Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Un Momento Por Favor



 Which is not Portuguese but one of my favorite sayings.

A friend of mine has on his wall a photo of himself inside this huge barrel wave. On a surfboard of course. Not just hanging around drinking coffee. I love the picture because it is a picture of someone who is totally, one hundred percent, in the moment. As a photo he is snapped still but not passive, clearly fully involved in a moment of amazing.

And being fully in, yet alone really experiencing a moment, is hard. We tend to be either regretting/reflecting on a past moment or worrying/looking forward to a future moment and meanwhile we miss all the potentially amazing moments we’re actually in. I’ve been trying very deliberately for years to appreciate the present moments, not necessarily because they’re good but because they’re my life and that’s the only one I’ve got.  Also because another ridiculously insightful friend told me that any time spent regretting or wishing (reflecting is OK!) on the past was a complete waste of time because no matter what we will never, ever, ever change it. I always knew this but forgot it quite a bit, more out of habit probably – so many mornings with the beer-niggles conditions you a bit to close your eyes against the recent past and wince. Not so often now thanks Obi Wan Hock.

I’m much better at it than I used to be, in the past my thoughts would flash around so fast I couldn’t even be in the same time zone as my moments, but a bit of age, a bit of suffering, a shitload of travel and some yoga breathing means I can really appreciate a good moment. My most recent favorite: diving into the amazing, croc free blue ocean of Portugal despite being warned it is the coldest locals have experienced in a billion years. HA HA! I mocked, I’m Victorian! I have swum in Warrnambool in the winter! So in I ran and the cold sucked all the air out of me and gave me the equivalent of a brain freeze in all of my internal organs. There was a moment of sharp, painful, exhilarating, mind blowing cold. And I burst out of the water laughing and choking and spluttering and snorting like a mermaid on crack.  It was a moment of feeling totally alive and alove with the world.

But it still ain’t easy, my last session of yoga was about being very present in the moment and breathing through any pain in your body– the idea being that you only feel pain as it’s leaving your body. After three days of travelling and many hours of trying to sleep horizontally while being vertical there was a bit of pain to get the fuck out of my body. Which was great, so I was breathing and accepting and almost asleep while sitting up again when:
Brain: Hmmm, I wonder if they’re doing those fish tacos at The Green Room again today, I’m pretty hungry, I could go a couple for lunch.
Yoga teacher: If you feel your mind beginning to fill with thoughts, go back to the breathing, feel the pain and empty your mind of thoughts.
Brain: Fish tacos fish tacos fish tacos.

So a little bit more work to be done. To totally overuse a metaphor – which I very much enjoy doing- I’m thinking that a moment is a bit like a really cool bar with comfy couches and chairs and stuff. Sometimes we stick our heads in to see who’s there, sometimes we walk straight through to the dunnies, sometimes we prop at the bar and watch the TV screen on the wall. There might be those who stumble through and don’t even realize due to overindulging. I would like to be in a big old beanbag in the middle, arse fully settled on and reassuringly supported by the beans, drink in hand. I wouldn’t mind if I was in the way really, or if someone tripped over me, it could make for an interesting conversation (in my metaphor moments I won’t get punched in the face for being annoying). I’d like to be able to see and speak to everyone if I want of just watch them hanging out. I’d like to be totally in it and seeing and feeling all of it.

So while I sit in yet another airport drinking a really ordinary coffee I am fully prepared and on the verge of rip roaring excitement to experience a few barrel moments in Morocco. I am going to take a big yoga breath and suck it all in thanks very much.


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Super Me



So today I went to see the new Spiderman movie. Much better than I expected after the lowlight that was the last one. And I was thinking; it is such and odd idea – to have spider superpowers but they are clearly extremely cool in dire situations, or when wanting to impress a romantic interest.

And all the way home I wondered what kind of superpowers I would like to have.

In our early twenties my cousins, brother and I once had a very interesting, very creative, very animated, very long, very entertaining and clearly very drunk discussion about what our superpowers were – what we had to offer at that point in our lives that none of the rest of us did. Then we had to explain the wonderful, awe inspiring and useful things we could do with that superpower. Mine was my driving license – I was the only one at that point who had one. I had a long list of reasons this was a fabulous and necessary superpower but to be honest it was never really going to be the stuff of Marvel inspiration, I have never been a reliable driver. "Exciting" some might say, "adventurous",  "dangerous" others might have complained. I can’t be relied on to concentrate for long periods of time, stay sober, follow road rules and speed limits or to stay away from the wheel after drinking….And for someone who doesn’t really cry a lot I have been known to cry very hard while driving – and big tears create serious visual obstacles. A pissy, speed loving, seatbeltless, distracted, belligerent, blubbering, irresponsible road menace does not a Marvel comic superhero make. It actually makes for a character who should be written out of a storyline for being dangerous to herself and others.  I would be the villain run over by the hero or zapped out of the car into another dimension where there were no cars, just looooong roads that had to be walked – or with really low cars but all roads paved with continual speed humps - as eternal punishment for my evil road doings.

