Bon Voyage

[Today’s entry is slightly shorter than the others, mainly because I didn’t write enough down on the actual day and now, three weeks later, I don’t remember squat, but also partially because I did less on this day. Took it easy after all the effort; relaxed in the afternoon, did some reading. In a way, what I’m doing in these first few weeks in France – reading and writing – is what I should’ve been doing all summer. Ah well, as one high school English teacher used to say, ‘Better late than dead’. The quotes that stick in our heads, eh? But my activity today, or lack thereof, should explain the format; most of this is thoughts I had at various points throughout the day.]

You know, it is a fight to go out – to go out again today, trying to get this paperwork done, encountering numerous obstacles. I have to will myself into doing it some more and not just staying in this room. Again, I’m sure there are countless exchange students, new missionaries, and others the world over who’ve been experiencing those feelings for decades. I can now relate to them firsthand, a skill that will certainly not remain unused throughout the rest of my life.

I went this morning to try again for my student card. Yes, I know they told me Friday, but that seems like a very long time from now, and if the disorganisation thus far is any indication, not everything they say is written in stone. Sure enough, this time the guy, though he laughed slightly when he saw me, told me jeudi, quatorze-heure. Thursday at 2 p.m. That’s tomorrow. Boom. Persistence.

Speaking of persistence, I also went to the international office to see if the woman had sent our papers back to Bradford that would release our funding. She hadn’t and asked me to come back tomorrow. I highly doubt she will have done it by tomorrow, but I’ll keep coming back. I’ll be the very essence of graciousness each time, but I’ll keep coming back. That’s my plan.

[Whatever you think of that plan, I didn’t actually go back until more than two weeks later.]

Right before I went into the office I ran into a group of French-speaking ERASMUS students and the French girl helping them asked if I needed to go down and do the payment for my student card along with them. She asked in French! And she didn’t recognise me as one of the English speakers, so she asked it at full speed! And I understood! I didn’t know how to respond in French, so I said, ‘Yesterday’ in English, but I understood the question! I will get this.

Went shopping after that; had to withdraw some more money from overseas, hopefully this’ll be the last time.

*     *     *

I was just thinking about when we arrived at Toulouse-Blagnac airport. We swept out of there so quickly – waiting for our suitcases at baggage claim was by far the most time-consuming. The immigration officers or whatever they’re called asked us no questions, they simply (for me) turned to the French visa in my passport and stamped it. Coming to the UK the first time I had to produce my CAS letter, possibly other documents, and they asked me questions. I thought that the laidback-ness of our arrival in France boded well for the registration process and all other formalities awaiting us. It did not, it was a severe anomaly.

[This is the other complaint I referred to earlier that you are meant to take with a grain of salt. It’s not so bad, and like I said then, they gave us mini-fridges! Means I don’t even have to go to the kitchen and risk running into a French person when I wanna munch. That was a joke. I am practicing my French by speaking to French people, yes I am.]

But I’m not just tired of all these formalities, I’m tired of complaining about them, so for both my sake and yours I hope they pass quickly so I can go on to telling all of you about my lectures, my interactions with French cultures, my hilarious language goofs (for that I need to be far more daring – I promised myself I would be), and the people I meet. I’m sure they will; the first few days always seem the longest and hardest. But telling myself that doesn’t help as much as I want it to.

*     *     *

I guess one thing that makes it hard is feeling like a burden, what with not being able to speak even a minimal level of French. If anyone told me I was a burden on the system, I would angrily retort that the system is a burden on me, and that would be true. But I still feel like a burden, coming into their country and expecting them to, at least somewhat, condescend to my level. I need to at least repay them for that kindness.

What also came to me today is that the reason I’m so frustrated with the language barrier is not just that I can’t communicate, but that I can’t express myself. Language has so much to do with how I convey my identity and persona to others that, excluding that, I feel so little. They don’t know me. I don’t fully exist. Now, part of that is valid, and useful to know about myself, but it’s not alright that I am so focused on me and my conveyance of myself. I should be about actions, not words and impressions.

*     *     *

In the distance I see a plane rising into the sky (my window faces the airport, though I can’t see it). Do I wish I were on it?

[Perhaps I should interject that the reason this question comes quickly to my mind whenever I see a plane in the sky is that several years ago, after having been asked at numerous points through my life what I considered home to be, I came up with the following definition: home is where you can look up at a plane in the sky and not wish you were on it. So now I, unbidden, perform that test quite often.]

No. I’ll stick this out a little longer (by a little longer, I of course mean the entire year). I just need to find something to sustain me here, like City Vaults Sunday night jazz in Bradford.

Another reason I don’t wish I were on that plane is that landing in Toulouse on Sunday was the second time in my life I have felt a searing pain in my head during a plane’s descent, and when I say searing, I mean searing. As in it feels like something behind my left eye is growing and trying to escape. My eyeball starts watering and seems about to pop out, every nerve around it is on fire, little pinpricks on my forehead feel like needles stabbing from the inside out, and generally I get the impression my left brain lobe wants to get as far away from my right as possible. It’s awful.

I don’t like to complain about pain, I mean, I am male. I wasn’t even going to write about this originally, but as I’ve been flying all my life and this has only started happening in the past few years, I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a little worried. The first time was on a flight from Japan to the US last summer. Same sensation. I looked it up a few days after arriving, and at least I’m not the only one who’s experienced it (one of the joys of the internet). Apparently it’s caused by fluid filling some chamber in the head at high altitude, and then expanding as the atmospheric pressure builds. I’ve had some trouble off and on with nosebleeds in my life, and those are always from the left nostril, so some of my piping back there must be wonky. But since I didn’t feel it on my flight back to the UK, I thought (hoped) it was a one-off. Seems it wasn’t. I’ll have to do some more research, especially on potential remedies.

