Strangers on a Bench - EPISODE 48: Outliers, Hugs, and Biscuit Thrusters
Episode Date: August 11, 2025Tom Rosenthal approaches a stranger on a park bench and asks if he can sit down next to them and record their conversation.This is what happened! Produced by Tom RosenthalEdited by Rose De Larrab...eitiMixed by Mike WoolleyTheme tune by Tom Rosenthal & Lucy Railton Incidental music by Maddie AshmanEnd song : 'Share The Weight' by Fran LustyStream it here: https://ffm.to/sharetheweightListen to all the end songs featured on the podcast (so far) on one handy playlist :https://ffm.to/soabendsongs————————————————————————————Instagram : @strangersonabench Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello, sorry to bother you. Can I ask you a slightly odd question?
I'm making a podcast called Strangers on a Bench, where essentially I talk to people I don't
know on benches for 10 or 15 minutes. Are you up for that? Do you want to give it a go?
Is there a day of the week that you favour?
In the last couple of years it used to be the weekend because that's when you'd have university or work off but I now work and
of the last two years in a profession that requires me to work out of hours quite frequently.
So my favourite day of the week tends to be the day that I have off, but that varies.
Okay, so let's imagine a day off then. Yeah. Your kind of ideal day from waking up to
go to bed. What does it look like for you? It can vary. Sometimes I'm in the mood just to spend
the day by myself. I don't really get a lot of time to myself. And so when I,
I get up and what time we're getting up usually later in the day just to get some sleeping
yeah usually about 10 o'clock and then I like just to keep the day at a slow pace I like to make
myself a nice cup of coffee enjoy it going to the garden say good morning to my cat
how do you say good morning to a cat just lots of lots of cuddles lots of strokes
um I speak to her I don't think she cares very much but classic cat
Classic cat.
What does your cat mean to you have interest?
So she's fairly new.
We've only had her sort of in the last couple of months.
But I didn't realize how supportive she actually is
and how much she matters in my life.
It's the little things like when she crawls over my lap
and she'll sometimes just sleep on my lap.
And it's just that there's this small thing
that's dependent on you for love and care
and it's that sort of relationship that I enjoy.
and I think that also stems from raising my younger brother
who I have a significant age gap with,
I had that role then of bringing him up,
feeding him, caring for him, taking him to school,
that sort of change now since he's older.
So having that sort of caring responsibility with my cat
fulfills that in a way, just like to care.
So you brought up your brother?
Yes.
Can I ask you about how that came to be?
So we have a 15-year age gap.
We'd been asking for another sibling.
Parents were like, OK.
And then he came into our lives and my parents worked full-time and I was in secondary school
back then and I said I can see it's difficult for you.
I'm more than happy after school to pick him up from my mum's workplace and look after him with my dad at home.
And I've been doing that for several years into college, into university.
And it's one of the most fulfilling things that I've done, really.
It was tough, but I think it just taught me so much and it's made me the person that I am today.
For sure, yeah.
So you said you were campaigning for this brother to be brought.
Because in secondary school, a lot of my friends were one of five, one of six.
I have another sibling. We're four years apart.
And we enjoyed each other's company, but there was a distance.
He liked to do his own thing and I like to do mine.
And I think we were all in agreeance that it was quite a quiet household.
And we just thought having another child come in would make things a bit livelier.
And it did. It did.
We still say it now every time it's my youngest brother's birthday.
We're always like, you were the light that came into our lives.
Wow.
I think we went from a family that's sort of, well, very hyper independent.
Didn't really mingle, like dinner time didn't really speak.
And then everyone had to sort of get together for this new child.
And I think he was the glue for our family.
Amazing.
Yeah.
I'm not sure I've personally heard that.
Very often, a child convincing their parents to have another child.
Do you remember saying at the time that I will do a lot of the heavy lifting?
No, I didn't.
Really?
No.
Oh, you didn't even do any kind of, because you would think that would make sense.
It's like a bribery thing.
All I remember saying was, Mom, everyone has many younger siblings, and it's just me and my other brother,
and could you just think about having another baby, and that was it?
It was a very short conversation, and really sort of me vocalizing that I will take responsibility came
Not long after he was born.
It reminds me, you know, sometimes you have situations
as a parent where, say, you know, a grandparent gets very heavily involved
and sometimes that's obviously wonderful, but obviously they're complicated
because they have ideas and ways to doing things.
Any part of your method clash with your parents' methods?
I mean, it was less relevant when he was an infant.
But more so, I think now that he's a teenager,
giving him the liberty to have his independence
and explore things and make his own decisions
and I'm very much for that
because that's how I like to live my life
and I suppose there's a cultural clash
with how maybe my parents
would want him to sort of live out his teenage years
so I think sort of experiencing that more so in this current period.
