What I Learned About Resilience After The Worst Year of My Life

TW: baby loss.

We all have fears in life and if we are lucky enough we don’t experience them. Although I have experienced anxiety in my life I thought I was one of those lucky people. It was November 2019 and I lived my life in a cosy bubble. Bad things had happened in my life, and I had lost people I loved, but I felt happy and lucky.

Two months earlier my husband and I had decided to try for a third baby. I was thirty-five but I got pregnant immediately. I was over the moon and slightly smug. Geriatric pregnancy my arse. Later, I was exercising and I felt something weird happen in my body. Like a pop. I immediately stopped and put my hand to where the weird pain had happened. Then I brushed it away.  There was a weird uncomfortable pain in my entire body. It felt like a balloon was filling up. I couldn’t sit down properly. Then when I went to the bathroom there was blood. The blood was very dark and it freaked me out. I went to A&E. They didn’t even scan me and sent me home. Despite the fact I could barely walk and was in a lot of pain. I have a high pain threshold and I felt like they didn’t see that I was suffering enough.

The next day I went to the early pregnancy unit and they thought the pregnancy was an ecoptic pregnancy. I’m not going into detail about all of it in this piece because it is an entire article in it’s own. I started feeling the pain on Monday and it was Friday afternoon when I finally got my ’emergency’ surgery and one of the first things the surgeon said to me when I come to was that they caught it ‘just in time.’ My fallopian tube had ruptured and I was bleeding internally. I had been walking around bleeding internally for days while being told to ‘go home.’

There are snapshots of this time that haunt me: the registrar stroking her very pregnant belly while asking what I wanted to do with the remains of my baby, the fear when they sent me home that I would die in my sleep. Waking up and not being pregnant anymore. Notably the fact that they kept sending me home and eventually, days later, I refused to go home and made them scan me again. On the day of my surgery I almost passed out numerous times and the nurse kept bringing my back with oxygen, refusing to let me faint on her watch.

Mostly I remember the grief. There is no pain like losing a baby. I always thought people who killed themselves before that were selfish, now I know they are just in so much pain that they want to leave their bodies. I was completely and utterly broken. The only thing that brought me through were my other children. I figured if I could just put my feet onto the floor every morning and then get out of bed, I could survive. I only had to put one foot in front of the other.

In the blur of everything I took care of my children and tried to make sure they couldn’t see my pain. I didn’t want them to suffer, and I refused to let them see their mother depressed or spending days in bed. I knew that I had to structure my days. I had to get out of bed and smile at my children. Play with them, read them books. I took up Spanish and started doing yoga. It helped that we were moving house and I had to pack up and deal with all of that.

Just as the surgery scars started to heal a little I got ill. really ill. I had this continuous cough that wouldn’t go away. I spent boxing day with my mother-in-law and my husband’s aunt, uncle and their children. I had to find an emergency doctor’s appointment and fainted at the pharmacy getting antibiotics. I somehow managed to walk home although I have no idea how.

A few days later I was going to take my children to bed when I felt a sharp pain in my chest. It took my breathe away and then I couldn’t breathe. I was on the floor crying, barely able to breathe, begging my husband to help me. He called an ambulance and long story short I had double pneumonia, just as rumours of a SARS like illness started in China. I was unable to eat anything or lie down flat. I spent the next six months recovering as the world went into lockdown.

It was now July and my world started to come together again just as I noticed my period was late. I took a test and I was pregnant again. The happiness I felt was like nothing else.  But then weeks later I started bleeding. I made my way to the hospital, desperate to hold onto this baby, only to lose another one.  A few of my amazing friends told me they were pregnant and I didn’t want to tell them about my miscarriage because I didn’t want to scare them, or take away their joy. I would see pregnant women on the street and feel a bitterness that made me not recognise myself. I was full of hate and pain. I found women who were pregnant with their third child, or who had one, especially triggering. The pain of a miscarriage is hard to describe. It wasn’t as tough as the ectopic pregnancy, but the emotional pain of waiting for your baby to pass through you is sharp and brutal. The loss is acute.

I got up, homeschooled my oldest until 2pm and then focused on my toddler for a few hours. Then I forced myself to write three thousand words a day. I started another novel which I finished in six weeks.Then one day I walked out into my garden and the world seemed so beautiful. I sat down to take it in and I saw dew on the blades of grass. I thought about how cruel it was that my baby never got to experience a moment of this world, and yet I knew the world was still beautiful and that life went on. Even if the pain never really goes away.

