......what
a year it has been!
Mistakes
were made, arguments were held, travel was undertaken and spare cash spent, but as
I sit back in the dusty spare room (currently holding a weeks’ worth of
washing, two un-renovated 1950s armchairs and paperwork covered in Milly’s fur),
some lessons have been learned. Allow me to share my collected twelve months' worth of wisdom with you, dear reader.
Geographic
location is everything. So is desperation.
I
scored a terrific gig at – not sure if they should be mentioned or if rhyming
words should be used, so we’ll play it safe – 'Bureauvision.' I had dropped in my CV a month earlier and
the lady who received it looked about as interested as a Kardashian not in front of a camera, but I only live one kilometre away. Four weeks later, when the dust had settled on some redundancies and an additional staffer was forcibly ejected for completely
misunderstanding what ‘work’ meant, I was called in. Yes, I could be there by lunchtime; I could be there right now if they liked
Cheapness is seized.
With the car not even warm after the 1km
drive, they asked for my hourly rate.
Not one for thinking quickly on my feet, I blurted out the one I use as
an English tutor. This was accepted before I’d fully closed my mouth, so it was
easy to figure out that a Swiss street sweeper with special needs rakes in more (and most of that from the gutters in the nightclub district). Even so, I bet they didn't have as much fun as
I did trying to publicise, coordinate and report on an awards ceremony that
featured drunk Belgian comedians (yes, they do exist. Belgian comedians I mean, not drunks), a stage hogging Dutch host, a scene-stealing
Aussie producer, Freddy Mercury fans, a modern interpretative dance routine during dessert and a huffy royal
wrangler. The gig is mine for this year too!
First
impressions are usually right. Second
ones just confirm the first.
Lyon
in France was visited again and still failed to give me the ‘oh wow’ reaction
that everyone else seems to get. Lingering smell of stale piss that seeps into
your own clothes and lingers for a week? Check.
A run-down riverfront that is praised to the skies online but was a
dusty obstacle course of bottles and beggars?
Check. Overrated ‘gusto’ restaurants
with 2074 price lists and 1974 decor? Check.
Swiss cows aren’t
happy; they’re deaf!
Those
enormous bells that your least favourite Aunt brings you back from her big bus tour around Europe? Usually festooned with vomit-swirls of hand-painted edelweiss and alps? Switzerland’s beloved
bovines really do wear those brass bongers around their necks. Even when casually standing in a field and
doing nothing other than flicking away summer flies and considering which
charming native flower to chew on next, the sound is a cacophonous chorus that renders
ramblers strolling by temporarily deaf, let alone the poor creatures
themselves.
Here’s
proof:
Life is full of
pricks.
In
my case, it was time to try another method to persuade Mr Migraine to favour me
less: acupuncture. My GP referred me
to his own acupuncturist; a German guy on the wrong side of town: next door to
the soup kitchen and the car park entrance favoured by pick pockets counting
their loot from the Plain Palais flea market.
My nerves were hidden by my immaturity: the doctor’s initials were
PP. Doctor PeePee... tee hee. After sitting down and asking about my
symptoms, how often, how long and where, I was asked to strip down to my
knickers so that he could place his pins in parts of my body that
included.... To be honest, I forgot
where he stuck them; the tiny sensation of them being inserted was immediately
forgotten and it was only when I sneezed and felt some wobble on my forehead
and shoulders that I remembered.
Don't save your nice undies for date night.
My
weekly sessions with Dr PeePee (see above) were making a significant difference. Three weeks into a six-week schedule had
shown only one sign of Mr Migraine and he was surprisingly easy to send
packing. In a now-familiar routine, I
stripped off, lay on the bed and received my various pricks before being placed
under a foil space blanket to keep warm. Dr
PeePee left the room and I decided to use the time to remember how to
meditate..... WOO WOO WOO!
I
sat up in shock; pins catching on the blanket and the ones on my ears pinching
my hair. WOO WOO WOO! The alarms were
sounding all over the city. Had it
finally happened? Was today the day that
the rest of the warring world decided that Switzerland had been neutral for far
too long and it was high time that they were forced to use their bomb
shelters?
WOO
WOO WOO! And here I was, alone, in
nothing but knickers, studded with pins....!
“Dr PeePee...? DR PEEPEE????” Sliding off the table with a partly-stuck on
silver blanket and pins that waggled as I walked uncertainly towards the door
to call out ‘Dr PeePee’ for the third time was not particularly comfortable,
especially when some were at the top of my ankle that folded in a bit with each
tentative step. “Dr PeePee...?!”