What's it like now?
I mean you raise him a bit like a mother word
but you're his sister.
Yeah.
I think when he was very young, he struggled to tell the difference
and was much more dependent on me than he was on my parents
because we were so close.
I think now the dynamic has more shifted from maternal
to a sister-brother relationship.
And I like that because I don't think I'd want him to need me all the time.
Of course.
But he knows he can come to me if he needs to talk about any.
And I can see he's developed that relationship with my parents.
So, yeah.
Say good morning to my cat.
And then I love to cook.
I don't often get to have breakfast.
I'm off, just rush off to work.
Oh.
Yeah, because I try to get as much sleep in.
Oh, fair enough.
So I've prioritised my sleep, neglect my eating.
How much sleep do you need?
To function properly for my job, I need at least seven hours.
You're a surgeon or something?
I'm in the medical profession.
Do you work in a, like, a hospital or something?
Yeah, I work as a doctor.
Yeah, okay, great.
How has that been so far?
I'm very grateful for the professional.
that I'm in, it's something that I dreamt of since I was a child.
I come from a working class background.
I'm the first woman in my family to enter higher education.
So to enter this profession, that meant so much to me, but also my family.
And there are days that are very tough, very tough, and you can forget.
Yeah.
When you say there are days that are tough, can you talk to me about what you find?
me about what you find tough or how that affects you?
I think some of the things you see often are quite upsetting.
Often you have to deal with situations that are very acute.
And on some days you have to deal with that back to back.
And you don't realise in the moment you're absorbing that sadness.
Because you don't really have a moment to reflect on it.
And then sometimes you go home and it doesn't even hit you.
And for me, it normally hits me when I have days off, like today, like, oh, yeah, that particular scenario was actually really upsetting.
And, you know, I might cry about it, or I might meet up with a friend and reflect on it, or go to work where I work with people who've been through that a hundred times and be able to dissect the situation with them.
Or sometimes I just sort of close it off and be like, yeah, if I think of.
about it too much, it'll just affect me and I just move on.
Can you think of a situation that stayed with you at all?
I had to break it to someone that
their cancer reoccurred.
And I've done that on several occasions,
but it's when you can tell it's completely like broken someone.
and they weren't expecting it.
And, you know, they're with their loved ones
and everyone's upset.
And then you just, you don't know what to do
or to say to make it better.
It never gets easier.
And I think because I'm a very family-orientated person,
I always put myself in their shoes
and it always really affects me.
Yeah.
It seems to me that obviously
a very empathetic person.
Yeah.
Do you wish sometimes you weren't?
Do I mean in that scenario, it's quite difficult?
Like you're just like wearing people's pain, basically.
Well, it's a difficult one, because in the profession, if you lack empathy, you can't do it.
But I suppose in other areas of my life, maybe, yes.
Being very emotive and extremely empathetic and being quite sensitive can be a detriment.
Are you taught how to break people?
break bad news?
Yeah, you're taught quite frequently.
You're given a structure, a guideline,
but it's very different in the moment
because you're nervous
or you haven't come across this certain situation before.
So yeah, I have a different approach each time I do it.
I always try to gauge what the person wants to know,
what they want to hear, what they want for me.
Some people don't want to know very much,
some people want to know everything.
want to know everything some people are fine being a left alone some people want you to be
there and just stay with them yeah do you kind of build connections with anyone is that tricky
or are you able to kind of keep people at a certain distance um i don't think ideally in the role
you should be forming bonds per se because it is a professional relationship it can be tricky
but I think my sort of way of building rapport with that person
is similar to what you're doing yourself,
sort of sitting here and just asking questions
now that I've told you this, how does that make you feel?
And is there someone that you can turn to?
And do you want me to stay with you?
Even, like, can I get you a cup of coffee, a cup of tea,
a cup of water?
Do you want me to come back in a bit and check how you are?
But it's difficult because often you'll do this
and you might not see the person ever again.
Of course, yeah.
And it's that thing of that conversation
often has a lasting impression on that person.
Many a times I know people in my personal life
who've had dreadful news given to them,
but as well as receiving that news,
they remember the person that delivered it.
And sometimes it's a negative experience.
The way that you deliver it
and the way,
that you're there for that person it has a lasting impact and very conscious of that.
So you mentioned you sometimes struggle with these really difficult moments and they stay with you.
Do you tell people that? Sometimes they do and sometimes they don't.
Sometimes I don't have the time to talk about it.
Sometimes I just like to keep it to myself.
But I do find it's easier to talk to friends and colleagues
who are in the same boat as me and often they understand.
Do you think people who are not doctors are kind of aware of that struggle?