I started to hate who I was becoming so I stopped. I decided that I didn’t want anyone else to feel this pain that I was feeling. I wanted to put positivity and love out into the world. To spread nothing but kindness. In this I finally found myself again. There is nothing uglier than bitterness or hate and my refusal to let it consume me was a turning point. I donated to charity and did everything I could to spread community and love. I kept writing and I started submitting my novel to agents and publishers. I went after every dream I had and I worked hard.

It has been two years now since my grief threatened to swallow me whole and I look back at that time and it still hurts, but I’m proud of myself. My Spanish is still mediocre and my yoga is not great, but I got a book deal and my novel Ember published in March 2022 to great acclaim. Ember has a character in it who had a miscarriage in the past and the lead character is also an obstetrician. I almost abandoned the book after my ectopic as I found editing it so painful, I put all of my pain into it. It was like therapy. I persevered and I’m proud I did. More importantly, in June 2021 I had my gorgeous and beautiful rainbow baby who I am grateful for every day. A little boy who is sunshine personified.

I didn’t let my pain break me or change who I was. The worse things got the harder I reached for the best. The negativity made me search for the positive. Faith and love helped me reach the other side and I know that life is always beautiful and precious. I promised myself I would always live my life to the full and never take it for granted. I won’t break it.

Top Books To Read Now

The Dead Romantics by Ashley Poston

This is one of my favourite romance novels EVER now. It’s funny and sad, heartbreaking and heartwarming. A definite five-star read. 

Florence Day is a ghost-writer with one big problem. She’s supposed to be penning swoon-worthy novels for a famous romance author but, after a bad break-up, Florence no longer believes in love. And when her strict (but undeniably hot) new editor, Benji Andor, won’t give her an extension on her book deadline, Florence prepares to kiss her career goodbye.

Although when tragedy strikes and Florence has to head home, the last thing she expects to see is a ghost at her front door. Not just any ghost, however, but the stern form of her still very hot – yet now unquestionably dead – new editor.

As sparks start to fly between them, Florence tells herself she can’t be falling for a ghost – even an infuriatingly sexy one. But can Benji help Florence to realise love isn’t dead, after all?

If you fell in love with Beach Read, The Love Hypothesis and The Hating Game, this laugh-out-loud romance packed with sizzling chemistry will give you all the feels!

The Serial Killer’s Daughter by Alice Hunter

A sequel to one of my favourite books of 2021, The Serial Killer’s Wife. This is just as good, twisty, compelling and full of depth. It’s impossible to put down. 

Is murder in the blood?

In a sleepy Devon village, a woman is taken from the streets. Local vet Jenny is horrified. This kind of thing doesn’t happen here.

But it’s not the first time she’s been so close to a crime scene. The daughter of a prolific serial killer, she’s spent her whole life running from who she really is.

And the crime is harrowingly similar to those her father committed all those years ago…

But she’s not her father’s daughter.

Is she?

All That’s Left Unsaid by Tracey Lien

A beautifully written and evocative debut. It’s original and shows that Tracey Lien is truly one to watch. 

They claim they saw nothing. She knows they’re lying.

1996 – Cabramatta, Sydney

‘Just let him go.’

Those are words Ky Tran will forever regret. The words she spoke when her parents called to ask if they should let her younger brother Denny out to celebrate his high school graduation with friends. That night, Denny – optimistic, guileless Denny – is brutally murdered inside a busy restaurant in the Sydney suburb of Cabramatta, a refugee enclave facing violent crime, and an indifferent police force.

Returning home for the funeral, Ky learns that the police are stumped by her brother’s case. Even though several people were present at Denny’s murder, each bystander claims to have seen nothing, and they are all staying silent.

Determined to uncover the truth, Ky tracks down and questions the witnesses herself. But what she learns goes beyond what happened that fateful night. The silence has always been there, threaded through the generations, and Ky begins to expose the complex traumas weighing on those present the night Denny died. As she peels back the layers of the place that shaped her, she must confront more than the reasons her brother is dead. And once those truths have finally been spoken, how can any of them move on?

The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O’Farrell

Written with fierce brilliance, this is a story you won’t forget.

