Archive for May, 2010

Between Continents

// May 28th, 2010 // No Comments » // Travel

Midday, 27th of May, 11,000 metres above the Carpathian mountains.

The twenty-four hour “overseas” journey is the modern hardship of middle-class Australia. We, who have grown soft in our prosperous cities by the seaboard, know little of the difficulties from which famed characteristics of earlier generations grew and that those living in “the other” Australia, of remote and very rural communities, still live with. We are neither so hardy nor so self-reliant, but we have at least a shadow of those great men and women whose nation we now claim. We can drink admirably and often, we can watch a good five full days of cricket without issue, we can shrug off diseases that a European  would take ill from, and make home improvements with a measure of duck tape and WD-40 which would surely cause an American to  seek professional help. We can also walk off a twelve-hour flight and straight onto another just the same without a second thought. This is one of the last remnants of our island heritage.

It is on the second such leg that I now find myself, feeling the strength of my people. It will be my first return to Europe since I left last June, bringing a three and a half years stint in Amsterdam to a close, and ending seven years off island. In the three short weeks on Continent, I shall be visiting fine cities- London, Bucharest, Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Berlin, Amsterdam- and a finer group of old friends. I will witness weddings and children, career changes and life choices, all of which mark these rare individual who I’m at most privilege to name as friends. I will pull into my organisation’s offices in Berlin and London for a weeks work that I look on with the same eyes as I see my friends, engaging emerging leaders in their fields whose personal and professional passions are delightfully and often necessarily interlinked.

My main ambition is to share authentic experience with these people and places and to make good proof against “the tyranny of distance” that claims so much as the years fall away.  As for places, none of the great cities mentioned gives me a moments pause but fairest Amsterdam. Oh, to imagine walking down the glorious canals, which was my sport, my hobby and my muse over thousands of hours, of afternoons and evenings, as the seasons rolled all around, and within, my self. I imagine strolling thus whilst thinking of a younger Arthur canal-side, and that Arthur envisioning the older in turn reflecting upon the former. Across this veil of time I sense communion in this serene aesthetic of Amsterdam.

The last six months is the longest duration I’ve spent in one country since 2001 and has passed with the speed of a new role in a known land. This trip will be a chance to break from that engagement, to take an account of that which I’ve not allowed myself in my months returned home.  I will pursue a closer examination of the journey that I’ve undertaken in the years since I left, to take some better measure of who now lies behind these eyes, of who it is that returns, of what has been gained and lost, and what quiet space remains ever present.

Melodramatics in Economy

// May 28th, 2010 // No Comments » // Travel

Morning, 27th of May, Abu Dhabi Airport.

Two doses of Dioxylamine drowned out three crying babies and their Balkan entourage for me to garner almost ten hours rest on the long haul from Melbourne. Wide eyed with foreknowledge of each of the inevitable steps that would mark this cinematic torment, I queued “The Book of Eli”. Denzel Washington was admirably stoic, in this Ragnorak style defeat of character, actor and audience- all merely playing out our parts, without hope of redemption or release, each blow leading the film closer to wherever it is that such films go to die, and me to dreamless, chemical sleep.

I awoke to a sunrise over a very different part of the world and a concert of crying that unfortunately had not found better harmony despite admirably long hours of practice. I found partial reinvigoration in fruits, a vivid awareness of my lack of progeny, and in the Keats romance, “Bright Star”. Before the conclusion of the narrative, we began descent to Abu Dhabi, so in my imagination Keats is eternally bound between the sufferings of insufferable romance and the creeping “condition” of a pre-Florean pathology. I have no desire to see the remainder, nor for any reconciliation toward unity or deathly division, nor to break the frozen amber dance of Pathos and Thanatos, which says more about Keats than any final falling of life or love.

I transited through the airport and my first taste of the Gulf was an acute awareness of the decided lack of expected decadence. Where is my gold dispensing machine? Where is the retro steam engine whisking me away for an indoor BASE jump, or the Emirati “skill-tester” featuring falconry and Rolexes hidden inside of lesser birds? Perhaps my expectations are based on fantasy and advertising, or perhaps there’s another airport- constructed on a manmade island shaped like JFK (the man not the airport) where the pharaonic desires of the rich in transit are born and met.

The bareness of the gate suggests both a fear that some obviously non-citizen types may take quiet refuge on a bench or other horizontal plane, and that the seat-loving elite are being led elsewhere. I take short solace with a well-travelled Italian coffee brand and some carrot cake that reminds me of playgrounds and being eight.  I open the Economist, which once again predicts the demise of Hugo Chavez, whilst openly mentioning that that the conservatives leading the fine British coalition received less of the popular vote than the demagogue in his land. I take both points as signs of exceptional quality. An electronic board, lacking even a baroque golden frame and semi-precious studding, flashes and I shuffle my goods to the next leg, a casual seven-hour ordeal this time, and then at last the Grande European Summer shall begin.

The Willy Wonka of audible chocolate

// May 26th, 2010 // No Comments » // Art, Music & Poetry

The Keeper, by Bonobo featuring the exquisite Andreya Triana. Taken from the album of the year, “Black Sands”. If the powers that be will it, I shall be catching them twice in the next two weeks, in Bucharest then Prague. My hobby is: following your favourite DJ on tour across central Europe.

The Requisite Apology

// May 24th, 2010 // No Comments » // Uncategorized

Requisite Apology

Since I last blogged, Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize and bombed the moon, built an unbeatable coalition to drive sweeping health-care reform and utterly lost health-care reform, re-regulated Wall Street and stepped in to run Haiti. There can be no excuse- except perhaps my next post explaining the continents, organisations, discoveries, conferences and festivals that lay between then and now, and my deepest commitment to the Internet that I will never abandon it again unless the dice are running unexpectedly hot, in which case I promise to roll the windows down a notch and bring it back a Pepsi.