26 July 2012

Green Green


The trip over to Ireland was much less romantic than I had anticipated. The four-hour train ride to Holyhead was lovely: gentle scenery, a quiet car and an attentive snack cart attendant. However, the ferry was a bit of a nightmare. It must have been family day since there were more small children running around than at Disneyland. I uncovered an algorithm that determines that families with small children need precisely twice as many seats plus one as there are members of the family. Thus so, I was hard pressed to find a place to sit and read. I finally found a group of three elderly passengers who were using precisely three seats of the four at the table and they were nice enough to let me join them.

I don’t even want to tell you about the sheer amount of junk food that I consumed that day—except that it was notable and I am committed to accuracy for posterity. Using up my quid on the train, I had innumerable cups of tea and bags of crisps and candy, but it wasn’t enough to tide me over on the ferry, so I also gave in to the smells of chips. Starving as I was, the first seven chips I stuffed into my face were the best things I’d ever eaten… and the subsequent 17 chips were some of the worst I’ve ever had and reminded me why I don’t really care for chips after all. (I suppose I should mention here that I am referring to a dish that Americans call French Fries [although a Belgian invented them.])

My first view of Green Isle was grey and industrial, but that was soon mended with tours into the countryside. My dear friend and reader, S, devoted himself to my delights and administered a thorough tour of the island via train, car, bus, and boat. S lives in Bray, which is a charming seaside town southwest of Dublin .

Being the ancestral home of my family in particular, I managed to track down the pub in Listowel, in County Kerry, where my Great-grandma Mae was born above. The bartender was not a member of the O’Connor family, who had bought the pub from GG Mae’s family before they moved to San Francisco, but he show me a picture of my Dad’s cousins who had visited in 2008. I had a pint of Guinness (after having learned the day before the proper way to pour a pint thereof) and tried to feel the fullness of being in the place where a woman had been born whose DNA eventually contributed to my own.

S, my fearless chauffeur, had an additional wish to go to County Kerry: the Skellig Islands. The largest of the two, Skellig Michael, was a monastery for over 500 years and bears the labor of these monks in beehive shaped houses and a thorough system of steps leading up to said huts. It is also a summer nesting spot for thousands of puffins. I can’t imagine that there is a more adorable bird in existence, and they were cautious but not fearful of the humans exclaiming over their cute beaks, cute wings, cute bodies, and cute waddles from just a few feet away. Did I mention that they were so cute?

We also journeyed to Cork (where we tried in vain to find some traditional music), Mitchellstown (where we did some spelunking AND got a bit lost in a hedge maze), and Glendalough. Glendalough is a monastery nestled in the Wicklow mountains that was founded by St. Kevin the Hermit. We went on a beautiful sunny Saturday so it was crawling with tourists, all trying to outdo each other for group photos next to the ancient tombstones. And really, what says ‘family’ better than everyone standing on grave smiling?

For my last day in Ireland, Sunday, we climbed up Bray head (much like Tillamook head, but with fewer trees and a big cross on top). There was also an air show event, so the little town was packed with carnival booths, prams and unsupervised teenagers. We ate corndogs made by a genuine Minnesotan. There are many more Americans in Ireland than I ran into in the UK.

Now I am back in New York, where it is humid and ill-mannered and malodorous as ever. Yesterday while I was reading in Madison Square Park, a young man asked me the time. As I had a clock on a chain that I had purchased in Camden Market, it took a few moments for me to make the mental adjustments to report. He asked me why I have a clock in a different time zone and then asked me if I was British. Oh dear, back in the land where accents are not discussed, and are even completely ignored.

