them to feel confident and never insecure like we was made to feel.
The negative for me though is that I find it hard to keep a relationship because as soon as someone does me wrong I take it really hard and personal and feel like I have to exit the relationship because I won't have my children put through any arguing etc., Where in fact I probably should try harder to work at it. I think I just get really scared I'm going to be like my mum and I've grown up striving to be the opposite (my mum's a legend. I mean be opposite as in not allow anyone to treat me or my children bad).

Domestic violence has affected me emotionally and mostly with trust issues but it has made me a stronger person, a better parent and I do find it easier to have empathy for adults or children experiencing the same. It's also made me very protective of the people I care about and I have really good morals that I always stand by.

As a child I also experienced many other forms of abuse, so maybe my experience of domestic violence may not be the same as others because I experienced other things alongside it.
So now I'm asking- How has it affected YOU?

If you have experienced domestic violence and would too would like to join in the #YouthStories campaign and publish your real life experience of how abuse, domestic violence, sexual abuse, bullying, rape, obesity, illness or poverty has affected you as a child or teen and may still affect you in adult life. Please email danielletylp@gmail.com  with your story, and suitable ones will be published to the blog. By doing this you are encouraging others to speak up and you are letting people that have been affected by any of the above know they are not alone.

The most important point I must make is that yes, my childhood was bad but I've gone on to have 2 amazing children who are raised beautifully in a loving home full of fun and happiness, I run a wonderful charity and use my bad experiences to help others, I have amazing friends and family and I consider my life to be pretty awesome and definitely full of lots of love and positivity.
The point being- Never let your past rule your future and never let the bad people win!

If you have Facebook then please visit The Youth Life Project Facebook page, you can also follow us on Twitter

Media Plant UK doing their bit for charity

The guys at Media Plant UK  have got behind local charity The Youth Life Project and are vowing to donate £100 to the charity.
All thier supporters have to do is share this link- http://www.mediaplant.co.uk/mathew-cole/ to put TYLP in with a chance of receiving the £100.
Account Manger of the company Mathew Cole has used social networks to encourage people to join in and raise some money for the charity.
This isn't the first kind gesture Matty has made for the charity, he has done a number of other things for The Youth Life Project, including some fantastic art work-


This summer he even attended a fund-raiser and spent the whole day in the sweltering sun tagging canvases and quality card for children in a bid to raise money. He provided all his own material and was non-stop all day.




TYLP would like to thank Matty for his help and involvement with the charity and a big TYLP thank you goes to Media Plant UK too. Have a little read up on what they're all about-

Media Plant is a leading CD, DVD, USB print company based in Swindon UK offering a range of services including CD & DVD replication and duplication, authoring, printing, packaging and order fulfillment, our location means that we are ideally suited to service your business needs anywhere in the UK.

Experienced Team Members

We have assembled a team of people at Media plant that include some of the most experienced minds in the industry. We are confident we can provide a first class service, working in partnership with you to ensure you achieve the results you want.

As experts in the industry we have seen and had to keep up with many changes giving us extensive knowledge of new developments and processes and making the right selection for you.

Quality Customer Service

The main focus of Media Plant is not just about producing products but really focusing on the customer service and giving you the client, that little bit extra.
This may be as simple as returning a phone call or responding to an email, or offering a suggestion on a particular style of packaging.
Or quite simply giving advice about the latest CD & DVD replication and duplication techniques.

Make The Right Choice

Rest assured when you need your media project to stand up and be counted, Media Plant are the people to trust.
If you have any questions, then why not call us on 0843 216 8640 or email us here.

Now lets share this link! http://www.mediaplant.co.uk/mathew-cole/

If you have Facebook then please visit The Youth Life Project Facebook page, you can also follow us on Twitter