Wednesday, 10 October 2012
As pernicious as nose picking
Me, a bit nervous, knock on the door of a swanky
office. He grunts from inside and I
take that as an invitation to enter. I
walk in to find a middle-aged man picking his nose and talking on his phone while
seated behind a desk that should have belonged to the president of some Middle
Eastern oil state. At least he can
multitask. There was a running gag
about a certain American president who was reputedly unable to walk and chew
gum at the same time. Anyway, he
gestures with his phone for me to come in, while continuing to mine for
gold.
“Well, what?”
I am taken back to another conversation about the island
being like a dog’s dish and no one likes to see another dog at the dish. Especially, a foreign looking dog’s head. It just means there’s less to go
around. So, I enter the fray with
little illusion and a great deal of misgiving.
There are times when one really has to ask just how much rejection can a
person take? Can one overdose on
it? Does it do irreparable damage to
one’s self-esteem? To do what one loves
and get paid for it is light upon light.
If writing could earn me money, I’d be in clover but the reality is
these stories that are pouring out of me at present are a displacement
activity. You and I know I need to be
out earning a living. How does one
reach mid fifties and be so useless at the basics of life? Practice and perseverance, that’s how. I have long perfected the art of putting off
what needs to be done. No more,
tomorrow I’ll bite the bullet, but tonight I’ll have a big bun and some
chocolate. Challenging day ahead after
all!
Tuesday, 9 October 2012
What is it about comfort's growing appeal?
New shoes at primary school
The teacher taught
But there was really no point
Because I had new shoes
Didn’t hear a word
Just wanted to admire
Those shiny new things
On the end of my feet
Every now and then
I’d raise my foot
And admire them anew
What colour, what shape!
I remember the glow
Of new shoes at school
They made the boredom go away
Thank goodness for growing feet
Then, in secondary school things went wrong
My feet began growing at an alarming rate
I started lying about their size
which seemed to be chasing my age
Instead of gloating at new shoes
I tried to hide them under my desk
Like I hid my spots with concealer
And my breasts with my school bag
When I was pregnant the doctor, unthinking
said thank goodness you’ve big feet
Your pelvic capacity is linked to your shoe size
Medical training should include a compulsory component on tact
For years either bumps or toddlers
Made me not notice my feet
They got me around
And wasn’t that enough
Then last week, I bought new shoes
I’ve been looking at them all day
Ugly nun’s shoes, that eat up the miles
what is it about comfort's growing appeal?
It’s been said that of all the things in your life
Make your shoes and your bed
the best you can buy
Because when not in one
Sure you are bound to be in the other
Saturday, 6 October 2012
I suspect it stems from when I was four and lived in a refuge camp
Today I discovered where all the rich hang out in
Malta. There’s a place called Portomaso
north of Sliema close to the Hilton, where plush apartments surround
horseshoe-like, huge private cruisers moored cosily together. There are expensive restaurants at each
corner and on one of the cruisers a well-dressed couple examined an expensive gold-topped
bottle of bubbly. I find myself wanting
to slap this rich man, eating a lobster, on the head hard as I go past. Don’t know why the rich bring out a desire
in me to howl, “come the revolution, you’ll be first against the wall!”
I suspect it stems from when I was four and lived in a
refuge camp. My family had emigrated
from Ireland in the 1960s and because of the housing shortage we found
ourselves in a refugee camp called Bradfield Park in Sydney. My best friend was a Romanian who spoke no
English. We conversed at length despite
no shared language, children just find a way.
It was a rough neighbourhood, our next-door neighbour, an aborigine,
stabbed his wife to death and was dragged off by five large armed and cursing
Australian policemen. Our main problem
was not knife fights but bins. Our bin
which was put out on a weekly basis was being stolen. My father in desperation rigged an elaborate trap for the thief
involving bells and ropes. Of course,
being four and extremely talkative I spent the week telling all the neighbours
of the exciting trap and needless to say the bin walked again. As punishment, my Dad took me with him on a
walkabout in the camp to find our missing bin.