21 July 2012

Photo Journal: Cardiff

Welsh Rainbow

Wetlands Preserve

Crossing the bay


Locks to get in or out of Cardiff bay



The old lightship... now a restaurant

The Welsh Senedd

Stranger on a Train


Bridges Crossed: 10/12 (Vauxhall, Lambeth, Westminster, Hungerford, Waterloo, Blackfriars, Millennium, Southwark, London, Tower)
Train Stations: 8/10 (London Bridge, Charing Cross, Victoria, Liverpool Street, Waterloo, Paddington, Euston, King’s Cross)

Well, I didn't meet my goals for Bridges and Stations. My only real regret is that I didn't make it to Fenchurch Street Station, but I only had Friday to really round out my goal, and I decided that running around town to cross bridges and stand in stations wasn't really worth it. All the ones I did visit/cross was out of actual need, so I am quite proud that I accomplished what I did.

My last full day in London was quiet. I was a bit fragile from the previous night's festivities so my first real event was fetching lunch from the Thai food from a cart in the eaves of St. John the Evangelist for lunch. Then I headed to Barbican to see the 50 Years of James Bond exhibit. My brother told me about this show and they had a wide range of 007 memorabilia from the movies such as Q's inventions and Oddjob's hat, as well as many first editions of the books. Afterwards I wandered over to Covent Garden to finally try this place I'd been meaning to: The Icecreamists. They are infamous for their human breast milk ice cream, but I couldn't bring myself to try it. Instead I had a couple scoops of Popcorn ice cream that was just the perfect blend of salty and sweet. I will be dreaming of this flavor for some time.

That evening I went on a Haunted London walking tour with my flatmate. It wasn't necessarily scary, more like a historical tour with the odd ghost story thrown in. We learned a great deal about the great fire of 1666 and the architect Christopher Wren who rebuilt most of the city. It was a nice chance to get to areas of the city that I hadn't seen yet, including the Bank of England. I was the only person on the tour who admitted to liking the Lloyds of London building, the famous "inside out" building. That evening those of us from the program who were still there got one last pint of cider at the Hole in the Wall.

On Saturday I took my massive suitcase on the tube to Paddington station where I caught the train to Cardiff. I had drawn myself a map of how to get from the train station to the hostel, but unfortunately I left off a key street, so I spent much too long dragging my burden around an unfamiliar place. There are always pitfalls and snags in travel--that can be part of the charm--but I loathe being overburdened when I travel. If I could I would only ever have a backpack. Of course as my purpose for being in London involved wearing work clothes I couldn't pack light this time. Just as I had found my way and was approaching the bright orange door of the hostel, a man on the street gave me unsolicited advice on where to go... where had this guy been 20 minutes ago?!

Once I settled in I wandered around the large shopping area, finding lunch and a movie theater to see Spiderman. The movie really made me miss New York. I finished up the evening in a pub called both "Weatherspoons" and "the Central Bar" depending on which entrance you used.

On Sunday I walked down to Cardiff Bay, which was perfectly lovely. I found coffee, breakfast and a wetlands preserve to explore. I took an Aquabus across the bay to the locks and then walked back around the bay. The Welsh accent was much less pronounced than I had thought it would be. Many of the people I met almost sounded American. It was nice to spend some time in Wales collecting my thoughts and easing out of the comfort zone that I'd built in London.

15 July 2012

You Won't See Me

So my last week at Westminster is officially over. On Tuesday I sat in the gallery for the House of Lords. I had been anxious to observe them live because they are a self-regulating body, although still active in the adversarial style of politics that Parliament does so well. Since the Speaker sits quietly and doesn’t call on those who may talk, the loudest and the quickest to their feet gets to speak. As the median age in the Lords is easily 20 or 30 years more than in the Commons, this isn’t usually that quick. I particularly felt for one ancient man who repeatedly leapt up at the pace of a wounded snail, only to be beaten by his slightly younger colleagues.

Wednesday morning was our one-on-one meetings with our sponsor, a member of the Lords who had previously been in the House of Commons for over 40 years. All of us interns had been meeting with him every Wednesday morning for the last ten weeks. He is a very kind man and chalk full of wisdom and history and anecdotes. I told him and his assistant[1] how much I adored MP and that I had had a wonderful experience.