Do you think it would be useful to be able to know?
I think it's a difficult way.
I think it's a difficult one because I don't know in what way other people can help.
I find it really difficult to give advice to my friends who are non-medics about their work
because I have no idea how it functions.
I can give very sort of superficial generic advice that I would do this and I do that.
But unless you're in that setting, that situation, it doesn't really mean anything.
and I don't come from a family of medics
and sometimes I'll open up to my family
who are wonderful and a great support system.
But again, it's that sort of generic superficial,
you'll be fine, you'll work through it,
you're a trooper, you can do this,
like it just doesn't help.
And sometimes, well actually, most times
having someone who's a friend or a colleague
be able to give me more sort of structured, more detail advice
and reflect on it, and they can reflect on their similar circumstances
they've been through, and I learn from it.
But I suppose just empathy in general doesn't hurt, does it?
And I do think people sometimes see doctors,
especially when you're in a scenario like A&E,
where they're in and out, in and out.
I don't think people realise sometimes
we don't have a chance to eat on the shifts,
We don't have a chance to go to the toilet.
Then we have to approach many sort of acute or upsetting scenarios
that I think sometimes people can be frustrated with you
because they weren't seen early enough.
I think sometimes people don't realise you've been on your feet all day.
Yeah, that's a big one, isn't it?
And it's sometimes difficult to vocalise, you know?
And that's not only sort of patients, that can also be your colleague.
There can be sort of a lack of empathy from all angles, really, in the medical setting.
I was just thinking, is there a role in a hospital for like a kind of runner,
just like running between people, just like feeding them food, you know, as they go between different stations.
What medical professionals?
Yeah.
It's like they've got this, like, this like, loads of bits, like, pull it out of their pocket.
I've had...
Like a biscuit.
Shove a biscuit in about.
Well, sometimes I've worked with people who do.
do that. When I first started out as a doctor, one of my more senior colleagues had paged me
and I thought they were going to ask me to do something and I was already really tired. And they were
like, now I've got some cake for you to pick up because I know you haven't taken a break. And I know
you never do. And that, that I found quite sweet. But in terms of actually someone get a spoon and
shove piece of food in our mouth. I mean, I'd quite appreciate that. Yeah, I'm going to revolutionise
Amy. Yeah, the biscuit thruster. Yeah, biscuit thruster. Yeah. That's a good idea, actually. I mean,
I would be well up for that. Yeah. I just think, what a role. Yeah. You just definitely know you're doing good thing.
Yeah.
There's pressure because I'm also the older sibling.
Mm.
My mum always vocalised to me that her biggest dream was for me to be educated and make something of my life and sort of be, yeah, change the family from here onwards.
And I was excited to take on that role, but I think on reflection, it led to sort of an obsession of being a perfectionist, really.
This was an expectation my family had of me and I wanted to make them happy because it's their dream as well.
But I think I just, I sacrificed many parts of myself for it.
I think now I'm sort of taking the steps to fill in those gaps of where I'd neglected myself in my childhood really.
And sort of what you call the good years where you have fun and you explore and you delve into different things and you learn.
and you grow I think I sort of missed a bit of that as well as taking on that
maternal role with my younger sibling again would never sort of change it but it's sort of
those two things just sort of made me neglect of their aspects yeah what do you think needs to be
kind of put back and how are you going to do that I think like I said I always strive for
perfectionism being the best at everything
and now I'm just sort of saying
just be kind to yourself, your own human
it's okay to make mistakes
it's okay to disappoint
it's okay
for your parents not to see eye to eye
with what you want, it's okay
to want your own thing
it's okay to have your own ideas
have you told your parents this?
subtly
do you need to do it more directly um i strike a balance to be fair between living up to my family's
expectation and making my parents proud and happy but also taking the steps to live life the way
that i want to and it's still a really difficult balance i still don't know how to truthfully do it
I think I'm doing that now, now that I've achieved my goals and fulfilled my responsibilities and I'm now spending that time letting light into my life and I've only really started that journey in the last couple of months.
Okay. Is there anything that you're keen to try in this new era of potential lightness?
I want to write a book.
Okay, here we go.
I've always been an artistic person.
I don't consider myself to be a very structured person,
although I've done that in my life for feeling these many responsibilities.
I'm very sort of very hippie in my interests and my thoughts and my ideas about things.
So I love reading, I love watching films.
I used to love acting when I was little, but I don't know if I could do that anymore.
But I think writing a book would be something I'd feel comfortable with.
Can you start? I mean, the book?
I have just as of yesterday.
Yesterday.
I've written a sentence or two.
There we go.
That's a start.
Sort of when I had a break yesterday.
That's fantastic.
At work.
At work.
