Friday, 8 June 2007
I Asterix: Free from speech
And so we came to our brave new world. A chip off the old block. Eastern bloc. We arrived with trepidation but with the hope of the resuscitation of our senses; from the ritual of routine to the edgy dance of expectation; from close proximity of the familiar to nuzzling with strangers in queues, in the streets as we shaved our safety limits, the protective barriers removed with the hope of fate. I arrived in the Tropics and packed everything with me; previous addictions, the ghosts of predilictions and the absorbing neuroses of the new. How would I survive without friends and the familiar ? I cut loose from an anchor. I am no longer at home. I am offshore now. Soon I will no longer be a resident of the United Kingdom but then it seems in my absence Scotland isn't either.
It is possible for me to vote from afar. How strange to be able to affect a change in a place where I don't live. How strange it must be for people to vote and affect no change in a place where they live. Does everybody live in the same place ?
Back in the ' old country' ( as one Alzheimered Cisco septogenarian walking the Saigon streets described his former life) resident status had previously induced apathy and anger at the futility of the vote. Who needs it ? Who needs them ? But truly is this not a priviliged position after seeing with my own eyes, mass numbness and an exploitable naivety. From Chairman of the board to Pol Pot. I could vote via d*m*cr*** ( can you fathom the asterix, the hysterics that necessitate such punctuation?) and make a country free and yet it is difficult to forget that there are countries that held ele**io*s recently for one party, the winner a foregone conclusion.
I am a guest, a working alien improving the prospects of a privilged few. I have been afforded the luxury of travel both within the country and some of its neighbours, Thailand and Cambodia. If I am tempted to make protracted statements about what I think is wrong like a kneejerk, reactionary expat getting boiled about poor service then it is always useful to remember earlier posts on this website and to recall the vibrancy of hope, the verve of the new and unseen, the untested and unknown.
Could do an epsiodic, sit-com style recap; the first step on the archetypal, tropical beach, the first breath of hot, filthy Saigon air; wading into more work-based pressure and stress than ever I have ever had to endure; then finding myself at home and at ease with Kate. She was and remains my solace, my hope and my future. And soon as the shock of the new eases we begin to explore wilder shores and mountain air before swivelling experience again and making sure we shop to the hilt in Bangkok's open market before finding moments of such tangible hurt and nerve-shredding horror in the Killing Fields near Phnom Penh,Cambodia. And then there are the more day to day events. We watch as cyclos pedal by with sheets of glass stretched across half the road; we walk around the park where the whole of Saigon plays, exercises and snogs so innocently after dark. Here, is the Saigon that enthralls, amuses, saddens and befuddles. This is a place of contradictions, contrasts and contretemps. We are sickened by a multinational that raves it up in the park with loud music and loud colour ( the way to get attention here) as they seek to promote food supplements that swell the naturally lithe and svelte Vietnamese body. Of course it is cultural. A fat kid means prosperity, there ain't no heroin chic here. But we are also touched by the genuine innocence of people emerging into controlled awareness. There is a Blyton-esque feel to picnicing sexuality that camps out for brief moments in the twilight. There is only a fondle in the park before marriage. There is no where else to go. And of course the world over sexuality and gender is the basis of so much oppression and expectation. Of course the woman must be a virgin when she marries but a large number of south-east asian men will have visited a prostitute many times before they marry their bride.
And there came a time when we stopped traveling, when we were no longer explorers on well worn routes. We travelled without sweating a drop and we explored without a wilting map. We have been writers, not so much in residence but in quarantine but we have been here, existing with coiled imagination; in abeyance, in waiting, in research and in preparation. I have been both absorbed in the newness and reminded of the ' old country' , the things, desires that have come to reassert themselves so strongly. And The Lotus Seed performance, so well realised, helped with that. Writing coming to life can only serve to act as a prescient reminder that there is so little time and so much to say.
But that is also a well travelled epithet. Those who have read this blog over the year and who know me will have heard that many times before. A melodramatic conceit that I do my best to pass off as belief in myself. But as a final thing for this long,last blog of my first year here, it must be said that I have really appreciated the feedback you have given me about the blog and it's been good to know that it gives me a connection to much-loved friends and family in the old country.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment