Barcelona briefs

“Ok?”
“Yeah, you ok?” I replied, and sat down on a bar stool two along from him.
“Yeah, where you from?”
I told him where I currently live and where I travel from, deliberately qualifying it like that.  As much as I’m fond of the city, Cardiff is not where I would say I am from.  He was thick-set Nigerian man who didn’t look unlike Pulp Fiction actor Ving Rhames, sporting a flat cap and nursing an almost empty large glass of claret.

From his Spanish chatter with the barmaids it seemed obvious he was a regular there and exuded a natural charisma.

Over the course of around an hour, a couple of beers (another glass of claret for him) and some tapas, he revealed himself to be a wine businessman trying to sell into China.  He bemoaned the recession and lack of money in the city, the fact that much of it was derived from tourists.

That was after the obvious first subject of conversation between two male strangers: football.  He was a fan of Barcelona’s arch rivals, Real Madrid, and good friends with AC Milan’s Dutch veteran midfielder, Clarence Seedorf.

“Girlfriend?” he asked, soon after our business chat petered off.
I wagged a flat right hand back and forth, pulled a face.
“Ha! You don’t know?!”
“Early days.”
“Why is she not here?”
“Booked before it all.. happened. You?”
“Yeah. 3 kids.” He listed their ages, didn’t mention their mother.
“What’s your name?” he asked, shortly after I asked for my bill, and I told him.
“I’m Stanley, good to meet you.”

—-

Viewing it from the outside, Barcelona’s famous Camp Nou football ground was a disappointingly underwhelming experience.  Nearby was a full-sized astroturf pitch where a match was being played.  I attempted to take an ‘in their shadows’ style picture through a gap in the meshed fence.  It wasn’t really working.

With my eye to the viewfinder I heard a peculiarly anomalous trickling sound.

Someone watering the..  astroturf?

Pulling the camera away from my face I was faced with a substitute footballer taking a break from warming up close by, taking a piss.  It was jarring, my eye was helplessly, inexorably drawn to his prick, then quickly away.

The substitute looked up at me.

“Pouco,” he said, referring to his manhood.  A small one.  He smiled, entirely unembarrassed.  Then he said something else.

“Ingles?” I asked.  And we spoke in English, about football and Barcelona’s upcoming match with Chelsea, and my supporting of Tottenham and hatred of Chelsea.  Eventually he tucked himself away and we bid each other goodbye.

—————-

A city centre street, La Diada de Sant Jordi (Saint George’s Day), also known as El dia de la Rosa (The Day of the Rose), a Catalan holiday with similarities to Valentine’s Day.

Her (young, dark, vibrant, confident and cheeky): You have bought a rose for your woman?
Me: You have received a rose from your man?”

I wish I’d had the speed of thought and nerve to reply.

Instead.

Me: Yeah.

I replied, smiled and stared a little too long, before walking on.  The sheer volume of women and men carrying roses was incredible to see, an old tradition still retaining so much public investment.  Towards the end of the day layers of rich, lusty red petals were swept towards gutters and drains, mingling with cigarette-butts.

—————–

On the airport bus into the city late Saturday night, an hour or so after full time of the big Barcelona-Real Madrid match I had originally intended to visit the city to experience, if not attend.   The stylish, well-groomed young man had gladly helped me with directions, using perfect English, then we’d fallen into football.  Of particular note was how the national team is cared for less in Barcelona than Barcelona itself – an unavoidable brand and an intrinsic part of life, whereas affections in Madrid are more equally divided.

what didn’t happen

The closing chapter of an earlier female fancy, and arguably the most woeful tale to disgrace these pages, to date.

Several days after coldly severing our communications, aborting whatever might have been – a response to my allegedly excessive pressure to book a flight – the Scottish female emailed a long apology.  This was despite her disappointment at my frustrated reaction of meeting the Hungarian female – whose interest I troublingly still retain. (Troublingly because I still entertain ideas of meeting again, for mainly physical, selfish reasons).

I accepted the apology.  Our communications never quite returned to the frequency of before but recovered to a chatty enough point, the hurt and upset she’d caused was forgotten. I told her I had booked that flight to her home city of Glasgow in that last weekend of October, as we’d discussed when we were on our best terms (so busy was she until that point) but also explained I was undecided about using it.  It wasn’t a long trip anyway.  Not even 48 hours.  She said she’d still like to meet up if I did.

In truth I was always likely to go ahead and visit.  I enjoy seeing new cities and Glasgow appealed to me; I’d heard good things.  I’d be happy enough to mooch around the place for a while, whether we met or not.

I hadn’t overanalysed my reasons for not confirming my visit sooner: playing it cool, seeing how interested she was in meeting it up?  It wasn’t hugely conscious or calculated; I partly gambled that she wouldn’t make any major plans for the one weekend she knew I might visit.

Unfortunately she did just that.  I told her a few days beforehand and she responded that she was going away visiting friends, had booked tickets to Ireland.  She was miffed that I hadn’t confirmed earlier and had assumed that because I hadn’t, it meant that I wasn’t.  She said that up until a few days ago, she was still hopeful, and news that I was had ruined her evening.  However, she repeatedly rebuffed my suggestion that she could have simply just sought confirmation, asked me the question.  The onus had been on me to confirm (obviously) and she wasn’t going to change her plans now.  This was all my fault.  Again.

*

Wandering the city’s centres sloping streets, I could see what had drawn some high profile film-makers to Glasgow in recent months, the likeness of the city to San Francisco.  The blocks and road widths and those steep slopes down to the River Clyde; a definite similarity to my now faded memory of the American city.  Glasgow even seemed to have a greater diversity of skyline, a more imposing height and sprawl than I recalled of Edinburgh, its near neighbour and Scotland’s capital city.  Infinite narrow alleys between blocks, down which many have pissed and probably a few have breathed their last; yet without that lingering stench emitted by areas of Paris.  Experiencing such aged and interesting cities inevitably makes you draw comparisons with your own.  My current home city of Cardiff pales in comparison: flat, bland, comparatively new, without the character and range.  Despite the constant overcast gloom, I was seduced by the city’s difference, its warmth and homeliness.

Perhaps misguidedly I sort of projected this fondness onto the Scottish female and there followed another protracted, stop-start exchange of messages, initially good-natured.  An absurd reaction in a way, complimenting her on the city, as if she’d built the place in her spare time.

Eventually the subject and mutual irritation about her absence / my presence returned.  Her porcupine nature of defence and accusation reared up once again; that belligerent lack of compromise or acceptance, not for the first time.  If we’d ever met in person, she may have presented a sweeter, less spiky version of herself entirely at odds with this reading.

Or she might not have.  Now I’d never know.  It was too late, I decided.  I’d had enough of this.  My patience was spent.  Game Over.  And the feeling may well have been mutual.  It was time to draw a line, as a friend had suggested much earlier: mate, she sounds a bit..  He was probably right.  She could have easily had a friend who said the same of me.  I sighed and was done.

Dear blog reader, I felt so ruthlessly decisive about this that I *even* unfollowed her on Twitter.  Brutal, I know.  I’m fairly sure it’s legal.  The act was reciprocated soon enough too.  Emotional carnage.  The rest of my Saturday night was spent holed up in a budget hotel room with beer, takeaway chips and Match Of The Day, all surrendered and abject.

On Sunday I walked off a mild hangover by covering a good few miles of the city, taking photographs, stopping in coffee shops to read the rather excellent booker-nominated The Sisters Brothers by Patrick De Witt, listening to my current acoustic singer-songwriter of choice, Ben Howard, and barely speaking to a soul.

