Posted tagged ‘manicddaily’

No Plumbing Problems On Trip

May 14, 2011

20110514-085101.jpg

And then there are those trips where some of your best memories are of the times you broke the plumbing.

I shouldn’t call them”best” memories–how about most unforgettable memories?

(BTW, this is not one of those trips. I repeat, from my couch in a rented apartment in Buenos Aires where we paid a significant damage deposit, this is not one of those trips.)

It really isn’t, actually. I don’t think you can “break” a pipe that’s not joined at all but simply aligned (more or less) with the pipe beneath it, with a big gap in-between, and yes, we have aligned them again.

Of course, there was that restaurant bathroom in Paris where I actually did tear the faucet off of the sink and water would not stop gushing straight up into the air. Onto the floor. Out the door. (How was I supposed to know that you weren’t supposed to push on the tap so hard?)

And I’m absolutely not going to go into any incidents in Mexico, except to say how lucky we were that none of the other people staying at the same house were home that day, and never lose heart.

But here, today, in this rented apartment in Buenos Aires, everything is just fine.

Bromeliad Angel

May 13, 2011

20110513-100247.jpg

I am on a brief trip to Buenos Aires.

As is almost always the case of my trips, my first day or so was spent bemoaning my wrong clothing. (Packing, see prior posts, does not come easily to me.)

Fortunately, hardly anyone helped me pack this time. This means that my mistakes require a lot of self-castigation, which, I hope, will cut short the bemoaning period. (It took almost an entire trip to Italy to get over the absence of a certain sweater my husband had grudgingly labeled, as I packed, as possibly good with a kilt.)

(Okay, my husband did give one piece of wrong advice this time too, about a certain very light black sweater, but neither of us thought of blazers–suit jackets!–so I won’t go into that.)

The point is here we are, my daughters and I, walking around a really very lovely place on a nearly perfect day, and I am silently (more or less) bemoaning my non-packing of a blazer–I have a zillion blazers!–and the Argentines are so formal, so stylish, and the weather so changeable, so blazer-worthy!

Then we go to Recolleta Cemetery. It is an odd tourist attraction–a stone garden of mausoleums–aisles and aisles of stone vaults, some incredibly grand–well, all once incredibly grand–some now decaying, bits of window broken, cobwebbed, others shinily reflective, the interior lace over their coffins unfrayed, their interior photos still glossy.

Statues of angels and soldiers, sleeping lions, busts of the dead. Some have bromeliads (a kind of fern) growing from their ears or torsos, others expressions you had to know to love. Cats, that all look related to each other–black and white, flat-nosed, long-haired, mangey–lounge about the pillared entrance.

All so over-the-top and Goreyesque to someone not used to mortuary art that we felt a little giddy,till we happened upon one small old bald man, in a dusty black blazer/suit jacket, carrying a bouquet of white carnations, the long stems wrapped in plastic. He walked stiffly, with a quietly stately totter from side to side. We followed him, at a distance. (This sounds kind of awful but we’d been following a lot of people at Recolleta, since we had not bothered to get a map and felt we should make an effort to find Eva Peron’s tomb.)

We did feel guilty after a while, and stopped following the old man, but then saw him pull out some keys, so circled back slowly. He had opened one mausoleum down a side aisle, and taken out a crystal vase of white chrysanthemums, almost exactly like the ones he was carrying only slightly, very slightly, wilted. He sat them up on a tomb on the other side of the aisle, and slowly set to work, taking out the old flowers, stripping leaves off the stems of the new, arranging them in the vase. He worked for a long time. We walked on. One tourist, braver than I–she wore flowered leggings–asked to take his picture. He smiled, but didn’t speak.

I just couldn’t take his photograph; for one thing, I was in tears, so instead, in my notebook, did the not- very-good drawings of him below; the bromeliad angel, above.

20110513-101028.jpg

20110513-101050.jpg

Leaves, Buenos Aires, Draft Poem

May 12, 2011

20110512-093642.jpg

I am in Buenos Aires, a beautiful and extremely leafy city. I may be particularly conscious of the leaves because it is Fall here, a time in which one is always very conscious of leaves. Fall, and Buenos Aires, also have a wistful quality, which, as a kind of wistful, Eeyorish, person, I am quick to glom onto. Here’s the draft poem of the morning:

My world without you – Leaves

My world without you
is like a tree fallen in a forest;
without you there to hear it,
like a tree that may have fallen
in a forest somewhere, without you
next to me, a tree possibly falling somewhere,
out of my range too; nothing,
in short, feels real
without the warmth of your hand
at my back.
So when we talk of leaving, let it be of leaves (mine)
pressed up to leaves (yours); let it
be of leaves only, grown, blown, each to each,
their veins nearly in line, their
outlines coupling, leaves of a tree
not fallen, swaying gently, mightily.

All rights reserved, as always. Suggestions welcomed.

20110512-094353.jpg

Traveling to Fall

May 11, 2011

20110511-045215.jpg

I am lucky enough to have flown deep into the Southern Hemisphere this morning, back, or forward, into Fall.

