Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Istanbul - Part I

24th August 2011
Istanbul, Turkey


Having a hilarious time so far in Istanbul. The tone of the journey to come was set by the taxi ride to the airport Tuesday morning. Our flight was at 06:30 out of London City and so E. told me that the cab would arrive at 3am to pick me up before going to her house. We would then meet J at the airport. The taxi arrived right on time, complete with crazy, smelly, oily-haired driver who thought it fitting to clean out the trash in his vehicle by taking it out and throwing it on the sidewalk in front of my flat. He also seemed to think that playing crazy Indian music (India Indian, not Native American Indian) at full volume was appropriate. He then proceeded to audition for Formula 1 on the way to E’s house.


We arrived at the airport around 04:00 after a level of crazy driving that left us both white-knuckled and deep in prayer. We walked in the sliding doors at London City only to be called over immediately by the woman at the information desk who told us that sorry, the airport was closed until 05:15 am, but we were welcome to wait on the benches with rest of the wayward travelers. Seeing as how I had a grand total of 3 hours sleep, and E had just arrived from a long trip to the U.S. at midnight, and hadn’t slept at all yet, we were both horribly disappointed. Nothing was open - so no coffee, no tea, and certainly no sausage roll for E. :(


J. arrived shortly thereafter, at which point we all found it hysterical that we got to hang out in London City airport for a good hour or so before check in. We did manage eventually to get some tea and coffee and sustenance before making our way to the gate. We wandered through Duty Free, sampled free Pimms (at 6 in the morning) and then made our way to the gate. Only to find the door to our gate closed. And the sign - when we bothered to look at it - said “Wait in Lounge”. We were off to a brilliant start.


The flight to Zurich was relatively uneventful - horrible muffins, free chocolate, bouncy whirry little plane and we managed to connect just in time. The flight to Istanbul offered a dubious lunch and a screaming little Turkish boy who managed to hit upper registers of sound only seen by world class sopranos.


Upon arrival, we went to get our visas, where I impressed the non-English speaking border agent with my three words of Turkish: Hello, Thank You, and I Love You. The hotel had offered us a taxi for 65 Euro, but we found a shuttle service for 24 Euro and decided to take that. Big mistake. Huge. It took us three hours to get from the airport to our hotel - three hours for what should have been at most a 40 minute journey. Granted, we hit horrendous traffic and stopped at three other hotels along the way, but we’re also pretty sure the driver was lost. About two hours in, E. wondered aloud if we were even still in Turkey or not.


We finally arrived at the hotel, which ended up being really nice… save for the pond-size pool outside. We decided to drop our things and then go out for a nice dinner. We all wanted to walk after hours on planes and in the bus from hell… which turned into a game of human frogger. Traffic in Istanbul is horrendous - basically gridlock and no respect for lights, lanes or pedestrians. We had to cross about six lanes of traffic and regardless of the lights, cars just came anyway. By the time we made it to the restaurant, we were all a bit traumatised. We ate at a nice brasserie in the Astoria building and our waiter was really funny and nice. We asked him for suggestions on where to go out, and when we left, he handed me a note that said:



“semi professional guide. Ozhan.” and his phone number.



We could not stop laughing, and J and E keep calling him my semi-permanent guide. We walked back to the hotel and prepared for an early night in as we were all exhausted. J and E brought ear plugs and so they missed both the strange drumming sounds and the 1am porn movie that was being filmed apparently in the room next store. (I didn’t think they would believe me… until it started up again at 9am this morning)


The best part of the evening was that we kept trying to find our hotel on the map in the Lonely Planet guide - we asked like three people - with no luck. J. spent a good half hour before throwing the book aside and declaring that our hotel must apparently not exist.


__


Breakfast this morning was… interesting. There were scrambled eggs (runny), hard boiled eggs, soft boiled eggs, chicken sausage, veal sausage, lots of crazy cheeses, real honey on a honeycomb, amazing bread, yoghurt, figs, apricots, Nutella… Most of the food was really good but the combination was so strange. I ended up having two hard boiled eggs, some dried apricots, a slice of cheese, fruit salad and bread with Nutella. We played a game at breakfast by trying to figure out which couple it was that was making the crazy donkey noises the night before. Based on the choices available, we really hoped that whoever it was was still sleeping.


