Monday, October 26, 2009

two days in one


I think I'm getting closer to my inner Italian.

I'm becoming nocturnal and creating a different body rhythm, in tune to the melody of the south of Italy, the Adriatic coastal beat.

I'm embracing my inner Southern Italian and I love the little secret this town shares

of having two days within one.



First part of the two part day is simple.

We get up in the morning and have a coffee and a pastry, a 'cornetto'. Maybe the croissant like one filled with nutella or maybe the custard cream. Then my girlfriend and I chat. We chat for at least an hour, sometimes two and have another coffee. We talk about the dreams we had the night before and the dreams we have for our futures. We discuss the possible significance of the archetypal characters we met in slumber and discuss our waking journeys philosophically. We try to disseminate the meaning of what it is that we are doing, even if it appears outwardly to be 'nothing'.

We have know each other for 10 years and have lived different lives but how wonderful to have a deep respect for each others choices and an acceptance of each others quirks. I mean she sees my flaws, she listens to the struggles I have with me and the disappointments I've created around myself and she just accepts me anyway.


The caffeine kicks in and we need to move, so we get out into the town and get some supplies to take down to the beach and to soak up the gentle rays of the Northern European sun.

Yesterday we bought a little blow-up dinghy from a sea side vendor and stashed our towels, large bottle of water, with it's slight natural effervescence, and fresh made panini with sliced ham, grilled zucchini and soft light cheese into it and swam out to a little island of rocks to bask and eat our lunch.


It's so easy to float on this salt packed sea that has no crushing waves, no threat of sharks or jelly fish, little stingers or salt water crocs for that matter. The most difficult thing about this town's local beaches are navigating the buffed, potato sized rocks that coat the shore.

Once you survive the crunchy potato shore and get your head under the surface you hear air pockets bursting between the rocky sea floor. They make the most delightful popping sounds that it reminds me gobbling down a packet of magic gum as a kid and having that noise explode inside your head. It's wild to be able to completely relax on and in the water, with no fear of sweeping currents or knocks to the head from grommets learning to surf.

Watching the Southern Italians so completely in possession of their summer selves, it's easy to fall in line with the tempo. As we munched away on our panini sitting on the rocks I watched the shore line clear of multi- coloured umbrellas and bronzing families as their lunch times called them home for a proper meal.

We stay awhile dozing on the rocks and flop into the salty sea like seals you see in a nature documentary, cooling us down from the hot, tingling of the sun on our pelts.




Satiated, but sleepy we pack up our island picnic to make our way back home. Of course we stop for an espresso at the beach side bar to give us just enough energy to drag our sun kissed selves back home.


We cut through the cemetery under the shade of tall trees to get back to town, where the first thing you notice is the absence of sound. It is the only time apart from between 2 a.m. & 4 a.m. that this town is actually quiet. There is no trashy techno pumping from cars beep, beeping down the road, the televisions are hushed and the green shutters drawn on the pastel coloured buildings.

It is about 3 p.m. and the whole town is napping, so we nap too. A gentle breeze whispers over our bodies, capturing and stealing away the last of the heat radiating off them and the delicate sound of nothingness lulls us into sleep.

We wake up groggily as sounds start to pulsate through the town and we make another espresso.

We get dressed and brush our teeth, comb our hair in preparation for another day - but it's still the same day it's part two of the two part day.


We flip flop through the narrow, winding streets of the ancient town, tripping over the large, polished undulating boulders that serve as both walkway and road in search of an aperitif. The town has come alive again around the centre square beneath tall tress and fountains. Children hold hands with grandparents while new mothers proudly push prams around the square watching glammed up teenagers hustling around the edges playing the game that got their parents to where they are now. The sun still shines and glitters through the boughs of the trees at 9 pm as we think about finding a seat outside a little pizzeria for our evening meal.

Everything takes a little time here and you have to succumb to the flow. The waiter will eventually get to you, he will eventually remember the beer you've ordered and the chef will eventually get around to crisping that margherita pizza you're panting for as you see the sun finally sink over the tops of buildings and the night time sucks away the last of the heat in the buildings.

Full with rounded bellies and that dreamy sense of contentment we begin our meandering home through the old town that spits us out again at the town square. At 12:30 a.m. children are still playing ball as their parents chat with each other and the little ones rest on seats on grandparent laps.

Little dogs on leads sniff each other happily as their owners chat loudly, gesticulating wildly to make their point known as one of the local kids swaggers up to us, mimicking the men around him, shoulders squared, chest puffed out and penetrating sky blue eyes nods his head to us and calls out 'Ciao!"


turning italian



I found myself responding in a French manner to the chaotic Italian transport system, again.

