Saturday, December 31, 2011

What Makes a City



Arriving into Charing Cross on the South Eastern, lingering on Trafalgar Square, watching performance artists in Covent Garden, standing in St. Paul’s Cathedral, catching a double decker on Frant, or simply going for a picnic in Hyde Park, one can’t help but think that this is truly one of the gratest cities in the world.

What makes a city more than just a place with many people is the way it moves throughout the day, the constant flow of energy through its arteries, the pulse of life that never stops.

At its best it is a finely tuned machinery where anyone can go anywhere at anytime and enjoy any space. Whether traveling below or above the ground, walking or roller blading, in a riksha or on foot, whether catching an early show in the West End or resurfacing from a club in Soho, tea at the Ritz or dinner at Royal Albert Hall, whether walking on the Mall, through Chelsea or Belgravia, this is a city that grips you 24/7.

Unlike Paris, London never sleeps. Unlike New York, London is bright, open and green. Unlike Chicago, London ends and the fields begin.

Over the last four years, London has become my favorite city in the world. It’s followed fairly closely by Lisbon and I love Rome. Also, I don’t mind a weekend in New York, but for me this is a ten out of ten. What’s yours?

Monday, December 26, 2011

To you all...


...a very merry Christmas! May you have been spared troubles of travel, the terror of tantrums and the torment of trickle tart!!!
Loads of love and good wishes to you all and all the best for what lies ahead...

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Winter Solstice Greetings



December has been good.

There has been a lot of happy anticipation, christmassy stuff going on around the house, music, paper stars and chocolate calendars. The cookies are baked, the cranberries are cooked and the duck is ready to be picked up tomorrow . The house and garden are covered in twinkling yellow lights and lanterns dot the way up to the house.

Matt is mildly bewildered at all the activity around him. He is still in his London routine, but he does like to settle down at night with a shot of Porto and the open tin of biscuits on the table while listening to Zoe’s very own rendition of “Noel” and take it all in.

This is good and it is these little sentimental niches that get us through the winter of life.
Junko’s memorial service is tomorrow.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

The Ladies...


Right as you walked into the “All Must Go Christmas Sale”, you knew that rummaging through tables laden with best deals would be a mistake, because really what you should be looking for was the ladies’ room.

But then, it was simply too good to pass up on and coming back later would be such a waste of time and anyway it was just going to be a quick browse, ten minutes tops.

NOT. You know it.

And as you urgently stagger out of the store an hour and a half later, mowing down unsuspecting bystanders left and right with super-sized shopping bags (because, and you knew that as well, there are no restrooms other than the grungy employee ones, with the unmistakable off-coloured rim and three sheets of toilet paper sadly dangling from a cracked dispenser), you will curse yourself.

The closest facilities at this point are at the museum cafeteria across the street, where the coffee sucks, but really, you don’t really have a choice anymore. So, dodging mad cabs and double-decker buses, you cross the street in the fading light of a rainy December afternoon and, while avoiding uncomfortable shocks to the system, you daintily leap up the steps to the museum cafeteria. You get your coffee in record time, plop your bags down at a table near the loo and...

...get in line.

Because there is a line. There always is. And you know that too.

Whether we like it or not, we ladies end up spending considerable time at airports, the movies, rest stops, and other public places in line to pee. Right next door the gents buzz in and out of their hive with little ado.

I have often been tempted and a few times driven to sneak into the adjacent door... And really why should we be put through this tedious wait time after time? Really, it boils down to this: We gals have a lot of business to deal with once we get into the stall. Apart from hitching up layers and layers of fancy attire, peeling off delicate pantyhose and frilly undies, there are such things as feminine hygene products that can produce a significant logistical challenge!!

In addition, each stall requires an individual approach, depending on the presence of a hook to use for coats and purses, the mechanism operating the disposal bin lid, the cleanliness of the seat and availabilty and kind (sheets of roles) of toilet paper available.

What comes first, where and how to dispose of unwanted items in a discreet way while also clinging on to the afore mentioned layers of fabric that should not come in contact with any potentially soiled surrounding surfaces. All of this while not dropping either hand bag or hygene products on the floor.

In some cases a blatant oversight on our part might require back tracking a few steps in order to retrieve urgent items, in other circumstances there may be a risk of spilling purse contents onto the highly suspicious bathroom stall floor. Under these aggravated circumstances, where strategy is of utmost importance, time is of no consequence.

Seriously, hasn’t the word gone around? Are all inerior architects male? Or is this but another one of the curses of womanhood?

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Like I was saying...

"The social progress of a society can be measured by the social position of the female sex."
Marx

Friday, December 9, 2011

Oh Say Can You See

Did you know that until 1978 a woman in the US could be fired from her job if she was found pregnant? Only in the nineties was there a law past that entitles a mother to up to three months of maternity leave - unpaid, of course. As of 1999, still a majority (30) of the U.S. states treat marital rape as a minor crime. Makes the New World look pretty old, doesn’t it?

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

God Bless the Hillbilly...please!?


It’s a curious thing that there is a tendency among people, and the groups they form, to cast a most favourable light on themselves. The cohesive “we are the good ones,” which in U.S. jargon translates into “God Bless America,” is the cradle of a pervasive double standard. It leads to all sorts of ill-guided approaches in dealing with “the other” and can go as far as causing acts of violence on both sides. Terrorism, persecution, sabbotage, boycots, and ultimately war are all outcrops of double standards.

While admittedly simplistic, “God Bless America” has become a powerful slogan that sanctifies virtually anything, America stands for. Under the great mantra of “we are the chosen ones” only few Americans ever question the underlying tenents of the blessed U.S. of A.

As should be obvious to anyone, this fateful arrogance has over the past decade caused a great deal of misery for Americans. Gone crazy consumerism combined with a testosterone driven everything-is-possible attitude has knocked US credit rating down to a most embarrassing AA rating and families bereft of their adored plywood Mac Mansions have taken to camping in inclement conditions.

It’s a good thing Wall Street is under attack these days, but the clean up should go deeper than that. Surely, it’s uncomfortable and will be the cause of much anxiety but it would be a worthy exercise and, who knows, maybe God may bless America again...some day!

