Salima Saxton
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We lost the people for whom a postcode matters. Most surprisingly of all, we lost the fear. Because, you know, when your life explodes and it morphs into something far better, the fear evaporates, disappears, distills, just goes into the atmosphere. I'm not scared anymore. There's just like a little firefly of fear. And that's to do with the health of the people that I love.
We lost the people for whom a postcode matters. Most surprisingly of all, we lost the fear. Because, you know, when your life explodes and it morphs into something far better, the fear evaporates, disappears, distills, just goes into the atmosphere. I'm not scared anymore. There's just like a little firefly of fear. And that's to do with the health of the people that I love.
We lost the people for whom a postcode matters. Most surprisingly of all, we lost the fear. Because, you know, when your life explodes and it morphs into something far better, the fear evaporates, disappears, distills, just goes into the atmosphere. I'm not scared anymore. There's just like a little firefly of fear. And that's to do with the health of the people that I love.
There was an afternoon last summer. I was sitting in the garden in the farmhouse that we now live in. And it was sunny. And I was watching my husband and my son tear up the lawn on the ride on Moa. There were my two girls, and they were leading their friend's horse, Stan, to get a bowl of water just inside the front door. And there was our cat, Tigger, failing to catch a mouse in the hedgerow.
There was an afternoon last summer. I was sitting in the garden in the farmhouse that we now live in. And it was sunny. And I was watching my husband and my son tear up the lawn on the ride on Moa. There were my two girls, and they were leading their friend's horse, Stan, to get a bowl of water just inside the front door. And there was our cat, Tigger, failing to catch a mouse in the hedgerow.
There was an afternoon last summer. I was sitting in the garden in the farmhouse that we now live in. And it was sunny. And I was watching my husband and my son tear up the lawn on the ride on Moa. There were my two girls, and they were leading their friend's horse, Stan, to get a bowl of water just inside the front door. And there was our cat, Tigger, failing to catch a mouse in the hedgerow.
Tigger was an indoor cat, actually, in London. But now, well, gone is this skittish creature whose mood you could never predict. Instead... We have a creature that leaps up trees, parties all night, purrs by the fire. She knows exactly who she is. I think much like all of us. Valentine's Day. It reminded me that most success is a wiggly line on a grubby piece of graph paper.
Tigger was an indoor cat, actually, in London. But now, well, gone is this skittish creature whose mood you could never predict. Instead... We have a creature that leaps up trees, parties all night, purrs by the fire. She knows exactly who she is. I think much like all of us. Valentine's Day. It reminded me that most success is a wiggly line on a grubby piece of graph paper.
Tigger was an indoor cat, actually, in London. But now, well, gone is this skittish creature whose mood you could never predict. Instead... We have a creature that leaps up trees, parties all night, purrs by the fire. She knows exactly who she is. I think much like all of us. Valentine's Day. It reminded me that most success is a wiggly line on a grubby piece of graph paper.
I used to think of success as tick, tick, tick, ambition, ambition, ambition. Now, now I think of it as finding the people, finding the places that make you feel safe and bring you home.
I used to think of success as tick, tick, tick, ambition, ambition, ambition. Now, now I think of it as finding the people, finding the places that make you feel safe and bring you home.
I used to think of success as tick, tick, tick, ambition, ambition, ambition. Now, now I think of it as finding the people, finding the places that make you feel safe and bring you home.
Thank you. So, it was Valentine's Day. My husband, Carl, came into the sitting room and he closed the door. He was wearing a big, thick winter coat, even though it was quite mild outside, and he was shivering. He was trembling. I didn't recognize him. Something terrible has happened, he said. My husband, Carl, is a coper. He is a man with a plan. If you want someone on your team, pick Carl.
Thank you. So, it was Valentine's Day. My husband, Carl, came into the sitting room and he closed the door. He was wearing a big, thick winter coat, even though it was quite mild outside, and he was shivering. He was trembling. I didn't recognize him. Something terrible has happened, he said. My husband, Carl, is a coper. He is a man with a plan. If you want someone on your team, pick Carl.
Thank you. So, it was Valentine's Day. My husband, Carl, came into the sitting room and he closed the door. He was wearing a big, thick winter coat, even though it was quite mild outside, and he was shivering. He was trembling. I didn't recognize him. Something terrible has happened, he said. My husband, Carl, is a coper. He is a man with a plan. If you want someone on your team, pick Carl.
He's an oak tree. Then he said, I just can't do this anymore. Whatever I do, it is never enough. He had a business. He has a business. He'd been navigating it through COVID, through Brexit, through all of it. And I'm embarrassed to admit right now that I just kind of got used to him being stressed all the time. I barely saw it anymore. And then he added, do you love me? Can you still love me?
He's an oak tree. Then he said, I just can't do this anymore. Whatever I do, it is never enough. He had a business. He has a business. He'd been navigating it through COVID, through Brexit, through all of it. And I'm embarrassed to admit right now that I just kind of got used to him being stressed all the time. I barely saw it anymore. And then he added, do you love me? Can you still love me?
He's an oak tree. Then he said, I just can't do this anymore. Whatever I do, it is never enough. He had a business. He has a business. He'd been navigating it through COVID, through Brexit, through all of it. And I'm embarrassed to admit right now that I just kind of got used to him being stressed all the time. I barely saw it anymore. And then he added, do you love me? Can you still love me?
Because sometimes I just think it would be better if I wasn't here anymore. I met Carl when I was 22 in the waiting room of an audition room for a Bollywood film. Neither of us got the part. I asked him for the time as a really spurious reason to talk to him because he was simply the most handsome man I'd ever seen in my life. On our first date, I asked him if he wanted children over the starter.
Because sometimes I just think it would be better if I wasn't here anymore. I met Carl when I was 22 in the waiting room of an audition room for a Bollywood film. Neither of us got the part. I asked him for the time as a really spurious reason to talk to him because he was simply the most handsome man I'd ever seen in my life. On our first date, I asked him if he wanted children over the starter.