We took a taxi to the Grand Bazaar for a bit of shopping. On the way, our driver gets into a road rage argument with another taxi driver. The two taxis were riding alongside each other and the men were screaming at each other in Turkish - while weaving around traffic.


Today was absolutely hilarious. I could write for hours - and probably will - but E’s netbook battery is low, so I’ll try to summarise:


  • The minute we got out of the taxi, we were greeted by two Turkish store owners who wanted us to look at carpets. I asked them if they were magic, and he told me he had some of those at his other store. They were very nice though, and took us to a good money changing place

  • We got to see an old Turkish man standing on a milk crate yelling and screaming (in Turkish). Turns out that he hates the government… a lot

  • The vendors in the bazaar are hilarious and very aggressive. They were enthralled with us - but seemed to think E and J were Australian, Italian or if they were from Barnsley or Manchester. No one guessed London. They were excited I was from America, but no one knew where Ohio was (typical)

  • One man followed E and said, “Where did you learn such good English?” to which she answered, “Because I’m from England!”

  • One of the vendors insisted on getting a picture with me, taken with his cell phone camera. He also sold E a purse for £7, which was awesome

  • We were offered tea, coffee, and from one particulary strange vendor, whiskey. We didn’t partake of any, but we did buy scarves from Mr. Whiskey.

  • The joke of the day was the vendor who got mad at me for implying that his wall of celebrity photos was photoshopped and so he then asked me, “Are you pregnant?” and when I stared at him in shock, he made a big belly symbol and yelled, “Baby?” I had no words - just stormed out of the shop. J turned to him and said, “You’re lucky you’re still alive”

  • The baby thing became a running joke throughout the day, but I’m still not too happy about it. I wanted to lift up my dress and yell “Does this look like pregnant to you, playa?” - but considering we were getting all kinds of depraved offers already, I wasn’t encouraging the situation.

  • J got propositioned to go to a Ramadan celebration by some kid’s granddad while the kid stood behind her and made thrusting noises

  • In one store, an old guy grabbed J and kissed her on the cheek and then started grabbing and touching. For no reason at all.

  • The bargaining was the best part. “How much?” “300 lira”. So E says “I’ll give you 1 lira”. When challenged she tells us “Well, everyone says you start low!”

  • “Goolay goolay” means bye-bye in Turkish … or, as I found out because E and J wouldn’t stop laughing, “testicle testicle” in British English.

  • I’m pretty sure that one man had me say something like “I’m a dirty heathen” when I asked him how to say “I’ll be back”. Only because the word Allah was in there three times.

  • They loved my Turkish until I learned how to say “How much is that”. Also funny was that I would ask “How much is that, please?” in Turkish and then they would answer me in full Turkish… fully knowing I didn’t understand a word

After all day at the bizarre bazaar aka where E wants to spend the trip, sweaty smelly men notwithstanding, we wanted to take a taxi to a waterfront hotel. We finally tracked down a taxi rank and settled on the W because we thought W’s are always safe. And so began the taxi ride of death.


This driver was on crack. First we had to sit in horrible traffic in which there were vendors selling bottled water and flowers. Then, as soon as there was a break in the gridlock, our driver took off like a rocket. He wasn’t just driving fast - he was aggressive to the point of us having at least ten near-death experiences. I’m not exaggerating. I probably didn’t help the situation by screaming “Oh, help us Baby Jesus!” a bunch of times. He drove towards oncoming traffic, tried on purpose to clip a car to clip a car because they were driving too slow for him, weaved in and out of parked cars, seemed to try to hit pedestrians on purpose and was constantly accelerating and slamming on brakes. At one point I almost lost control of my bladder. By the time we reached the W, I had developed an amazing level of religion. At one point, E was like “Should we throw up our hands?” (like on a roller coaster)


We paid him exactly the amount on the meter. I don’t think he was too happy but there was no way we were going to tip for that experience.


The fun continued at the craziest W I’ve ever been to. No one really spoke English. I ordered a glass of champagne - pointing to the name of the champagne on the menu - and got a glass of rose for my trouble. I then got the one English - speaking person there to understnad what I meant and finally got my bubbly. J. went to the bathroom and got stuck in the stall because the door didn’t work correctly. I then went and got stuck in a different stall. We ordered “risotto balls” which ended up being fried ricotta cheese balls…and horribly inedible. We were all shocked that somewhere liked the W could have such crazy inconsistent service.