We covered miles and I began to feel really sorry about the whole
business as my father became more quiet and withdrawn the further we went. Eventually, we returned home binless and a
shocked Dad told the rest of the family that we actually lived in the affluent
part of the camp! In terrified tones he
described to them all, the real poverty that existed just streets away. It was scary, we thought we were at the
bottom, the very dregs, but in the camp structure we were practically “rich
bastards”.
You get used to living behind large ten foot chain fencing,
I, as a small child naively thought it kept the bad guys out. Never twigged it was to keep us refugees
in. I have another memory of playing in
the dry soil making mud pies with a cup of water in front of our shack. My brother, who was six at the time, shouted at me not to move. Something in his tone frightened me, so I
looked around slowly to find a much older boy standing with a boulder held
above my head. He told me if I moved
he’d drop it. My brother, shouted frantic
instructions to me, “when I count to three, run!” He counted one, two and then before he got to three and I could
run to safety the boulder was dropped and got me hard on the head. I was carried home bleeding by my father and
was lucky I inherited by far the most useful genetic trait in our family – an
exceptionally hard head.
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
another Australian man wore daring shorts with a “wife beating vest”
There is a fantastic cathedral here in Valletta, Malta. It’s called St John’s Cathedral and I queued
to get in and view the magnificent interior.
While waiting I decided that the entrance fee might be worth paying and
entered. Only to be accosted by a large
officious woman at the door who said I needed to cover up! Bemused, I checked myself, I am not
generally known for my daring outfits.
I wore a long skirt down to my ankles and a high necked top. What could possibly be offensive? Then, the lady pointed out that part of my
shoulders were visible at the edge of my top.
I mean, if you looked up my sleeves you might get a glimpse of my upper
arms, but really there was nothing obscene about it. I could tell the people in the queue around me were bewildered
too. One of them wore a cut away sarong
to the waist, but she was okay, another Australian man wore daring shorts with
a “wife beating vest” as my eldest son likes to call them. The lady in front of me had shoulders
covered but her neckline descended to her belly button and almost all her
breasts were on display. However, they
were all okay, it was I who caused offence for some reason and was duly draped
in a huge orange piece of material to make me decent.
The Australian giggled, as he said, “Sorry love, you looked
like Mary Poppins to me even without the shroud.” I sigh, such things seem to happen to me. It was at this point dressed in a huge
orange tent surrounded by half naked people, I realised I had forgotten my
glasses. Having paid my fee I was
trapped in a stunning church with poor eyesight that only let me see what was less
than a metre in front of me. Not to
be outdone I peered hopefully at each nave, every picture and all the
ornaments. In fact I am pretty sure,
every tourist that day in Valletta has a picture of me in a vast orange tent in
all their pictures of the cathedral.
They are all probably at home now in far off places showing relatives
and friends their holiday snaps and saying, “yes, I have no idea what this
idiot was doing, dressed in an orange tent who managed to get into all the
shots.” Well, the explanation is that
in order to see I had to stand in front of everyone really close to the
exhibits. While peering at the
aforesaid object people were clicking away in the background.
The floor is covered in gravestones of the famous knights
who died and their names are engraved along with the dates. The more famous have paid for huge statues
of themselves posing with angels and such like. In fact the more I read and examined the place the less I felt
like admiring things. Is that how it
is, you pay for your immortality, your place in Holy places? To get remembered, you need only get
something ornate and gold trimmed and stick it up somewhere? That doesn’t seem right. Mind you King Charles V who actually gave
the knights Malta, as their centre was not quite right either. Charles suffered from an enlarged lower jaw,
a deformity that became considerably worse in later Habsburg generations,
giving rise to the term Habsburg jaw. This deformity was caused by the
family's long history of inbreeding, which was commonly practiced in royal families
of that era to maintain dynastic control of territory. His bloodline would
become so genetically flawed that they could not survive, those red necks from
the film “Deliverance”, were obviously not the only ones to marry their kith
and kin. I even think can hear a banjo
playing as I wander round the church and its opulent décor. But, it was perhaps holding his own funeral
that makes Charles stand out in my mind.