The Marriage Portrait is a dazzling evocation of the Italian Renaissance in all its beauty and brutality.

Winter, 1561. Lucrezia, Duchess of Ferrara, is taken on an unexpected visit to a country villa by her husband, Alfonso. As they sit down to dinner it occurs to Lucrezia that Alfonso has a sinister purpose in bringing her here. He intends to kill her.

Lucrezia is sixteen years old, and has led a sheltered life locked away inside Florence’s grandest palazzo. Here, in this remote villa, she is entirely at the mercy of her increasingly erratic husband.

What is Lucrezia to do with this sudden knowledge? What chance does she have against Alfonso, ruler of a province, and a trained soldier? How can she ensure her survival.

The Marriage Portrait is an unforgettable reimagining of the life of a young woman whose proximity to power places her in mortal danger.

Before I Do by Sophie Cousens

Another outstanding novel from Sophie Cousens, who is turning into the romance writer of our generation. She can’t put a foot wrong and this is another stunner. A must read. 

What would you do if the one that got away turned up the night before your wedding?

Audrey is marrying Josh; steady, dependable Josh, the love of her life. They share a flat and a bank account, and it’s the only relationship that Audrey’s ever had that feels like something she can put her trust in. But romance should be full of fireworks, and as the big day approaches, Audrey’s found herself wondering if Josh really is ‘the one’.

So, when Josh’s sister Miranda arrives at their rehearsal dinner with Fred – Audrey’s ‘What If?’ guy, the man she met six years ago and had one amazing day with but never saw again – Audrey can’t help but see it as a sign.

Surely Fred’s appearance the night before Audrey is due to get married can’t be a coincidence. And when everything that could go wrong with the wedding starts to go wrong, Audrey has to wonder: could fate be trying to stop her from making a huge mistake?

The Winter Garden by Alexandra Bell

Beautiful and full of wonder. 

Welcome to the Winter Garden. Open only at 13 o’clock.

You are invited to enter an unusual competition.

I am looking for the most magical, spectacular, remarkable pleasure garden this world has to offer.

On the night her mother dies, 8-year-old Beatrice receives an invitation to the mysterious Winter Garden. A place of wonder and magic, filled with all manner of strange and spectacular flora and fauna, the garden is her solace every night for seven days. But when the garden disappears, and no one believes her story, Beatrice is left to wonder if it were truly real.

Eighteen years later, on the eve of her wedding to a man her late father approved of but she does not love, Beatrice makes the decision to throw off the expectations of Victorian English society and search for the garden. But when both she and her closest friend, Rosa, receive invitations to compete to create spectacular pleasure gardens – with the prize being one wish from the last of the Winter Garden’s magic – she realises she may be closer to finding it than she ever imagined.

Now all she has to do is win.

Coming in November…

Desert Star by Michael Connelly

Everyone knows I am a huge fan of Michael Connelly. I have never been disappointed in one of his books and I love his Bosch series. And…this one is my favourite Bosch book ever. He just keeps getting better and better. The prose, the story, the brilliant characters. Can Michael just give me an ounce of his talent please? He has plenty to spare. Utter perfection. Preorder now. 

SOME CRIMES YOU CAN’T FORGET.
Detective Renée Ballard is given the chance of a lifetime: revive the LAPD’s cold case unit and find justice for the families of the forgotten.
The only catch is they must first crack the unsolved murder of the sister of the city councilman who is sponsoring the department – or lose everything…

OTHERS YOU CAN’T FORGIVE.
Harry Bosch is top of the list of investigators Ballard wants to recruit. The former homicide detective is a living legend – but for how long?
Because Bosch has his own agenda: a crime that has haunted him for years – the murder of a whole family, buried out in the desert – which he vowed to close.

WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOU KNEW WHO DID IT?
With the killer still out there and evidence elusive – Bosch is on a collision course with a choice he hoped never to make…

 

What are you reading?

Hair Volume Goals With BondiBoost Thickening Therapy Range

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I have tried this range and I love it! Perfect for getting your best hair yet.