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

On the other hand...

...considering that we are whirling at 67,000 mph through a vast and pretty much empty space, seven billion sixhundredeightythousandeighthundredsixtynine humans on planet Earth is a comforting thought...

Friday, November 25, 2011

My Fall


I don’t know how your fall has been so far, but mine has been exactly that: a deeper than ever tumble into the depths of motherhood...ah, and just as I have sat down here to whine about it all, in comes a phone call from Zoe...and off I go to pick her up because she missed her ride - did I say too much?

Back again... So, on my way back from school, I also picked up Julian’s bike from the shop and a pint of milk from the store since I never leave the house for just one errant - I can’t, I virtually would have to quit eating a sit-down meal all together. As it is, I only have one of those a day anyway.

I have given up on breakfast ever since the daily fights over the bathroom began...I could have changed my routine a gotten up earlier to resolve it, but that would mean earlier nights on the other end and since I only get to see Matt in the evening, I decided to go for plan B...a protein-joghurt shake on the run.

So let’s see what else did I accomplished today...? After a brisk and very wet walk to school, I sold used children’s books at the canteen to raise $$ for the class trip and after 1.5 hours had brought in a whopping 17.00GBP!! When there was no further hope of talking an unsuspecting fellow parent into buying an almost new copy of Winnie the Pooh, I hauled the sad rejects back and decided that maybe class trips are over-rated anyway.

Next was the wash - three loads - the dishes, chili con carne and a futile effort to fix the recessed lighting in the kitchen, which ended up tripping a fuse and subsequently also blowing out the fridge which shrewedly went into defrost mode over the rest of the morning.

Next I wrote on a monologue for yet another fundraiser - this time to restore the clock house - an epic endeavor. But this one should be fun, given that it can’t possibly be any worse than the first one I staged. There came a moment during that performance when I actually thought that to cut my losses, I should just drop the microphone and put the house on the market. That was last month.

Since then, I had the flu, travelled to Lisbon for a reunion where nobody showed up except for Matt, watched the school musical five times in a row (because Zoë, after years of being cast and recast as a Viking, finally scored a female lead), and made lanterns, a dragon head, and seventeen calendars depicting every inch of our existence in order to quench any requests for pictures - forever!

I also made three sour dough Friendship Cakes that nobody wants to eat because they suck (don’t ever get talked into making a cake called Herman!), and nit-checked diligently every Wednesday as ordered by the school nurse...actually I skipped the last two times....

Anyway, my fall has been a blurr of maddening hyper-activity tempered only by a few hours of restless sleep here and there with my face esconded between seven downy purple pillows, that and a walk through the olive garden of São Jorge.

I don’t know where it all will end...it says pride comes before the fall but I wonder what comes after?

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Broken Dreams



Our wish for freedom, mobility, opportunity as well as our search for happiness define what we consume from cars to musli and ebooks.

But almost more importantly, they define the well-tuned marketing machinery that fuels our consumption habits. Because virtually anything can be marketed as ticking at least one or two of the boxes.

A car may promise freedom and mobility in one ad and maybe opportunity and happiness in another. And the same is true for most things ranging from soft drinks to life insurances.

Most successful of all, smart phones have quickly become our new best friends because they seemingly tick all the boxes. After all what could be more perfect than a gadget that gives you instant access to virtually unlimited information, entertainment, and people?

Like children in a pink cotton candy world, we are living out our sweetest dreams with the one difference being that we usually pay for them.

But what happens, when they brake, because they usually do. What do we do when the pictures from our Blackberry don’t load onto the iMac, what if the slide show we spent hours on froze and folded? What if that brand new car has a clunky gear shift, or the five star dishwasher is slow? What if the dream we bought doesn’t work?

Usually at that point the nightmare starts. We spend endless hours searching for warranties in old cardboard boxes and browse through endless online chats and waste many agonizing minute explaining in detail the truly frustrating experience to a blatantly indifferent Bangladeshi.

In the end, more often than not, we end up putting more money down to purchase the new and improved version, the upgraded dream, and hope that this time surely it will last....

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Mug Shots


When you wonder how and when bankers became bankers, or why some people are just in it for themselves, just think back to your high school class. They were all there then and they haven’t changed: the notorious liers, tricksters, bigots, socio-paths, and...yes, loosers, their mug shots are all neatly lined up in your yearbook and those of your friends. People don’t just change over night even if your average Newborn Christian will swear they have found the light. Well, yes, maybe in their closet.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Too Much of Nothing


We all bemoan the impending death of the bookstore and yet I admit, I haven't supported one lately. For one, the only ones that survive in today’s online ordering business and Kindlemania are either the very specialized ones, the secondhand bargain ones or the nondescript “whatever sells” kind.

When I browse through the titles on the shelves, I can’t help but feel a strong urge to yawn at the sight of yet another teenage fantasy triology, celebrity memoire, ten-steps guide to utmost riches, love, and/or happiness, or else a trite fivehundred page romance novel. Boring!

Where are the witty short stories? Where are the daring one volume only best story ever books? Where is the content? What I see has all been there before.

Authors and their agents apparently have to keep trends and mass tastes in mind because their publishers are struggling to hit their numbers (or so they say).

Some of the best authors probably keep their stuff in the drawer, because the story they tell is a quiet one, one that doesn’t have Hollywood potential. I guess they could always self-publish on line. And there goes the idea of the independent bookshop.

In our village, we have five cafés and ten restaurants. I guess virtual eating hasn’t come en vogue yet.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Chop Chop


Every time I ponder the issue of our explosive population growth, I cannot help but blame virtually all of humanities plagues on it. From poverty and gender inequality to war and genocide, from urban sprawl and globalism to global warming and rising mountains of rubbish.

Resources are being depleted rapidly and our lives are becoming more desperate in a race for the last remaining ones. Anxiety is the widely shared sensation of the twentifirst century whether we are able and willing to admit it or not. We are struggling for our survival like a hoard of newly hatched sea turtles racing to reach the surf before being scooped up and gobbled down by some unknown predator.