Although one stood out.  Mid-afternoon in a central coffee shop, a startlingly beautiful woman returned from the counter, awkwardly carrying two hot mugs and pushing the wheelchair of a deaf and possibly also mentally disabled child.  Her seating choices were limited, my table the most obvious place, were it not for the fact that I was still sitting there.  I was nearly done though, so drank up and bade them to come and sit.  She sincerely offered her thanks, rewarding me with a huge smile – perfect teeth, and signed an explanation to the deaf child.  Sign language is just always impressive, like being an airline pilot who you trust must know the functions of all those buttons.   Sign language issued by a very attractive person was doubly amazing.  I smiled to both of them in turn, said she was welcome.  She was arrestingly, punishingly gorgeous (did I make that clear enough?)  A colourful tattoo of the kind which usually makes me baulk peeped out from her upper chest.  I nobly considered that this could be overlooked given her wealth of other distracting features.  They smiled again and I left, trying to look cool and like I wasn’t weighed down by the effort of not dissolving to mush.  I felt pubescent.  It was the best exchange of my trip, not that it had much competition.

It might not have been, of course.  The city could have held an alternative story for me, if things had played out differently.  But things didn’t.

my first blog – aged 10 and ¾

..sort of.  Found a folder of old writings and a couple of disks at the parents’ house this weekend. Must have typed this out around ten years ago. Only minorly tweaked.  One of those things which might only have entertainment value exclusively for me.  Thought I’d lob it into the internet anyway..

Monday June 17th 1991

I got on a posh coach at 8.01 to hear Lufton girls awfully singing the shoop-shoop song by Cher.  It’s a terrible song but they made it even worse.  Then I let one of the Lufton boys have a go on my electronic Donkey Kong game and I think he’s better at it than me because he’s had it for quite a while.  I’ve tried to draw a picture of the view from my seat on the coach but failed miserably.  I just had a go on Chad’s racing game but only got one point.  Everybody keeps asking me what time it is for their diary because I’m the only one with a watch.  It’s 9.18 now and a posh Jaguar car has just passed us.

We stopped at a Granada service station at 10:45 and I bought a Mars bar and a football magazine.  Our coach driver for the week is called Shirley.  They put the film ‘Big’ on the coach television but I didn’t watch it because I was reading my magazine.

At about 12:20 we arrived in York and saw a squirrel hopping around a lawn.  Then we sat down to eat our lunch and there were loads of pigeons around.  When we went to look round York Minster we went down to the crypt and saw statues, and a Prince William was buried down there.  Not Princess Di’s son, obviously.  I tried to take some photos but I couldn’t get the flash to work on my camera.  We saw interesting stained glass windows of people’s life stories and in the gift shop I bought a yo-yo.

We arrived in Scarborough at about 4:45.  The girls went in the hotel first and then we went in.  It wasn’t hard to find our room because it was room Number 1.  I was sharing with Robert Griffin from our school, and Richard Thorn and James Chander from Lufton.  The others at our school were jealous of me because Robert is popular and can be quite funny, even if he is not very well behaved.  He is in the year above and is probably sharing with me because the teachers are worried he might cause trouble if he is with his usual friends.  I get on alright with him but don’t know him very well.  We discovered our room and unpacked, then wrote a letter home.

I forgot what we had for dinner but remember having two choc-ices for afters because one of the teachers didn’t want theirs.   After dinner we went for a walk on the beach, and to the end of the pier.  When we got back James Frenshall bought me a lemonade because I had run out of money.

Tuesday June 18th

Woke up at 8.00 and went for a walk on the beach where we saw massive breakers crashing against the harbour walls.  It was brilliant, not much like the brook in our village.

When we got back to the hotel we had breakfast of Weetabix, toast, sausage and baked beans.  Not all on the same plate, obviously.

After breakfast we went to the town and did a sketch of the seafront or the town.  I did one of the town and took a picture of my view so I could put them together and see if they looked the same.  They didn’t really.

Then we went for a walk around the town and it rained so heavily that we went in an amusement arcade.  I bought an ice-cream and watched Chad play an Italia 90 football game.  When I finished my ice-cream Chad and I had a game and he beat me 2-1 – but I had been winning 1-0.  Then we went back to the same place where we had sketched earlier for lunch.

We went back to the hotel to get ready to go to Filey beach.  When we got there some people went in the sea.  I thought they were nuts.  We had a game of football on the beach which ended in a 7-7 draw, but I swear one team (not mine) won 7-6 and the teachers were just being careful nobody was upset.  Then nearly everybody bought a sugar dummy, including me.  I sold mine to Tim Marsh for 22p because it wasn’t as nice as I thought it would be.

When we got back to the hotel, we went to our rooms to write our diaries, and shower because it had been pouring down while we were playing football.

In our room just now Robert was swinging his sugar dummy round on its ribbon, like he was a cowboy with a lasso.  He swung it hard onto James’s head on purpose and it smashed everywhere.  James went very red, got angry and upset and ran off.  Robert knows he will get in trouble but he laughed anyway.  What he did was wrong but I don’t think he meant to smash it into James’s head quite so hard.  If that had just happened in the playground at lunchtime there would have probably been a fight but because we have to share a room together nobody really knew what to do.  The other Lufton boy in our room, Richard, was annoyed with Robert, but didn’t say anything.  I’m sure James has gone to tell on him now anyway and it’ll get sorted out.

Sir just called Robert out of our room for a talking to.  Sir can be quite scary when he properly bollocks you.  I’m still finding small bits of sugary red dummy everywhere.

In the evening we went on a boat trip and there was a disco on it which I didn’t like.  They kept playing Obla-di Obla-da by the Beatles, which I didn’t like, even though I normally like the Beatles songs Dad plays in the car.  Everybody did the conga but I escaped down to the toilet for some quiet.

Paris plugholes

My remaining couple of days in Paris were spent walking long distances back and forth across the city, beneath grubby overcast skies, taking photographs and doing the occasional touristy thing.

I considered going into roughly ten times as many cafés as I did. The truth is that many of them slightly intimidated me. When you have company, you have a front and a mask of some kind, or perhaps I’m massively pretentious and not at all true to myself when I have company – because it’s an infrequent experience.

My point is that you (or I) mind less about things because you don’t want to appear unnecessarily frugal, or fazed by over-formality. You’re happy to lead or comply, or make a snap decision and stick to it. Whereas solo, you approach cafés and see fancy glasses on the dining tables, even fancier twizzled napkins swirling out of them, a thick lusty tablecloth and a uniformed waiter; and you think ooh no, that’s a bit much for me. I just want a coffee and a sit down for a few minutes, not a bloody show.

On more than one occasion I grew sick of my plodding, indecisive self, bottled it altogether, headed for a main street Boulevard and found a Starbucks. Then I immediately hated myself for my total lack of adventure. Although you do get more coffee for your money and one of them was the most exceptionally grand and finely furnished Starbucks I have ever visited. And I’ve visited quite a few now.

In the same vein, I might have popped into an Irish pub or two as well, and instantly wanted to glass myself yet being also more comfortable being, well, more comfortable.

My hotel was bad and smelly and didn’t encourage doing anything rather than sleeping and awkwardly carrying out ablutions. Awkwardly because there was no shower holder, which meant holding the shower head above yourself with one hand and washing with the other, while ensuring the water temperature was ok. It felt like doing a weirdly static Bee Gees jive.

One time I tried having a bath and discovered the plug didn’t do its job. Despite forcing my heel down onto it, the water eventually seeped away to nothing, leaving me sitting naked in a puddle, swigging from a large bottle of Heineken and stuffing my scabby face with a French variation of twiglets. WINNER was not writ large across the scene. The plughole finally gurgled and belched its last and I managed not to cry.

