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The essence of being

Mistaken

NAV office
A room with a view.

„Hello sir. How may I help you?”

Well that’s what he could have been saying but seeing as he was muttering in some God-forsaken tongue he may just as likely have been telling me to shove all and sundry where the sun don’t shine. At this I was slightly taken aback. I had been reassured by the travel agent that everybody in this Eastern European country spoke English, at least to some degree. I guess the Russians won that war. Brr, chilly, chilly.

„Yes, yes! Do you speak English?”

He looked at me a little dumbfounded, poor Commie, so I chose to slow it down and raise my voice. This would surely help!

„DO…YOU…SPEAK…”

„Yes sir. A little.”

He gestured with his thumb and forefinger as he said this. Poor bastard, probably never had a proper education, certainly not under that fellow, Chew-Chess-Coup, or whatever.

I smiled to show that I appreciated his efforts. Christ, maybe I should have brought some treats along for the guy.

„How I may help you?”

I waited. Was it a dramatic pause, or a grammatically mixed-up question? I guessed the latter.

„Well my good man, I’d like a room.”

„Which room?”

„Which room!”

„Yes, which room? For strangers we have 2 room…”

„ For strangers?”

„Yes. You are stranger, yes?”

„Of course, but that’s only because we’ve just…oh, okay. I see what you mean. Stranger. Foreigner. Yes, yes. I am.”

I laughed at this. I couldn’t blame the young chap for that one. Just as well he didn’t ask me if I was an alien. Ho ho. An awkward silence, then:

„Oh yes, em where were we? Rooms. 2…only two!?”

The guide book said this particular area was crawling with tourist hotels. Maybe they just didn’t…ah well.

„I’m sorry…”

„Huh?”

„It seems today but 1.”

„One! Well okay. Is it good?”

„Excuse me sir?”

Good intonation by the way!

„I mean is it a nice room?”

He giggles a little. I mean at first I just want to reach over and punch his lights out, the condescending…but then I notice he seems a little embarrassed.

To hell with caution. Here I come. Captain Adventure!

„Okay I’ll take it.”

He looks at me a little oddly. I’d forgotten. The uneducated buffoon probably thinks I want to remove the room from the building!

Okay. Again. Nice and loud and slow.

„I’LL…TAKE…IT.”

„You want to go there now?”

„Yes, yes. I want to go there now.”

No, no…I’ve flown all this way so I could go there tomorrow, next week, next year. Jesus, this was surely a case of lost in translation.

„Alright. You go this corridor. Go on first right. Go straight down. Three door on left. Room 404.”

Well done. Thought he might crack for a second but no…his nerve held well.

„Okay. Thank you.”

I stand there for a moment and he smiles back. I shift my weight a little. Maybe he needs to be stimulated into movement, those directions having worn him out.

Nothing. I hold out a little more. Maybe its Ruskie etiquette. Nothing. The sliding doors at the front of the foyer shuffle open, then close, then open…

„Ah Jesus!”

„And my key?

„…”

He’s thinking. I can see the steam rising. And then that smile, half giggle again.

„No key. You needn’t key! Just go there!”

Wait a sec. That time there was definitely a slightly patronising tone. The little…

„No key!?”

He shifts his eyebrows. Is he holding back? Is he actually suppressing a laugh? Why that little…

„No key? Interesting. Well, See YA later!”

I shove my joviality in his face. We saved ye monkeys from the gulags. You can’t rise me that easily.

Incredulous, I march off in the direction he had indicated, expletives abounding under breath.

No key, I kept thinking.

What? Was it voice or retina activated? Fingerprint ID? Ridiculous. They didn’t have that info. Hey, and they didn’t have my passport…That’s IT! They must have some kickass new technology. Maybe this is some swanky experimental place like I’d seen on Discovery. All connected up so even your own personal bank card could drive the rental car, operate the penthouse lift…

Well judging by his directions I was very much ground floor. Room 404. Odd number for the ground floor. Still maybe it was a code for foreigners.