Any species will come under pressure when its population reaches a certain size because only the fittest will survive the harsh struggle for scarce goods. Usually it’s the food supply that becomes increasingly limited, consequently leading to rivalry and ultimately starvation of the weakest members.

Sounds familiar? Many parts of the world are experiencing exactly that. And those lucky ones who live in more prosperous and well-managed corners of this planet acknowledge that luck can run out.

Who has not worried about work being taken over by a cheaper foreign competitor, or a university place given to a more industrious student. And so, as we all compete for impressive grades, ever longer CVs and measurable personal achievements in the hope to outcompete those who would like our share of the pie, our life quality in this desirable part of the world begins to sink as well.

Tiger mothers are a good example. Just forty years ago, with three billion fewer people clogging up the system, a book such as Amy Chua’s “Battle Hymn for the Tiger Mom,” for example, would have been regarded as the sad testimony to a full blown Angst psychosis instead of ending up on reference bookshelves across the world.

Yet, today we wonder whether she might just be right and even those who question her vindictive methods may consider signing up their children for an after school chess club and music theory tuition. Surely a slight competitive edge wouldn’t hurt, right? After all, what, oh my, will happen to us, once Aids will stop decimating the African subcontinent and China further eases its one-child policy....? So better scamper along little hatchlings as long as you can...

Friday, November 4, 2011

PS Boo!


Over the last days of October, human population on this planet has reached seven billion i.e.7,000,000,000 !! Cities in the ‘developing’ world are bursting out of their seams, with the urban poor living in squalid quarters feeding off the refuse from the more fortunate. Schopenhauer once compared the earth and humanity on it to a churning ball of iron with a cooled crust covered by a growing funghus - us. Boo!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Bloody Brilliant!


Mom, cool, look!! I have got a nosebleed. I can be a bloody ghost tonight!

Monday, October 17, 2011

Virtually Anywhere!!


Never before has the use of time been as much in our control as in this day and age. With the absence of wars and famines and the arrival of more and more time-saving contraptions over the last two centuries, people in industrialized nations are finally in the enviable position to be able to decide what to do with a good chunk of their time every day.

But choice has never come easy. What is the best way to spend the time, for instance, saved by shopping online instead of pushing one’s own cart through the ailes? Let’s say it amounts to about an hour a week that can be “gained” that way.

Suddenly, everything seems possible: a thirty-minute pilates workout, singing, yoga or maybe cranking out some home-made bread...

However, usually we simply end up doing more of what we’re doing already. In this case, we are most likely going to use that time to bounce around the virtual world a bit longer. We might check our mailbox, pay a quick visit to e-bay, or see what’s new at itunes. Or we may want to stop for a hand of poker, read the Financial Times, or watch a replay of last night’s game.

After all, it’s right there and most likely it won’t require a shower once we are finished with it. Virtual is quicker, cleaner and can be quite gratifying. That one hour has suddenly grown exponentially in it’s output. Instead of making one phone call to tell my friend that I am doing my groceries online now, I can post it on facebook and tell the whole world.

But just as the car brought everyone mobility and thereby the option to live farther away from work and extended family, what is happening today with every hour that we invest in a virtual environment, we are removed from the actual place that we inhabit.

We can be virtually anywhere and it’s up to us to make the best choice.

Friday, October 7, 2011

'Cause yo never know what'ya gonna get...


I stopped by the violin maker today. The bridge needed adjusting and I was in a good mood to spend a little time and money on a job that meant nothing to the world, but all the world to Lea, whose little fingers had been straining against the tough metal strings.

As I stepped through the wooden gate and walked along the mildewy roses over to the work shop, I felt slightly undeserving, given that all I was carrying was a Chinese-made 3/4 violin and no musical genius to claim my own.

This feeling was compounded when I opened the door to the cramped shop and found myself surrounded by dismembered wooden bodies, pins and a variety of glues. Everywhere around me were unvarnished curvy bits and pieces of a 3-D musical puzzle.

I was greeted with great delicacy as the violin case was taken from me and the fragile body extracted from its entrails and dexteriously inspected. And while the specialist’s eye hovered on it and the over-sized hands spun it adroitly back and forth, he explained the various approaches for the cure and also pointed to other musical patients in the shop who were in his expert care.

And for the next fifteen minutes I felt treated like a beggar in a ball dress. Seeing this much expertise and delicacy applied to wood in order to ensure its exquisite sound enhancing quality, the many steps from material to mastery was in all truth humbling.

I couldn't help but think that whoever decides to spend this much time and energy on a project with an often uncertain outcome must be a) a compulsive crack b) a visionary, or c) a parent.

Why else would they do it...?

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

I am a believer!!!


Last week I thought it was all over. Some joint in my hip other than the hip joint (do I care to investigate further??) got stuck and so did I. It hurt like Rush Limbo and I had very clear visions of life in hell. In my utter agony, I sought advise from a witch doctor in the village, also known as cranial osteopath because she was the only one who could see me that day. The promise of someone acknowledging the years of abuse to my skeletal frame through pumping out children, hauling them around on one hip and installing them in car seats at all kinds of odd angles, seemed good enough to me to at least try this option.

Well, forty GBP and a few swift strokes above my mysterious energy lines later, I am healed. And amazingly enough, relieved not only of the obvious pains that brought me into her lemon grass imbued practice on a gusty October morning, but also of an incessant fatigue that had plagued me for months. Therefore, I can only encourage you that if you ever were to consider holding a gun to your head as a benign way out of your misery, you may want to consider looking up a cranial osteopath first...

Monday, September 26, 2011

Zzzzzz

I have been really tired lately. If other mother folks weren't reporting similar effects of back to school routines on their coffee consumption, I would be worried by now. Coffee is my drug of choice, and an absolute must. I have never liked it much and I can only drink it with half a pint of cold milk added (try to tell that to anyone at Starbucks), but drink it I will and in copious amounts. Yet, I am usually out by 9:30pm. Which reminds me...gotta go - it's past my bedtime!

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Trouble is Good!


