How does one deal with the burdens of stardom?
Our agony aunt turns her attention to this vexed question among others

Michael Slater: corrupter of RT Ponting • Getty Images
No. Ricky started spitting only after he became a Test cricketer. His grandmother once told me he was an unusually germophobic little boy who'd scream blue murder if his "Inside this shirt is an Australian Test cricketer" t-shirt was not starched and bleached to his liking. I always suspected that Michael Slater turned him rogue.
Change your diet to accommodate demi-glazed pork ribs, deep-fried cheese, steaks and potato, and triple-layered chocolate cake. That'll thicken your skin (and arteries) enough for the trappings of international cricket.
Fickleness made its first recorded appearance in the cricketing world on December 15, 1960. The best Test had just finished and it dawned on everyone that nothing better would ever happen. The players couldn't stage a game that could be more exciting, the public couldn't feel any more thrilled than it already was, and the press couldn't write any better than it had (so they let TV take over).
No. The luckiest guy in the world is one who has never heard of Samir Kochchar. Or one who has never seen Shilpa Shetty wave the Rajasthan Royals flag. Or one who thinks "shameless plugging" is what a vain bald man indulges in. Or one who doesn't have to endure to the IPL theme music as his neighbour's mobile ring tone. Or one who has only ever seen orange and purple combined in a paint-spill accident.
Nana Boycs was speaking to Samantha Pendergrast between games of mahjong