Monday, June 18, 2007

Moneytime/Nighttime

THEY SAY TIME IS MONEY. CLICHE, CLICHE. So how come I seem to have so very much of the first commodity without ever getting paid very much of the second? Come on, somebody. Don't explain this limp load of verbal poppycock. Just pay me. A nice purple-factored £20 note would do the trick rather pleasantly. Provided there's somebody around to commit alchemy.

For that's all money means to junkies. Notes become magic passports to those tiny topknotted polythene bags of heroin.

***

NIGHT. No idea of the hour.
Matran and Laundretta have been up and about for hours which tells me it's late. They are two of the most antisocial people I have ever met. Every time she returns home, which is often, (she's always popping out ofr drinks and cigarettes) - she comes stomping back upstairs and bursts into their room almost falling over (yet again). He has been periodically yelling and exclaiming "Don't f--- with me," (one of his catchphrases; the others are too disgusting to repeat). Both of them go stomping on the ceiling to a ridiculous degree. Laundretta says the guy downstairs from them has made a very vusial pass when "coming" out of the bathroom. Then again she says such stuff about most men. Earlier she was going nuts because she couldn't find her phone. Matran has sold her phones before to get more crack at five, six, seven in the morning - whatever time her whorehouse earnings run out.

Cars are whooshing across the horzon. Sometimes I think it's tyres on road I can hear.

Mother Hubbard's given up smoking! Well over a yer ago she knocked booze on the head and has not gone back. Which makes two out of three (in my mind). As for the third one: "why should I?" she said. For now she's happy swigging back meth(adone) all week and having heroin "hits" three or four days out of seven. Those hits are the highlight of her week.

Digger Dodge, her "old man" (partner) was out seeing his old man (father) in the old folks home where he now resides. Mother Hubbs makes a "home" sound like a fate worse then death. I don't see that it's too bad. It's a fully private facility. You're allowed pets. And all bedrooms have satellite TV. It's considerably more luxurious than here. But then again, so are some prisons, judging by what I've read in the papers.

Mother Hubbs has plans. I think, as soon as she's able, she wants to up sticks and leave these dismal shores for the brighter climate of Melbourne Aus, where her sister lives.

The travelling bug (or more to the point, the upping sticks and plonking down somewhere else blog - I'm not into moving around for the sake of it) has bitten me too as I reported a couple of posts ago. If and when and everything I can and do get it together to clean up and straighten out, I feel the call of European shores. Amsterdam has alwyas been an attraction (why does everyone associate the place with drugs. I'm not even going to argue this point. Drugs are everywhere and not everyone in Amsterdam is on them. Read Nicole's blog. Berlin I have always wanted to see. And I can easily speak German well enough to get by there. Then there's Paris. I've been there twice. YOu can wander the streets all day long without feeling you could be somewhere better. It's so cool and calm. Easy to forget you're in a city of equal size and stature to London and New York ...

One thing my family cannot (or will not) understand is my desire to travel. I just don't understand why. They cannot seem to grasp my viewpoint that a day lived abroad is a day full of tiny thrills that simply do not happen in one's own country. It's basically because things are just a little bit different. Different buses. Different trains. Different money. Different stamps. Different food. Different people to inflict my dreaded pingpongball dumplings upon ... just kidding (of course) ... It's ten times easier to make friends abroad. People want to speak to you because you're different. This is not idealism speaking, it's experience.

Another aspect my family wouldn't understand is that I spent years studying the French and German languages and this has given me an insight into their cultures that is simply out of reach to the average monoglot Brit. Of course I'm always swimming against the tide with this one. Our insular view is that "all foreigners speak English anyway, so why bother?" The best riposte to this argument would be something I once read in a travel guide. And it's simple: imagine staying in New York or London for three months and not speaking or understanding a single word of English. How much of the culture would you understand then?
- I rest my case.

Basically I feel that if I live out my life not having lived abroad when I have the chance, I will have failed myself.

What will I do with myself when I'm out there? This is a New Europe. Supposedly "Unified". Anything I can do here should be possible in France, Holland, Germany or Spain. I'd like to train up for a profession. And I'd like to write and get paid for it. You can do that anywhere these days. Which is precisely my point.

And that, my dear friends, is as simple as that ... And here endeth the present drivel!

17 comments:

  1. Because I lived in New York for seventeen years, I feel myself a worldly man. Not that I traveled. The world came to me.