My bathroom’s basin plughole had quirks too. Water would rise up to half the level of the basin, even if there was no plug in place, such was the lack of drainage. Yet conversely, when a plug was inserted into the basin and left for a few moments, prior to shaving, all the disappeared. Like I say: quirky. We had such fun, me and the plugholes.

With little of appeal in my room, I stayed out, pacing streets, doing tourism, sitting for coffee, meals and evening drinks; and observing human traffic with the company of books until I was tired or drunk enough to sleep.

A recurring setting of Julian Barnes’s latest book of short stories, Pulse, was a dinner party of thoroughly dislikeable, smug and overeducated people. I would have kept quiet and not returned, had I attended one. The stories were readable though, and touched on the issues of sexual desire and appetite which meeting my friend left me wondering about on my first evening. Another book was Pigeon English, the highly lauded debut novel by Stephen Kelman. A distinctive narrative voice of a migrant African boy in a dangerous London tower block. Easy to read, vital and urgent, if not wildly imaginative. Parallels with “Curious Tale of The Dog In The Night-time,” it should sell heaps, especially with the promotional backing it’s received. Like the author of that book, Mark Haddon, I could envisage Stephen Kelman never doing anything to commercially match it afterwards. It led me to thinking about the marketability of popular fiction and particularly the disparity in gender audiences: the ‘chick-lit’ market being much bigger and knowable than the ‘lad-lit’ one, simply because men generally don’t read as much, and are probably more simple in their tastes. Appealing exclusively to one gender demographic is perfectly acceptable and relatively simple; appealing exclusively to another is significantly harder and less commercially viable. Lad-lit must be touchy, feely sensitive and appeal as much to women as men.

Podcasts provided another branch of faux company, as ever: mainly book reviews and interviews. It was particularly arresting to hear the reliably strong Richard Bacon interview with zeitgeisty women’s heroine, Caitlin Moran. Pronounced CATlin, apparently. (Who knew?) I’ve read her so much, in her various newspaper columns and features, as well as her tweets, that it felt almost perverse for her to come alive and have an actual out-loud voice which I could hear. Like a fictional character was suddenly no longer fictional. Unsurprising was her alacrity and articulation. More surprising was the clipcloppy midland tone, and a headmistressy assertive pace about her speech. I kicked around a drizzly Champs Elysees, weaving between waterproofed tourists, failing to find any vaguely interesting photographic perspectives. The interview was engaging and witty. I was disappointed it only lasted about half an hour.

Speaking of women in a wider sense, I noticed the locals’ adoption of touch; that women of a certain age would happily walk down the street alongside a friend, one hand looped over the other’s shoulder, like footballers trudging off a pitch consoling each other. A continental nuance. Down south in Nice a few years ago I’d been surprised how men had met each other outside a football ground with double cheek kisses. Wouldn’t happen at Millwall.

Distance from home always gives the impression of being able to newly reassess, like it should offer a profound new perspective. Which may or may not be the case. All the same, as I plodded the damp Parisian streets I pondered the things I often ponder but don’t act upon.

  • Join a running club, if I’m definitely decided about giving up football this season. There’d be females there too, but would the whole set-up be weird, the cross-section of people too diverse for a grumpy misanthrope? Middle-aged running nerds comparing their “PB”s and the best type of running socks? Not so interested in that.
  • Internet dating? Never tried it, but often thought about it and ultimately turned my nose up. Lots do do it. Numbers are stacked against blokes generally, particularly against ordinary looking blokes who can glamourise software yet struggle to make themselves sound interesting. So probably not.
  • Going to see a specialist Dermatologist about my sporadically grim face, which could ultimately give greater confidence in trying either of the above. I looked shit again right then, dark unmissable scabs bisecting the tip of my nose like a total prick. Lovely. Plane journeys with their recycled clammy air, however long or short the haul, are never a great treatment. It meant I wasn’t going to go out of my way to try and speak to people or make new friends, but at least I didn’t know anyone here and wasn’t forced to perform.
  • Stop being such a boring twat and just end it. This permanent, tedious loneliness thing, living and working alone and not having any gumption to do anything about it except whine into the internet. It must be boring for every poor bastard who hears you whinge on about it too. Try finally doing something interesting and noteworthy that takes balls: take a leap off the Eiffel Tower maybe? That was where I was heading.

*

Other tourists kept me amused, particularly in the Louvre museum, and particularly the far easterners. I swear I was keeping roughly equal pace with one old Japanese guy who seemed to be taking a picture every single exhibit. I wondered what his internal stream of consciousness was like: “Ahso yes, this is picture. Aw yes, this is picture too. And look, this is picture.”

Except in Japanese, obviously.

It made me chuckle after a time, to think what his collection would be like or if he’d look at every image when he got home.

French connections

“No trains to Paris today. Electricity fault on the line. Buses on fifth floor.”

So said an English speaking Information Desk clerk at the train station of Charles De Gaulles Airport. A rail replacement service? Super news.

Having trundled my case miles through an, in part, eerily desolate airport, I had been confused by the lack of trains heading into Paris. Now I learned that this wasn’t totally because I was stupid. The electricity was out and there were no trains into the city.

Impatient and pressed by the urgency of a beer appointment with an old friend, I angrily made my way up to the fifth floor, and outside. No buses. A taxi-rank. Where were the bloody buses? This was stupid. The taxis queued and crawled and collected passengers and left. It would be expensive, but it would be less expensive if..

Two oriental men nearby were glancing nervously at the vehicles.

“Hey! We share taxi to city?”

They reacted openly and we compared Google map printouts, quickly figuring that we weren’t staying far away from each other.

We climbed aboard a waiting taxi – all three of us squished along the back seat; the driver apparently unwilling to move his own debris from the front passenger seat – or the Japanese passengers too polite to ask.

After he loaded our cases in the boot, I set about explaining our destination to the driver using the Google Maps and my broken schoolboy French. The driver was of Chinese appearance and spoke French in a Chinese accent. And yet, somewhat miraculously, I was still able to make my French understood and understand his replies. (Or when I didn’t understand, pretend I did by saying yes and nodding a lot, then making a rough guess of the translation to my new companions).

It showed what could be done under pressure, when needed. How I could surprise and underestimate myself. I wondered if that could possibly be extended to other parts of my life and my general willingness to take the more comfortable looking, slower road. Better not to dwell on that.

“Ahh, you speak French?” my Japanese allies looked admiringly at me, newly pleased with their selection of travelling companion.

“Um, not really.. Just a..” Ah, hell. “Yeah, well, you know. A little.”

We exchanged further civilities. They were chemistry academics: one a relaxed Professor, one a younger postgrad, heading from Paris to a conference in Spain. I asked if they weren’t still radioactive and they charitably laughed. They were polite and amiable but returned no questions of me. We looked out the windows, watched grey Parisian suburbs pass by and the city grow up.

*

We’d barely kept in close touch after a season of playing football together in 2006/07. I’d given him lifts to matches and training and we’d been out for occasional beers. Facebook messages had been the extent of our contact since then, but I’d given a month’s notice of my visit and he seemed keen to meet up; we could easily catch up and revive our bantering relationship.

And so it proved, despite the odd comprehension wobble due to his shaky English pronunciation. His main headline was that he was a new father of four months. He’d been with the same girl for the majority, if not all, of his adult life, after growing up on the same small western Atlantic island. They moved to Paris as young adults and he’d lived in England for eighteen months without her, when we’d met.

