Thursday, August 3

BOTH SIDES NOW

 


It has been raining for three weeks solid here in Brussels.  We shouldn't complain, we had an unbearable heatwave in June which some countries are still suffering in August,  but we do of course.  BBC's Chris Packham brought us back to Earth (see what I did there) by reminding us that 252 million years ago it rained for two million years.  Thankfully humans hadn't yet been invented, or else we'd have webbed feet and gills now.  Two million years!  Like in Blade Runner.  I would venture that this might have been the Great Flood that the Bible talks of, except how would anyone have known?  More likely one of several more later ice ages which, on melting, provoked Great Floods which made the waters rise.  It makes our current climate crisis look like a blip, and our attempts to hold it back like King Canute commanding the waves to desist.  

The present deluges all over the world are throwing up photos of clouds, which took me back to the annual school journey at primary school where we would be marched out on "field trips" to study aspects of the natural world. 

Manchester and Liverpool sent their kids to North Wales on subsidized holidays. South London had the Isle of Wight. These all-expenses paid jaunts were for kids whose parents weren't wealthy enough to take them on a family holiday.  Foreign holidays were almost unheard of, at least in our demographic.  The ILEA as it was, Inner London Education Authority (1965-90), was a fine socialist organisation that provided grants for holidays and, later, for language stays abroad, of which I was the lucky recipient of two. 

We would be transported by coach to Portsmouth, where we were decanted onto the ferry to Cowes.  This was the first time some of us had travelled by boat, and was very exciting.  Not me, of course, I had been many times on the Woolwich Ferry to North Woolwich and back, so considered myself a seasoned mariner.  We were lodged in guest houses in Sandown and Shanklin, in rooms of 4-6 bunk beds,  all found, for which the guest house owners were no doubt royally paid out of the taxpayer's money.  

We were ordered to write letters to our parents on arrival, which were collected up, stamped and posted by the teachers.  We were allowed one phone call home a week.  It was as much about teaching us a degree of independence as about field education.  We were about 10 years old.

On route marches over the cliffs we would meet kids we knew from other local schools marching in the other direction and unruly banter would break out.  




We were taken by coach to Alum Bay, which is known for its different coloured sand cliffs, formed 60 million years ago by erosion caused by the rising and falling of sea levels bla bla bla ...   and given empty glass test tubes with stoppers which we filled with layers of different coloured sand.  We had to take notebooks and keep records of what we had learned on our field trips.  Types of tree, leaf samples, seashells, nothing too technical for a 10 year old.  On the cloud spotting trip we were taught the names of the different cloud formations and drew pictures.  Thus I learned to distinguish cumulonimbus from cirrus stratus, a piece of knowledge that has proved invaluable over the years. 

Nowadays I hear of children going "with the school" to Thailand or South America!  With a hefty contribution from their parents no doubt.  Although I am far from being a communist fellow-traveller, I must say that the degree of concern and support for families with few resources by the Labour-controlled administrations back in the 1960's was commendable and sadly may not ever be seen again.  It really was a good time to be hard up.



 

 

Wednesday, September 16

THE LAST TRUMP


As assiduous followers of the KNOB* will know, the European brass community's four-yearly annual jamboree has been advertised for many years as EUROTRUMP.  The last one I attended as a participant was in 2015, in Paris, before the ascension of The Unspeakable Orange Tantrum to the presidency of the United States.  Ever since 2016 the word "Trump" has become a loaded term.  Literally, it can mean a winning card, or the noise made by air forced through a narrow opening.  The Powers That Be formed a committee and eventually came up with the new name:   BRAS.  I tried to tell them, but they were adamant that it conveyed a modern take on BRASS.  Oh well, don't say I didn't try to warn you. 

Don Spartini


Last year I was dusting off my triangle for my last appearance in a dirndl before retirement, when disaster struck.  Don Spartini, our esteemed and much loved capo di tutti capi, decreed that we should all turn out for a demo on 26 April.  Now I am not a fan of demos, they play havoc with my kitten heels and I hate all that shouting.  I usually just tag along at the back for 100 metres or so, rattle my pearls and take a shortcut back to the office.  However, this sounded a bit more like an order, and nobody likes to wake up with a horse's head in their bed, so I reluctantly got an Uber to place Luxembourg where the demo was starting.