Oh my God, wow.
He's like, at luck.
Do you know what start the novel?
Well, for several years, I've had thoughts about what I'd write a book about.
I'm a big daydreamer
so these thoughts just randomly
appear in my head
but I've only just started
to actually write it down
whether I'll actually stick to it
I'm not quite sure
because I'm quite poor at that
but you've stuck to stuff very strongly
in your life
you wouldn't be where you're in that
so you can stick to other stuff
I think it's about having that confidence
that I'm good enough to do it
getting good grades
there's a formula to it
you learn it memorise it you do it
there's a high likelihood you're going to succeed in it.
But I think with the arts,
that nervousness is what I'm writing is absolute rubbish
and will people like it, will people value it,
will people see what you see?
So it's that having that confidence to be like,
actually what I'm writing is good enough.
I think you've just got to do it.
Yeah.
You know, small steps.
You know, write a couple of chapters or something.
Yeah.
Find a couple of people who you trust.
Yeah.
Here's where I'm at mentally with it.
You know, I'm new to it.
They'll know you and be sensitive to,
to you and you're no more and then you just build that confidence slowly and then
keep going yeah you know is there any reason why you started yesterday I'm interested
well I've only sort of recently becoming more mindful and looking after myself and I think in
this day and age in this generation when you have periods of time to yourself you do
scrolling you know you're wasting that time are you a big scroller yeah
You don't strike me as a scrolling.
I know.
Don't give me scrolling vibes.
I never had social media until I was 26.
Oh, right.
So you're late to.
Very late.
And then...
Should never have started.
I should never have started, but I'm trying to get out of that.
And so, yeah, it's just as of yesterday.
I was just like, actually, why not invest time in something I'm actually interested in?
I think it's a very good idea.
Yeah.
I think you should definitely do it.
So at some point your mother was like, I want you to be the person who changes the momentum,
the trajectory, sorry, of the family, full stop.
Yeah.
What age would you have been at that time?
11
It's young
Yeah
It's really young, isn't it?
And
Difficult question
But like
If she says nothing
At that point
What do you think your life looks like now?
Different
I probably
Would have done a different degree
I probably would have gone into something more artistic
I probably would have thought about doing a year abroad somewhere.
I love travelling, so I probably would have done a gap here.
But there was never any pressure to be a high achiever.
I think that's just part of my personality as supposed to please.
Sure.
So do you think your mum, you know, she saw something you need to say that?
Yes, exactly.
Do you have any sense of ill will towards that moment or that tiny?
Do you think that was too young?
Do you think it was too much?
Sometimes yes, but I think as I've grown older,
I've started to put myself in my parents' shoes.
I mean, my mum herself came from very little.
She got married when she was 17 to my dad.
she wasn't allowed to even finish school
and she grew up with the consequences of that
and I know her intention was and is
that she just wants me to live the best life possible
and she saw higher education
means you have financial stability
and yes there are hardships,
with that and you sacrifice a lot but then you can live your life really however you want
with that you can travel with that you have more options to do things in your life and when we talk
about it now it just makes her so happy and she's so proud that I don't see it as a sacrifice
I see it as leverage into building a better life for us as a family my mum goes around telling
people with joy you know my daughter's a doctor and she likes the respect that she gets from that
she likes how proud other people are and how it makes our extended family proud and how people
talk about it it's not something that necessarily gives me a lot of excitement or it sort of you know
I don't use that as an ego boost or anything personally for myself but it's the joy and happiness
it gives her um yeah suppose our happiness is somehow interconnected
And we're so similar.
Me and my mum, I forget we're different people.
I know that's a really strange thing to say,
but we're both equally as sensitive and introspective and reflective.
And sometimes it's really, it's an odd thing to say,
but sort of differentiate between me and my mum.
But you haven't got married at 17, I guess.
No, no, no.
And I think my mum would have been mortified.
But I suppose now I'm 28 and I'm not.
That's a conversation of my life.
How are you fixed, you know, love-wise?
You've got anyone in your life?
I haven't and I've never been with anyone in my life and I'm 28 and when I was younger
when I was like 20-21 that didn't mean a lot to me because I thought I've got time.
and then time just flew by that something that I'm thinking about a lot is sort of relationships and marriage
because I never thought I'd be in this situation.
How do you think it's happened?
It's complicated because I believe in courting, so sort of dating with the intention of marriage.
Okay.
And that can be really difficult to vocalise.
Yeah. What do you mean by that, like courting with the intention to marry?
So I practice a certain faith. Yeah. I grew up in the faith. I followed it since I was young.
Can you say what this faith is?
I'm Muslim. And so I always grew up being told when you meet someone in a romantic sense.