Bondiboost hair care range

Frost Loves: Longbottom & Co Virgin Mary

Recently I worked my way through cans of Longbottom & Co’s Virgin Mary and Tomato Juice. Both are glorious and full of flavour and spice. Perfect for a kick to drink on their own, or to mix into a Bloody Mary. 
Longbottom & Co Virgin Mary is a canned tomato juice perfectly seasoned for a non-alcoholic Virgin Mary and creates the perfect pour every time. Rightly spiced and with the garnish blended in, the Virgin Mary has got spirit enough without the alcohol. Not only is Longbottom & Co vegan, free from artificial ingredients and GMOs, but it is also made with the world’s best fresh-pressed Spanish tomato varieties. Canary and Pear Tomatoes are known for their sweet and balanced flavour, making Longbottom & Co a top-quality tomato juice.
RRP: £2.50 for 1 x 250ml. Available from Longbottom & Co. RRP: £18.00 for 12 x 150ml. Available from Amazon. RRP: £37.00 for 24 x 250ml. Available from Amazon and Longbottom & Co
Celebrate Bloody Mary Day, 1st January, & Cure Your Christmas Fog With The Cocktail Society’s Bloody Mary Cocktail Kit 
 
 Bloody Mary Day falls on New Year’s Day so why not make The Cocktail Society’s Bloody Mary your first cocktail of 2023. This cocktail kit is a great gift to add to your Christmas wish list and be prepared for New Year’s Day to clear the Christmas brain fog.
 
The Cocktail Society’s Bloody Mary Cocktail Kit is a collaboration with Longbottom & Co Gently Spiced Tomato Juice and Black Cow Vodka. Together they have created the ultimate Bloody Mary in a box, ideal for 1st January and delivered straight to your door.
Each Cocktail Society kit comes with the ingredients to make four Bloody Marys, a Black Cow  Vodka signature highball glass, a premium snack and a recipe card.
 Cocktail society, longbottom, tomatoe juice
Longbottom & Co Gently Spiced Tomato Juice is the ultimate Bloody Mary mixer, made with the finest tomatoes, a dash of Longbottom & Co Hot Sauce, and their secret, specially developed vegan Worcester Sauce. This tomato juice is not only the only vegan-certified drink in the category but also free from artificial ingredients, GMO and gluten.
 
The Cocktail Society’s Bloody Mary Cocktail Kit RRP: £45. Available from The Cocktail Society
 
Longbottom & Co Gently Spiced Tomato Juice RRP: £2.50 for 250ml. Available from Longbottom & Co
Longbottom & Co Gently Spiced Tomato Juice RRP: £32.71 for 24 x 250ml. Available from Amazon and Longbottom & Co

The week just gone has been hectic at the Columbia Community Association, but when isn’t it – and all so exciting

 


Monday morning MBC were at CCA at 9am on the dot for  cooking day, and lucky  Marion was offered the leftover fruit, to refuse would, of course, have been rude.(ho hum)  Cultural Creatives then pitched up and a Teddy Bears Picnic was created to everyone’s delight. 

During the week, Julie Milne, Lead Residential Liaison Officer at Equans talked with Marion, who told Frost, ‘There’s nothing like discussing your hopes and aspirations with ‘them at the top,’ I don’t know if it will be productive, but shy bairns get nowt.’                

 

It really is revolving doors at CCA because Donna Gilroy from Havern Wellbeing  delivered a donation of household products along with hand sanitizers, gloves etc. which was much appreciated.  And Equans donation of refreshments meant a very  great deal to CCA.

The CCA team was delighted to welcome Joseph Tote and Glen from the Jewellery Road show and Marion told me it was so  great to see the community popping in to use this free service. ‘Some people missed the opportunity but we have passed their details on.’

Then, off goes Marion again, with a great idea: ‘I have just ordered a new signing in book and on reflection maybe I should have bought in bulk as the books are filling up fast. This is a good thing as we love to entertain. Red shoes Bob as Margaret calls him is looking forward to being the Bingo caller on Friday for our “Free Prize Bingo” . He is a born entertainer, gets things wrong on purpose, or so he says, but he is game for a laugh. Then, on Wednesday, Ben the Plumber came to fit our new two bowl sink, which enabled the kitchen to be finally finished by the end of the week, so that the new appliances could be unpacked and ready for use.