So, what kind of super powers would I like?

The ability to fly would be best – like Superman being able to turn back time by flying reeeeeaaallly fast around the world, I would
a) Go back and erase a few tequila-fuelled misdemeanors and shit guy choices and
b) Get to my friends n family ASAP when I need to be known and loved and when I really miiiiiissss them!

Some kind of incredible martial artsy type fighting skills because
a) You look cool and
b) You look cool in leather.

Immortality-because I generally usually have a load of fun and don’t want it to stop ever. Plus you can be like 201 years old and still pick up young hot guys and not be the oldest person on the dance floor.

Telepathy-so the time zone which means I’m Facebooking everyone to see what’s going on in the middle of the Aussie night and feeling like a total loner won’t be necessary. I’ll know exactly what’s going on with ya’ll.

The renewal ability like in the new Spiderman-so when you have a little accident due to :
a) Tequila
b) Awesome sex
c) Drunk sex
d) Being older than you think when exercising
e) Being older than you think
Means you won’t be bruised and stiff and sore and confused but instead totally new within hours if not sooner. 

And super driving skills so you can never ever be a bad road user.

So for now that’s enough super powers I would like. The next installment will require some further reflection on - full circle – the superpowers I already possess. This self-discovery is likely to happen during the yoga sessions I have just found where you’re only allowed to focus on your breath and no thoughts are allowed to enter your mind whatsoever. During this time I’m going to focus on my superpowers. Along with stretching and strengthening this will be good value for the money. Look out Marvel, I’m coming!



Thursday, July 19, 2012

Once a child, always a child


My cousin was kind enough to remind me the other day that spending six weeks with my parents would be the longest time I have spent with them since uni holidays – and even then I was working most of the day, weeding tomato paddocks – wonderful work in the 37 ish degree heat of the northern Victorian summer.

And apparently, in just a few days back in the parental fold there is very little distance between teenager Annalea and today’s Annalea – it’s interesting how quickly we can regress to our former, less gracious or compassionate selves in such a short time.

First night after travelling three days and being very confused about who, where and what time it was:
Mum: Now we won’t make any plans cause we know you don’t like to make plans.
Me: Excellent.
The next morning I hear whispering from the lounge room:
Dad: I wonder what time she’ll get up.
Dad: Will she want breakfast before going to the market?
Mum: I don’t know, ask her.
Dad: Maybe we should go for breakfast after the market?
Mum: She might be hungry before that.
Dad: Which café should we go to after the market then?
Me: Morning! Anyone for a vodka?
Dad: Do you want to have breaky now or after the market? Do you want something small or a big eggs breakfast? What do you want to do after the market? Do you want to go to the pool or beach?
Me: I thought I’d just have a vodka and see where the day takes me…

And over the next 2 days:
Mum: What are you going to do with your hair?
Me: I don’t understand the question.
Mum: Aren’t you hot in those boots? Do you have some nice shoes?
Me: I don’t understand the question.
Dad: What are you eating? What are you doing? Where are you going?
Me: Vodka.
Mum: Are you wearing that?
Me: Due to a serious case of swimmer’s ear caused by you letting me run wild and spend every day swimming in freezing cold rivers with treacherous currents, and the nights hanging my head out of cars speeding down long country roads like a crazed border collie – also your fault for not putting locks on the bedroom windows – I can’t hear you.
Mum: Well, your brother didn’t need locks on the windows.
Me: That’s ‘cause he’s boring!!!
Dad: You look beautiful. Except for the boots.
Me :/
Mum: Do you want to go and put some lipstick on?
Me: I don’t understand the question.

Of course I understand the questions, they want to see me and know that I’m here with them. They enjoy their roles as parents and it is wonderful to be spoilt and fussed over – they are very excited to have me here and I have been excited to get here. They want to show me everything they love about the place and how much they’ve made it a bit of a home – the oldies they get their fruit and veg from at the market on Saturday mornings, the café with the best iced coffee, Louis’ Bar; the smoky local where dad hangs out with his mates, the local supermarkets and their favorite lunch spots. 

And it's the wonderful familiar of watching dad cut up his fruit for his cereal with such concentration and precision, then holding it up: Look at that! And mum telling me stories about their neighbours and keeping me up to date with the news - which I never bother to watch. And both of them swearing at the computer. And of course we don’t get to be spoilt often or children forever so for now I will visit and meet and greet and eat, I will pop on some lippy, put my hair up and find some non-boots. Because there was vodka, soda water, limes and gluten free food in the apartment when I arrived. And because the novelty will wear off and then I can run rampant. As they also expect me to do as their child.  


Friday, July 13, 2012

Airport Love


Travel:
It means excitement, adventure, the thrill of the unknown. The thrill of possibility. The absolute pleasure in the out of the ordinary. It means perspective and wonder.
It also means airports.