When you are talking to someone, you know, it's with the intention of if things go well that we should get married.
Because in the faith, we don't believe in boyfriend and girlfriend.
So you just skip that stage?
You skip that stage.
It's sort of a really prolonged talking stage.
Yeah, I see.
Yeah.
Do you think there any benefit in the boyfriend and girlfriend stage?
I think it's difficult because living in England where you're exposed to music and movies,
all you see is sort of romantic relationships in the context of boyfriend and girlfriend.
And when you grow up, you think you want that.
Yeah.
And then you go home.
and you have your own cultural practices
and that that clashes
and when I was younger
I was quite stubborn about it in my mind
that no I think I want to approach it
like I see it in the movies
and then in songs and things
and how my friends might do it
but I see a value to courtship
as I've gotten older
I think that's how I'd want to approach it
I've always been like
I want to meet the one
and that's it
and you just haven't met that person
No, haven't met that person
How hard have you tried?
Not the hardest, I think as the years have gone by
My social life has diminished
Again, my work is such chaotic hours
That when I have days off
I'm not really thinking about that
How am I going to meet someone
It's more so how can I just
Look after myself and recuperate
Of course
Do you think you need to
Wait, does it, could it be someone of any faith
you could find as long as they were into that system
or is not that's not how it works
so I think that's where the difficulty lies
because my pool is restricted
I'd want to be with someone the same faith
as me that's important
and that's not because someone's telling me
it's because
I want that
I'd want someone who understands
the way that I grew up
the way my family practiced
the faith
and also we share the same values
so that when we have children
We raise them the same way.
You know, sort of seeing it from the outside, relationships are tough enough, I think, to add that in the mix.
Yeah, I understand.
Of having constant conflict would be difficult.
Yeah.
I mean, you're going to be contrary here.
Okay.
And obviously, complete understand.
I feel like if someone really loves you and respects you, you know, they will shift their things to meet what you need to be met, you know?
I don't know, I feel like, I feel like it's, is this like too much of a limitation?
Yeah, because I think it would upset my family.
It would completely break down my family.
Do you think so? Like, oh, completely?
Yeah.
Wow.
It's, it's not as simple.
And it's just not mine.
It's, it's, that, that would be a common thing.
Yeah.
But let's imagine, sorry, one more annoying question.
If I moved you to another country, you had no family around anywhere.
And families, wasn't it?
Yeah.
Would that be different?
I'd still want to be with someone with the same faith as me, because it's what I want.
And also, I don't want to impose my faith on anyone.
I think that's important to me.
I think I'd rather meet someone on the similar wavelength from the same faith,
and we share that life together rather than meeting someone completely different.
because I have friends who've done it
and it's very difficult
I've heard of all the hardships
along the way that they've had to go through
I just wouldn't want to do that
I think I just value peace a lot more
exactly fair
so I think
sorry for asking a noise question
that's okay
you know that's okay
so where do you find
where are you going to find someone
how does this work
I don't know
but I think that's the beauty of life isn't it
Everyone has different journeys.
Some people, they meet people when they're younger
and some people just happens when they're older.
I still have hope that I'm going to meet someone.
In an organic way.
I don't know.
Well, it's difficult because I'd like to vet them.
So I think, for instance,
being someone spontaneously in a park,
I don't know if I'd say yes
because I really need to vet someone.
You could bet someone in the park.
Yeah.
ask us some questions yeah maybe maybe yeah i don't know where i'd meet them i don't know but i'm
trying to i'm trying to go by the approach that life is magical
it is but also sometimes you have to inject it with magic as in like if i didn't approach you
today we wouldn't be having this conversation the point is like you know sometimes to get the
magic you've got to do some stuff but i think on reflection of my life
the more I've tried hard at something, the more it's backfired.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, fair enough.
Yeah.
For instance, when I got into medical school,
I got in the second time around three years later after applying.
Okay.
I just let it go.
I just sort of applied, shut my eyes.
And then it was on Christmas Day that I got the email to say that I'd gotten in.
And there have been many instances in my life like that where I've just sort of let go.
I've made peace with it.
And then that thing just came into my life quite easily.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't totally agree with you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But that's, I mean, I totally get what you're saying.
I just think, oddly enough, I think romance is something that exists in its own sphere.
Okay.
I kind of believe it needs its own rules.
I completely see what you're saying.
Yeah.
But also we're dealing with, you know, it hasn't come to you.
Yeah.
So sometimes when it hasn't come, then you have to operate in a different way.
So that to make...
What do you suggest?
I should do.
So I think you just have to be a bit more proactive.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Like, I mean, it's simple as that.
Like, I don't know what that means to you, what that proaction would be.
But I just, whatever it is, I think he's got to just be a bit more pushy.