Because it’s not just about being able to comfortably use the fastest form of transportation currently available to mankind. It’s not just that I enjoy flying and want to continue to enjoy it. Flying, for me, is much more than those things; it is far more sentimental.

No, I don’t have childhood ambitions to be a bird or Superman that I’m secretly clinging to (though some of you might take issue with the latter claim). But I have been flying longer than I can remember. I’ve lived in a lot of different places, and airplanes have taken me between almost all of those places. You could say that the cabin of a jumbo jet has been a relatively constant physical location (with irony as my elixir) throughout my life, something I cannot say for any house in which I’ve lived. So air travel is a glue that holds all my life experiences together. After long periods without it, I miss flying like I imagine other people miss their hometown. As for the place I sometimes call my hometown, Yokohama, well, yes, I love it there, but I love it because it’s cool. I probably have stronger feelings for Tokyo and my high school, but Yokohama is cooler so I call it my hometown. I’m not sure that’s completely legit.

Going back to the previous point, I suppose that the reason my definition of home is so useful for me is that it’s not merely asking if I wish I were in a different place, it is asking if the place I am in right now beats being on a plane, a wondrous long-haul plane flight, with all the home-ness I attach to that experience. To be told that I cannot, or probably shouldn’t, experience that anymore would be, in my mind, akin to someone who finds out that they, for whatever reason, cannot return to their home, though I don’t wish to trivialise those actually in such situations. I realise that my mentality, or perhaps sentimentality, rather, is born very much of first world privileges.

There’s more I could say about this, such as that one thing I like about being on a plane (long-haul, of course) is that for the duration of that journey, everyone is from the same place and they are going to the same place. There is none of this pesky, ‘Where are you from?’ business. And likely some of what I have said could be said in a better way. But I will do that at a later date, in a far more polished form. For now, these are some of the thoughts flitting through my head as I watch that jet (Airbus-made, perhaps?) climb away from Toulouse-Blagnac. If you’re a fellow TCK I would love to hear your thoughts on what I’ve said, or even if you’re not a TCK, I suppose.

That’s Wednesday.

Day 8: Delighted With Turkish Delight [groan]

A very good friend of mine has a blog in which he reports on a new thing he does each day. It’s a fantastic idea, seeing as we get stuck in our ruts and routines so quickly and, before we know it, wake up ten years later realising we haven’t changed much at all or moved in the direction we once dreamed of. Gotta keep things fresh.

I have a ‘New’ to report today. I try to do new things every day, but this one is especially meaningful, because it’s laid a long-term low-intensity wondering to rest.

Books have always been a huge chunk of who I am. Before I could read my parents were reading to me, and it’s these books that played such a significant role in my formation as a mental human being (haha – gotta love the cultural connotative gap), for better or for worse, though I’d venture that all the good aspects came from reading and most of the bad from not reading enough.

Anyway one such book, or series of books rather, was C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia. Oh, here, let me give you some BGM for this post.

I’m not so into the films, they played perfectly fine on the big-screen of my imagination. I should go back and re-read those Chronicles, actually. Along with the Harry Potter books, though those weigh in far below.

Despite books like these being so relatable there are the inevitable bits of different culture. I never knew, and always wondered, what Turkish Delight was. Edmund, when being naughty and self-indulgent, asks for it of the White Witch, and she grants it – for a time. In this context I always thought of it as some guiltily rich chocolate concoction, like a thick pudding or brownie kind of thing.

Because I read a lot of British books growing up (which indubitably has something to do with me being here now, despite one of my lecturers denying that Britain still holds any cultural power in the world – I take issue with that; if I’m the only sailor in that boat, so be it) this year has been a series of discoveries of long-heard-of but unconceived-of treats, like crumpets and Christmas pudding. Tonight, Turkish Delight was added to that list.

A crumpet, but watch my YouTube video for the full explication.

Turkish Delight and Christmas Pudding.

I saw it in a store a few days ago and the people I was with explained that it actually wasn’t chocolatey; rather, it was more like fruity gummy things, only HC (High Class, remember that one, I’ll be using it frequently, especially in London I hope). So today when I saw it on a shopping trip I couldn’t resist. I don’t know if it comes in a wide variety of flavours, but this box happens to be lemon and rose – I think you can guess which is which.

The lemon is very nice, though standard with an imaginable taste. The rose is…different. It’s the kind of taste that you might instinctively (I almost said extinctively, which isn’t a word but could be) dislike but persuade your brain to like because it’s ever so HC. Or is it just me that thinks that way about certain things? C’mon, you can’t tell me that all girls naturally enjoy wearing heels. They lose them halfway through the night, after all.

The rose taste reminds me of Thailand, for some reason. Can’t put my finger on it. Might be that dried fruit we bought and consumed, and had diarrhea, repeat cycle. Two words to describe that dried fruit: worth it.

And my smart Mac has just taught me that the British spelling is ‘diarrhoea’. Man. Makes it seem even painful. Which it wasn’t. It was just…quick.

Okay, okay, enough about that. Thailand was great, I’ll not turn down any opportunity to be reminded of it, whatever the correlation, and the dried fruit was good as well, good enough to unintentionally smuggle back to Japan and bring in all sorts of virulent bacteria that are no doubt wiping out millions as you read this.

And Turkish Delight is great, both its lemon and rose varieties. Oh, Christmas pudding? It is most soi-tenly scwumptious and up in dat dere HC realm. And apparently matured over six months? Kudos.

In closing, to those who told me English food is unspectacular: what the heck, man.