Also on Wednesday, I took notes at a meeting with MP, and sat scribbling furiously while she bawled them out for shady dealings in her constituency. One of the men was quite defensive and produced an agenda from another meeting that declared that the company had been providing the correct financial statements. MP shouted, “I could show you a piece of paper that said that there was a whale in the Thames, but that wouldn’t make it true, would it?!” In my printed notes, I wrote, “[MP] was skeptical.” This was the second to last meeting I’d go to with her, and also the second to last meeting in which there was a great deal of shouting. She doesn't always shout, but MP knows that those are the meetings that will be of greatest interest to me. Also, as I’ve mentioned before, she is a lovely woman, but she absolutely loves to start fights. It’s quite refreshing to go to meetings and not hear all the regular political-ese that seeks to avoid what the meeting is actually about. Politics is naturally adversarial and putting it all on the table right away is MP’s unique style.

I stayed late on Wednesday finishing up research and letters, as I wanted to be available to respond to any draft changes on Thursday (my last day). And on Thursday, I gave MP a card and a thank you gift. The card mentioned on it that she should think of me if a spot ever opens up on her staff. She agreed wholeheartedly and said that I should definitely check in after I graduate and to keep in touch in the meantime. I think we both got a little choked up. Later, she took me up on the roof of the palace. Since she has a dodgy knee I knew how much it hurt her to climb up to the roof. To be honest, I felt a bit overwhelmed by the gesture. Also as a thank you present, MP got me a beautiful silver Portcullis necklace from the House of Lords gift shop. It’s basically the prettiest thing ever (when I got to my hostel in Cardiff, I only put two things in the tiny room locker: my computer and that necklace).

Photography outside the tourist areas of Westminster is frowned upon, so I spent my last few days sneaking pictures down halls and through windows. Very few of them turned out well, but I’m glad to have them. A hall might not be very interesting to most, but when you’ve walked down them happily for ten weeks, they become friends.[2]

I’m loath to forget all the eccentric habits I developed over the last two and a half months. For example, whenever I had to fetch someone from the Central Lobby to bring them to MP for a meeting, I would always tell them the same thing to make conversation: That yes this place is a maze, and really I’ve just figured the layout a week ago, and that I had just discovered an amazing shortcut, so that is the way we’ll go! (I really just took them the same way every time, but as they were different people, they had no idea. I think it gave their experience a little extra drama.) 

Other habits included saying Howdy to anyone that MP introduced me to as “her American intern.” It started out as an accident, but everyone seemed to like it. I also got into the habit of saying Cheers. I had no idea what a handy word this can be. At its heart, Cheers says, “I acknowledge your existence.” At first I tried to emulate the British, but then I just started saying it for a great deal of things: thank you; you’re welcome; yes, I would like some tea; I would be happy to make you some tea; here you go; you just held the door for me; I just held the door for you; I love you; etc.

Did I ever tell you about the food? Strangers dining hall at in Westminster Palace offers a variety of delicacies, each more abysmal than the last. Lest anyone worry that Members of Parliament are glutting themselves on exotic morsels, let me just tell you that the entrees I tried physically made me sad. The fish and chips tasted like rejection; the jerk chicken was a metaphor for loneliness.

British food is universally regarded as terrible, but it seemed like the dining hall there was subsidized for taste as well as price. I generally stuck to simple items: a pre-packaged sandwich fittingly called, “Just Chicken,” a satsuma, a cup of tea. Surprisingly though, Strangers’ kitchen could produce delicious puddings. I frequently rounded out my sad, bland lunch with a slice of Victoria Sponge or Chocolate Lava cake.