Yeah, I've been told I'm not a flirtatious person, and I completely agree.
I'm not one to put myself out there.
I'm quite a reserved person.
And also, I like to build something off a friendship.
I don't, I wouldn't want to jump into something.
think romantically. So the thought of just going back to the park. But even to get that
friendship going, you have to be proactive. You don't have to be great at flirting or anything.
I'm not really, it's more just like the intention. It's difficult. Like I said, I have a certain
criteria. It's that difficulty. Where do I put myself out there where I'm meeting people who
fulfill that requirement? That's tricky. Because if I didn't have that, it would be so much
easier but I do. And I know that that's why I haven't met someone. I'm not a dating app sort of
person. I don't think I can, I like to meet. You're a business card? No, but do you think I should
put one out? Yeah. We say his business card. Can't be a message. It's going to go for it.
Not much to lose. You're right. You're right. I think maybe that's the appropriate which I should
take in life. Yeah, maybe. Because I think there's a thing where I, I think, there's a thing where I,
men should always make the first move and I didn't I didn't grow up feeling that way
but I have a lot of friends who feel that way and I sort of I've I've become more like
that where I'm like it's that thinking of if a man really likes you he'll make the
effort to speak to you and approach you what if this man is like you and then you've got
you know then no one's doing anything then yeah and I feel like that's happened a lot
I feel like that's happened a lot in my life really reflecting back I think
I think.
And anyone you can go back to?
Maybe.
Maybe that's what you're going to do tomorrow?
Maybe.
Maybe.
So, okay, a picture of scenario, like three eligible gentlemen like in, you know, 10 minute intervals kind of like walk past and spot you and they're all perfectly appealing.
Okay. They would warrant like a meeting or whatever. Yeah. How does courtship work?
Yeah. I don't think there's any rules into how many people you can speak at one chance.
And also we live in the generation when people use apps and a lot of people do that on there, don't they?
There shouldn't be any physicalness to the relationship.
That's only sort of within the boundaries of marriage.
What is physicalness that of interest?
Like, what's the cast of point?
Anything from kissing to being completely physical, physically into it.
So kissing off the...
Off hugging.
Yeah. No hugging.
Well, it's very different for different couples.
I see. I have friends with the same faith who do everything and sometimes their families know and sometimes they don't.
Yeah. I mean, I was just on the top of my head, so I just say, like, obviously, completely respect all faith and all intentions here.
I think, like, personally, the physical connection with someone is so related to the connection.
Obviously, it's not, you know, the whole package. I'm not talking about sex story. I'm literally talking about like two people, embracing.
you learn so much from that.
I suppose my concern would be that
then you're making this huge decision
for a lifetime where
you're kind of rolling out
this huge bit of evidence
that you've got that or haven't got that.
Well, someone can be a good hugger
and be a rubbish partner at the end of it.
This is true. This is true.
I think...
I suppose because I've grown up with the idea of it,
I don't know any different. I just don't.
But I also see it as quite.
special like you've courted each other for quite a while and then you get to have your first
hug and how that feels it's it's about that mindset that you were able to control that desire
to favor your faith abide by your values and really sort of um value the person and their
personality because that takes a lot of control and the fact that you did
that together it's quite rewarding and quite fulfilling and I know people might see that as strange
and quite different but I quite like the idea of that and I assume that would feel even better
you know the fact that you waited for so long to have the first hug to have the first kiss
to have those intimate moments yeah totally fair yeah well well explained but you just do all
But I understand. It's strange. It's strange not having held hands with somebody who's
eventually going to be your life partner. And I agree, I think physical love is just as important
as the spiritual aspect. You should enjoy that. You should enjoy the physicalness,
but in the context of marriage.
Yeah. Totally get it. Yeah. Well, it's time to get those business guys made.
Yeah.
or whatever that method is.
Yeah.
I have been thinking about it.
I'm not sure.
I don't know what the best approach is.
I think my friends have all exhausted ideas for me,
my parents as well.
I think if you know of some people you might quite like
and it's the simple as it's just like, you know,
sending them a message going, you know, do you want to do this?
You know what I mean?
I just think it's important to be in the game.
You're right.
And again, I think it's a difficult balance for me to find
Like in a lot of aspects of my life, I'm like, right, I want this thing and I'm going to work hard towards it and I've got a game plan.
Yeah. Just do that. That's something that's work so far.
But it's difficult.
Getting yourself out there, the embarrassment of rejection. I think for women, it's quite difficult.
You know, the thought of having rejection is really like embarrassing.
Of course. Totally get it.
So it's about that really.