He’s always been open to me about cheating on her, not that he would ever use that word. He said he still has “friends,” and emitted an irresistibly infectious laugh. Everything about him is playful and lighthearted. He isn’t the least hounded by any guilt and has a naturally coquettish smiled reserved for placing orders with barmaids. (I instantly deferred in the company of a native speaker).

The key is to have friends in different cities, he explained. When asked if he suspects she also has “friends,” he said he didn’t want to know and didn’t appear bothered by the idea that she may. When asked if he loves her, he almost incredulously responded a powerful Yes, of course, as if this could never be questioned. The thing was, he explained, he can’t ever get used to the difference of women, how they can be attractive in so many different ways. And I can empathise. It’s difference and, when you’re in a long term relationship, the temptation of newness which is so seductive. Perhaps more so when the relationship isn’t the only relationship ever; when there is history of change. My suspicion is that to those who have only really ever been with one other, possibly more to women than men, any deviation is tantamount to an illegal act, it is so fundamentally wrong. The context of their history rules, and rules stronger the further back it goes.

On a separate level, I empathised with him because I can fall in love / lust several times a day for a very short period. I will be breathtaken by one woman of a certain kind or style for one moment, then forget her to be stunned by another who looks radically different the next. By the end of the day I will struggle to remember any, which doesn’t dim the strength of my appreciation at the time. It’s what makes men promiscuous and simple and dumb. Few are able to not look, or not notice.

But there’s little by way of practise in my attentions, as there is in my friend’s. That’s providing he’s telling the truth and none of it is bravado. He says his “friends” are all long term “friends.” None are random people, met once and never seen again, as my nearly-but-not-quite dalliances often are. Perhaps the small island migration experience forges a close bond which endures.

We had several beers over the evening in Bastille, Paris. I Britishly drank pints, while he drank bottles. Bowing to my Anglo ways of wanting to see more than one room, we visited a handful of different bars, flying in the face of French sitting and staying in one place for a whole evening.

I was perturbed by people outside bars as we walked between them. Chairs were positioned like theatre seats, directly facing the street; not even the pretence of an angle or position around a table, the street itself a stage. It made walking in front of busy Friday night bar cafés all the more unnerving.

With the final drink and all our stories spent, Things To Say grew harder to find and our chatter slowly sputtered out. The last trains were approaching.

On parting in the underground Metro station I asked him to teach me the handshake I had literally failed to grasp when we met, which left me limply clutching the ends of his fingers. It was a simple right palm slap and punch of fists. Easy enough to master. With that, and an ambiguously meaningful invite of a reciprocal visit, we turned down separate tunnels.

My fear of negotiating the Metro system half-drunk was unfounded. It proved simple enough, possibly because the eternal paranoia of self-doubt was reduced by alcohol. On my carriage I found the loud, hip-hop mobile ringtone of an old man more amusing than it probably was. Nobody else appeared amused. He ponderously addressed the device, taking a while to find the right key.

Eire 07

Given that I posted a couple of excerpts from an Ireland trip on or near St Patrick’s Day last year, I thought that this year I’d post from another, earlier jaunt to the emerald isle – the notes from which I rediscovered a short while ago.  Life sort of got in the way last week so I’m posting now instead.  (Not sure why as my faith in WordPress analytics has dwindled almost entirely and I don’t know how many, if anyone really reads this).

Still, it gives me a little pleasure just freeing the twaddle from my hard drive.  I’m simple like that..

Circa May 2007..

From Rosslaire harbour on the south-eastern tip of the country, a good three hours solid, simple, scenic driving took me to Cork.  I stopped to refuel, have another couple of dry biscuits and a handful of dates, thinking I was probably now under an hour away from my destination on the westerly side of the country.  Shortly after smaller, bumpier roads began persuading me otherwise.  They stretched and wound on and on, under the never quite total darkness.  As I chased the sun, villages and small towns came and went, sometimes without even a signpost.  By 10pm I was growing tired, knowing I was on the right track, yet the road just kept unravelling like a magician’s hankerchief.  By 10.30 I began thinking that the Atlantic Ocean was just a cunning ruse and I was sure to hit New York soon any time soon.

Signposts for Bantry, Glengarriff; I was nearing, it was getting close.  I was actually on the right road they’d given me directions to by 11.15.  There was still, unbelievably a very dim ember of sun which it felt like I’d been pursuing for hours.  New York couldn’t really just be over the next hill, could it?  I accidentally drove through some oceanic wormhole?

I grew paranoid about overshooting my final destination bar / campsite / hostel / boarding house / whatever the hell it was that I’d booked on a whim without looking to closely.  I stopped at an isolated pub to ask two men exiting the building if they knew of the Glenbrook Bar.    I needed to listen hard to interpret the man’s words, obscured by accent and alcohol into one punctuation-free dirge of sound.  They knew it: 3 miles further on the right hand side.  I hadn’t passed it already.  Excellent news.

A young man serving at the bar ticked me off my list, handed me my key, and gave what proved to be wholly inadequate directions to my room: out there, round the side, and up the stairs – giving the impression that the room was in the same building.  Precise and deliberate in his manner, I presumed that it wouldn’t be difficult and heaved my bags to my shoulders, looking forward to seeing a bed.  I looked outside, round the side of the building, the back of the building, the other side of the building, the front of the building.  No open doors or anything looking faintly like accommodation.  I re-entered the bar again.  He came out and showed me, apologising for not showing me the first time.  While we walked I asked where could I hire a bike for tomorrow.  Ah, they’d stopped renting them out here, I was informed.  But, the chap furrowed his brows, stopped walking – as if walking and thinking this hard at the same time was a tall order.  He looked down at the floor, concentrating hard.  He put me in mind of Father Ted’s sidekick priest, Dougal, his anxiousness not to get the detail wrong.  “Right,” he said, like he’d now prepared all his words.  “If you go to the next town, Castletown Bere, and a store called Supervalue, ask for Denys.  He’ll sort you out.”

With that drama resolved, he pointed me towards a narrow exit through the corner of the back yard, and a small lawn over which I needed to walk.  The building itself was the other side with a small light over the front door.  He could have told me to take my car from the front of the pub and drive it into the site and up a short drive to the front of the building.  How did he think I’d got there?

*

Sure enough, the next morning I drove the short distance further along the sunshine-dappled coast to Castletown Bere.  One of the first shops on the main street parade was a Supervalue, opposite which was a car park overlooking the pretty harbour.  I parked, went to the store and asked a timid looking eastern European checkout girl if Denys was about.  She didn’t understand me so I asked a native (Siobhan, her name badge reassuringly said), if Denys was about.  Siobhan gave him a call.  Denys arrived promptly and cheerfully, sporting a red face which appeared like it might always look a little drunk.  He showed me a short way up the street to a small hut full of bikes, and lifted one out from the mesh of steel and wheels.  He handed it over to me, saying was easiest to ride.  It looked a fine steed, light and durable.  I took it away and kitted up beside my car, swiftly changing trousers for shorts in the driver’s seat, in what I hoped was a swift and discreet style.

The best part of a day’s pleasurable yet unplanned cycling around various parts of coastline, hills and mounts was blighted halfway by my first bout of irritating hay fever this season.  Much sneezing, eye-wiping and nostril clearing was relentlessly required.  A stunning day, bright and warm, left me with predictably sunburned neck and upper arms where my T-shirt had ridden, a bruised inside left knee – from a precarious rocky hill descent , and a regional back bruise from the edge of something in my rucksack which I lazily never rearranged.

Hello Vietnam

1. 08:25 – 04/10/2005

“Whath that?  Nuclear physicth, ith it?” a young voice says a little too loudly from above my left shoulder.