The immediate transition from Spring (up in New York City) to Fall (in Buenos Aires) is quite striking. It makes one realize palpably how soft Fall is compared to Spring, which is literally, you know, springy. The Fall air in contrast seems veiled in rumpled, oak-aged softness; there’s a bit of blur; the light feels dappled even in bright sun. Of course, this could all be just me. I am definitely blurred and rumpled right now, more aged than usual, and maybe have some spots in front of my eyes. It is very difficult to sleep in coach these days even on a long, late flight.

Trip Tomorrow – Packing?

May 9, 2011

20110509-101911.jpg

20110509-101925.jpg

20110509-101939.jpg

20110509-101949.jpg

20110509-102146.jpg

Before Mother’s Day

May 8, 2011

20110508-090958.jpg

“Warhorse” with Brushes (App)

May 7, 2011

20110507-125428.jpg

I had the good fortune to see Warhorse last night, a play that shows a slice of the horrors of World War I through the story of a horse and his boy. Based upon the children’s book by Michael Marpurga, as adapted by Nick Stafford, the play is, well, very sentimental in the manner of almost all art that focuses upon the bonds between humans and animals, playing powerfully upon the heart and tear ducts. The emotional force of the story is compounded by the horror of the truth of World War I, the devastation of both the humans and animals caught in its web. (The program notes that 8 million horses died in World War I, as armies learned that a calvary was no match for machine guns, barbed war, tanks.)

One wishes, at times during the performance, that some of the sentiment–the “Lassie” elements of the story–were toned down. Even so, the production is extraordinary–genius found in life-sized puppets–horses, animated by three handlers at a time, whose ghostly and yet matter-of-fact arms and legs and wonderfully subtle but emotive faces spirit the horses across the stage, whinnying, snuffling, hoofing, rearing, stomping, fly-whisking, trotting, being ridden, being shot at, screaming, dying. One loses all consciousness of the puppeteers; one falls in love with the horses.

The lighting, set, costumes, all production values, are fantastic, bringing a sense of a no man’s land (no horse’s land either) palpably to the stage.

Happy Friday Once, Happy Friday Twice, Happy Friday Three Times

May 6, 2011

20110506-075628.jpg

20110506-075643.jpg

20110506-075654.jpg

More Blurred Thoughts on bin Laden, May 5th, New York’s Day

May 5, 2011

I spoke to my mother in Florida today, May 5th, who asked me if we were all super-happy now, we New Yorkers.  (My mom watches a lot of TV.)

New Yorkers are never super happy.  (We don’t all wear black just because it doesn’t show dirt.)

But some of us do seem to be happier than usual; according to the media, many of us are absolutely euphoric about the killing of bin Laden; for the last few days I’ve been wondering why I’m not one of this group.

(Please don’t misunderstand me. I am glad the U.S. has accomplished its mission.  Still, I don’t find that bin Laden’s death brings the satisfaction that the media has been touting.)

One reason, previously mentioned, is a general pacifism.  I could manage violence in self-defense, and certainly in defense of others, but I feel uncomfortable with an “eye for an eye” ideal of justice, even in the case of horrific villains.  It seems to me that one must be careful not to lower one’s self to activities that are in any way similar to those that one deplores.

But one reason for my sense of anti-climax may be the way the 9/11 attack was originally handled.  At the start, President Bush characterized the attack as an act of war rather than as a crime.  (I remember that moment in his speech with great intensity, sitting on my coach, in the haze of smoke and dust that overtook downtown Manhattan, weeping.  Afterwards, cooking impossible, we went to eat in an Indian restaurant I’d never been to before or since.   Like many Indian restaurants in New York, it was actually a Bangladeshi restaurant, and I wondered what the waiters were thinking, serving those small metal dishes of currified sauces, war in Asia in the making.  It was a surreal time in the City.)

If an action is characterized as an act of war, if it is used as the justification for war (two wars), it’s a bit difficult to turn it back into a crime again, something solved by a successful manhunt.

Would that it could be so.

Still thinking about bin Laden (though I’d just as soon not)

May 4, 2011

20110504-085101.jpg

My brain is still reeling over the death of bin Laden, still caught in a very strong mix of feelings, all much much more somber than jubilant. Robert Klitzman, the brother of a victim of the 9/11 attacks, writes an op-ed piece, “My Sister, My Grief,” in today’s New York Times that encapsulates some of these mixed feelings–a kind of relief that the U.S. has finally accomplished its specific mission, a re-awakened grief for the specific deaths and losses of 9/11 as well as for the decade of deaths and war, a worry about reaction chains of violence (both past ones, such as the war in Iraq, and future ones) and, underneath all of that, concern about the hatred and history and misunderstanding, manipulation, greed, prejudice, and genuine disagreements, that continue to divide and menace the world and that are a lot more powerful than a single man.

I’ve been thinking a lot too about the specifics of Obama’s mission. Even as a pacifist, a long-term vegetarian, someone who just abhors the idea of killing, I realize that any capture of bin Laden, attempted trial, would have been a nightmare, likely leading to hostage taking around the world.

All these concerns make me very glad not to be involved in politics, not to be one of the people making these types of decisions. Last night just thinking about it, I wanted to get back to something simple, down to earth.

What I came up with was bread. Rolls just out of the oven, still on a rather corroded baking sheet. That’s what those lumps up there are supposed to be.