My last night in Westminster, I finally did a Houses of Parliament pub crawl. A friend on my corridor brought me with him to the Lord’s pub and also the infamous Sports and Social Club.[3] Sports was uncomfortably crammed with old politicians and young staffers. Shouting my order to the bartender, he asked me what part of the States I was from. He then told me: “I had a flatmate from Oregon… he hated it there.” I told him that his flatmate sounded like a pinhead.


[1] As I mentioned in my Lords post, Peers don’t get staff. However, our sponsor is so used to having an assistant from his years in the Commons that he co-opts the services of his former staffer, who helps him out of the goodness of her heart even though she has a new MP boss. She is a really lovely person and when I saw her at Sports on my last evening, she told me that I should contact her if I ever want to come back and work for an MP full-time.
[2] Yes, I made human friends too.
[3] It's infamous because MP-on-MP fighting has sometimes broken out here. Recently the PM allegedly did some red-faced, finger-pointing at one of the rogue, anti-Lords Reform Torys in Sports and it got brought up during PMQs (Prime Minister's Questions time). 

12 July 2012

Barcelona Blues

I want to tell you about my trip to Barcelona, but my head is so full of this being my last week at Westminster that I am feeling very disconnected from anything else. So this isn't my usual thoughtful analysis but more like a series of word snapshots. I'd love to hear from my dear readers about any last insights on Parliament that they would like to know? Today is my last day in the palace.

Last weekend I took a short vacation from my working vacation. I went to Barcelona to meet some friends who were traveling through Europe. I'm sure Barcelona has many delightful tourist attractions (and I saw a few), but my primary goal was to get to some sand and sun and sea. I wanted to wear the bikini that I had brought and was mocking me every time I grabbed my umbrella. 

This was my first time in Spain. When I landed at El Prat, the passport control guy saw where I was born and then serenaded me with the song "Californication." I knew I would like the place immediately. 

Barcelona is an bewitching city. There is a ridiculous amount of public art there. All of it massive and weirdly beautiful. You can really tell that this is an artist's hub. The streets in the neighborhood we stayed in were narrow and ornate. There are hidden plazas and squares filled with white cafe umbrellas and tables. Everyone seems relaxed and happy and there are thousands of bikes. 

I had pretty much the same tapas for every meal: Patatas Bravas, fried peppers, Catalan bread (with oil and tomato and oregano), calamari, and some other type of fish (cerviche, prawns, mussels, mackerel). I also tried Paella and Fideua, and gazpacho, and drank a good deal of Sangria. So it was a culinary adventure as well as a sun-seeking one. In retrospect though, I didn't have enough gelato. 

Probably the best part of my trip was having lunch with an old high school friend who has been going to school in Barcelona and meeting his wife, who is just adorable. 

On the plane ride back from Gatwick, I head a woman tell her friend: "Now I've got the Barcelona Blues." And I knew just what she meant. 

09 July 2012

Of Lords and Ladies

At the heart of a representative democracy is the prerogative to "vote the bastards out" when they don't act in a representative manner, right? For Americans, with no history of a monarchy, the word "democracy" carries an almost royal privilege. Yet here in the United Kingdom--an indisputably democratic nation--the House of Lords remains.

As a distant observer of British politics prior to coming here, I thought that the House of Lords was a generally terrible idea. Just calling someone a Lord or a Baroness seemed antediluvian and gross, much less giving those lofty people political influence. From what I had heard though, it was a largely neutered institution that had little real power--much like the royal assent (i.e. the Queen's ability to veto a bill. The last monarch to invoke her right to refuse royal assent was Queen Anne, on a bill allowing the Scottish to raise their own militia, and that was in 1708). But then why--I may have wondered idly to myself while watching an episode of Yes, Minister--did the British keep this silly, old House around at all?