Michael Moore is looking a bit more tired these days. Like a much handled comic, he looks slightly frayed, creased and worn on the cover.. His eyes betray the years of trouble that followed his Oscar speech, when the blind masses turned on him. But is is good to know that trouble can be worth it and that there are always just enough people out there to appreciate it when someone takes on the ungrateful role of speaking up. His new book "Here comes Trouble" goes on the bookshelves tomorrow and I hope it will be a much handled item. Keep up the good work, Michael. I don't know how you do it, but keep going!!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Well, Jules, this is what you do...


...you make them earn their keep!!! And this fence better be painted when I log off or else!! Hey, wait a minute, where are you off to now? I meant you, you spoiled little scum tossing dung beetle...

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Oh Boy !

Is it fun having children? I am a bit nervous that it's not...
(Jules)

Friday, August 12, 2011

Off Again


It’s 11pm and the time remaining until I have to get up again is less than four hours -that’s when the whole airport madness starts. In a way, it’s like Christmas, you dread it but you also can’t do without. It’s the summer holidays. Everyone we know has already left or will be leaving shortly.

The countdown is running, carry-ons are bursting with pens, paper, books, ipods and juicepacks (....they won’t make it very far through the airport, but one can always try), suitcases have been acrobatically weighed, lists diligently checked, and alarm clocks woefully set.

Just a few minutes ago, Matt launched a final desperate campaign to take the labtop along after all, but was blocked, since the only way I intend to surf in the next three weeks is on my belly.

But, I’ll keep in touch somehow, because surely Fred will have some insights on Obama’s plight, the Arab Spring or plundering UK kids that are worth sharing...

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Jules gets it


I have to make my life a good one, because I have only got this one.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Coming About!


I took this picture of the girls last week. What a fun day that was! I had spent the afternoon training on a bigger boat, a Wayfarer, which to Popeye’s (my instructor) pronounced dismay I kept referring to as the Windfairy - but then, what princess comes up with the names anyway?

I don’t know exactly what made me sign up for the course to begin with. I don’t like boats and I don’t care much about the people sailing them, but I guess wating in a parking lot for the girls to get done was even more dreadful and so I thought, signing up was acutally a good idea.

Four days and a close call with the divorce lawyer later, I would say, sometimes it is worth considering waiting in a parking lot for a couple of hours.

Why Matt had to take me out on the dinghy the day after I got my little certificate, when actually everyone else was taking their boats out of the water, I don’t know. But then, it’s not like he took me for a wee on a leash. I could have barked at him and stayed home, but somehow, I thought, he knew what he was doing.

But then, that would mean taking the mad out of Matt. And without that we probably wouldn’t be sailing together still after twenty years.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

These last days...


I have been out shackling halyards, tacking jibs, and cleating and uncleating all sorts of ropes...uh sheets. But even after three days of an intense sailing class, I can't confidently say that I have a secure grip on what I am actually shackling.

When it comes to rigging the dinghy first thing in the morning, I usually excuse myself to the bathroom, because I am afraid I might break something. The other guys - and they are all guys - don’t seem to have that problem. They will shackle, cleat and hoist anything.

The instructor with his tanned lower arms - a blue anchor next to “Hold Fast” tattooed across the left one - is the image of popeyed masculinity, the kind I usually try very hard to avoid. And yet, there I am thrown onto the shores of our village reservoir pretending that I am reviewing my bowline knot just one last time before I too will lay hand on that blue vessel that’s sitting in front of me like a dead moose.

All changes, however, when we are on the water. There I reign, because under the smoldering summer heat I can’t wait to capsize. I don’t mind close contact with that natural element. In fact, I crave it.

And so, once tossed onto the choppy waves, I wield the rudder with fearless aplomb, I holler my carefully rehearsed sailing lingo at my crew, and I pray that just once the boom will knock one of them over while we come about. Just once.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

It's pointless -


...but it can also be really really good.
LIFE !

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Viva Vita!


Again and again over the past years I have come across amazing and yet little publized, in fact often sidelined, literature produced by women. I am currently reading “All Passion Spent” by Vita Sackville-West, a friend of Virginia Wolf. However, she reads like a Tolstoy, although more concise, and humorously disects the gender oddities of Edwardian England with a poignancy and clarity as if she were alive today. Of course, that kind of writing is uncomfortable for many and rarely is kindly reviewed by literary juries...

Monday, July 18, 2011

Do you smell that...?

It's one thing to get hit again and again by this fetid blast of negativity every time "la gran famiglia" moves into the picture. It's another to pretend it's the latest Hugo Boss.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

God Bless...


So if most people in fact do like fast food, Discount Stores and prefer a gym with a sizable parking lot to a brisk walk through the neighborhood, it comes as no surprise that the “free” market economies of the world look the way they do: paved nearly door to door with a most eclectic patchwork of gas stations, parking lots and stores in the efficient style of giant shoe boxes. Obviously quick and easy does it - at least for most of us.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Between Here and Zurich


Airports make me feel out of place. No matter how much time I have spent there, I can’t really get used to them.

I feel like I am walking naked through a chocolate display. Everything looks neat and tidy, ready for consumption, if only it weren’t for me bending over to help myself to one of the tasty bites.

My carefully chosen outfit suddenly seems to wrap around my rear end like wet toiletpaper, the tired straps of my skin colored bra are showing and my carry-on looks like something not even the cat would bring home; I could use a tan, my hair is floppy, and my nose is a size 14; I spilled coffee over my trousers, my fingerprints are all over my glasses and most likely I forgot to peel off the sales labels off the bottom of my sandals. Shall I go on...?

As I look around me it’s clear that I am the only one. Everyone else seems effortlessly perfect. It’s like leafing through a magazine and hoping that extensive airbrushing was applied even to the smallest detail.

Toned thighs extending from seemingly haphazardly draped skirts, lazy hair flowing down well appointed tops matching eyecolor and shade. Cartier jewlery, Prada sunglasses and all sorts of the latest electronic paraphernalia make me feel distinctly uneasy. Why oh why can’t I...?

But then, I have a lovely personality.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

What the boys are up to today....