Jesus only two rooms for foreigners. Really hush hush stuff. Maybe it’s an ex-KGB building.

Anyway. Room 404

I try the door. It opens easily in front of me.

What the……

 

… „It’s okay Martin, it’s okay.”

A consoling arm reaches over and around the old man in the corner.

„You can finish it tonight, I know you can.”

Others in the room shout encouragement but the man named Martin is inconsolable.

Minutes pass by. Then John, or Joe, the leader, or organiser, or whatever turns to me.

„Jim isn’t it?”

„Yes.”

„So could you…”

„I’m sorry to interrupt…” but I am curious „how long has he been coming here?” I point to the man, the haggard old man, named Martin.

„Oh Martin, he’s been with us for 5 years now.”

„5 years…and he doesn’t seem to be getting any better.”

Martin tries to interject, sniffles, snorts, clears his throat and tries again. As he looks up I realise he’s not as old as I’d first imagined. 40 at best, but the gaunt features and thinning grey hair make him look older.

„I’m getting better,” he manages doggedly. I nod. Jesus, he’s a mess.

„So Jim…”

I return to John, or Joe, or whatever.

„Uh huh” Still in a daze after what I’ve just seen.

„So would you like to tell us what it was like for you the first time you went to the APEH (tax) office?”

Fatherhood

My loves
Sweets for my sweet, sugar for my honey

Being a father was always something I’d dreamt about…in the deepest realms of a quirky notion. It never breached the surface of my conciousness, not on anything bar a romantic level. Someone to continue the family name and if not he, then at least to carry on the family genes! Is this what it is ultimately reduced to, some primordial urge to survive, exist, perhaps, postmortem/posthumously.

I would have, in my most cynical, single man days, surmised that all there was to babies was neurotic mothers and hapless fathers, the latter forever tormented because they could never understand what it’s REALLY LIKE!

Well, as for the torment there certainly is some of that to consider. Kicking back after a day’s work with a beer and football doesn’t quite wash with a sleep deprived mother – the father’s lack of sleep doesn’t matter – but really there’s little you can do (right) with a breastfeeding mother other than F-Off (out from under her feet).

Bem Rakpart

Bank side
Let your mind go

 

A finely scented pipe, by that I mean tobacco, ornate in its design

The drift of smoke, the owner’s look, all the ingredients for conspiracy/ intrigue.

With a sun set reflecting off the windows on the far-side the sunlight, in rebounds, trickles across to where I am, but then suddenly, perhaps a moment, a cloud or a passing minute, it’s gone.

I’m left instead in the veil of a bright bank walk evening, the benches are filling up.

The joggers are sweating, while the cyclists glide arrogantly by.

On the river a tour boat moves southwards, the snap happy tourists confined; perhaps not, perhaps they’re just weary,

And at Batthyany they’ll be ready to dock.

The cars down below, they stop and they flow,

now and then I gain a new neighbour

But high perched on this wall maybe they can’t see me at all,

Or maybe they just never notice.

Again I look up for ideas, inspiration is fading it seems

The treelined ‘rakpart’ calls me onwards…

and downwards to the city beneath.

Ah yes…the pubs where i would have frequented

the cellars, the smoke and the beers…

A tourist boat, another now passing distracts me,

A new life it seems.

I hear the squeak of an unoiled bicycle, the rubber on tarmac below,

a bird I heard earlier is silenced as the traffic’s beginning to grow.

The light while still present, soon fading,

a breeze at my back urges me on,

the river and sky now nearly one hue…

Ok, it is time and I’m gone!

July 2011

Cashman's Cork
For a pint or some

In Jim Cashman’s, Tara-val, Andi is shopping…

She stirs, she rubs her eyes; her nose it itches, maybe.

She snorts, and shuffles, and settles back.

She’s a babe in wraps, encased as she is within the atmosphere of this Irish, this Cork pub.

She sleeps while the atmosphere resonates. I wonder if she dreams in Cork, the Corkonian lure fluttering at the veils of her subconscious.