Four hours before arriving in Hong Kong, most of the plane is in darkness, its passengers restlessly trying to grab some economy class sleep.  I gave up long ago as I have a Korean Jabba The Hutt character sprawled and gurgling next to me.  My only blessing is an aisle seat.

I’m reading an entertaining, untaxing novel requiring minimal attention.  At the beginning of each chapter there’s a small italicised question and answer blurb which forms the central theme of the novel.  All of these are heavily ironic, poking fun at an immature narrator.  The one on this page has something about physics.

Bold opening gambit, nuclear physics, I think of the lisper above my shoulder.  And one dismissed as not possibly being serious.  How could someone begin a conversation in a quiet, darkened aircraft at an indistinct but deep night time, about nuclear physics?  I decide to banter.

“Well, no, it’s quantum physics actually: my speciality,” I say in a low, quieter tone, hoping his pitch will follow mine, although the effect is also that I sound less jovial than I’d intended.  He’s a year or two younger than me in his earlier twenties.  It’s possible mild drunkenness exaggerates his lisp.

“Really?” he says, still uncomfortably loudly.  It’s like he can’t control the sound level as it blurts from the back of his throat.  Some people nearby shuffle in their seats.  He’s fascinated, apparently believing that nuclear physics really is my speciality.

I’m forced to concede my jest when he points at the small section at the top of the page of my book.  After I explain, he stays to chat, somewhat awkwardly, still too loudly, nursing his thimble of spirit.

He’s going to Hong Kong for the first time to meet his Japanese girlfriend, who he sees every six months in various places around the world.  It’s a cobbled notion of mine that any western man, particularly British or Americans – can easily land eastern girlfriends.  It’s not difficult.  To do with the difference / novelty factor which leads to many a holiday romance.  You often saw gawky looking guys at university with eastern girls, because they’re less aware of their gawkiness.  I tell him I’m just passing through Hong Kong on my way to Saigon.  He asks if that’s in China.  Vietnam, I correct him.  Still he prolongs the scene with his travel tales and profound observations that I’m largely unresponsive to, smiling politely until he’s finished, then he plods back up the aisle.

Will I have to meet and be pleasant to many similar types of over confident, over loud, well-travelled, yet slightly empty seeming?  I could dream up a sneering name for them like my Dad would – an oh-so-clever acronym.  He and I had parted with the regular rushed clasping tangle at Terminal 3’s pick up/drop-off bay several hours ago.

Now Hong Kong is beneath me, looking impressive and strangely accidental.  As if somebody has haphazardly scattered numerous well developed skyscraper families across a beautiful landscape intended for cute wooden huts and not many people.  I’d like to go back and see more than the airport one day. The city’s formation over a series of jagged coastlines and islands, often too large to be connected by bridges, is spectacular.  When we landed into the airport, I couldn’t stop looking out of the panoramic windows at the landscape.  I’d heard that landing in the old Hong Kong city airport was a spectacular experience and had been disappointed to learn it had relocated to a small island a short distance away, but this was impressive too.  I’m flying out now, away from Hong Kong, its surroundings and this breathtaking expanse underneath me.  Hong Kong will frame my time away as I’m due to stop through it again on the way back, but I’ll know practically nothing apart from the almost arrogant charm it commands from arm’s length.  “What, just because you came all this way, you expected us to live in wooden cabins?  We live better than you, you mugs,” it yells from the ground.

At the gate to this flight onto Saigon there was a lady reading a book I’d recently finished.  I wanted to say something, speak to her about it, having enjoyed it despite myself, despite thinking it all implausible and rather silly.  I wanted to speak to someone, and speak to someone about that book because I hadn’t spoken to anyone about the book.  And, apart from the chap on the plane, I hadn’t spoken to anyone about anything for a while.  She got up and went to another gate for another plane.

I remain worryingly ignorant of what awaits me in the southern Vietnamese capital of Saigon, or Ho Chi Minh City: its official title.  It won’t be as developed and westernised as Hong Kong, I’m sure, but how much less?  Will there be pavements?  Boarding this aircraft, I began to feel more conscious of being western.  A handful of other tourists, but we were in the minority.  The natives looked bored to be going to Ho Chi Minh.  It’s not something to get excited about, judging by the look of them.

2. 18:16  04/10/05

During the descent through Vietnam, everything grows brown: bare, charred fields with strips of scorched yellow offsetting the dominant brown rivers.  Then the city: exposed blocks of vulnerable greyness, growing nervously.  Unlike two hours previous, no sparkling skyscrapers, no stylishly shimmering sea; a sluggish fat brown river and a clutch of average sized tower buildings mark what must be the centre.

Excited and scared to be exiting the last aircraft of my long journey, to be staying somewhere so incredibly alien, I trailed my fellow passengers into the disorganised immigration area.  Straggled queues led.. presumably.. to somewhere, outside?  I wasn’t sure.  It was impossible to tell exactly where or even if you were in the right one.  Britishly, I joined one and hoped.  Other western people were in it, but they were in ones to the sides of me too.  A pretty young eastern girl in the queue next to me selected Robbie Williams from her silver mini iPod.  A toddler bumped into the back of a short, sweaty young man with a large forehead who looked vaguely eastern European.  He looked surprised by the bump, and travel frazzled.  I exchanged a weak smile with him then selected Ian Brown’s F.E.A.R on my own ageing iPod, whose battery I was oddly proud to see was still hanging in there.  The American couple in front of me were gently reprimanded by the immigration official when they went up to his desk together.  He ordered her back.  She said something to me I didn’t hear because of my music, but I smiled anyway and half shook my head at the maddening beaurocracy of it all.  The immigration official had a frighteningly long hair sprouting from a facial mole.  He didn’t smile.

I was eventually passed through, collected my luggage and went to join another queue, which I wasn’t alone in being frustrated to see appear ahead of me.  What now?  One final baggage scan.   Half a dozen young men wearing identical T-shirts and baseball caps jumped the queue, unabashed.  Disgruntled murmuring amongst us patiently waiting folk, an effeminate western boy rebuked them in fluent Vietnamese.  They looked mildly apologetic, but not much, before still going on ahead of most people.  Bags scanned and passport checked a final time.  There was daylight ahead.

At a currency exchange counter I swapped forty quid I’d taken out at Heathrow.  Musty, mainly pink currency in return.  Then the searing blast of heat and a heaving swarm of people outside the main Arrivals door.  There must have been hundreds of people staring at anyone who walked out.

“Hey, taxi?!” a uniformed man emerged from the dense pack and shouted at me.  I looked up from studiously examining the floor, avoiding hundreds of pairs of eyes.  Yes, he had been shouting at me.  What other choice did I have?  I didn’t know anything.

“Mm, ok,” I muttered, offering the first example of my bristling Vietnamese language.  I’d half-heartedly tried learning token phrases for each country I would visit and now relied on a pocket phrasebook, knowing it was unlikely I’d develop the confidence to say anything more than hello, goodbye and thank-you.  I was already uncertain of the approaching character as he weaved through the crowd towards me, knowing he’d be out to fleece this stupid dumb westerner who clearly knew nothing, who would need two hours and a large calculator to do any currency conversion.  He appeared to be an agent of some sort and led me away from the doors, across the forecourt, away from the incomprehensible throng of people, to a taxi which already had a driver in.  He quoted a price I knew to be way over the odds.  I’d heard that the centre was only about twenty minutes away.  He said thirty-five.  Perhaps he was expecting a haggle but I conceded anyway; the taxi company had no competition.  I forked out one of my largest notes to him, still ignorant of exactly how much I was being fleeced for.  Better not to think about it.