Every time I log on I browse through the main Yahoo headlines and then move on. I rarely click on any of the news links. For me, it's a bit like checking through the kitchen window to see what the boys are up to, whether they are chasing the cat, killing each other over a shovel, or pissing into my rain barrel. It's always sort of the same stuff.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Painfully Plain Pleasures



Theorists disagree about the number and quality of our basic emotions. Some list as many as eleven (Arnold), while others reduce their number to only four or five.

One study (Parrot 2001) lists six primary emotions, including love, joy, surprise, anger sadness, and fear which lead on to a longer list of secondary emotions such as longing, pride and exasperation, which again connect to an even larger list of tertiary emotions (for a complete listing go to changingminds.com).

I like to keep with Marrow' approach who limited the list to two basic emotions, pain and pleasure. However, I would like to qualify this by adding that both pleasure and pain often are merely anticipated. Whatever secondary or tertiary emotions may be connected to them, more often than not they are not based on the actual experience but rather on an perceived or anticipated experience.

Pain or the anticipation of pain is, of course, directly linked to our feeling of security and how we estimate our chances of survival.

Belonging to a group, being accepted and valued by its members, for instance, plays a very important role in our human evolution. This is true especially for women, who due to their vulnerability as physically generally weaker and reproductively more involved sex, have been (and in many environments still are) very dependent on protection through others.

According to this approach, anticipated pain, this underlying feeling of insecurity, can bring on all kinds of emotions, including those usually not linked to pain as for instance in the Stockholm Syndrom (love for an abductor). And, by the same token, it can help explain why in abusive relationships there often is much talk about love.

As to my own feeling this morning, they are definitely leaning more towards the side of pain. And yet, a vague but nevertheless powerful feeling of loneliness earlier today has been somewhat eleviated by a brisk morning walk across the fields with a few friendly faces along the way.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

About that Apple


Zoe just left to go to bed. For the last two hours we have sat on the sofa by the window, watching the Midsummer sky change from an orangy pink to a many layered purple, and talked.

The topic eventually shifted to religion. Surprisingly, while deeply agnostic, I suddenly heard myself praise the power of images from the Old Testament. Images like that of the Tree of Knowledge continue to give me goosebumps. It neatly anchors our perpetual and yet futile search for truth.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

A funny thing happened...


Susan, my dear friend back in Costa Rica, is quite attached to the word “funny” - especially when it relates to the many unforseen events that life keeps shoving her way, you know, all that stuff that happens while one is busy making other plans...

It seems that having kids exponentially contributes to the amount of “stuff” that can happen any given moment. From little things like scraped knees and barfing pets to bigger stuff such as broken hearts and teeth all the way to the really big crap such as messed up relationships and empty coffres and then, of course, the general horror scenarios of sickness and inevitable death.

And while we usually keep a tight lid on the last category, it tends to linger quite effectively in the back of our minds to make us just a that bit more pathetic when dealing with the lesser upsets.

In fact, having kids and being responsible for them 24/7 is one big lesson in mind control.

So, when dealing with Addy’s Downs Syndrome and a non-supportive con ex, “funny” is probably a healthy way of putting it.

I love you, woman. Hang in there!

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Twenty-three, twenty-two, twenty-one


As we are nearing the end of our first school year, I am beginning to drag like a wind up toy on its last leg. Any chance to slow down even further is welcome. I have started to drink Earl Grey (with milk!) - whenever offered.

By the time everyone at home is up in the morning, I usually regret I made it out of bed in the first place. Approaching school, my feet become laden like in a time warp and after drop off, I linger to an extend that seems suspicious to even the chattiest of parents dotting the parking lot.

I will talk about anything - and at length - just to avoid having to trott back up the hill to my mountains of laundry, patches of weeds, and oceans of to-do lists. Sometimes I wonder whether I am lacking some life-enabling gene that makes tedious routines feel like comfort food.

But, hey, this is June and the countdown is running!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Daddy does it...

Now that’s funny. Xena style body guards and fluttering grey moths all around the “King of Kings,” daddy Moammar, el gran liberador de las mujeres!

But then, women were always good at that...letting themselves be intstrumentalized eitther as sex objects or as madonnas.

Hitler did it with “Kinder, Kirche, Küche,” the Communist movement maintained a stable support that way, Berlusconi tried it, Gaddafi does it.

A bit of positive feedback goes a long way with the girls.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

You Suck!



Peta thinks I am the worst feminist of all times.

“F... you suck at being a feminist!!” she chided me when I dropped off Charlie’s Angels at her house. She has carpel tunnel and is in dire straights for post-op diversion.

And she is not the only one who thinks that I am not true to the cause. But then, I am not sure there is one cause for women. Peta, for instance, thinks that women are in charge anyway and that men are just bloody jealous.

While not that original, most free spirited women that I know, like to take that route - for obvious reasons... Why sour your life with all the shit that’s going on?

To those women - basically all my female friends - I am a prickly thorn. Although they generally agree with my ranting and ravings, they don’t want to hear about it all. Yet, funny enough they scorn me when they think I lapse.

But in all honesty, I speak less for women than for humanity. I just want people to reach their full potential instead of living lives as abused and abusers. And if hormones are in the way of that, I will name fingers and point names.

And, by the way, I do think Natalie rules!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Remind Me

Away from home for the week, Zoë was sent the “Course Rules” ahead of time. There was little room for doubt about what was expected of the children. This one cracked me up: “All members must attend all meals and EAT. Please, queue in an orderly fashion.”

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Anybody there...?

From “My people have this secret superfast weapon that can destroy aliens” to “Stealth bombers were deployed to target ennemy combatants” it's a rather smooth transition. But whereas in scenario number one, an agitated mom is rapidly closing in on the sandbox to take possession of the secret superfast weapon (sand shovel) while telling the alien to retract his tongue, there is no such institution, it seems, in scenario number two. Instead we see crowds of flag swirling mom's with badges on their T-shirts saying Proud to be a US Soldier's Mom.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Words that Lie


Why, he wondered, was there such a word as "lie" if lying itself was not allowed. When he came to me looking for an answer, I had to think for a moment. My cynical self had an instant reply ready, of course. About how there are many words that refer to undesirable human behavior and that "lie" was just one of those. But that would have been like flicking the lid off a box filled with nasties. All he wanted, after all, was find some sense in the world. Why spoil a perfectly fine Sunday...?