I hadn't been away from Paris long enough to embrace the Italian side of my personality.

I had an air of the affected, casually annoyed.

It was pretty simple i had a flight from Paris to Rome, Rome to Bari. Connecting through the same airport and even the same terminal, I figured with the wait time between flights at Fiumicino i could get out my laptop and write.

I put aside my recollection of my last trip to the south of Italy where i was stuck at the same airport for 6 hours because of a bomb scare. To while the time away then i listened to my disc-man, yeah, it was a few years back. As i enjoyed my music that blotted out the obsessive gesticulating noise of unhappy Italians stranded in the same airport terminal with the air-conditioning not functioning and nerves frayed, I missed the important announcement that my flight had been re-directed from another airport. I just sat by the gate I was supposed to be leaving from and listened to my music, keeping calm and feeling a little smug that everyone around me appeared to be freaking out.

That was true right up until the moment the screen above the departure door came alive with a flight to a completely different destination and my own personal panic kicked in. I shut down my disk-man, picked up my stuff and ran to the information desk to confront a gorgeous, impeccably put together, but completely over it Italian woman sighing at me and telling me that my flight was now leaving from an altogether different airport! "Why weren't you listening to the announcement?! You now must go out through security again and down to the ground floor to collect your luggage that you checked in and find the chartered bus that will take you to the other airport, but you wont make it now, it's too late you will have to stay in Rome and buy another flight tomorrow." WTF!?

So in my panicked state I started running around the airport trying to locate the hidden place where my lost luggage now was, because i was supposed to have collected it hours ago apparently. What is that that happens when you start to panic? Had I retained some semblance of calm I might have just been able to follow her instructions and do what she said. But no, I got sweaty palms, my heart rate went up and i started running through the airport. I stopped people along the way, who were themselves exhausted and frustrated and didn't understand or particularly want to deal with a frazzled tourist who didn't speak a word of their proud tongue. I even managed to upset a security guard, at the security checkpoint who told me to take off my pure snakeskin belt because it was clear that this was making the security beeper go off. But there is no metal in it!! I yelled at him and I'm not taking it off for you, who ever heard of a snakeskin gun for gods sake? What did it matter, he didn't understand what I was saying, but I got the sentiment across. His response was to raise an eyebrow and put his hand on his hip, stare me down and say "Off".

Fuck, this is awful.

I eventually found my bag, by chance, through a half open door to a room that had no signage on it whatsoever, I saw my bag and just walked in, grabbed it and as i turned to wheel it out saw the three Carabinieri staring at me and put their hands to their holsters. You're fucking kidding me; so i asked "Do you know where the 663 flight to Bari leaves from I don't understand Italian and I'm lost and confused", nearly in tears. They all looked at each other quizzically and one of them stepped forward asking me to repeat. I explained my situation and his face softened as he told me "It is too late now, you must just to stay in Rome tonight and come back tomorrow and buy another flight. No problem, stay in Rome, beautiful city, eat good dinner, find hotel."

Oh great, a charmer. And he's in that hot uniform with the red stripe down the side of the trousers and shiny cap and probably a wife at home with three bambinos. NO! I need to make this flight, my girlfriend has been waiting for me at the other airport gone through lunch and dinner sitting at a dank airport, munching her way through the entire selection available from the only food outlet at the airport; a vending machine. The charming guard points me in the direction of yet another information booth when i recognise a group of people that were waiting with me initially at the original departure gate. I check their bags to see that they have the same luggage tags and follow them out of the airport where they start loading onto a shuttle bus. I ask several of them if they were supposed to be on the same flight as me and I finally get confirmation from a younger guy who speaks a little English. I line up to have my bag chucked into the storage compartment + jump on the bus. Phew. I might just make it yet. After a 45 minute bus ride we arrive at another airport where we must go through the whole check in procedure again complete with security check and finally onto the plane for a 40 minute flight. That's right folks, i probably could have hired a car and been there already, stereo blaring down the highway and singing all the way. Silly me, thought a flight would be quicker. When the plane finally touches down in Bari all the passengers erupt in applause, as though the whole thing was a great ruse, a melodrama worthy of an Italian opera, a performance of the macabre.

I can't possible expect anything but for this trip to run smoothly, surely.

Mais non, this is Italia after all...

Although there are no bomb scares this time there are delays (it takes over an hour for the bags to come through on the carousel from our flight), then there is applause, then there are further delays (the check in window for my connecting flight opens over half an hour late) and less enthusiastic applause - but applause none the less, oh and wait, yes another delay...(of course the flight is then delayed) and when we finally touch down in the south, yes of course the entire flight applauds.