Once the signal was given, the tete de cortege moved off at a dignified pace, in the direction of the Commission.  I and my Spartettes followed, sporting an assortment of windcheaters in red or green, the colours of the two main Spart organisations.  I have to say neither is really my colour, and all the windcheaters had been bagged so it was a red bin bag or nothing.  I just prayed I would not bump into anyone I knew and especially not la Comtesse Fifi de la Foufounette. I tried to remember how to fashion it into an Umbogwan head-tie adorned with some fruit I was going to have for my lunch, and tweaked it artfully to show my diversity credentials.  Together with my gay umbrella, I felt I was sending out the right message.  You can't be too careful at Spart Towers.

Millie Tant


Gonzo from Spain was in the crowd, and waved a cheery "Ola!" from up ahead.  I put my best foot forward to attempt to catch up with him, but kitten heels and Brussels cobblestones conspired together in my downfall, and after a short sensation of being airborne I found myself flat on my face, fruit tumbling every which way and gay umbrella scattered to the winds.  The worst thing was, nobody seemed to notice for about 30 seconds!  They just kept marching around me, engrossed in The Cause.  Luckily my Spartettes saw my involuntary and very short-haul flight and came rushing to help.  

I am stoic by nature and was more concerned about the damage to my fruity hat.  My gels gathered around to preserve my dignity but more people saw the unfortunate incident than I would have liked.  Scruffito came rushing over, and gallantly carried me over to the side of the road.  Someone said an ambulance had been called, but couldn't get through because of the demo.  I brushed it off as a mere sprain, and waited for the pain to pass.  It didn't.  In the end I got my gels to help me to the end of the road where I could call a taxi.   Like the old trooper I am, I didn't go straight to Casualty but went home and rested up on the sofa.  By the evening I was in agony, and Gorbals had to take me to the hospital.  

It was broken.  And not a hairline fracture, either.  The doc said he would operate the next morning, and I would have to stay in overnight.  I immediately sent Gorbals home to fetch my best Prada nightie and bedjacket and matching fruity hat.  He came back with a piece of cheese and some back copies of Private Eye.  He means well, dear boy.  I was duly operated on and confined to a wheelchair for six weeks, from which I directed operations with the help of crutches.  I am pleased to say I am back on my feet now, sporting a matching pair of mended ankles (see previous posts about Portugal for the other one) and taking calcium supplements for me old bones.  Not getting any younger, you know.


  

And so it was that I did not attend the Vienna gathering of BRAS2019.  Probably just as well, just the name Vienna adds inches to my waistline. Cake, cake with whipped cream, hot chocolate and more cake.  And of course the famed Sachertorte, probably the best chocolate cake in the world.  Not to mention Mozart, Strauss and The Sound of Music.    The KNOB wanted to go as the Von Trapp family but then found that almost every other delegation had had the same idea, and anyway, without me they had no Maria.    Dieter was particularly concerned about my incapacitation.  "Aber Daphne, who is going to tuck us ins bett und ein lullaby to us sing?"  he fretted.  I promised to make him a mixed tape of my greatest hits to take with him. 





And so EUROTRUMP is no more.  Would that the same applied to the reason they had to change the name.  I have hung up my triangle for good.  So long Spart Towers, farewell the KNOB*, auf wiedersehen the triangle, goodbye ...  













* Kurt Nachtnebel Oompah Band

Wednesday, April 15

NEVER CAN SAY GOODBYE




I'm still here.  

Six and a half weeks from retirement.  But to be perfectly honest, this is not quite how I envisaged it.  

I am halfway through week 5 of the corona virus lockdown.  It is 10:40 on Wednesday and I am still in my pyjamas.  

This is how it is.   This is how I suspect it will remain, in retirement. 



All those plans and dreams of bursting free of the chains of indentured servitude at Spart Towers, finally liberated to write, sing, dance naked through the daffodils, were nothing more than fantasy.

I am a lazy bitch.   I am kind of enjoying the lockdown.  It takes all the responsibility off me.      



So much for establishing a routine for my retirement:  get up, shower, get dressed.  Get out of the house every day.  Do a museum a week.  Get to know Belgium better.  Learn Dutch.  Pick up where I was so rudely interrupted with Portuguese.   Get a decent camera and do a photography course.  Write at least one day a week.  Work on that epic novel about my Irish grandad in America.   Walk 4 km every day.  


None of it.  NONE OF IT.   It is 10:40 and I am still in my pyjamas.  

When I do get out of the house to go in search of victuals I am invariably wearing the same tracksuit pants, hoodie and soup-stained T-shirt.  We are in Waynetta Slob territory.  You can take the girl out of the caravan, but ....    