He unceremoniously threw my backpack into the boot, then shut the rear passenger door behind me.  My driver was a young man with few English skills.  We spoke anyway, without understanding much each other said, both nodding and smiling frantically, picking up and dropping our own tangents between long periods of silence.  The view from the window of my taxi was mesmerising.  My first wholesome, mindbendingly rich flavour of Vietnam.   I didn’t want to miss anything.  I wanted to suddenly attain photographic memory powers, to remember each detail.

When you go somewhere new, anywhere you haven’t been before, however close to home, you’re naturally sensitive to differences.  Here, somewhere so far away, so different, it was more natural trying to look for things that were the same.  Sameness in such an alien, distant place was novel and kooky – Coke signs, aha!  A few dominant global, capitalist names, but difference was king.

Traffic apparently isn’t in need of order or rules, anarchy reigns, everybody has the innate ability to thread their bike or vehicle through the eye of a needle.  Even where squeezing through a gap doesn’t seem possible, where a fatality seems so inevitable you daren’t look.  These drivers need only a millimetre of space around them.  Any more than that is a luxury.  The drivers look accordingly concentrated and serious, yet never stressed or hurried.  Cars are few, with motorbikes and scooters ruling the road, packed tightly together, riders never with a helmet – a smog mask the most protection they have, chatting across the road with each other as they go, smoking, occasionally on mobile phones – despite the constant intrusive engine drones they’re immune to or have learned to speak over.  Most have motorbikes: scooters and Vespas, and laughably tatty machines which appear barely capable of making a sound or staying intact if you were to sit on them.  Less so of actual movement.  Not a Harley Davidsons in sight.  Pedal bikes come a close second to their motorised siblings although few look what we would call modern.

The more people on a motorbike the better.  Young and old, friends, lovers, whole families nonchalantly cram on, babies looking out glazed over the handlebars of speeding, precariously weaving cycles.

Beeping isn’t an aggressive act.  Hello, I’m here, is all it means.  Road rage appears extraordinarily non-existent.  Buildings vary wildly from the ramshackle corrugated iron hut, just about upright, to the recognisably regular, sturdy modern bulk.  Little glitz, no neon, but an intensity of frantic bustling dusty life that, in my experience, had no comparison.  I sat in the back of the taxi staring out, petrified, hypnotised.  Sometimes a passing biker would see the pasty-looking westerner in the taxi window – did locals ever use taxis? – and take a second look.  I sensed our nearing centrality by the rosing height of buildings and an increase of western looking people.  Still not many: the occasional couple, or a single young person.  Then I passed a war museum, outside which an obvious clutch of them waited, adorned by cameras, sunhats and shades.  The taxi swung into the forecourt of my hotel after a ride of about twenty minutes.

*

Now I’m irrationally seething following a protracted tour of Ho Chi Minh City, getting fleeced for the second time in a number of hours.

My journey finally at an end, I reached my hotel room in the plush hotel I’d been advised to book by my travel agent, at around midday local time.  In the context of Vietnam it was an expensive room, with an en-suite, mini bar and television.  Determined not to even consider napping, I freshened with a shower, a shave and fresh clothes, before braving the manic streets.

For the first few minutes I could only summon enough courage to walk around the blocks, only crossing the fearsome, permanently jammed roads when strictly necessary.  I swore I’d be killed if I tried to be too clever, tried to cross too many roads.  The odds were surely stacked against me with the swarming volume of traffic as it was.  It brought to mind a childhood computer game where you had to cross a river packed with crocodiles, stepping on safe logs to reach the other side.

Climbing into the seat of a large pedal cycle, I wondered if I had been wise in succombing to the fourth offer of a tour.  “3 dollar for hour,” he had reasonably quoted, before pummelling me with measured, luring questions as he pedalled alongside me, pitching his sale.  “Oh, ok then,” I finally submitted, willing to defer the responsibility of my direction and lower the chance of getting run over.

The hour elapsed, but he continued showing me authentic Vietnamese pagoda after pagoda, temple after temple.  Some more impressive than others, many a fair distance apart.  The smell of incense in most of the square buildings lulled my senses, relaxed my already jetlagged mind.  This combined with my unerring sense of over-polite Britishness and I delayed telling him: Enough, I’m tired, take me home now – even when the second hour passed.  A tall, self conscious and over flamboyant temple with little artistic substance, claiming to be the tallest; then another,  smaller, flatter, red block with a wondrous amount of detail, locals on their knees, praying to Buddhas.  My guide sat in his cycle, relaxed, smoking, pointing me in the direction of other buildings of interest, although I’d lost enthusiasm long ago and wanted to go back.

I brainlessly agreed anyway and went plodding dopily off to the next temple.  Beginning to lose track of the number of temples I’d seen, I grew weary of getting rinsed of money again.  He pedalled, standing behind me as I sat fretting, between short, sporadically vicious thunder storms.  He had cycled around more blocks than was necessary to get back to my hotel, I was sure.

It had been around two and three-quarter hours.  I’d been stupid for letting it go on so long and was as much annoyed at myself for that as I was at him for overcharging me.  Amidst another torrential storm soaking us to the bone, we had a confrontation outside the hotel.  I was reluctant to give him as much as he asked, claiming he should have told me at the beginning how long the tour would be.  A local lady manning a nearby streetside drinks stall saw our stand-off, came over and mediated, successfully knocking his price down better than me.  Reluctantly, I handed over a still inflated fee, and stomped dripping wet into the plush hotel, attracting confused looks from the staff.

(I later guessed that this was because they would have expected to collect my room key from them, but I had accidentally contravened rules by taking it out with me).

I’m irrationally angry now because it was a decent, occasionally fascinating tour, taking in many different corners of the city – possibly ones less chartered by tourists.  And the traffic remained consistently captivating, terrifying, tipping back and forth like an hour glass, each vehicle a grain of sand, on each junction a hundred miracles, never even a scrape.  Several near-miss swerves when collisions appeared a certainty.  Heart regularly in mouth as I sat in my little priveliged shell, I’m amazed not to have witnessed a single accident.

My energy levels, momentarily boosted by the adrenaline of conflict, are now dipping again.  Ridiculously so for six o clock.  But I’m jet-lagged so it’s excusable.  My writing is dipping in and out of focus.  I should stop.

whatever that means

“I wanted to fuck you the moment I saw you,” she murmured into my ear.  Shit, really? Nobody’s ever said that before.  And this city’s been slicing my face into scabby pieces lately. Not wanting to alter the atmosphere in any way, I kept quiet and kissed her.

Conversely, I hadn’t wanted to fuck her straight away.  It was the Alice Band: an immediate issue which made me annoyed by my own fussiness with jewellery and accessories.  Back home Alice Bands were exclusively the staple of 12 year old girls or girly-haired European footballers.  Not women.

But by the time she breathed those words into my ear, the next morning, naked in my hotel bed, I did want to fuck her, very much. And I even liked her too.

She’d entered the bar and sat down next to me, wearing that Alice Band – worn to hold curly red hair.  She seemed nice, chatty, human and smart; neither of us perturbed by the unorthodox meeting, the loose online acquaintance but not actually knowing the first thing about each other.

We drank pints and ate burgers, drank more, conversation flowing easily.  She spoke amusingly and with the manner of a charismatic, obviously homosexual man: lots of back and forth shoulder tilting, flappy hand gestures and much use of air quotation marks, which I teased her about.  I was enjoying having company, conversing.  She was fun, the bar was cool and low key, the music good.  Although I wasn’t sure if this was just a pleasant couple of hours and we should be getting back: me to my hotel a few blocks east, her to her small flat a short train ride north.  It was more of a date than I’d anticipated when I suggested meeting up.  But that was fine, and became better than fine.

