What Can I Give My Dog For Tooth Pain?
Animals & Nature0 min ago
Following from an earlier question - any suggestions?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I lived in and around brixton for years. still go out there now and again as i have friends that dj in venues in the area.
Don't miss living there now i moved away. It's nice not to have to be on high alert when i wander about town anymore (though i was only in what i'd call a dangerous situation once in six years).
While it's true that residents definately get treated differently from tourists who (mistakenly?) wander into the area, the old front line wears you down after a while.
Still, can't diss the place - just that drugs are prolific in the social scene there, so i'll leave it to the kids who are comfortable staying awake all weekend and trudging around out of their minds the whole time.
Brockwell parks my favourite park in london though...
How on earth can people relax there? I walked into Brixton from Stockwell last week and saw police cars with "Lambeth Anti-Robbery Unit" painted on the side. Walking past the tube station I had people lungeing in my face, I used the cash point near Tesco and have never been so nervous. I went for a pint in the Beehive and all over the wall is plastered "no drugs".
The place just has this overwhelming air of menace to it. It may be unpretentious but I've got less chance of getting shot in Chelsea or Hampstead.
It only struck me last week how distinctly odd London is - you can be walking through a rough part then suddenly into a posh part and vice versa, f.e. - Notting Hill / Ladbroke Grove, Hampstead / Kilburn, Greenwich / Deptford....the list is endless.
Brixton's horrible. Why can't people accept that?
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