We braved a taxi ride back to our hotel - which was fine, save for the fact that the taxi was almost out of petrol and a police motorcycle followed us for about a mile with its flashing lights on… for no reason. We got out of the taxi… and ran straight to the Popeye’s across the street.


Yes, there is a Popeye’s in Istanbul. Brilliant. After much sign language, laughter and a mistake involving something called a Pop-Roll, I got my chicken nuggets to take away. I also got a picture with the staff of Popeye’s, which seemed to be the highlight event of their year.


And now, it is off to sleep, perchance to dream, perchance to be woken again by freaky noises. This time, though, we’ve promised to make the noises back.


Don’t mess with England and America when we get together ;)

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Матрёшка


Stardate: 21 August, 2011
Listening to: “I’m Not Your Toy” by La Roux



Although I know it’s unfair I reveal myself one mask at a time.”
Stephen Dunn



When I was younger, I used to want to be an actress. I will never forget my mother telling me to stay away from that career choice. She was adamant about not letting me even try out for school plays. Not because she thought I wouldn’t be good at it - but because she thought I would be too good at it… that I would lose myself in whatever role I was playing and not necessarily be able to find my way back.


I never really understood what she meant, and chose instead to see it as yet another way my parents were ruining-my-life and if I could just find my real family, then I could live a beautiful, cotton-candy life as the princess I knew I really was.


But I understand it now. 


I am a dangerously emotive person. Even when I’m happy, I’m like the colour yellow with just a shade of black underneath. I’m always a half-step away from falling desperately in love and I’ve been known to disappear into bathrooms to have a cathartic crying session - well, just because.


I think I let things affect me far more deeply than they reasonably should. I am completely wrapped up in a movie of my own making and going full-out for that Oscar performance.


My brother and I have talked about this - he has shared that he struggles with a similar manifestation of this trait (finding himself sometimes getting almost irrationally angry at the most inconsequential things). It’s like we take the “go big or go home” thing to a new level, emotionally. We’ve agreed that it is probably a direct result of our childhood - and how nothing was ever moderated. Things were either really, really good and happy or they were manic, tragic, awful.


I can’t help but seeing the world around me as written words on a page, and that page as part of a script for a movie of which I am the star performer. During my morning commute, I’ll imagine that I’m on my way to deal with something deliciously tragic and beautiful and I’ll have worked up several acts by the time my train reaches my destination. And then when I step off the train, I’ll start up with a completely different interpretation of the world around me - slipping in and out of emotions like I flip through dresses getting ready on a Saturday night. 


Which begs the question - can I discern the real from the imagined? I am fairly sure I can, though it takes quite a lot to get through the haze. Whenever someone is able to do that - even just a little bit - I find myself romanticising them to a somewhat unhealthy degree.


And so I find myself in relationships that make no sense and yet instead of backing away, I slip into a different persona and try to convince myself that no, everything is fine, this is really who I am meant to be only I just didn’t know it before. This farce continues often for as long as the other person will let it - or until I exhaust myself trying to keep all the versions of myself straight, and I slip up, and everything goes to hell.


At which point, I react emotionally… and yes, well, you see where this is going. Self-fulfilling prophecy, anyone? Since moving to England, I’ve been through at least deliciously melodramatic romantic experiences.


All of this came to mind today when I realised that about this time last year I was in the early stages of putting someone on a pedestal. Someone who really, really was not right for me. That entire experience ripped a piece out of me - not because I fell desperately in love (though true to form, there were little hiccups of moments where I thought maybe-possibly-perhaps), and not because the ending was horrific or anything.


I find myself a bit damaged because I spent that entire experience being someone other than myself. I was so terribly lonely at the beginning and doing what I always do - cycling through various personae to see which one clicked - and it just so happened that he responded to the one that was least like who I really am in so many ways. She was still razor sharp smart and funny - but she was muted. It was me, but me rinsed and filtered and wrung dry of most of my essential traits.


Oh, and I knew it was no good. I felt it deep inside, and I ignored it - all because I desperately wanted companionship and because this person happened to slip through my haze just a little bit.