Yes, you heard me right. Here is
an account of that very occasion.
|
“The chapel was hung with black, and the blaze of hundreds
of wax-lights was scarcely sufficient to dispel the darkness. The brethren in
their conventual dress, and all the Emperor’s household clad in deep
mourning, gathered round a huge catafalque, shrouded also in black, which had
been raised in the centre of the chapel. The service for the burial of the
dead was then performed; and, amidst the dismal wail of the monks, the
prayers ascended for the departed spirit, that it might be received into the
mansions of the blessed. The sorrowful attendants were melted to tears, as
the image of their master’s death was presented to their minds—or they were
touched, it may be, with compassion by this pitiable display of weakness.
Charles, muffled in a dark mantle, and bearing a lighted candle in his hand, mingled
with his household, the spectator of his own obsequies; and the doleful
ceremony was concluded by his placing the taper in the hands of the priest,
in sign of his surrendering up his soul to the Almighty.”
Yes, the rich and the royal are often, "gone in the head",
as my nephew James would rightly say!
On that thought, I gave back my orange tent and left the cathedral
pondering the dangers of riches, fame and glory.
|
|
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
She was omnivorous and ate everything but people
There is a monument in Valletta in one of the beautiful parts I found
recently. In fact, there are many
lovely monuments around this historic city.
For example overlooking the main harbour there is a huge prone figure
lying flat on his back as if on a bed beside a huge bell. The Siege Bell War Memorial commemorates the
victory of the Allied forces during the Second Siege of Malta from 1940-1943 and remembers the many who paid with their lives in defense of the island.
The proud
tiny island was almost constantly bombarded during this period. At a time when the war could have gone either
way and entire countries in Europe were over run in days/weeks this tiny island
and its defenders, planted deep in the Mediterranean, on the critical shipping
routes of this region, stood firm for three years in their walled city and
would not submit. In 1942 Malta was awarded the George Cross. In bestowing the
award King George VI said '...to honour her brave people, I award the George
Cross to the Island Fortress of Malta to bear witness to a heroism and devotion
that will long be famous in history'.
It perhaps helped that the Maltese had a heritage of withstanding such
attacks dating back to the great siege of 1565 when just 600 knights, a few
thousand mercenaries and a few thousand Maltese irregulars – in all between
6,000 and 9,000 managed to hold the city against 40,000 fighting men of the
Ottoman empire.
However, it is not the courage of the Maltese but their kindness that I
wish to celebrate here. Nearby there is
a monument to a foreigner to this island.
It is dedicated to Clement Martin Edwards who died on the 17th
March 1818 and reads
“Few could vie with him in usefulness of talent
And fewer still possessed a heart more benevolent
Or deposition more social.
He died in the prime of life
But lived long enough to know
how fully he had secured
the respect and esteem of all good men.”
What a lovely way to be remembered. I have a horrid feeling mine will read something akin to
"She was omnivorous and ate
everything but people
With a temper foul to bear and look that would curdle butter
Her purpose in life appeared to be consuming as much chocolate as possible
but take heart dear passerby, as you read this gravestone
because however bad you are, you are better by far than her!"
Here is a panoramic view of the harbour of Valleta, if you fancy a quick look.
Sunday, 30 September 2012
Maria and Michael Abateo, forty winks
Here lives Maria and Michael Abateo. Maria is a bubbly fifty-year-old Maltese
lady. Full of life and laughter. You’d pass the house and not notice it,
except perhaps the flowers spilling down the front in total abundance. They suggest someone different lives
here. She loves clothes in bright
colours but has good taste so they make her seem younger than her years. Her husband jokes continually with her, but
it is tinged with admiration. Life
with Maria has brought surprises. Like
this week!
Maria
was driving up a steep street in Sliema and spotted a tourist pushing a woman
in a wheelchair. It was midday, the sun
was blistering hot and he was obviously finding the slope too much. Maria drove past but when she got to the end
of the road, she circled back round to the couple and stopped next to
them. She asked them where they wanted
to go. The man said, red faced and
panting, that they were heading to The Point, a shopping arcade. Maria told him she would take them
there. Maria has a huge jeep so they
all fitted in, wheel chair included.
While they drove, Maria found out that they were a married couple, Doug
and Claire from the UK. Doug had been Claire’s
nurse in hospital in the early days of her muscular dystrophy. Now, Claire was completely wheel chair bound
and even required a catheter. During, their
short journey Maria discovered that the couple were trying to find somewhere to
eat, so immediately Maria suggested taking them to her home. “I’ll make you something,” she offered
generously. They readily agreed and
Maria was as good as her word with a delicious Maltese meal ready in short
time.