“Well.. I’m having a fun time,” she said, leadingly, so we moved on elsewhere.  In the next dark sports bar we had tequila and further strong liquors, discussing drinking, local politics, religion and family.  An hour later we tired of that bar and headed out, considering a next venue but not knowing where.  On the street it was bitterly cold.  She shivered and I put an arm around her.

Despite being the local, she was unsure where to go next. “Nothing.. funny, but we could just go back to mine, or..” she trailed away.  I suggested we go back to my hotel, a shorter distance away, just a few blocks.  Nothing.. funny either, I added, chuckling in my head.  She agreed.  In the room I generously poured from the bottle of Sour Mash bourbon bought from Moe’s Liquor Store in Sheboygan Falls earlier that week.

She flopped down onto the near-side of the bed.  I made to leap over and rest the other side of her, louche and athletic: a poor idea made worse by a misjudged leap and bounce off the far side of the bed and onto the floor.  It was clearly unintended and less than smooth.  She laughed.  We were both drunk and fuzzy.  I clambered back on the bed
and lay next to her, embarrassed and flustered, any cool I had extinguished in that moment.

We breathed and sipped at the bourbon.  What now?

“We could get naked and get in bed?” she nonchalantly suggested.

“But what would my wife say?” I whispered straightfaced.

A nervous giggle, a pregnant pause for thought.

My turn to laugh.  I assured her, agreed to her suggestion and hoped she’d take off the Alice Band.

*

Around midmorning, that stupendously filthy murmur suggested her headache had eased.  These were times of therapy for a man of fragile ego.

Midday saw glaring Chicago sunlight punish the curtains.  She rested warmly against me, now freshly showered and slowly preparing to leave. No great urgency.  I played with her hair.  The night before had been made easier by the transience of the situation: the time-sensitive One Night Only Offer.  Nothing had mattered all that much, nothing had any real consequence.  In two days’ time I’d be gone, a long way away, unlikely to ever return.

That’s unless feeling develops, if there’s any sense of mutual feeling, if raw is courage acted upon.  This is less likely with sober, pragmatic characters already encroached on their thirties.  Those who know they should stop playing games and start being serious, whatever that means.

Let it go.  Frivolously skim back across the ocean and remember it fondly.  Accept it for what it was: a night with someone you found you liked, albeit for a brief period, someone you had a good time with.  Be content to smile at the memory: that spectacular death of your cool; that you were both naked in bed before you’d even kissed; the quirky unorthodoxy of it all.  Be grateful for her unknowing illumination of your ridiculously unsuitable previous female hope.

Use the knowledge to go forward and hope that these type of meetings – for this isn’t entirely without precedent – isn’t as good as you can ever hope for.  Hope that you stop being so pathetically grateful for attention from any female with a combination of looks and intelligence.  Learn to stop excitedly sledgehammering square shapes into round holes like an overzealous recruitment consultant.  It’ll be fine, it can work, IT WILL WORK!

Move on now.

Let it go when you kiss her for the last time and smile and say something meaningless and she leaves the room and the heavy hotel door clunks shut behind her.  Let it slide and blur and fade.  Just like that.  Easy.

Lying there together in those final minutes, absently twirling one of her curls around a forefinger, perhaps it was because nothing mattered all that much, because nothing had any consequence: perhaps that made it sadder.

Wisconsin Wander: Day 2

Grey mist and drizzle met me as I pulled apart the curtains the next morning, any remnant snow finally dribbled away.  Having plotted a loose south-easterly diagonal return, I trailed the westerly edge of Lake Winnebago before pressing further south.

Around mid-morning I stopped at the town of West Bend.  (It seemed to me from the map that the river bore East at this point, but who was I to quibble?)  This place reminded me of an hour spent in Fort William, Scotland.  It was based next to a river, there was a lingering grey mist, the size of the place was small and there was almost nobody else on the streets.  However, there were no surrounding mountains here.   The place was ghostly but part of what these trips are about: the missable in between places as well as the big, swaggering ones.  I took a coffee and read my book in a small diner where I was served by a Hispanic waitress.  She wrongfooted me with a “gracias” when I handed over the money.  “Cheers” was my charmless reply.

Several wrong turns and U-turns alongside large fields finally put me on the freeway back south towards Milwaukee.  Driving with only a loose sense of direction means you tend to make plenty of quick decisions.  You beat yourself up for taking a wrong turn, before finding that you weren’t wrong in the first place and in trying to correct a perceived error you’d totally screwed yourself.  Then you go momentarily mad and angry, which never helps anything.  Darkness unavoidably invokes a greater sense of jeopardy, panic and uncertainty, as it did during my previous evening’s acquaintance with the suburbs of Oshkosh.

The freeways were simpler.  I let myself be sucked into the heart of a misty downtown Milwaukee over the freeways, not a little smug that I was reading all the signs correctly here and everything was going smoothly.  You just need to be cool and focused, I pompously applauded myself, entirely forgetting the numerous U-turns and frustrated wails while sitting stationary next to desolate fields the previous evening.  The large freeways better signposted, more intuitive.

I parked at the lake-front art museum with little intention of going inside the museum.  Has the internet killed museums?  There’s a sense of stumble-upon discovery which perhaps isn’t as possible when browsing online, but it’s not like you can touch anything and the exhibits are often predictably samey.  Narrow, inhospitable stone corridors led me up from the car park, offering a sense of the forbidden, and up towards the museum entrance.  I walked past it, marvelling at an impressive white bridge structure which turned into a walkway above the road, and led into downtown.

With its clutch of tall tower buildings, Milwaukee had the sense of a scaled down Chicago, and was also bisected by a fat, Lake Michigan-fed river.  Big but not that big.  I paced round awhile, took pictures, took a coffee, then headed back to the car, wanting to give myself at least two hours to make it back to Chicago.  And I needed to top up on gas in order to ensure I returned the vehicle with a full tank.  Stress was simmering.

The ride back in was fraught, the density of the rush hour traffic immense.  After avoiding the tolled routes by taking smaller roads, I headed back towards the freeway, laboriously programming the SatNav system with my final address.  It delivered the route, but not before further stress and panic.  The car was due for return at 5pm.  At 4.40 I was still some way out of the city, and still needing to get gas.

I exited the slow, by now almost bumper-to-bumper freeway, which erased my route from the SatNav, found a gas station in a suburb and failed to figure out the prepay credit card system.  I wanted to ask a customer on the other side of my pump but he seemed to be chatting, possibly flirting with the woman in the vehicle behind him.  I finally secured his attention; he looked and shrugged.  Ask inside.  Thanks.  I asked inside the kiosk and a guy swiped my card, before realising it wouldn’t work because the petrol nozzle wasn’t in its holster.  I went to return the nozzle into the holster and the payment went through, allowing me to buy the ten bucks’ worth of gas.  I felt stupid and panicked.

Having re-found the freeway, I painstakingly re-programmed my route: C-H-I-C-A – while weaving between traffic.  Yes SatNav, it was the passenger at the controls, not the driver.  As if.  Once finally programmed (about four minutes which felt like an hour) I repetitively tapped its View button to reassure me I was heading in the right direction.

Gradually the city loomed up through the darkness around me, a gigantic, sparkling, throbbing, beautiful, terrifying urban monster.  Its dazzling scale made me feel proud of humans, as if approaching a space station.  Wow.  Look what we’ve done!

Lulled by my reverie, I grew confident.  SatNav lady seemed sure everything would work out, it’d all be ok.  It was only 4.50.  It might be ok.  I hit downtown proper at about 4.57.  As the crow flies it would’ve taken two minutes from there.  As the traffic moved, jerked, honked and crept, it took about thirty.

