logo
My cultural awakening: I joined Danny Wallace's accidental positivity cult – and found the love of my life

My cultural awakening: I joined Danny Wallace's accidental positivity cult – and found the love of my life

The Guardian12-07-2025
The spring after my A-levels was not going the way I planned. I was 19, hadn't got the required grades for any of my university choices and hadn't saved for a gap year. My friends were off enjoying their new lives and I was stuck at home in Essex with my disappointed parents, doing occasional temp work.
Then I read Join Me by the writer and comedian Danny Wallace. I'd enjoyed another book, co-written by him, Are You Dave Gorman?. I found this joyous and silly project, about grownups stumbling their way through their own lives, comforting when I had no direction. So when a friend recommended Join Me, I thought it would be a giggle too; I didn't realise it would change my life.
The book was more or less about how Wallace inadvertently started a 'positivity cult' after posting an ad in a London newspaper that simply said 'Join me'. Soon, letters started pouring in. He decided to use these people for good by rallying them to commit random acts of kindness each week. It was the mid-2000s and I spent a lot of time on internet forums. Some people started to talk about the group. The concept appealed, and I duly joined in.
Forum members organised regular real-life Join Me meets, where they would hang out in the pub for most of the day before doing random acts of kindness, such as giving a present to a stranger. I'd been to a couple and, in June 2004, took the train to London for a meet-up on Soho's Golden Square.
I was always apprehensive about meeting a bunch of strangers I had only spoken to online. One of the first people to approach me was an unassuming, bespectacled, kind-looking young man wearing an awful green jacket. He offered me a homemade Join Me badge – Badge-It! machines were very popular at the time – and we didn't speak again. We continued chatting on the forum, though, and I ran into him at meets in Brighton and Edinburgh.
Then a few months later, after a night out, I drunkenly started a new thread on the forum, posting that I thought he was quite fit. It was pretty cringe. His reply was something along the lines of: 'Erm, thank you?' In the sober light of day we both ignored it.
Sign up to Inside Saturday
The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.
after newsletter promotion
Then on Good Friday 2005, I went to a meet in Nottingham, where he lived. It was the first time we'd met in person since my post, and as we moved from the pub to a club, he yelled out my name, shouted: 'I like you, you're my favourite person!' and ran up to hold my hand. We kissed – and it was the start of the rest of my life.
We texted, and I travelled back to Nottingham and went to a pub quiz with him, then a bowling date, where we had a proper, more sober kiss. After a month of dating, I moved in; five years later we got married.
During that time, I did my resits and got better grades, but I'd met so many people from Join Me who had taken different paths that I realised I didn't need university at all. I got a job on the local council and made my life in Nottinghamshire with him.
We've been married 15 years now. We have a beautiful house, an assortment of cats, fish, sea monkeys and ants, and an amazing 12-year-old son who is the best person I've ever met. We still have a tattered copy of Join Me on our bookshelf, and I know of at least 20 human beings who exist because their parents met in that forum.
I am so grateful to Danny Wallace for those silly projects, and particularly how they brought this amazing, kind, funny – and, yes, still quite fit – man into my life.
You can tell us how a cultural moment has prompted you to make a major life change by filling in the form below or emailing us on cultural.awakening@theguardian.com.
Please include as much detail as possible
Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB.
Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian.
Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian.
If you include other people's names please ask them first.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'
Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'

The Independent

time17 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Playing politics gets dangerous for Julie Delpy and Suranne Jones in ‘Hostage'