Hurrah Hurrah, Brian rang to tell Marion that  Wayne would be calling in with the door signs and they are so great that Marion thought how lovely it would be to get him to make a new sign for the wall outside. So naturally she lost no time in contacting Margaret at the magazine, with the answer:: ‘Whoop whoop done deal Margaret, I keep telling you there is no blood like Brady Blood, I bet you are so pleased that you share this glorious nectar running through your veins. These signs are fantastic and made with love and pride. Oops, we missed the E out of Kelley, soon to be rectified and the nice gentleman who brought it to our attention is going to pay for the new signs.’

In answer to Marion, I am indeed pleased, for there I was, Little Annie Newsome’s lass who  spent most of her time outside the classroom door because she talked and talked, and whose reports always said – Could do better if she stopped being a nuisance – finally took herself in hand and started to write novels, quite a lot  set in  north east pit villages. How could I not,  after hearing about mum’s  life growing up in Brady Square, and my own times staying with Uncle Stan in his shop. Mum was relieved, she thought I’d be a criminal!

Chris from Harry Burnicle Contractors Ltd arrived to do the electrical check on the building. ‘We must ensure everyone safety at all times.’ Marion said.  Mind you, they had coffee and a chat on his arrival and ‘he agreed to have his photograph taken for the beloved Frost Magazine.’

Bob took the tables over to Woodridge Gardens for their Table Top sale on Sunday. The CCA likes  to help out where they can, and this is reciprocated by so many others. For instance:. 

ALLYSON CHAPMAN from Bells Caterers who are sadly approaching their closing date have a host of memorabilia  to donate to the Community Community Centre. How wonderful is that.

Last word from Marion:It’s been a great week and very productive and tomorrow is a pamper day for PollyP; red nails are on the cards., I love red nails Margaret, just as much as you love red shoes. Tonight, I am expecting the Alcohol Fairy to call. Cheers from Columbia Community Association, the place to be.’

It most certainly is.

Information: Columbia Community Association  Columbia uk Community Forum

Memories of Brady Square

   

Uncle Stan Newsome, and Annie Newsome soon after their mum died. Auntie Isobel and me some years ago when she had left the shop after Uncle Stan died and lived in Biddick.

Mum’s parents ran  the Long Pull or Long Pole off licence. Her mum died when she ws 2. Her dad remarried. On Her father’s death when mum was 11, I think Uncle Edgar took the shop over, Finally Stan and Auntie Isobel  ran it. I loved them very much, and David, my cousin.

The Moors at The Hope Theatre, Islington, London reviewed by Paul Vates: “Although the Moors are outside, the desolation they invoke encroach into every scene”

Inspired by the letters of Charlotte Brontë, The Moors is a claustrophobic tale performed in the round at the intimate Hope Theatre. The venue is petite and oppressive, perfect for the tense confinement the play wants us to feel. Although the Moors are outside, the desolation they invoke encroach into every scene.

The young governess Emilie (played by the excellent Meredith Lewis) has just arrived, to find her new employers just as desolate as the bleak landscape. Agatha is in charge (Imogen Mackenzie enjoying her Gothic Nurse Ratched role), but her sister, Huldey, is the counterpoint. Huldey produces light where there is darkness, innocent joy where there is gloom, wearing hearty pink to Agatha’s ominous black. Kenia Fenton’s lightness as Huldey is heart-warming to watch.

Kenia Fenton as Huldey

For me, it’s Tamara Fairbairn who pitches her performance to the mood of the play – both quirky and menacing. Is she Marjory or Margaret? We never quite know. Which is how it should be.

Tamara Fairbairn as Marjory/Margaret

The subplot of the mastiff dog and the moorhen leaves me cold. Is it necessary? I don’t think so – others may disagree. Peter Hadfield and Matilda Childs do what they can with the bizarre scenes they are given – an intertwining parable that is a little too obvious as it crawls to its inevitable conclusion.

Hudley, Emile, Agatha and Margaret/Marjory

And therein lies what I think is a problem with the structure of the play. It is so full of threat and menace that, at two hours, we become numb to it. The constant ‘scary’ soundtrack, cleverly designed by Julian Starr, does its best to create the eerie atmosphere. But there is not enough action or comedy to truly relax us so that the shocks hit home. Too much is on the same level. Phil Bartlett’s direction attempts to keep some movement and flow, but I think it’s an issue with the heart of the play: trying too hard to scare and unnerve… perhaps more light and shade would help, as there is a creepy evening’s entertainment here which is desperate to get out and chill us!