I mean, it makes you for any better. Obviously, not in the same situation of being a woman and being rejected.
but doing this bench thing
like rejection is so
a huge part of it
you know but actually
the beauty is doing it a lot
you just get better at it
and then someone rejects me now
I'm like oh it's a bummer
because I could tell you know
someone might be good at it
but hey ho and they just don't wear it
as much each time
and yeah I think
now I agree with you
and I wish I could go back
and sort of try a bit harder
I'm sort of
going back and forth between is 28 to have I missed the boat or is 28 still young because
definitely still young in my culture 28 is quite old to not be married yeah there's that part of me
that has the urgency to be like okay the next person just try to make it work yeah but also trying
to be a bit more rational being like no you this is an important decision to make in your life
I would also say this is maybe quite a heavy thing to say to you but I say anyway um
a large part of your life has been, as you talked about earlier with your mum, you know,
it's been like something that's kind of been chosen for you. Yeah. And I would say, it's really
important not for that to be necessarily the case for romantically as well. You know,
I mean, isn't that, isn't someone choosing you, picking you out and you're going, yeah, yeah,
fine. Yeah. You know, where you take the lead and have, you know, as in that, I think that's
really important thing. Yeah, I agree.
flip it around. It's trying to flip it around actually. Be the chooser. Yeah. I mean that also
kind of speaks to you started a book yesterday. You know, you're choosing to do that. Again,
it's like no one's picking that out for you. Nothing's going to take away the magic of two
people meeting for the first time and all the amazing dynamics and things at play. Okay,
yeah. But you have to get there. Yeah, you're right. I suppose I always wanted a nice story to tell
my kids. I've met someone. But like it can still be an amazing story with how you, however you do it.
No? Yeah. Tell my kids I print it out a business card. I mean that's it. But then there will be
always something organic in the process. You're right. Yeah, you're right. Maybe I should look into it.
Maybe. I don't know. I don't think it has to be a business card. Roll out a few cards.
I used to, in my earlier Romantic days, do watercolours and then hand them out on the train to people I like.
What?
Yeah.
Watercolours of what?
As in just watercoloured paintings.
Yeah.
Is it just any random paintings?
Oh, sorry, yeah.
I mean, just like, I was really bad at it.
And do you get any success from that?
Yeah.
What, really?
Yeah, because then you can write a little message.
Oh, you wrote a message in that.
Okay.
Just a painting.
Yeah, yeah, I was a painting.
Sorry, they just found me, found me.
And then I would just write a little thing,
I just like, I hope you have a lovely life, whatever.
Then you write your name just in case, you know?
And then again, they can just find you if they want, you know?
You never know how these things are gonna happen.
But it's the planting in the seas, which is the crucial.
Planting the seed, isn't it?
Maybe I should.
Maybe this is, maybe we were meant to meet and do this
to sort of have that realization that, you know,
maybe I've been sitting in the back for,
quite a while and being quite reserved and because it's something I think about all the time.
Even on my walk before here, it's something that I reflect on, you know.
So maybe this was, this encounter was meant to have, to sort of give me the nudge.
That and the biscuit thruster of course, and that sounds.
You're going to talk to your colleagues about that.
Yeah, I will.
And your book?
And my book.
Three, triple threat?
Yeah.
Three things to go bored.
Yeah.
You know, the charts of us meeting and doing this is just like, it's so improbable.
This is a bit weird to say this.
Okay.
Sometimes they get feelings about people from a long way away.
Okay.
And I saw, because you were on that bench for ages.
I was.
Really quite a while.
Yeah, I was.
And I looked up and I thought, okay, that has to be.
okay that's interesting like in the at some point you're the only person up there
I was like I wonder who the only person out there is that's intriguing yeah you know
and it's like felt like a certain you know you get like you feel like a certain
awful like far away that intuition to approach up oh yeah um so weirdly I use my
intuition to approach you and now I'm saying you should do yours approach up
see I love that I love that but that's it you know it's like it is like there are
miracles within miracles in that sense you know it's one that we've just here in the
first place but another that it's so easy you're
of just, you know, not.
I hope it's not strange to say, but it's part of sort of life being magical, even this encounter.
I'm not, I'm not wanter, like, like a year ago I wouldn't do something like this.
I've always been quite reserved to really open up a lot.
There are things I dream about doing, but the thought of putting myself out there and doing it just petrifies me.
But like I said, I'm recently in this mindset, life is once.
once. What have you got to lose?
Completely. So even doing something like this, I think it's, it's so beneficial for me.
And I think it's only going to make me more confident in my approach to things in the future.
Yeah. Yeah. And also amazing that you started writing a book yesterday. I feel like these things like,
you know, you, you know, one begets another. You know, it's like you're just like you're in a role.
I think this is going to give me the motivation to continue it. Oh, definitely do it. Definitely.