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Twenty-four Seven


Where did you store that one-liner? You do remember it, don’t you? A couple of days ago, when Yahoo’s main page popped up on your screen, it was right there, the second news headline from the top.

I instinctively turned it into a ratio: Forty-eight women every hour is approximately 1 every 72 seconds...

What I didn’t do was click on the link to read on. I realize that I should have and if only in order to fully acknowledge both the horror of this ongoing atrocity and the researchers’ effort to reach our awareness.

But I was afraid. Afraid of the rage that would surge in me while reading details of the study that puts a cold number to the brutal fact of humanity.

Forty-eight women and girls in Congo are raped every hour, 24/7.

There it was. Information readily available to be locked away in a dark corner of our human experience. A truth to be ignored.

A few years ago a study done by a couple of US professors concluded that rape is not unnatural among human males. The study came under a lot of criticism and after a while I lost track of whether the public and academic outcry was about the sober conclusion, or whether it showed our inability to accept another truth or two.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

When...

...there is a moment to see we seldom look.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Just to say...


Happy Easter to y'all !!

It's not easy to keep in touch with everyone. And I know, I have been a really lousy correspondent and blogspot friend, but I do think of you all and I hope that wherever you are, you had a jolly good bunny time. I just got done with my third load of chocolate casualties...we were down to swim suits at some point...Love A.
PS Yorkshire is beautiful!!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Spring Escape


It'll be a week of hiking through the North Yorkshire Dales for us. Let's hope the news of Spring has reached that far...

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Move over Guys !


A recent University of Cambridge study found that there seems to be a positive correlation between steroids, more specifically testosterone, and factors that contributed to the financial crash.

The researcher, Dr Coates, observed what he called a state of mania among traders, characterized by heightened risk taking attitude, increased confidence and reaction speed.

In other words, what he witnessed was a sort of feeding frenzy. And we all know the mess that was left behind. To avoid future bubbles, he prescribed an increase in the number of women and older men working the floor.

Well, there and preferably in other places, where hormones get in the way of rational thinking, I would think.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Too Easy



It’s pretty convenient to shove someone, and all the little idiosynchracies they come equipped with, into a box, lid shut and case closed.

We do it all the time. It does make life seem a lot tidier, when we can neatly label the boxes and store them in some dark corner of our memory without ever opening the lid
again.

Susan is really sweet but an airhead. The best thing about Cathy is her cooking. Miles can talk miles without listening for a second. Nick is obsessive, Mag a crowd pleaser, Lucy a prima donna.

Even if it’s all true, which it usually isn’t, and even if for a moment it gives us the feeling that we’ve got it all figured out, which of course we haven’t, and even if it would make life a whole lot easier, which ... Yeah, you got it ... it doesn’t. Even if all the ifs seemed reasonably real. It’s not a good idea.

And yet, if you insist on going ahead anyway, at least have the decency to punch some breathing holes into the box...or even better, remove the lid from time to time to have another look.

Life would be boring, if we had it all figured out. Freezing all the variables around us and buying a dog is not the solution.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Go Quota!

There are many reasons why quotas are no good. For one, they are “unfair” to those they disfavor, but also they are unfair to those they are intended to favor, because they tend to provide fertile grounds for office gossip.

And yet, they do what we have failed to do in any other meaningful way. They break through entrenched networks, racism and sexism, or, more generally speaking, they encroach on hiring practices that for eons now have favored the white male.

In fact, considering women and their particular life cycle which, as we all know, can impinge uncomfortably on their careers, I would actually propose an even tougher quota system.

Given that the most important time for women to make good money and move up on the career ladder is right when they come out of education, a strict quota system ought to secure their swift promotion at that point in their professional lives.

For one, if women get a head start and remain motivated, they may be far more likely to return to their swivvel chairs once their childbearing years are over. But also, it would give them a chance early on in their lives to make contributions to their pension funds.

This is crucial not only for personal but also for economic reasons as most countries around the world, including the US and Germany, don’t give any credit for the time women spent in child rearing - a blatant “oversight” which greatly contributes to high poverty rates among women in old age.

Quotas may not be fair, and they are definitely not a preferred option, but they are a decent plan B, where reasons beyond reasons blurr our decision-making.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Gunshots


About a week ago I tuned into BBC Four for a report about Ivory Coast. We listened to a group of women who had gathered in a square demanding to be heard. This filled me with joy and I was cheering them on from our kitchen with Zoe joining in. Not that often women risk their lifes and that of their loved ones to speak up against wrong doings. But every astonishing time that they do it, it fills me with great pride. However, our chanting came to an abrupt end when rounds of gun fire could be heart. It felt, as if I we were under fire as well. My heart stopped for a moment and I looked over to Zoe. She had tears in her eyes, unable to utter a word.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Hating it...


Two point four million GBP is what a UK banker receives on avarage as a bonus each year. At HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland, it’s a bit less - just over a million. Still that’s pretty decent for government employees - because that’s what they are now, after they burnt through their money and had to be bailed out with tax payers´ money. Somehow I get the feeling that they really must hate their job, if they think they deserve that much. Maybe one ought to feel sorry for them...

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Waiting to hear...

I am wondering whether Fred will reconsider his laudatio to nuclear energy or whether in his good old die-hard Republican manner, he will claim that Fukushima is just a big press campaign, launched by the anti nuclear energy lobby.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

This is It !


It’s happening. Mid-life. At forty-one, solidly arrived on the other shore, life feels just a tiny bit more like a gigantic wet towel. While the twenties were full of arrogant energy, ideas and goals, the thirties abounded in a can-do attitude that resembled that of a frost bitten summit chaser. Joggling double and triple days, childhood illnesses, and family feuds, that decade was not an easy one, and so it comes as no surprise if the aftershocks can still be felt at this end....