Photography Steve Gregson

Poster Designer Matt Smith

Director Phil Bartlett

Producer Ella Dale

Designer Sophia Pardon

Music Daniel Kluger

Sound Julian Starr

Performances until Saturday 5th November 2022

Shows at 7.45pm

Length 2 hours, plus an interval

Tickets www.thehopetheatre.com

Prices £16 (£13 concessions)

Location The Hope Theatre, Hope & Anchor, 207 Upper Street,

Islington, London N1 1RL

Instagram @thehopetheatre

Twitter @TheHopeTheatre

Facebook /thehopetheatre

The Magic of Moonma by Alex Bannard Wellness and Wellbeing Editor

At the beginning of Sept I attended Wellbeing by the Lakes Festival & had such a wonderfully uplifting day. We listened to fascinating talks, practiced mindful movement, picnic’d by the lake & met some inspiring souls.

This is where I met Shelly, co-founder of Moonma. We chatted whilst my friend & I browsed the rails of beautiful quality, Eco-friendly t-shirts emblazoned with uplifting messages, reminders of positivity & mindfulness. One mantra caught my eye: ‘And still I rise.’

Several days later ‘And still I rise’ was still in my heart & mind. It is a mantra that really resonates with me so I reached out to Shelly to discover more about Moonma.

Moonma is the co-creation of mother-daughter team, Jackie & Shelly. Jackie’s spiritual journey started over 2 decades ago in the wake of life knocking her down time & again as it is often the case. But Jackie’s kindness & love, drive & determination & her spiritual practices got her through.

Shelly had a spiritual upbringing, growing up with yoga, meditation, mindfulness very much part of her life thanks to her mum’s magical influence. They both swim in the sea at the full moon & practice moon meditations. Hence, Jackie’s nickname: Moonma.

Jackie & Shelly wished to create something that would empower others to be present & connected. They felt strongly for the power of words & embodying the essence of these words: and Moonma was born. A delicious array of clothing & gifts decorated with inspiring & intentional mantras guiding you to feel good inside & out.

Wearing the mantra you want to reflect that particular day, is like setting an intention for the day & a gentle reminder, whenever you catch a glimpse of the message, to turn inwards for a moment & connect to the essence of those words.

It was wonderful chatting to this inspiring mother daughter team. I joked with them that there was no way I could work with my mum but they are obviously a close family & working together was a natural progression.

I told them how inspired I had been by the mantra ‘And still I rise’, how it really sang to me. They told me they had created a beanie with it on further to my suggestion & that they had expanded the range to include other products bearing these words – I can’t wait to see them & get my order in! They also said the inspiration for this t-shirt was May Angelou’s fabulous poem And Still I Rise.

But there comes a point when words can no longer do the product justice, a picture says a thousand words so why don’t you check out it out for yourself, There’s new product coming very soon! Find out more: https://www.moonma.co.uk/

If you would like more information on how to practice mindfulness, meditation & yoga message Alex Bannard  at alex(at)alexbannard(dot)com.

For free resources check out her Facebook group: Mindfulness & Yoga for Self-Care, here is the link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/MindfulnessYoga4Relationships

Alternatively please check out her website: alexbannard.com

The Stylish Hat Keeping Your Curls In Tact

The colder months are nearly upon us, and while we all know that it has a detrimental effect on our skin, is anyone thinking about what it does to our hair?

 

Your hair needs more TLC than you might think in the winter. Cold air, indoor heating, and blustering winds can all leave your locks lifeless and lacklustre. To keep your hair healthy and hydrated, it needs protection; that’s where Only Curls’ Satin Lined Knitted Beanie Hat comes in!

 

Who said curls and hats don’t mix? Only Curls have made hat wearing a little easier with their satin lined, knitted beanie hat.

 

They have updated the classic beanie with a smooth satin lining to help protect curls, reduce tangling, and keep them frizz-free throughout the Winter. Stay warm, look cute, and keep your curls intact!

 

The smooth silky lining helps reduce frizz and protects hair from the cold weather. It is roomy enough for curly hair, but tight enough to stay put, and results in less tangles.

Made from 100% Vegan fabrics, Only Curls’ soft and stretchy Beanie Hat is available with and without a pom-pom, and in a range of colours to suit your style.

Only Curls – Satin Lined Knitted Beanie Hat With Pom Pom (Dusty Coral)

£22.00, onlycurls.com