When I was younger, actually, I thought I was going to be an author.
And I used to write to Penguin and other publishing houses.
And I used to write on a piece of paper.
I used to illustrate myself in my summer holidays.
I had no idea how publishing worked.
And I used to write children's books and then just get my dad to post them to like Penguin.
And they were always so nice about it that I remember in return,
And I got a set of rolled-dial books, all like 12 of them for free.
Then I'm like, yeah, yeah, I remember that.
Well, maybe that moment will come again.
Maybe.
There's no reason where you can't do all the things.
Yeah.
There's no reason where you can't keep these things alive, you know?
I really, yeah, I really want to branch out and do different things.
And I always used to have a mindset.
You have a job.
That's your entire life.
And now I'm starting to think, like, actually, I have other interests.
and it's okay to do many different things alongside your job.
Completely.
And even like just you were talking about earlier
about, you know, kind of the weight of your job.
Yeah.
Anything also to give you a bit of a break from that?
Oh, 100%.
It's sort of a therapeutic sort of, yeah.
That's not the relevant of it.
Yeah, absolutely.
One more question for you, then I'll leave you alone.
Actually two.
Okay.
Because there's the aim question which is why and everyone goes.
I forgot to ask you earlier
because we did all the kind of heavy moments in the hospital.
Yeah.
Can you tell me about the most joyous?
that you felt.
I have a lot of memories.
Okay, well, you can do more than one.
I recently, actually, they're just small moments.
I was looking after a patient,
and as they left the room and they were going to reception,
and I was heading back into reception to call another patient,
I overheard her saying to the patient that I was going to get,
oh, she's a lovely doctor.
you love her. She's so nice. She helped me so much. And even though that might seem like a trivial
comment to make to other people, it's just, you don't hear that all the time. And I don't think she
expected me to hear that. I didn't think she realized I was there. So it's the fact that she was
saying that just meant a lot. It was a booster for my day. It just made me feel grateful and
thankful because sometimes you don't realize the things that you're doing are contributing to
someone's life in a positive way. You're helping them. You're looking into things. You're making
them feel better. I remember going home that day and thinking, this is a special job to have.
You know, you are touching people's lives. You're helping them. Because there's not only a
medical aspect of the profession, there's an emotional aspect, a psychological aspect, a spiritual
aspect as well. So that made me feel really happy. And we sort of flipped through multiple
rotations and I recently left my hospital job in a particular specialty and it was just a
colleague who I didn't really work with a lot. We did a couple shifts here and there. I do have
low self-esteem where sometimes I don't think I'm interesting enough or funny enough because
to get yourself through these shifts sometimes people like to use a lot of humour and I didn't
think I was particularly interesting or funny or anything or we didn't work that for
frequently together but he sent me a really nice lengthy message saying how much he valued me
as a colleague and he really enjoyed our moments together on the shifts and that he thought
I had a bright future ahead of me and he'd hope that one day in the future we'd work together
again for whatever reason and that he thought I was a really good clinician because he's a couple
years senior than me so to have heard from a senior they say I think you're really good that
meant a lot to me.
Lovely.
If you had last question for you.
Okay.
Then you're free.
Okay.
You can other answer this in a now way or a general way.
What are you going to do next?
I am going to live life with more confidence.
just put myself out there
do the things that I was scared about doing
just telling myself
it's really not that serious
it's everyone's first time living their life
be kinder to myself
let go with the perfectionism
just be more human really
and I hope from our conversation
going forward.
Maybe by the end of this year
I can look back
how many months
have we got left
till the end of the year?
Six, seven.
Sort of in the next six months
I hope that I've done
a lot more in
learning things,
doing things, meeting people
than I did in the last six months,
let's say.
I hope I'm on the
path to
living life a bit more freely.
I think you are.
Yeah.
Well, thank you so much.
Oh, thank you so much.
I really love this.
This was amazing.
Yeah.
I really enjoyed it.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I don't know what to say to make it better.
Would you like the company should I stay.
No, it's hard not to shoot the messenger
when she's free to walk away.
Leave work alone in the rain.
Where in your pain like a cold, I can't shake.
Loneliness like salt on my tongue.
I'd write a book if my hands were numb
Oh, I'm everyone else's crutch
My brother, my mother, my job
When I'm tired at the end of the day
You could stay and share the weight.
It happened as soon as I looked up.
I trusted all my secrets to a stranger in a park, he said.
It's okay if you're letting people down.
will rise the world will still go round if you're everyone else's crutch there's nothing left to hold you up when you're tired at the end of the day no you'll find somebody who will stay
Take the weight off your shoulders for a while.
While we wait, let me hold you for a while.
Thank you.