I would like to say I’ll never do that again. I’m certainly going to try very hard.


I’m spending my time these days focusing on setting aside all my various masks, digging out that girl deep inside the nesting dolls. I want to take her out, dust her off, and hold her gently - reintroduce her to the world. She is a bit crazy, a bit dangerous, and a bit of a hot mess - but definitely worth knowing.


Observations

Last night at a friend’s leaving-do (aka going away party), I came to two rather sobering relevations:


1. If I want to spot the single (and or gay) men in a crowd at a “hip” party in London, just look for T-shirts. My (married/attached) friends and I quickly realised that all the men who were attired in button-down shirts were taken (aka “domesticated”).


2. As I approach my 35th birthday, I realise my days of passing off being single as a “desire for freedom” or “a choice as I focus on my career” are numbered. Very shortly, my singlehood will quickly become one more of the universe’s little jokes.


All that being said, I’m still not willing to settle for what passes for eligble men in London today. I’ve met some amazing people through my dating forays, but I’ve also met some complete freaking weiiiiirrrrrdos who make me seriously question the integrity of the global gene pool. And so I’d rather be rolling solo at home, watching Nikita while painting my toenails than out on a date with someone with whom I could never imaging having an 8th grade make-out session. For example.


Action plan? Find a fun-loving sultan and/or son-of-sultan whilst in Turkey next week.


Perfectly reasonable approach. :P


Federman out.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Obama’s Folly: Why Taxing the Rich Is No Solution

Link: Obama’s Folly: Why Taxing the Rich Is No Solution


“Is the president willing to risk one of the last sectors in which the United States enjoys a comparative advantage, betting that less burdensome taxes have nothing to do with this competitive edge?”



P.S. - Since when does earning $250,000/year make you “rich”? Comfortable, yes. Rich? No.

I think this society suffers so much from too much freedom, too many rights that allow people to be irresponsible.

Boyd Rice

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sorry, I'm not trained for that...

Just had a hilarious conversation at lunch during which myself, and two colleagues (one Algerian, one Polish) had a good rag on all things English.


My favourite is the story told by A., which involved buying cheese at a local Sainsbury’s.



“So my boyfriend and I bought a slice off a wheel of cheese, because we wanted to take it with us to the park and make sandwiches. We realised that we didn’t have a sharp knife, so we took the slab of cheese back to the deli and kindly asked if it could be sliced… only to be greeted by a look of dumb panic from the Sainsbury’s deli employee.


"Um, I dunno”, he mumbled. “You see, I haven’t been trained on this.”



P. then told a story about trying to get an extra link added to his watch. After waiting weeks for the part to arrive, he went to the shop as requested and was told to wait 15 minutes. Thirty minutes, then forty-five minutes and then an hour passed. When P. inquiried about his watch, he was told, quite rudely, that it wasn’t ready yet, and that he should probably do some more shopping and then come back. When P. that he didn’t have time to wait any longer, he was told that there was only one person who was specially trained to add links to watches and he was unavailable… and she was unable to provide a time as to when he might be able to make himself available. P. promptly lost his temper, demanded his money back and sought custom elsewhere.


My contribution to this party was sharing the ridiculousness I encountered at my last job. The employees had been requesting a microwave in the new building for months, and HR kept demurring. After a particularly vocal employee feedback session, the reason emerged that HR was very concerned about the health and safety implications of having a microwave in the kitchen, and about the accidents which could potentially occur without proper training.


Seriously.


In the end we got the microwave… but posted to the top and side of it, and also on the counter door above, were explicit instructions on how to handle it safely. Nevermind the fact that they bought what had to be the cheapest option out there and so it took finding an engineer to figure out how simply reheat last night’s dinner.


Ahhh, England.





Thanks to my friend Megan S. for pointing this out - Look in the top right corner.
Click on the photo to read the article, “Riots in Britain: Anarchy in the UK”

Monday, August 15, 2011

Moving, Moving, Moving! (To Tumblr)

Don't get too excited everyone... I'm still staying in the UK.
But I'm moving my blog. I'm now over on Tumblr, so be sure to visit and bookmark. I don't think I can automatically email updates any more so you're going to have to put some work in and actually "Follow" me! :)

http://anarcheintheuk.tumblr.com/

[youtube=]

joshua radin - star mile (by casafashion)
Not the actual video, but one of my favourite songs





I want to live here. Nice, France





The English response to the Riots

We are so accustomed to disguise ourselves to others that in the end we become disguised to ourselves.