I'm on Italian time now, I just sigh and resign myself to it.

You know that Roman saying.


Monday, October 12, 2009

Line 7, Paris Metro


Each metro line in Paris is distinctive.

Carriages in various states of disrepair and odour depending on the age of the vinyl or linoleum.

Whether a new line or old the colour schemes vary, as does the pace, the seating arrangements and even the way the doors open.

My old line, bright yellow line one, is new and shiny and clean with a sombre lady's voice announcing famous names as it stops along the way. She repeats them too which came in handy for me with my pronunciation, although Tuileries is still lost on my Australian tongue.

Line seven is a rose pink line on the metro map, but inside is all shades of 70's blues.

Royal blue seats and light grey-blue acrylic painted interior, even the button you have to press to release the doors is a rounded-edge blue square. Or wait, maybe it's green - eeek I can't remember! Actually I think it's green... either way line 7 is predominantly blue, if you get my drift.


It's my last Friday night in Paris and I'm on line 7 heading from Censier Daubenton in the 5th up to la Chapelle to meet a friend for a dhosa dinner in the 10th. No one tells you what stop is coming up next but I find it such a pleasure watching the stations roll by. I adore some of the metro stops in Paris, they even make their metro stops pretty those aesthetically acute Parisians.


I've sat myself down on the three seater banquette au fond du carriage and opposite me are two stunning French-African women. I guess they are on their way to a party all dressed up with bags of goodies at their feet. They chat and giggle unselfconsciously about boys, a topic that is rarely exhausted between girlfriends.


I put my headphones in to let music accompany me on the ride although I can't help but stare at these women, their beauty and animated conversation is hard to ignore. It seems as if they have dressed to complement line seven all together, melding blue hues. I keep stealing glances at them as the stops roll by; Pont Neuf, Palais Royal, Opera.

The girl on the left has fluffed up her afro so that it creates a halo of tight curls all around her. Each time we pull into a station the light from the platform illuminates her as if Glenda the good witch has touched her with her star shaped wand.


She's wearing a French cliché classic, the wide necked blue and white striped, long sleeved t-shirt and hit it with American Apparel type shiny deep blue leggins and white high top trainers. Her eye lids are dramatically awash with a cornflower blue shadow that glitters against her perfect dark skin. The effect is mesmerising.

Her friend's close cropped hair is all Grace Jones like and suits her angular features perfectly. She also has blue shadow on her eyelids, but high-lighted it with sparkling gold and added a deep red gloss to her lips. A pair of bright neon lime and dark green zebra print tights clash perfectly with her silver brogues and simple dark blue tee.

I suddenly feel like I'm in first year high school and these girls are the cool girls in final year.

It flashes me right back to that 'Clark's' bus in 1989 when I used to stare at an older girl from a different school who had short black hair and wore a De La Soul daisy t-shirt and badges on her satchel.

A sudden burst of laughter and lunging-forward-thigh-slapping moment from across the isle brings me back to the present with a start.


As the girls regain composure they look to me to catch my eye and apologise for 'disturbing' me... ahhh Paris


Saturday, October 3, 2009

Ascenseur pour L'echafaud and the Italian


Well, I was sitting at a table in a bar in Paris...


I was sitting with a young woman who was asking me my opinions on life, love, relationships and travelling alone — you know the basics.

It was an intense discussion to be having at a bar in the middle of our friend's birthday drinks I agree, especially while the Caipirinhas were flowing at quite a pace.

But I do like to discuss the big topics n'importe ou.


I remember she was talking about her burgeoning new relationship and relating to men and asked me;

'Would you just go home with someone for one night while you're travelling?'

I responded honestly with "I'd rather spend a week with someone while I'm here than have a one night stand," and then I met the Italian.


His reputation as a 'ladies man' preceded our introduction, yet he had me and everyone around intoxicated with his warm humour and loud personality.

Gathering everyone together, facilitating conversation and ensuring all were interacting — it's quite a skill actually, not something many people can do easily and sincerely. Introducing everyone to each other and chatting to whoever was near it was a whirlwind to watch.


He encapsulated that 'Italian' ideal that I've encountered over the years; the grabbing life with both hands, never passing up an opportunity, taking extreme pleasure in the small gifts that life presents and taking no shit and proclaiming it all loudly to whomever is near. I love that.


He cornered me outside the bar to steal a cigarette and hit me with the line "Jennifer, your eyes are incredible, this colour — how do you call it?"


