This weekend heralds a weekend of partying and debauchery across Holland as it marks the first King’s Day since the inauguration of a King so good that he needs two names, King Willem-Alexander. Now a normal grown man would take the time to learn as much as he can about the culture and heritage surrounding King’s Day. Thankfully I am not a grown up.
I (along with my dear lady) have a long-held obsession with national celebrations. This fascination has led to us nearly being blown up in Malta, and nearly trampled to death in Menorca. I hold a firm belief in regards to new experiences. The thing you should do, the essential component in ensuring that you get the maximum from them is quite simple. Just experience them. Don’t pre-plan them. Don’t study them avidly. Just go, try to blend in and treat it as an anthropological investigation.
It’s for exactly those reasons that I have read as little as possible about King’s Day. I have bought the most expensive undercover surveillance kit I could afford. A fifteen euro orange t-shirt and some red, white and blue face paint. I have avoided conversations about the topic whenever I could in order to remain as ignorant as possible. The only knowledge I have about the celebrations come from secondary sources. Here is a list of my favourite spurious gossip that I have heard so far:
There will be gazillions of people everywhere
Everybody wears something orange
Everybody will be selling whatever they can think of
Everybody will get very, very drunk
There is a famous man who you can pay to throw eggs at
As you can see, I am not particularly well-versed regarding what to expect and I sincerely hope that my ignorance will fan my enthusiasm to get as much as I can from King’s Day. I only hope that it will include windmills, clogs and rock and roll.
Have a lovely weekend, I will let you know what transpires 🙂
I have arrived. Not quite in the sense I would like it to mean. I find myself in an apartment on the 9th floor of Amsterdam with remnants of my life including my fiancée, my dog and a solar-powered buddha. On Friday morning I was a human being. This very morning I became a British Burger.
My first impressions of Amsterdam are positive. So far we haven’t ventured into the city, instead we have tried to acclimatize to our home. Our apartment is in a quieter district with no hookers, drugs or windmills in sight. So far it has been nothing like I imagined. My passport has been bureaucratically violated and now carries a mark declaring me as an officially ‘undutchable’. I have a burger number even though the only burgers happen to be British and American. All around me I keep hearing people making noises like cats struggling to dislodge hairballs from their windpipes, each of them capable of speaking better English than me whilst the vast majority of them are so tall that they can replace the blades on windmills without using a ladder.
The key discoveries so far is that gravy has been invented, nobody actually wears clogs and a single vowel sound in the word ‘hallo’ marks me out as a foreigner. Eye contact is good, smiling is better and not all Amsterdammer’s arses are welded to bicycle seats. The supermarkets are super, lamb exists, salt and vinegar has arrived and the quality of meat is such that my dog would struggle not to make something awesome from the contents of my refrigerator. Interestingly banks don’t need to be open to get an appointment in and official bureaucracy comes with smiles, free bags and newsletters. So far the only place I have failed to get an appointment is the supermarket.
Despite my best efforts I have failed to humiliate myself in typical fashion. The closest I have come so far was by buying non-alcoholic beer and then complaining that it tasted flat. The transition to life here so far has gone as smoothly as a vindaloo’s transition from the human stomach to a sanitary waste receptacle. I only hope it continues. For now goodbye, or as they say in Windmill Land ‘Dag‘
In around two weeks time I will be packing my life into something transportable and bidding farewell to Poland and its people. After nine long years it feels somewhat unbelievable that I am really leaving. I know what I should be feeling is excitement. I should be looking to the future, spewing clichés about new chapters, rebirths and other such Buddhist nonsense. However I am not, I will be leaving Poland with a heavy heart as Poland has somehow become my home.
I am not for one minute suggesting that Poland is paradise. Far from it in fact. It is a nation so woven with contradictions that I have never openly witnessed such pliable truths. It is a land of harsh winters, cabbage obsession, catholic repression and open xenophobia. It is a land of proud people who aren’t quite proud enough to go the extra mile. It is a land of Christians who proudly rejoice in their neighbors misfortunes. And it is a land where some of the most repulsive disgusting voices get elevated to public office.
That’s not to say it is all bad either. It is a stunning country gifted with an abundance of geographical treasures. The people are largely hospitable and kind (if there is vodka somewhere nearby). It is a country with an incredible history if you can somehow navigate the minefield of nationalist propaganda which surrounds it. And most of all it is a nation of hopeless optimists and incurable romantics.
Throughout all my years here,there has been one pervasive theme. Frustration. Progress has been incredibly slow , in part caused by the corruptible hand of bureaucracy and most often by sheer incompetence. Very little has actually changed, and those things that have, have been farcical in their execution. Sadly this trend is likely to continue for the foreseeable future.
As I wave farewell to you my dear Polska I have three wishes for you my dear. The first is that your people start taking pride in the beauty you possess and stop desecrating your body because they are too lazy to find a bin. The second wish is that your people recover from their phobias, as in all honesty, nowadays they have nothing to be afraid of. And thirdly that your government takes the vote from the over sixty-fives and closes your churches. Perhaps then, and only then you will be ready to take a great leap forwards.
Many years ago Britain was the home of a most peculiar pastime. Trainspotting. For the Europeans among my readers I feel I must point out that Trainspotting does not in actual fact require participants to take heroin and become Scottish. Trainspotting actually refers to a long, forgotten hobby, as archaic as druidism with even sillier costumes. The participants of this strange pastime were almost always funny looking bespectacled men, adorned in anoraks and bobble hats. The activity itself solely consisted of spending entire weekends sitting on train station platforms writing down the numbers of passing trains in tattered notebooks. Believe it or not, the participants of this form of social relaxation, did it for…. fun. I don’t know whether this futile pursuit still exists, rather regrettably, I suspect it does.