Only a few people know what it's like to stand outside 10 Downing Street and address the world's media. Suranne Jones and Julie Delpy aren't politicians, but they got that opportunity playing rival stateswomen in thriller miniseries 'Hostage.' No. 10 is where the British prime minister lives and works and it's at the heart of Matt Charman's new Netflixshow releasing Thursday. During a tense Anglo- French summit, Jones power-dresses as Prime Minister Abigail Dalton, while Delpy wears the red lipstick of the pristinely presented French President Vivienne Toussaint. Also starring Ashley Thomas, Corey Mylchreest and Lucian Msamati, both women wrestle with power and their personal lives when Dalton's husband is kidnapped and Toussaint is threatened with a career-ruining scandal. 'The speeches is the hardest thing to do in the show,' says Delpy, who stood at a podium on the set of an impressive recreation of Downing Street. 'I had the same anxiety as if I was doing it for real.' Jones also had to address the House of Commons, with everyone shouting at her. It's a common sight in British politics, with politicians yelling and making noise over the top of a rival to drown them out in Parliament. Once everyone started braying at her, Jones 'couldn't remember anything' she was saying. Then they'd retake it without the extras shouting, which threw her after she'd got used to the all the noise. And words are weapons in this thriller, as negotiations veer between solidarity and betrayal. 'Every word is being scrutinized, like if you use a term instead of another, it's going to be judged by the press. And I mean, it happens a little bit in our business, but nothing compared to a politician,' adds Delpy. Delpy and Jones sat down with The Associated Press to talk about politicians and power pants. Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity. AP: How do you think France will feel about you being president? DELPY: I think they might get upset, I don't know, at my representation — no I'm joking — of a French president with a sex scandal and all that. I don't know, French are not very big on judging sex scandals with people. I don't think it works in France, like it works everywhere else, but not in France so much. Like they don't care when a president has an affair. It's more the politics. AP: These aren't specific politicians, but you did research and speak to female politicians. What did you learn? JONES: I wanted to talk to loads of women that were in it and from lots of different parties as well. So some on the phone, some were in person. I interviewed a couple of people high in power. We went to the Commons, watched the PMQs (Prime Minister's Questions), felt the atmosphere, walked the halls, talked to the speaker. And it was all, it was all so ... to be in the world that I know nothing about. I've been invited as a creative or a celebrity, but to actually talk to people about the balance and the cost of what it takes and what it does to your kids ... that was really helpful. DELPY: I've listened to a lot of politicians about their life, about what it's been like after they were in power and stuff and the pressure and stuff, but I didn't want to inspire myself on someone specific so there's no reference. It's like, 'Oh, she's like the blah blah blah or she's like so.' I made her different than some French women politician that would be the obvious persons to be inspired by. AP: These characters are in power and they are holding on to it. How do you use your own power in your life? JONES: I feel like I sometimes put power pants on, do you know what I mean? Because actually I also quite like to hide away. So I like the duality of power, which Abigail doesn't have that choice really. But, so I like to go, 'Right today. ... I'm going to use it for good.' Or I need it as energy, so I have power pants, but I like to take them on and off. AP: Can I establish, when you say pants — do you mean English pants (underwear) or American pants (trousers)? JONES: Big knickers. Yeah, power knickers, what about you? You got any power pants? DELPY: No, I don't know. It's funny. I was thinking of a joke I made years ago about like how when women are directors, they have to wear fatigues, not like literal, you know. If you go direct a movie wearing a dress, people don't take you as seriously. But it's kind of a joke on, you know, the power thing. JONES: But it's the same thing, isn't it? DELPY: Yeah and I think I've noticed that ... if you give a vibe that's more in charge, I think people have a certain respect. AP: So you both, like your characters, put a lot of thought into what you are wearing? JONES: What you're wearing emotionally that day, what you're giving out, what you're putting on. … And wearing the heels to make yourself taller, wearing the shoulders to not feminize yourself in that historically masculine situation. So yeah, all of that comes into play. DELPY: Toussaint, for me, it was important that she was really pristine all the time. And we talk about the white coat, that she has never put lipstick on a white coat. I would put lipstick on my white coat in 10 seconds. But she's like really the kind of person they will never be, you know, she'll never be walking like this (folds over her lapel) into a room… JONES: With a lapel up! Julie on the other hand, definitely. DELPY: And I'll step in a hole and fall.

Robbie Williams says phones are a ‘drug' as he bans them for his children
Robbie Williams says phones are a ‘drug' as he bans them for his children

The Independent

time17 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Robbie Williams says phones are a ‘drug' as he bans them for his children

Robbie Williams has prohibited his children from owning mobile phones. He described mobile devices as "a drug" and a form of "abuse" during an interview with ITV. Williams stated his intention to keep his children phone-free for as long as humanely possible. He expressed concern about the internet's "corrosive" effect, questioning how he could give such a "drug" to a 7-year-old or 12-year-old. Watch the video in full above.

Helen Flanagan says son was ‘running wild' at 11:30pm in late-night struggle
Helen Flanagan says son was ‘running wild' at 11:30pm in late-night struggle

The Independent

time17 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Helen Flanagan says son was ‘running wild' at 11:30pm in late-night struggle

Helen Flanagan has spoken candidly about the difficulties of parenthood, specifically her struggles to get her four-year-old son, Charlie, to settle down for bed. She shared a video on Instagram on Wednesday, 20 August, depicting her efforts to calm Charlie, who was still running around at 11:30 pm. In the clip, Flanagan used a calming technique, asking her son to repeat the phrase 'I am calm, I love my mummy' while holding his hand to her heart. The mother-of-three captioned the post by acknowledging the challenges of raising young children but also expressing that she will cherish these moments in the future. Watch the video in full above.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store