After
the meal, the couple were tired and Claire asked if she could have forty
winks. Maria, once she understood what
forty winks meant, knew just the place, her large cool corridor with a light
blanket thrown over Claire’s wheelchair.
Within minutes, in the cool breezy corridor, she was sound asleep. Doug and Maria sat in the spacious living
room sofas chatting for a while. But an
afternoon siesta is an attractive proposition when you've been out in the sun
most of the morning. So, in no time at
all, Doug and Maria were sound asleep each on a large sofa in the shuttered,
darkened room.
When
Michael returned early from work shortly after, he was startled to discover a lady in a wheelchair in his entrance hall with his own favourite blanket tucked cozily around her. Tip toeing
into his living room he was nonplussed to discover his wife and a complete
stranger also sound asleep in his living room.
Only Maria, Michael laughed, could spring such surprises. He tells the story well of that day, with
animated gestures and eyebrows raised and both of them erupt in gales of
laughter. What a lovely couple, in a welcoming
home, with radiant faces and hearts.
Friday, 28 September 2012
Old age isn’t a battle, old age is a massacre.
Philip Roth
How
well said. This getting older is a
process and I know it began the moment we were born and that should be
comforting, but it isn’t. Just because
you were born into a process doesn’t mean you were automatically given the
skills to cope with it. It’s a bit like
someone throwing you into a river and telling you to swim, you might be lucky
and have enough visceral and body fat to keep afloat (I suspect, I would float
quite high in the water, myself!) ,but unless someone had taught you to swim,
you are not going to learn in the next few minutes of your life, are you? So what are the life skills that you need to
sustain this massacre. Well here is my
list
1.
a
sense of humour because if you cannot laugh at yourself you are going to be
very tired of others doing it for you
2.
don’t
assume old age makes you smell less – the opposite is true. As we get older we are like orange juice concentrate
and we become stronger, thicker and less dilute. This applies to all our attributes, so if we are slightly
sarcastic in our twenties, we will be bitingly bitter in our thirties and
really rancid in our forties. Some
personal progress on a daily basis is not a nicety, it is a necessity.
3.
most
things you see around you are a distortion of the human spirit not its
essential nature. The good news is that
people are much nicer than we think and this applies to you too.
4.
It’s
a good idea to look around you and feel that you are surrounded by spiritual
giants, it will compensate for the fact that you, probably like me, are from
the pigmy tribe of spirituality. Don’t
think of this as a negative, the humble posture of learning this engenders will
help you grow.
5.
Everything
you have and everything you own will eventually be taken away from you, it’s a
fact, face it. Now, spend your precious
remaining time on what cannot be taken away from you, your service to
humanity. If you don’t know what that
means, find out and fast!
6.
Be
conscious of the fragrances around you, jasmine brought to you on the night
air, rose’s wafting across the garden and those human scents of cooperation,
concord and love. Surround yourself
with such things until they become part of you. It will help you smell less in old age!
Sometimes when we are being massacred something
beautiful happens, that takes ones breath away. Dr. James Simon, born in Berlin on 29th September 1880, was
a solidly-trained composer, pianist and musicologist. In late March or early
April, 1944, Simon was one of a thousand inmates deported to Terezin, a
Nazi camp.
Simon quickly entered into the musical life of the
ghetto. On July 9, 1944, he set Psalm
126 for Karel Fischer’s Durra-Chor, which was performed seven times in Terezin
between July and October.
From
Psalm 126
"Our mouths were filled with laughter,
our tongues with songs of joy.
Then it was said among the nations,
The Lord has done great things for them.
The Lord has done great things for us,
and we are filled with joy."
On October 12 he boarded the transport to Auschwitz
and died in a gas chamber shortly after his arrival.
He wrote on a dedication sheet to a friend,
‘Do
righteous deeds and throw them into the sea.’ – Arab proverb
I hope you, like me, have caught a fragrance of this
sweet soul and feel the benefit of knowing such flowers existed.
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