~François Duc de La Rochefoucauld

Wonder Woman?

I don’t know if this is an actual quote or if I’m misremembering, but I think I once heard someone say that the things we hate the most in others are but a reflection of our own worst qualities. Even if this isn’t an accurate quote, I still think it is somewhat true. I have long said that I hate weakness in others – especially in the opposite sex. I have been known to dismiss people and feel unrelenting contempt towards them solely on this trait alone. Well… just recently something happened that made me realise that perhaps the reason I am so demanding and unyielding in this aspect is because deep down, I can be pretty weak myself.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Witch Lady

Disclaimer: my nephew is perfect and exempt from this post. :D

My brother and sister will immediately know what I mean by the title of this post. I am referring to the scary woman who used to live at the bottom of our cul-de-sac and who would come outside and scream at any child who got within 5 feet of her driveway or yard. She even used to try to argue that she “owned” the part of the cul-de-sac that was in front of her house.

Wonder Woman?

I don’t know if this is an actual quote or if I’m misremembering, but I think I once heard someone say that the things we hate the most in others are but a reflection of our own worst qualities. Even if this isn’t an accurate quote, I still think it is somewhat true. I have long said that I hate weakness in others – especially in the opposite sex. I have been known to dismiss people and feel unrelenting contempt towards them solely on this trait alone. Well… just recently something happened that made me realise that perhaps the reason I am so demanding and unyielding in this aspect is because deep down, I can be pretty weak myself.


I never thought of myself as inherently weak – I mean I’ve been through some crazy shit in my life and come out the other side, often times better off. I’ve stayed strong in situations that would have put other people under. But like anything else, I reckon that weakness isn’t binary. There are varying shades, varying degrees, and varying kinds of weakness.  And this is going to sound ridiculous, but the closest analogy to my own weakness that I can think of is Superman. He was so strong, could move the world fast enough to go back in time, bend steel, stop bullets – but put him around a piece of kryptonite and a 3 year old could take him down.

I certainly won’t be stopping any bullets or holding up speeding trains any time soon, but I consider myself to be a pretty fierce, capable woman. So what’s my kryptonite? Given what it is, I’m not sure putting it out there on the interwebs for all to see is such a good idea. Let’s just say that one of the very things that makes me who I am is also what leaves me vulnerable to some serious emotional hurt. I’ve also realised that, in a typically unfortunate twist of fate, the personality type to which I am most attracted is also the one most well-equipped to  cause me serious emotional havoc.

So where does this blistering insight leave me?

Slightly confused and majorly frustrated – because like anything else, just because I now sort of understand it doesn’t mean I have any clue as to how to go about repairing this hole in my defence system. (This whole situation is like Canada - I mean we know it’s there, but what on earth to do with/about it?) I suppose that the upside is that now that I know I have a propensity for possibly being more sensitive than is good for me, I can at least try to put things into perspective moving forward.

I’m thinking maybe adopting a shield would be a good move too. I haven’t quite worked out the psychic-shield option, so I’m thinking something more like this -



Regardless of its efficacy, it certainly would be a conversation piece.

On the train: “Excuse me, sir, you’re getting fingerprints and Englishness all over my magic shield.”
At work: “I’ll be right in for that meeting, just need to polish up my shield. Has anyone seen my sword?”
In da club: “Girl, I know you did not just spill your glass of Hypnotiq all over my shield. Don’t make me put on my magic arm cuffs and take you outside to my invisible jet!”

Or I could just stick to my tried-and-true most favourite shield of all, and that is my ineffable sense of humour. ;)

Federman out.


Saturday, August 13, 2011

The London Riots

It’s been a while since I’ve updated my blog. I haven’t traveled anywhere super exciting (unless you count an unexpected foray into the underbelly of Wimbledon last weekend) and to be honest, the entire blog thing has slipped my mind. But the shameful acts of last week during what will probably be forever known as the “London Riots of 2011” have got me thinking.