Eighteen months after I boxed up my life and put it in storage that costs the equivalent of renting a house, I was again saying goodbyes.  Twice – on the island and in Victoria. Apparently practice does not make perfect, in fact there were even more tears this time and in unexpected moments – on a sweltering, small plane squeezed between people, in my coffee, on a beautiful bare chest – unexpected but still delicious – driving to dinner, in my friend's front yard… . But despite feeling like my heart was breaking again – and again – I knew once I was on that plane I’d be A-OK.

And I was.  I love that moment when you have checked in, gone through the beepers, without your pants falling down cause you have to take your belt off, and it’s just you and the joy of a coffee, a new magazine, and MAC. Bought the coffee, magazine and a new lipgloss (even though it is a total waste of time – I keep buying MAC in the hope it will transform me into a glamorous, well groomed woman and then never wear it..) and was there on the verge of the world and everything in it. For me it is a real moment of absolute freedom, sad as I am every time I leave – and it’s getting harder – I shed it all as I walk through duty free towards the gate to my new moment.

I often get so relaxed at an airport that I can get to my gate perilously close gate shutting time– I don’t need to be the first one on the plane like most of the population, I’m happy being last avoiding getting hit in the head with hard case carry on and sweating in overheated cabins while people squeeze past you to their seats. And realizing you have to pee as soon as you sit down and are completely trapped by a hundred other passengers clamoring past. So I leave it a bit later and have had a few close calls. But it’s all about the experience, and I can happily while away a couple of airport hours.

Once on the plane it’s less fun- I can’t sleep on planes and the fuck-arsed knee shots pain all over the place after half an hour of sitting down. I’m always hungry and thirsty and wriggly. This time, however, after 20 or so years of travelling I finally caught on to the overuse of sleeping tablets. I got some from an easygoing doctor on the island last year when heading to (hair flick, sip of drink and pause…) Guatemala. She told me to start with a quarter and work up to one if that didn’t work. It didn’t, I managed about 4 hours sleep in 30 of travelling and was still grateful for getting that much. This time after dinner and a movie (the perfect plane date) I popped 2 and it was adios Australia, hello Dubai. 8 ½ hours of interrupted but pretty good sleep- more than I generally get in a bed.  So got off in Dubai feeling ridiculously sane then topped it off by having a shower.

Dubai airport doesn’t have enough seats. Thus despite its glamorous, modern décor, there are people lying and sitting on the floor everywhere making it look like a post festival backpackers’. But I felt great – clean, rested and even though I had to drink my coffee on the floor tiles near the café and couldn’t find anything non-gluten to eat it was all pretty easy. I even bought a new MAC eye shadow, which I will never wear and which made me late to the gate. It has been said before – I do not learn from mistakes.

However, I made it to the gate and onto the second leg of the journey – 8 ½ hours and I’d be in Portugal. Except that 1 ½ hours later we were still sitting on the tarmac. I was half way through a movie and not able to concentrate because a) it was such a shit movie – the latest Underworld – not even great special effects, vampires and werewolves fighting viciously and Kate Beckingsale in leather could redeem one shit bit of it – and b) because I knew I was going to miss my connecting flight from Lisbon to Faro where dad would be waiting for me. Shitballs. I texted him and let him know and figured there was nothing I could do so I’d just have to watch two more shit movies. 18 months on an island and movie starved and nothing decent to watch..

So I got off the plane with 20 minutes to catch the connection, an Emirates lady was waiting with my boarding pass and told me to run to gate 19. Cool I thought, despite inactivity and having to avoid a billion stupid rolly bags, I ran. She didn’t mention the line up at passport control, which didn’t move for ten minutes. Fuck that, I created a bit of a drama and got through my own special line with a beautiful, friendly man that I could barely appreciate as I was so close and still too far from that stinking flight. More running to the x-ray thing where I beeped because I forgot to take my bling off and a poor woman had to feel me up while I was sweating like I’d just run 10 k’s in the afternoon during wet season on the island. Yuk.  More running to finally get to gate 19 where there was absolutely no one. I missed it by ten minutes. Shoulda kicked up a stink at passport control as soon as I got there. So here I am with a pass to the Emirates airline lounge which is all very businessy and there dad is doing a bus tour of Faro while we wait 6 hours till I can get the next flight and then head to Lagos together.

Airports are not so much fun at this point. I should go into the city but am in that dazed and confused point in jet lag where I’m likely to leave my passport or wallet or sanity in some bar somewhere. I’m too tired to read and there’s no life saving massage spots like Bangkok. The urge to drink a lot of wine from the cool wine vending machine (free) is strong. The words are blurring on this page but I figure it’s one way to stay awake. I have no idea what time it is here or at home and when someone asked me where I had come from I couldn’t remember. Bathurst Island – Darwin – Torquay – Melbourne – Dubai- Lisbon…

In 5 hours I will be back on a plane and in about 8 I’ll be in Lagos ready to collapse. Pleeeeease don’t let me fall asleep and miss the flight! Pleeeease let me be able to string a sentence together when I see dad! Pleeeease let me cankles go away by the morning so I can finally go for a swim at the beach!! I still feel free but also very wilted..a tired, dirty, blur-eyed kind of free. Best head off to look for a good coffee and some duty free MAC.