“The tank full?” asked a young girl at the Hertz desk who I hadn’t encountered before.  She didn’t mention I was half hour late.  I said yes and she wished me a good night.

‘Stoked’ by my success, not dying or crashing or having too many people beep me, I paced off back down Michigan Avenue, ever-teeming with shoppers and tourists.

Pictures from the trip can be viewed by clicking these words.

Wisconsin Wander: Day 1

As on the previous day, when I’d visited the large hotel to check my reservation, the Hertz car rental desk was unmanned.  A young black guy joined me to form a two person queue.  He mentioned out loud, to himself but not really to himself that he really needed to move to a warmer climate when he graduated.  I was happy enough to nibble at the conversation bait and he told me about his study in Chicago, a general degree which would allow him to teach.  He ultimately wanted to build his own school for under-privileged kids in Central America and strongly believed in a hands-on method of teaching employing music and touch.

A harried Hertz man returned to the desk and with minimal fuss, printed out forms for me to sign and told me to go wait outside for the car.  This was the quickest, least paperwork-intensive car hire I’d ever experienced.  So much so that when the Hertz man’s colleague brought down a small red Toyota Yaris from the car park, I just got in.  Then I realised I didn’t know what any of the main controls meant, never having driven an automatic vehicle before.  I beckoned a parking attendant over for a quick overview.  Drive, Reverse, Park – was apparently all I needed to know.  Don’t worry about the rest.  With that I pushed the stick into drive and took my foot off the brake, which itself seemed to roll the car forward, gently easing myself into downtown Chicago traffic.

It was fine, all fine, keep on the right, it was all going to be fine, just concentrate, keep on the right, head for the Lake, hug it and head up the one side, simple, easy, cool.  I gripped the steering wheel tighter than necessary.

I slowly grew into to the Yaris and understood that driving it was easy; boring in fact.  Automatics neuter the driving experience; they do everything for you and give you less control, like holidaying with a tour guide.  Not once did I go to depress an imaginary clutch, although I did flap my left hand into the door from time to time, flailing for an imaginary gear stick.  I also kept approaching the vehicle from the wrong side, expecting the driver’s door to be where the passenger door was, which didn’t make me look too clever.  On a freeway I was momentarily alarmed to be overtaken by someone casually reading a newspaper, before realising it was a passenger.

With the assurance of an appropriate section of map spread haphazardly out across my lap, I covered minor roads skirting Lake Michigan, up through suburbs with Scottish names, Highland and Glencoe – where I stopped for a coffee and to applaud myself that I wasn’t dead.  This Glencoe wasn’t much like the Western Highland mountain range where I’d driven a couple of years ago.  Like much of the drive over the two days, it was a flat and unremarkable landscape.  The later plains of Wisconsin mimicked this and chided me, as if I’d landed in London and decided to take a trip round East Anglia.

Still it was experience and the towns were interesting, many with a makeshift retail park feel to them, quirky stores like the dogs’ hairdresser ‘Canine Coiffeurs.’  The welcome signs also amused with their exact population figure: CITY OF NEENAH, Population 56,723.  (That one isn’t accurate).  They made me want to add a few tally marks to the sign or run to the Police station screaming I’VE FOUND ANOTHER ONE!!

Priority at open crossroads without traffic lights also foxed me.  It often seemed that nobody moved at all, so I did.

Next stop was a small park on a tip of Lake Michigan near the city of Kenosha.  Thick snow still lay on the ground and the closest edge of the water speckled with mini icebergs, as had been the case all the way down in the city.  When the tide swept in, lapping sounds twined with the clinkling of ice, like rippling shattered glass or a wind chime.

From here I found the highway and ignored numerous junctions to drill on through Milwaukee, an impressive cityscape not on a par with Chicago but still not inconsiderable, before eventually stopping again at the small Wisconsin town of Sheboygan Falls.  This was a very small town, replete with a Simpsons-esque Moe’s Liquor Store, where I bought a bottle of bourbon.  Moe wasn’t very chatty when I complimented him on his strong range of liquor, or he didn’t understand my accent.  A middle-aged lady assistant in a neighbouring gas station where I took a leak and got a cup of tea was much perkier.

It was hit or miss whether people understood my accent or not.  Earlier in the trip I had to say ‘beer’ to an American air stewardess three times.  She looked at me like I was retarded.  I don’t have any strong regional English accent and don’t know how else to pronounce the word.

Now the light was beginning to fade beautifully.  It had been a clear, cold, blue-skied day despite constant radio warnings that cloud was heading in.  The radio stations had offered a strong sense of the locals, particularly a warm, mumsy DJ improbably named Robin Rock.  She kept thanking her listeners for “working with” her and spoke a lot about her teenage daughters and how they’d do backflips if they won the station’s big competition prize of a trip to Disneyworld.

This reminded me of the chatty old lady sitting one seat along from me on the short connecting flight from Minneapolis to Chicago.  She’d been excited to tell me and the girl sitting next to me how she was going back there soon, this time to see ‘the adult things’ which the kids don’t like.  Interest piqued, I had bitten my lower lip slightly and enquired further about what exactly ‘the adult things’ at Disneyworld were.  Apparently reading descriptions in the galleries and things like that.

The radio songs didn’t range too widely:  old classics to Americana, with edgier stations going for tracks with indulgent, rapidly boring guitar solos.

Fearing darkness, and the distance I had to cover the next day, I impulsively decided not to go as far as the next big city, Green Bay.  Instead I took an A-road to chase the dipping golden sun across a wide expanse of plains towards Appleton, on the other side of Lake Winnebago.  Although I missed out Appleton itself and found a couple of small, hospitable seeming towns with a pleasant buzz of life about them: first Menasha and then Neenah, where I stopped.  Disappointingly no motels or any places of accommodation other than a Holiday Inn could be found.  So, after a brief stroll I headed on.  Growing faintly edgy about a final destination with the draping darkness, I flicked on an internal light in the car and studied the map to see Oshkosh was the next large looking town.  There was bound to be something there.

By this point I was tired and not thinking straight.  I spent about ten minutes finding the correct direction out of Neenah, then at least twenty more getting lost in the suburbs of Oshkosh, eventually finding its downtown area and only hotel.  It was more than I had wanted to pay for a room but my will to look further had evaporated.

Later in the trip it was explained to me that the place-names had connections with the native Indian past and weren’t, as I had suspected, made up by drunken infants. You often forget about the historical significance of the Indians to these parts.  Or at least I did.  There’s a theory that the word “Chicago” has native Indian origins, while the overtones in Milwaukee are even more obvious.

An evening stroll up an icy, sludgy Oshkosh Main Street suggested more life than I’d imagined from my route into the downtown area: plenty of samey dark bars with neon signs advertising the same drinks.  One dumping of snow seemed to have lingered for days across a vast global latitude.  I stopped in one and chatted to a welcoming barmaid who served me a small bottle of Newcastle Brown of the type they don’t serve at home.  A symptom of the tipping culture is that it makes you think naturally friendly people are just playing for their tip, even when they might just be naturally friendly.  Young guys sat round watching sport.  I intermittently chatted to the barmaid, watched the American Football and Basketball playing on the screens, (however much I tried, I was unable to cultivate any genuine interest), and flicked through a Harry Hill jokebook app on my iPod.

Another bar further down the street had more people and a faux urban kind of buzz about it.  I took a Guinness and again sat at the bar, this time with a music fanzine – it seemed the area had a vibrant scene.  I spoke to nobody and shortly after headed back, nothing challenging my suspicion that I was one of about four guests in the large, deeply uninspiring hotel.

Pictures from the trip can be viewed by clicking these words.

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