    WS

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  2. Travelling sounds a great idea once you've got yourself totally clean. Would miss you though especially all your comments on my blogs...they always make me smile because you are always so darned nice to me!
    Rx

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  3. Wayward: that's faintly cryptic. But then again I think I geddit. The whole world COMES to New York so ... yeah I geddit. How did you end up in San Fransisco then?

    Ruth: Why should I stop blogging or commenting?... also did you see the one where I was threatening to hit you? I left it about an hour ago... circa 8pm

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  4. BTW re the excess mint...does anyone have any Bourbon...Mint Juleps are nice.
    INGREDIENTS
    2 cups water
    2 cups white sugar
    1/2 cup roughly chopped fresh mint leaves
    32 fluid ounces Kentucky bourbon
    8 sprigs fresh mint leaves for garnish
    DIRECTIONS
    Combine water, sugar and chopped mint leaves in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat until the sugar is completely dissolved. Allow syrup to cool, approximately 1 hour. Pour syrup through a strainer to remove mint leaves
    Fill eight cups or frozen goblets with crushed ice and pour 4 ounces of bourbon and 1/4 cup mint syrup in each. (Proportions can be adjusted depending on each person's sweet tooth). Top each cup with a mint sprig and a straw. Trim straws to just barely protrude from the top of the cups. Serve juleps on a silver platter (or in my case a plastic tray)

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  5. Ruth:
    Mint Juleps - food of choice at the Kentucky Derby!! haha!! oh yeah I've heard of them. even if I don't do it now I will keep the recipe...

    do you happen to know what a "julep" actually is (except for a minty drink - duh!)
    ??

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  6. I also don't understand people who do not travel. I've always moved around the world, at times more by force than by choice but I still have a thousand places I'd like to see. I have noticed in all my friends and the people I have met, that the ones who have travelled are changed and different, they have more insight and have more understanding of the world and their own role in it.

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  7. you can get a fix for 20 quid? blimey, us cokeheads need at least double that for a cheeky wrap of blow.

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  8. Nicole: here here!

    Jungle: yep that's the point about heroin it's cheapo! In LA I heard you can (or could) buy a bag or Mexican "vulgaridad" tar for $7 or £3.75! You used to be able to buy £5 bags here ... but you can get it for £10 or £15 easily, yeah man! Coke is £40 or £50 for a gram - aparently but I've never bought a g of powder coke ever. Half a g of coke is £20 or £25 but crack you can buy for £40 an "arfur" ("half a sixteenth" (of an ounce) which is just under 0.9g why they use imperial for crack beats me. It's just a way of giving smaller measures in my opinion

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  9. The possibility of you writing for a living crossed my mind the other day...watch this space??

    There is something quite magical about Paris isnt there..travel definitely broadens the mind,and educates... something I so want to do more of....BIG SIGH

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  10. it's really making me wanna go clean

    the thought of travelling with a raging habit is an utter NIGHTMARE!!

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  11. I note nobody responds to my "monoglot English vulgarians" point!!

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  12. Hi Gledwood from danmark..Lillemor

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  13. Recovery beckons!!!!

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  14. keep this url safe:~~

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/m2k/article/0,,215382,00.html

    renegade gardeners cleaning up amazing areas of london like a skip in kings cross ...

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  15. I love traveling myself, Cambodia and Thailand are favorites. My new job will get me to Japan (so excited).

    I am glad I was in recovery once I started traveling because my quest was for knowledge and new experiences instead of just the next place to feed my habit.

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  16. I too would love to travel but I don't know if that will happen. It seems to me i've chosen the route of love and marriage and children. Hence the money saving and the no time to travel til i'm old dilemna. I always wanted to help in an orphanage maybe someday I will. we shall see

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  17. Discovering: yeah~~far as backpacking goes, that part of the world attracts me more than any other... sorry if that sounds like a cliche but I've always wanted to go out to SE Asia, trendy or not. Anyway the place that attracts me the most is MYANMAR/BURMA!! Fascinating... (also wasn't it an outpost of the British Empire..??)

    Naomi: don't give up on love whatever you do for the sake of travelling! I know you wouldn't do that anyway bc you are sensible ... ANYWAY you can still go travelling WITH children. There was loads of hardcore hippies out in Goa with their semi-naked kids fluent in Konkani and Hindi hanging off the back of motorbikes ... and they didn't get ill all the time (I did) ... it can be done, just don't discount it. Anyway I'm sure there's some v good websites etc travelling with kids ...

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