“It’s
okay Madam Lockett,” he said, eventually squeaking up the passage in blue
Crocs. “Today is the day when all of the
alarms have to be tested in Geneva. It’s
the law.”
My
sigh of relief caused a pin in my neck to fall out. “In that case, wouldn’t today would be the
ideal time to bomb Geneva, as nobody would think it was anything except a
drill, would they?”
Dr
PeePee smiled. “Well it’s a good thing
that your clothes are within arm’s reach then, isn’t it?”
You can teach an
old dog new tricks.
Steph’s
friend Anne is a pharmacist by trade, but a dog trainer by passion. As with alarm testing and cow bells, they
take it very seriously here in Switzerland.
She was required to video lessons she’d undertaken with various dogs and
needed to run a class with a young dog and an old dog. Harley, at two, fulfilled the first criterion
and Milly, at ten, amply provided the old.
The
aim was to get both dogs to walk left and round around four orange traffic
cones, sticking closely to the sides of their owners and then sitting down at each end. Harley was eager and up for it and walked alongside Steph
willingly, but decided that manoeuvring through the cones was a waste of his
time.
Milly,
on the other hand, followed my every move, left and right, onwards and upwards,
sitting proudly on her backside (always careful to protect her arthritic back
legs) at the end. The same result was
achieved over and over again, encouraging idle fantasies of Milly-n-me putting Pudsey and
her human chick Ashleigh firmly into second place and snatching the half-million
UK pound prize from under their noses.....
“Milly, you’re a natural at this,” Anne said, walking towards us, hands
in her bum bag. “Although if she eats
any more of my treats her stomach’s in danger of dragging along the ground.
10 comments:
Firstly: God Bless Milly.
Secondly: Sod the cows; the sound of those bells would drive me insane [with pictures of edelweiss making it impossible to get the sound of Elvis singing about the wretched things out of my head - they are undoubtedly weeds].
Last but not least - Madame [sa Nomme Oubliez] the faux frog [une Belgique] who tried to teach us French at school, failing to understand why prepubescent girls could not recite pomes en francais about lost love with appropriately existentialist ennui.
Your travel report has made me feel better about not having Belgium on my bucket list.
But wow - I bet your CV should now justify a massive increase in your hourly rate. Well done, and Welcome back!
Are you telling us that you had acupuncture from a German doctor WITHOUT warbling esoteric music in the background? Please ask him to come back to Germany and tell his colleagues.
(Nancy is much nicer than Lyon.)
Oh Kath. How I have missed you. I am smiling all over my fat face this morning. And, despite not being a Dickens fan, I am going to channel Oliver and ask for more. Please.
(But do we have to have stinking word verification AND comment moderation?)
All very valuable lessons. And I'm feeling very sorry for Swiss cows :(
Hello lovely lady.
I had acupuncture a few years back, before I realised my liver was growing things. I enjoyed the experience, except for the time I suddenly needed to pee halfway through. Awkward!! Thankfully no one caught me sidling up and down the hallway, trying not to drop my needles along the way!!
Hooray on the gig and Dr PeePee too, it's wonderful to hear that Mr Migraine is getting his comeuppance. Milly is a sweetie, of course she excels!
Those cow bells drove me crazy in such a short time, I feel sorry for the cows now. I really thought they only wore those things in movies such as Heidi.
Note to self- never go to Lyon, no matter how many people tell you it's wonderful there.
Hi Kath,
Welcome back to land of Blog.
I am still not tempted to ever try acupuncture - the thought makes me cringe.
:0)
Cheers
PM
Thank you, FruitCake. The CV/hourly rate will deffo get an overhaul in the next year...
Sabine, yes. Dr PeePee is a keen runner, loves to talk about books I've read and used one of my iphone 'being pricked by Dr Peepee' selfies (long since delated) for teaching!
E-Child, I hope that the word verification thingy is now gone. Just for you :)
JackieK, the cows near us today were all lying down in the sun which was not only relaxing but much, much quieter for them.
You've made me laugh, Fernstar! It's such a vulnerable position to be in, isn't it? Semi-naked and full of pins!
Darling River - Milly is still my constant companion and is snoozing at my feet whilst typing this. The snores are getting louder as she ages, as are the farts!
PlasMan, I avoided going for years, too, but was pleasantly surprised by how painless it and how it has worked. Placebo or not, just the fact that Mr Migraine has other more pressing engagements is good enough for me.
Ooh, Hi Kath, I'd lost your blog somewhere along the way and was just searching for it yesterday, so thanks for stopping by. Wow, you're all looking so well!
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