There is a mental fatigue now that seems to linger which is only topped by the exhaustion of everyday life that hasn’t let off as babies turned into pre-teens. What is this? One asks while checking ones mid-section on a dreary morning...I didn’t use to look like THAT!! And what’s with the grey curly hairs sprouting everywhere - can’t pull all of them out (or can I?)...not to mention the sneaky woodworm that has slyly dug its way through our faces. Where was I when all of this happened?

These days, long nights are no longer a sign of vivacious energy, but a blatant mistake. Headaches, a stiff back and an acting up ischias are reminders that we need to take better care of ourselves....pick up yoga, pilates, nordic walking. And alas, chocolate is not as quickly metabolized as before and will need reconsideration. Darn.

And then there is our other half - if they stuck around until now. This is the time of reckoning and many will in the end reckon that it is time to move in separate directions, leaving afore mentioned children and mortgage payments in their wake. For those who are more inclined to reconcile, there remains the certainty that this is it. This is their life, these are the recurring issues, and ongoing annoyances and very little is going to change. Not for better but maybe for worse.

Do you remember the Game of Life? It was a board game, that made it onto almost everyone’s shelf in the eighties. Players moved through their fictitous lives in little baby pink and blue cars to end up in either a semi-detached (oops!) or grand mansion (congrats!) at the finishing line, depending on the amount of personal bankruptcies and lottery cash ins they happened to come accross on their journey.

I loved that game, especially the part where one had to spin the wheel to see how many children were to travel along in the car - I always hoped for twins. Well, I know better today. And for whatever its worth, that’s an insight one rarely gains before turning forty.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Human Intarrogance


Like a mad charlatan concocting ever more colorful potions of questionable content and potentially hazardous result, we are coming up with outlandish cures for the ailments that are plaguing human civilization. Gene manipulated foods to save the starving millions, nuclear power plants to support their pampered lives, invasive treatments to prolong them....when really the only life prolonging remedy would be to have fewer of us around in the future. But now the US government is cutting funding for Planned Parenthood and hopes to put a dent into the national deficit that way. Another one of those cures, it seems. Let’s just hope it doesn’t kill the patient.
PS Happy Women's Day...

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Adelante!


So Austria is dying out, and so is Italy, only outpaced by Germany, and so governments there are groping around for ways to get women to crank out more babies, or else Europe the way we know it will cease to exist. Just imagine vast sums of money are paid so young women won’t feel that they have to choose between having a child or earning money. At least for the first years.... They must be just pooping their pants if they go that far! Paying mothers!!!

But what are they so afraid of? Western culture disappearing? People looking a little less white? Languages dying out? Nobody there to cultivate a decent Bordeaux anymore?

Language always changes - as much as the Académie Française tries to keep French pure by forbidding the use of foreign words (and thereby making French an even more awkward language) youth culture will forever be stronger and push the limits. And, yes, that youth will increasingly consist of more and more second and third generation immigrants.

And with regards to our culinary tradition...most of the Bordeaux we drink nowadays isn’t even produced in France anymore, the same with pâté and Pinot and with regards to looks...well look again. A little stirr up would certainly not do any damage.

And what culture is that we are talking about? Countries around Europe seem to be in a race to shed their herritage. Six lane highways are criss crossing the country sides of France, Italy and Germany. Only the poorest regions get spared. Discounters and supermalls seem to have become the main point of attraction. The medieval towns in their forgotten midst are slowly falling to pieces. It’s not where the jobs are, you know.

So while we are slowly morphing into a more or less amorphous 21st century shape, I would say let’s hail any good idea from the outside - the Maghreb seems to be a place where things are happening...open the doors. Let’s just hold on to some of our legal and constitutional framework.

Like that we all might be better off in the end.

Monday, February 28, 2011

And now...?

So what’s next? The western world seems to hesitate as if they didn’t want to spoil the sweetness of the moment. Twittering teenies taunting terrible tictators. In a way we all want to be part of it, support, embrace and empower...but then, what exactly do we expect to happen?

Of course, what we want to happen is democracy and free speech, market economy and stable oil prices, but how likely is that to happen? History has taught us after all that revolutions tend to bring forward the next strongman, the next silver back who leads the way, his way, the next loud mouth who knows how to rally the masses behind him.

I wonder what Obama is thinking these days. Has he placed his bet yet? It will be interesting to see what his next moves are.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

...no chance!


I wonder whether our parts of the world will see a revolution again. Civil disobedience in western democracies doesn’t seem to go beyond strikes and demonstratrations and occasional clashes with law enforcement - usually following European football matches.

Seemingly functioning electoral systems have absorbed the major currents in society. All western democracies have left and right leaning groupings in their party landscapes with minor eccentric parties on the margins.

With plenty of bread and games there is no reason really to risk once life in the name of... say a better world. Granted, some people are better off than others, have better opportunies to move ahead and stay ahead, but generally speaking, very few are starving.

There are state funded schools everywhere, miserable as they may be, thrift shops pick up where more high end retail doesn’t want to go, and there is plenty of nonstop diversion around, for everything else there are drugs.

So, my bet is that we are done with this kind of bonding experience.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Bonne Chance!



Revolutions, when they happen, are an amazing event. The momentum of a feeling turned cause and finally movement is a great manifestation of our humanity.

Two years ago we watched students in Iran stand up against a corrupt and brutal government. We all were frustrated when their courage didn’t meet with success, when they became victims instead of victorious.

But in the end, their voices reverberated in the hearts of many and helped to unite people across the region to stand up against suppression. How wonderful would it be if what happened in these past weeks across the North of Africa would travel like a tsunami accross the rest of the continent where brutality of a few limits the life perspectives of so many.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Play it Again...


As we decended through the evening sky and swooshed over a land that I knew only form memory, I was taken back in time. Immediately the beauty and otherness conjured up the bliss and ease that were once mine. A life time and a time of life. It was so good to return to Marrakech after all these years. And before we even had touched ground, I leaned over to Matt and whispered, “I want to do this again and again...”