Something strange happens to people on trains. For some reason our chronic fears, and distrust of fellow humans tend to float to the surface for no other reason than the fact that we are on a train. The most common rite of passage usually takes place on the underground. For some reason people fear making eye contact and go to enormous lengths to find a spot to look at which is free of those terrible manifestations of evil: the human eyeballs. The determination and commitment shown in this endeavor often makes participants look as if they are experiencing some form of fit as their eyes twitch all around the cabin. Strangely it is not the nauseous odor of human bodies trapped in a metal coffin which offends people. The vast majority of us are fine with being surrounded by the potent cocktail of perfume, sweat and farts. It’s the eyeballs which worry us.
That of course doesn’t mean that we don’t have the same problems on regular trains, it is simply that the seating arrangement reduces the chance of ever having to make eye contact with a stranger. They still stink, there are still lunatics, it is more a question that normal trains are presumed to be more civilized. The reason for this is simple. We are extremely unlikely to find ourselves ‘face to crutch’ with a stranger, or ‘nostril to armpit’. The perceived civility comes from the fact that by and large normal trains are more orderly. Of course we still avoid eye contact, we still stiffen when someone asks ‘is that seat taken?’ and we do shuffle in out seats when a stranger sits next to us. All of these examples of perceived incivility make the fact that a new pastime has developed on trains, which given the human discomfort which is evident on every journey has come of somewhat a surprise to me.
The fact is that trains have become a hunting ground for wankers. Literally. It is hard to believe given the fact that a train is hardly conducive to romantic liaisons. Unless Virgin has started lacing their tea with aphrodisiacs. The first time I heard about a locomotive pleasure seeker was in a news story involving a man acquitted of indecency on a train, on the grounds that he had been playing an invisible banjo underneath a newspaper on his lap. I know given that picture, some of you may dispute his innocence but I find his argumentation incredibly persuasive.
Think about it:
Recently I read another story about a man in Florida who was accused of stimulating himself on a train. In his defense, one I might add, that is perfectly plausible, he claimed that he was rocking backwards and forwards because he had an itchy belly. I can imagine how such an action could easily be misjudged and honestly it’s an example of how people in general always jump to negative conclusions. He did incidentally admit that he may have accidentally ejaculated on the train’s bathroom floor. I for one admire his courage as honestly, who hasn’t been there?
A quick search on Google brings up a startling amount of stories from all over the world. America, Denmark, Australia, Thailand to name but a few. An exception to the rule is when something like that happens once, in one corner of the globe, in one isolated incident. When repeated incidents take place across numerous continents it can then be classified as an epidemic.
The reality is that the appearance of train wankers coinciding with the disappearance of train spotters is no accident. It is a natural byproduct of evolution. It is a living example of ‘Gradualism’. Train wankers didn’t appear suddenly. They didn’t pull themselves out of the swamps and march towards the cities. They are an example of a slower, gradual change which is reflected in our societies as well as our biology. Once upon a time it was unthinkable for a man to sit in the same cabin on a train as a lady. Even today women-only passenger cars are still offered in Japan, Egypt, India, Iran, Taiwan, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia and Dubai. Yet 100 years ago they were commonplace in most countries, which begs the question whether this is truly evolution, or really devolution.
Wherever you stand on the matter you must acknowledge the fact that one day you might be on a train and you may notice a man acting suspiciously. Before rushing to any rash judgements you should perhaps ask him if his belly is itchy. If he shakes his head you should then play him a note from your invisible banjo and see if he responds. If he doesn’t then the chances are that he is stimulating himself. Unfortunately given the fact that people like this are hard to stop mid flow there is only one thing you can do. Don’t scream. Don’t hurl abuse. Shout ‘dead kittens, dead kittens, dead kittens’. If that doesn’t kill his mood you can be sure that he is a proper wanker.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I am delighted to introduce you to Alejandro Jorge Pedro Maria Elbúho, a humble Menorcan owl, who has wisely devoted his life to hunting adventures. I know what you are thinking, it rhymes with hot da duck.
We met Alejandro in Menorca where we holidayed last summer. The moment we saw him on a market stall we were immediately dazzled by his awesomeness. The first thing was how handsome he looked, hanging from a peg and swaying in the breeze. We were immediately struck by a wave of inspiration. The inspiration came from ‘Up In The Air’ literally. The hollywood film of course. One of the subplots involves George Clooney travelling around America with a cardboard cutout of his sister and her husband, taking the honeymoon snaps they could never afford. With that in mind we decided that for the remainder of our holiday we would take pictures of Alejandro everywhere we went. We were quite unsure why, and most certainly concerned that we had both perhaps lost our minds. Simply put, we had a vague idea that we would use the photos for some kind of travel blog.
After experimenting with different blogging sites we settled on a layout on posterous. Where for sometime we quite regularly added pictures along with short explanations of Alejandro’s story in ‘Owlglish’. We also created a Facebook group for him. Initially we wanted to see if the power of the internet would turn Alejandro into a celebrity. However for reasons we could never figure, it didn’t. As our complete failure came home us, we slowly lost interest in the project and stopped updating his blog. We simply left him hanging on the coat rack of failure, waiting for a better day.
Recently we have decided to reactivate his blog. And to publicise him too. As we feel he is just too damned awesome to be forgotten. We still have a stockpile of photos from Menorca and a few other places and it seems a shame to waste them. So Alejandro is back and as he would say ‘ready for big adventure’.