To which I replied "What is this? Are you trying to seduce me?"


And him, all wide-eyed surprise tells me "Ah, well...Yes!" and laughs loudly.


So I told him with a smile, "Look how about you drop the seduction thing and let's just go inside and enjoy ourselves, non?"


A little direct, sure; but you know that's how I am.


So we did, we went inside and had a ball.


There was dancing on the bar, in Paris mind you, that's how much fun we had.


And in the end I was seduced, not by 'come on' lines but by effervescence and laughter and perhaps a little persistence.


We spent a few glorious days together in the Parisian heat of August, all salty summer kisses and slippery embraces.

It was hot, on all counts.

I stayed in his white walled, herring-bone wooden floor, quartier latin appartement as the white, ceiling to floor curtains picked up the occasional wisp of wind and the sunlight flickered over the white bed clothes.

I wore a white sheet, mostly, while I was there and set up playlists on his massive desktop macintosh and watched the white jellyfish-like JBL speakers quiver with bass lines of tunes I loved.


Making passionate love on a hot summer's afternoon with Miles Davis' 'Ascenseur pour L'echafaud' playing in the background is an experience I would hope everyone gets to experience at least once in their lives, in Paris if you can manage it. And if your lover is also happens to be Italian, top that off with a home made pasta as a late lunch a stroll down for a nap in the Jardin du Luxembourg and you could call that a perfect day. With an apero to follow, bien sur.


Is it any wonder I didn't get much writing done in Paris? Or that I kept falling asleep in parks?

He leapt out of bed one morning to jump on a Velib to cycle to the neighbouring quartier to find a boulangerie that was open for fresh croissants. Incredible how many places shut down in Paris for August. Closed for the summer, boarded up for the month as the owners take off to the countryside or the coast. You've gotta respect that. Fuck it, we're outta here - Its summer and the sun is shining for everyone. Can you even imagine half the businesses in Sydney closing down for a month? Its be chaos.

I lay on the cast iron day bed in the lounge half submerged under copious pillows and cushions, of course in shades of white and caught myself musing 'My god this is actually my life'. He returns with fresh croissants and presses oranges for juice; breakfast is served, followed by an espresso and a cigarette, but of course.


As grateful as I was for all this, It was easy to leave — it felt right, and as though I had been blown wide open by passion, excitement and energy.

It's an incredible feeling, that opening up to a new lover.

He was dynamic and fun, a big personality with the added attraction of that classic latin sensibility of being able to seize the moment and sup from the pleasures that life presents you.


He told me just before he left to attend a weekend wedding in Lisbon that if we were living in the same city he feels that we could really be together.

The shock on my face prompted him to say, "You know I'm not trying to scare you, but I have to say I really think we could be together."

It was not what I expected to hear form him. In fact I hadn't expected any of it, which is one of the glorious freedoms of travel — the unexpected.

Not something that could have happened back home, for a million reasons, including how far Lisbon is from Brisbane…


A new connection has been made and my current reality is; who knows where I will end up?

Better to have taken the risk and made the connection than to not, non?

hit this hyper link!
Miles Davis : Discography : Lift To The Scaffold

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Thursday, October 1, 2009

I know where the wild things are


I can't seem to think at all these days.


What a blessing!


Days lost in meandering through gloriously manicured city streets, iPhone tinkering tunes through my body and I always seem to find myself lead to patches of thick, lush grass where more often than not, I end up next to some magnificent sculpture, fountain or you know, important monument.


It's so peaceful here in the pulsating heart of this magnificent city.


Hours slip-tick by in these sublime parks with their columns of towering trees.


Trees with their branches and foliage squared into uniformed, tapering shapes that look like fresh green icy-poles*.

Icy-poles for giants.


Really, that's what they look like.


If it's hot down here on the ground, imagine how hot it must be up there above the tree line.


Who's to say that horned giants with bulging eyes don't just need a little relief from the heat of the summer sun and a respite from roaring their terrible roars and gnashing their terrible teeth? Maybe these guys are on a summer break from filming. Spike Jonze has been working them hard, I'm sure. For a bit of relief they could just pluck the lime green icy-poles straight from the garden with their massive pudgy fingers poking through the clouds.


Yeah, so... I fell asleep in the park, like a hobo.

I don't think they get many 'hobos' in this park, especially in the summer when the threat of icy-pole picking is at it's fiercest.

I'm so relaxed, i fall asleep in parks now, in the mid afternoon apparently.

With no regard to Maurice Sendak's monsters.

I wake up to find small groups of people munching on baguettes with cheese, playing boules or reading solitarily in the shade.