Friday, February 11, 2011

4,000 Camels


...and five admittedly pretty tea cups were offered in exchange for lovely me. Matt politely declined. I on the other hand, if asked, would not have been offended at the promise of life under the warm North African sun, with tame monkeys and sinuous snakes at my feet and the lush smell of mosc in the air. Two and a half months of drizzle and down pours on this windy shoal have taken they’re toll...

Friday, February 4, 2011

Just a Fool


Every fool can manage a crisis, it takes true genius, however, to cope with everyday life...

Saturday, January 22, 2011

YUK

When you hear what the film "Precious" is about, you would think it would make you sick. But it’s acutally the Bonus Material with the director, Lee Daniels, and Ms Paula Patton that make you dash for the loo. So this guy gets to direct the film based on the fantastic book "Push" by the author Saphire. The story is absolutely harrowing. Teenage girl grows up being physically, mentally, emotionally, sexually (have I skipped anything?) abused. Two kids fathered (so to speak...) by her father. She is black, obese, and undereducated. Not a winning ticket. The film is shot as if you were in the room with Precious, the girl. But it’s not that jagged pseudo-amateurish camera job. It is acutally just calm. Lots of close ups of faces that speak the unspeakable. Really good. But then only God (“Hello are you out there?”) knows why Lee Daniels and his side kicks have to go and turn the story into a soap opera when they talk about it in the interview. Seriously, get the DVD, watch the film, but DON’T WATCH THE BONUS MATERIAL - or keep a bucket close!!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Brilliant!


It should be feasible in this day and age with social networks, twitter, email, instant messaging etc....for word to go around about what I would call a No Knock up Night. One 24 hour period of not conceiving. Worldwide. Can you imagine the powerful message that would send when nine months later, the birth rate drops to near nill for a day? Just one day.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Disreputable

There is so much to say, to shout out loud into the busy noise of our daily lives, about the gnarled idiosyncrasies of a woman’s life, that sometimes I wish for the world to come to a screeching halt - just long enough to take a good long look and then, hopefully, readjust its course.

Population growth could be a thing of the past.

Things may have changed, but when I went to school, I was never told about the effects that childbirth may have on my life. There was no mentioning of the part-time trap or of forgoing years of paying into a state pension fund.

Never were issues such as physical and emotional strains of child bearing and raising openly discussed. The exhaustion which goes along with attending to the next generation was a slightly disreputable secret just like worn-out bras.

Menstruation was a biological fact young women had to learn to cope with. In no way was it considered a rite of passage that bestowed powers of reproduction to be both acknowledged and reckoned with. And as far as my sexuality was concerned, the pill was to take care of that.

And so I entered adulthood as a complete ignoramus ready to take on the double day.

Completely oblivious of what that would entail, of course, for I thought, that I was free to choose any carrier and decide how I was going to live my life - ah yes, those mirages of endless opportunities!

Entering university, I had a pretty good idea of how to work towards future employability, but over the years I was sobered by numerous reminders that instead of venturing out into the remunerated work force where glass ceilings, harassment, double days and unequal pay were awaiting me, it may be wiser to stay closer to home and settle for biological fulfillment.

Under the circumstances, certainly not a bad idea. Thank you very much.

And so after having given birth to three children spaced neatly three years apart, I opted out and left it to my partner to play the chicken ladder game. An impregnable uterus is - after all - another disreputable fact, that doesn’t sit well with employers. If nothing else, it defines one as ‘different’ - especially in the more profitable lines of work. And ‘different’ is seldom a good thing - especially when ‘normal’ is defined by the bully.

My cousin once asked me, whether I had wasted my education when opting to become a stay-at-home mother. As much as the question shocked me for its brazen disrespect, I have thought about it time and again and wondered how I would answer it with what I had realized about the myths of self-determination.

Get a job, a hobby, find a worthy cause, some would say. But luckily I don’t need either. What I would like much more is to enter in a dialogue about the most crucial aspects of our lives as women and mothers, some of which need to be addressed urgently.

But here is one more disreputable side about me: I don’t care enough about all of this to lend my time and energy to those who prefer the status quo and will cowardly defend it by all means for fear of even the mildest challenge. And so I wait that some day, a critical mass of people will join the discourse and that the bullies who had their turn will simply disappear.

In the meantime, stay posted for a brilliant idea....!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Gotta try a little harder


When the pundits marvel about the hapless war in Afghanistan, they tend to point to a history based on tribal structures and warfare in that region. Accordingly, what we witness today, the stubborn resistance to outside ideas, whether introduced with method or might, is at least in part a manifestation of that history.

I wonder if one might apply a similar analysis to the ongoing trouble in the US. The surprisingly hotheaded approach to basic principles of the common good originated in the minds of people who ventured out into the unknown to find greater freedom.
Whether gun control, freedom of religion, or health care, the issue is not as important as the fact that no one is supposed to mess with it.

At this point, the conservative fraction is reaching a point of hysteria for fear that some of these rights may have to be mitigated for the benefit of the community. So now they point crosshairs in every direction.

The question to ask is how one can turn a country’s historical baggage into potential? How can one introduce a sense of security in a nation that is still fighting the ghosts of the past?

Obviously not just by using rhetoric along the lines of “God bless America!”

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Good-Byes


To this point, I have avoided funerals, because the one I went to, my grandpa’s, just made things worse. From the onset the pastor had taken over our thoughts and memories and ran off with them. Although he had never met my grandpa, he seemed to have a lot to say about him. Trite sentimentalities and pseudo insights into the complexities of a wonderful person. I had never felt so alone in my life.

So from that point on, I stayed away from final good-byes.

But with J. I felt, I had to make an appearance. For one, it probably wouldn’t have been any good to tell the family that I was probably going to hate their funeral service; and then I didn’t feel good about lying to them either. So, brave little Julian and I went. And I am glad we did.

It was a simple ceremony. Her husband had written the eulogy. And with very few frills and elaborations, he managed to bring her back among our midst. And so what made that terrible day good in a way was that, not only for the first time in my life I had arrived on time for something, which would have made her proud, but above all that everyone who had come was able to reunite with her through these few words, which would have made her very happy.