The notion that she is among people, their chattering, the clink and clatter of dishes, the voice of the barman querying, and here the words fall torrential on this page racing from back to front to meet a centre…

And still she sleeps.

Szeretlek!

Dublin 27 June 2011

Charlie,s Guesthouse
When in Dublin

 

Charles Stewart Guesthouse- Parnell Square East

Quaint by the way of age; nothing is too modern, yet everything is convenient, comfortable. The joining corridor between the two flights of stairs, succumbs to the idea of age with its ramp-under-carpet feel, but a room off to the right, with computer screen glare, reminds one that the spit and polish amounts to an up-to-date operation, where still the old touches- the receptionist, the tea in the rooms, and the breakfast awaiting the refreshed travellers- are paramount. Thank God we found this place- and thank this place for everything else.

http://www.charlesstewart.ie/

Shifting perspectives

Walking on a stop or two instead of standing, waiting for that bus, perhaps helped remove expletives from the run of these few preceding words. Sitting on the wall here on Varosmajor utca, 2 stops off Széll Kálmán tér, I’m in the early noon sunlight, somewhat protected by a thin, cotton ball film of cloud, and by the cooling which I’d expect of September.

However hot it is today, it seems to me perfection.

A fly ventures to land on my bag, I let it.

The constant rumble of traffic; music!

The notion of an approaching bus still leaves me hurried but my error allows me this one sentence more…at least.

A gentle breeze cools off my peripheries, though it’s now that I’d love a kilt, let some real aeration in.

A grandmother and grandchild spend this time conversing. They weren’t at that first stop.

People walk by, cycle past, move with the constant pulse of city life.

Sometimes, just barely, a moment like this enthralls, not the long protracted pen-stroke of a cafe pause, but the honest meanderings of a pensive, if meditative mind.

The bus arrives to break the last thought and as it rattles and squeaks along to its next port of call, doors slamming and banging, bells buzzing and fussing each time, I’m reminded of how easily it is to write when the object is not writing itself, but the mere restful state of observing.

 

An arrival, a beginning

Between choices I found myself again, having biting the bullet and letting emotion cloud my judgement. I had been wrong; I had reasoned incorrectly and because of this, now, here, I find myself, once more, sitting, wondering as to the consequence of my next move…

Coffee Break

Jesus! Listen to this dreariness. The chatter of the boys on the gatt, the Eva Cassidy-esque sounds over the speakers, the bar sounds: glasses; spoons; a sweeper-scooper; a coffee spoon stirring; and the constant hiss of silenced television, the different channels flickering. Outside the shadows of people fall in, cars fizz past on damp tarmac; the shadows grow from wood red to purple in here, out there there’s only grey. It falls from the heavens too. A pub, a pub like this, any pub, is not a place to be alone, not unless you’re armed with a pen, a chronic drinking habit, insanity or an abundance of optimism. I have 3 of those 4.

Amen!

The sound of cooking

Settled into the darkening corner of an evening-lit frontroom, laptop perched on slightly elevated legs, I sift through my thoughts wondering if there is anything worthy of print. While the telly casts out its sounds I’m reminded, but only vaguely, of many things. None of them hold sway and so I’m left to ponder over a blinking cursor. That’s it; I’m done.

Homesickness

Relax
Wherever I lay my...

 

Leaving Budapest for the summer, the buildings mock me. They stand resplendent in their morning veil as I glance back over my shoulder Buda-wards, not fearing to become a pillar of salt, merely to find hidden in the secrets of those spires and ornately tiled roofs, a sentiment, a love for this city.

Pest greets me as I cycle  through it, the hustle and bustle, the noise, the traffic, the bars.

I know it’s early but whoever came up with that silly notion of it being too early to have a beer! The postman crosses swords with the all-night reveller in a kocsma, both on dawn patrol.

Soon I’ll be home, to Ireland, my first home, but having made this a clear second, the other places in which I’ve resided shuffle for attention. They’ll get it in moments of reminiscence, but for now I must contend with the idea that for two months, while alleviating homesickness, I may also become homesick.

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