Me and Gorbals before the lockdown.  

My hair is growing longer and thicker.  I have taken to enturbanning my head with a scarf.  I made a half hearted attempt to reconnect with my sewing machine to fashion a face mask, but I am to sewing machine as Gorbals is to hoover.  Never going to form that magical human-machine bond.  I am still working on my fabric prototype, now using knicker elastic cut from old holey knickers that I am now saving.  In the meantime I use my collection of under-hijabs as face masks.  I bought them for 1 euro apiece from an Arab shop behind the Gare du Nord.  I keep one in every coat pocket in case of rain.  If I pull it down around my neck and back up again, hey presto, call me Fatima.  Who's laughing now, eh?





Not much has changed for Gorbals, in truth.  He didn't go out much anyway, dresses in rags, sleeps most of the day and bathes once a week.  He's got more conspiracies to read about on Reddit.  He learned many street survival skills when he was channelling George Orwell on the streets of Brussels (except he hadn't got the gumption to get a washing up job).  He  once showed me how you could clean silver using fag ash and spit, and I always said, when the Apocalypse comes, I'm sticking with him.  At least my best cutlery will look nice.



Wednesday, January 29

THE LAST POST

Onward and upward



It may not have escaped your attention that this blog fell silent in June 2016.  Yes, that's right.  JUNE 2016.   Three weeks, more or less, before what I like to call the British Naqba.  After that, there was nothing more to say.  

As of Friday, last day of January 2020, the die is cast.  Alea iacta est.  UK has left the building.  And, coincidentally or not, in 17 weeks' time I will leave Spart Towers and the world of work.  I may or may not have become a Belgian in the meantime.   A new era is starting in many ways.  And so I think it is time for a new blog.  

Chocs Away!  Old Girl  has served to document my time in Brussels, allbeit with a good deal of embellishment.  Fifteen years, one job, four different apartments.    My ex sneered at me in 2005 when I said I was going to Brussels, and implied I would have no friends there.  I had one, as it happened, at the time.  And now I have dozens.  Good ones, too. 

But I feel the Brussels era is nearly over.  It was always about the job.  I have never felt any deep love for Brussels as a place.  It has to be said my view of the city has improved since I bought a car two years ago and can now get out to places like leafy Genval more easily.  But it's never been part of my retirement plan.   I always wanted to go back to France.  For a while I flirted with Portugal, but then reverted to the Perigord.   After a few years the prospect of global warming was starting to make me think twice about the comfort level that far south, and I shifted my focus to Brittany.  However, after ten years of visiting various regions of France, nowhere gave me a burning desire to return.   Paris was starting to be a very distant memory and its rose-coloured tinge was fading to sepia.  The France I knew was changing, too.  It was acquiring all the bad characteristics it used to sneer at the British for - populism, consumerism, poor education, bad food (yes! they even invented a word for it, "la malbouffe"), vandalism, knife crime ...  I started to ask myself the question I thought I would never ask - did I really want to go back and live there?

In the meantime I found myself in Scotland more and more often.  In 2009, and again in 2014, then in 2018 my cousin moved to the Highlands and I visited four times in two years.  It felt strangely right.  Particularly Glasgow.  It ticked many boxes.  I started to wonder, was this The Place?  OK I wouldn't be able to afford the lovely detached house with garden which I would have if I moved to some remote corner of Brittany.  But those old sandstone tenement apartments were very attractive, and there are some fabulous parks, not to mention the breathtaking scenery a short train ride away.  And a garden is a lot of work ...    The weather is not exactly tropical, but with my skin and aversion to taking my clothes off in public, would it really matter?  Weather isn't everything.   What appealed to me was the natural humour of the Glaswegians, their friendly nature, even towards the English, and 24-hour shopping.  Also, in terms of getting the lodger straightened out administratively, it would seem to be the logical, if not the only, choice. 

I'm still thinking about it.  But I must say it's creeping up on France as a retirement option.   It may even be a way of turning Brexit to my advantage - with two-thirds of my pension paid in euros, if the pounds slumps my strong euros could prop up my income.  And if I can persuade Gorbals that it is worth his while, certain sectors will be desperate for workers with British passports.   Always look on the bright side of life ...

The irony being, that if I do get the Belgian nationality, it may turn out to be unnecessary.  But hey, two birds in the hand are worth one in the bush.  Or something.