Sunday, December 19, 2010

It Won't Slow Down

Returning to a place you have lived, you become more aware of how the landscape changes.  New houses, new business, new people.  All jump out at you as contrasts to your landscape of memory.

Before this experience, the changes were not as apparent.  Like the frog in water crawling to a boil. Gradual changes are not apparent.

In contrast, the flash pan fire of removal.  The people you knew changing, children growing, and landscapes evolving.

When in the same spot, the Earth can appear to stand still.  Start moving and the absence boils ferociously.

Sometimes it is too easy to focus on one place.  So easy that when you are attention shifts for one moment, your sense explode with new information.

In reality the change has been there all along.  You only had to shift position to see it.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Protest du Jour

Somewhere in the annals of human instincts must exist the drive to make placards, march, and make noise.  Some of us carry this gene. The rest contemplate why anyone would want to ruin a perfectly nice Saturday afternoon.

Protesting and free speech are essential parts of free society.  Certainly it is understandable that when you feel you are being oppressed, or when you see injustice, you let your leaders and fellow citizens know.  In fact, yelling and screaming and organizing en masse are much more civilized than the more violent options remaining when you are not allowed this right.

However, just because you are allowed to do something does not mean it should preclude thought.  Take the instance of the rioters protesting the government, retirement, and the fact that Sarkozy has an attractive wife.  Does it really make sense to burn cars and break windows?  The people impacted by the wanton and senseless destruction are tragically not those that have the responsibility of decision.  Instead of making a valid point, it just serves to quench an adolescent thirst to break things.

Further, if there are more pressing issues in the human Zeitgeist, maybe it is not a good time to push other agendas?  It has been baffling to see what people put ahead complex socioeconomic issues and war.

Like animal rights.

Certainly, this is an issue where people have passion and wish to make a change.  There are intelligent people making convincing arguments on behalf of the cause.  However, maybe the time to protest is not during the pension strike engrossing the nation.  France, and the world, is paying attention to proposed reforms.  Anything residing outside of this realm at this point in time has a small chance of being noticed.

And if you are for the conscientious treatment of animals and protesting the abuse and use of fur, you may want to consider a few things:

Like how many of you are wearing leather shoes.

In addition, your dogs hearing is far more advanced and evolved than yours.  So, if the noises are loud and obnoxious for you, they may just be torturous for them.

And some of this may be missing the forest for a few trees.  But if we purposefully take a stance in such an overt way, should it not be consistent?

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

"The French Buy Nice Things"

Best iron ever
As previously mentioned, “furnished” is a term used loosely.

However, other expats agree, a furnished apartment is the way to go.  A non-furnished apartment takes on new meaning in France – do not expect anything outside of a toilet and sink.  One set of friends had a nine-month adventure from bare apartment to fully-furnished.  Throughout the ordeal, a popular furniture chain experimented with new depths of customer service.

Far be it from this author to criticize anyone’s furniture.  If you find me in a place with nice furnishings, rest assured it will be someone else’s doing.  However, taste and opinion are fair game.

The metal slats and thin
cushion are excellent
motivation for standing.
If the best thing your rented apartment has to offer is a nice Philips iron, so be it.  This actually makes a lot of sense in the land of the five Euro shirt pressing.

But if the iron is Koslowski’s umbrella stand then the rest is closer to his current furniture.  A set of chairs that require an actual steel derrière, a couch from the era of Reagan vs. Gorbachev, and nothing made with wood sans glue.

So why comment?  Because this was mentioned at closing:

“The French buy nice things and keep them for a long time.”

If the apartment is evidence, this statement is half right.