Must be like not-so-busy coloured ants to my imaginary monsters peering down from above.


It is funny being the outsider. Even now, anonymous in a rectangular parc on the edge of the Jardin de Luxembourg surrounded by icy-pole trees i am the only one who chooses to sit smack, bang in the middle of the grass.

Everyone else is scattered along the edges of the rectangle.

Is it a French formula to collectively and instinctively place themselves in sync with the manicured beauty around them?

Is it an Australian instinct to surround yourself with as much space as possible?


Or is it just an aspect of my insolent personality that in a moment I take in the scene and unconsciously do the exact opposite...


je ne sais pas.


*(icy-poles/iced lollies/ice-blocks)


Friday, September 25, 2009

Paris has Shrunk!



Walking around Paris today i kept getting hit by memories.

Hit directly in the solar plexus like a punch to the gut that winds you.

Painful pleasure.


Sauntering across le pont des arts in full summer sun today, the gilt on the Louvre winking in the sun's rays I get a flash back to a random moment of my heel getting lodged between the planks on the pont des arts walking home from the 5th in the very early hours of the morning.

I remember how cold it was that february morning and that there was not another soul on the bridge.

The memory flickers and I wonder; how many women has this happened to over the years?


It hits again as I walk by little cafe near metro St Paul;

I was meeting the man who was to become my Parisian lover for our first official 'date' and as he saw me emerge from the metro station, he jumped up from his table leaving all his belongings and ran across the road to me and embraced me on the street.

I felt as enamoured as that woman appears to be in the famous 'kiss' photograph by Robert Doisneau.




An anxiety trembles through me as i walk up to BATEAU CONCORDE ATLANTIQUE thinking;

'could love strike twice in the same place five years later?'

<>


Jumping off the metro at St Germain where I once found my guy all 'nino quincampoix' around the photo booth

and my heart started pounding just like Amelie's. Art imitates life and life in turn...


Walking aimlessly through the 6th on my way to Jardin du Luxembourg I'm hit again with the full body, deep cellular memory of a passionate kiss as I pass by the front of the Sorbonne, bien sûr


As I left the apartment this morning, feeling a little melancholy as I stuffed my headphones into my ears and just walked the streets.

Such a great thing to do in Paris.

Even walking the streets with a broken heart in Paris is somehow pleasurable.

I found myself near the Tuileries and remembered colette, a place where I had found some great music in the past.


History repeats as I find a 10 inch record in the small record bin

The 10 inch is a soft rose-pink sleeve, my colour,with large white text

" I was sad

then i bought this record

I still feel sad"


Comme un été à Paris


J'arrive!


God, it's so easy to be back here. So familiar, it just feels normal.


You know I love Paris. It's completely obvious.


If I could live back here again I would, in a heart beat - or the bat of a lash. Actually, which one is quicker?


The quartiers of Paris are distinct and different as you probably know.

When I lived there, I lived in the 8th. All fancy big apartments (except mine!) doctors & lawyers residences, l'Arc de Triomphe at the head of the street and parallel to the Champs-Élysées.

Don't even ask how I managed that, it's a whole different story.


I had friends in the 17th a much younger and edgier quartier and close to montmarte/pigalle, friends in the 11th le bastille, friends in the 10th where they have 2 miniature arc de triomphes and an explosion of Eastern and African immigrants, friends in the 6th - St Germain and 13th - china town, oh and a lover in the 5th.


If you haven't seen 'Paris Je T'aime', do - it gives a great lyrical insight into les quartiers. (and yes Dad, it is subtitled)


Oh and off topic see that Michel Gondry film with Charlotte Gainsbourg and Gael Garcia Bernal called La Science des rêves . just because its great.


This time around I'm staying with my gorgeous friend who has just moved into the 5 ème, le quartier latin.

An area I know well and is filled with romanticism for me on account of the great Parisian love affair I had there that summer.


I have been so excited to catch up with D on this trip. She's my partner in crime and our off-beat humour somehow manages to gel.

We have ridiculous fits of laughter and can discuss anything even if it doesn't technically exist yet, and then we laugh about it.

And sometimes we cry.

How great to have friendships that span the globe and weather the years to be able to see each other again and laugh so easily.


She's more French these days than British, I guess it's just crept up on her but each time I see her I notice the difference straight away.


Big changes have happened in her life and mine since we saw each other last.

AND it's her birthday just after I arrive, fresh start, new things. Play Time.

We are so ready for this summer, ready to laugh and play and slough off the old skin.



for info on les quartiers of Paris & the map above http://www.parisnet.com/parismap.html