I have no interest in advocating for or against Lords Reform, or the bill in its current draft, but simply find the whole discussion fascinating. I’ve also been quite surprised at just how interesting the House of Lords is in actual practice. Over time, the Lords has evolved into a body of experts (primarily); people at the top of their fields who are given titles. They spend months pouring over legislation with much more time and interest in the details than members of the Commons, who have constituencies to worry about, can do. It's true that they are generally unable to block legislation that the Government wants, but the Lords' recommendations and changes are publicly recorded. They can also delay bills for a great deal of time that they feel are particularly bad. More often then not, they provide a mild and thoughtful check in the parliamentary system where the Government operates under a mandate (coming from the idea that by being in the majority, the voters have agreed to their campaign manifesto as a whole), that basically allows them to push through anything they want until the next election.

Even while I've been working for a Member of the Commons this summer, I have discovered a great deal of respect for the work that the Lords does by being a different kind of body with motivations that are divorced from campaign promises, ipso facto, less political squabbling. Many of them are even "cross-benchers," meaning that they do not belong to any political party. Peers are not politicians in the sense that they have constituents or are seeking reelection, and with 775 of them, there is very little publicity to go around. They include Nobel prize winners and Oscar winners. Most do not receive a salary (although many receive a per diem and traveling expenses) and they do not have staff.

Yesterday afternoon there was a debate going on in the Commons gallery over the Deputy Prime Minister's Lord's Reform bill. The Deputy PM is the leader of the Liberal Democrats (who are in a coalition with the Conservative party--an odd political bedfellow but one which allowed both parties to find power as neither had an outright majority over the Labour party after the 2010 elections) and Lords Reform is his pet project. The greatest change in this particular bill is to turn the Lords into an elected body, in which most of them would be required to run for a single non-renewable 15-year term. Although they would be elected (and therefore could be anyone, and not just professionals and experts), the bill creates a less flexible system of per diem compensation (As the MP I work for says, "When you pay peanuts, you get monkeys"), and it will greatly reduce the number of Peers over time. This is reform in the true sense of the word--the House of Lords would change dramatically, while allowing them very little additional power over policymaking in return.

Debate over how to reform the Lords has been going on since the 1911 Parliament Act, and all the major parties agree that some reform is overdue--the rub is how to do it. How to keep the best bits: the expertise, the soft power, the time to deliberate, etc., while making it more representative of the whole country and kicking out the hereditary peers? Sadly, by putting all the reform measures into one bill, instead of breaking it up into separate issues, the possibility of consensus is slim.

This may prove to be one of the most interesting bills of the 2012/13 session, since it is primarily supported by the Liberal Democrats. And while the Conservatives are their partners in Government, it's clear that they are not unanimously in support; just today, 70 Torys released a letter in opposition. Labour is also divided for various reasons, although their leadership may be able to rally a position based on embarrassing the Coalition by killing one of their bills.

Naturally most of the Peers are not thrilled with this bill, but as I mentioned they have little power to do much about it. This reminds me of the time when, (mostly) as an end-of-session joke, the Oregon House of Representatives drafted a bill to abolish the Oregon Senate. Of course, the Senate would likely never choose to abolish itself, but such is the question of reform in most democratic institutions, I suppose. The only institutions that can be reformed, are those that don't do much harm anyways.

Here is a link to the Parliamentary Library's brief on the House of Lord's Reform bill, if you have additional interest in this subject: http://www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/RP12-37

Also, feel free to bring this up with me when we see each other next--I have so many more thoughts to share. This is history in the making!

03 July 2012

Shrew Love

The bus I took from Piccadilly Circus to Waterloo was mired in traffic on Sunday from the combined flag-cape wearing forces of Canada day revelers and the supporters of both teams for the Euros 2012 final. I didn’t mind because I like the views from a double-decker and I was intently reading “Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women” by Susan Faludi. Although written in the late 1980s, this book is still a timely and important read for women at all stages of life. It's refreshing to learn how flawed and biased the popular “studies” of women in the workplace, so-called trends of female fertility, and the myths of not getting married later in life really were when they were published. 

Feminism is always a controversial issue, but it’s been front and center lately. From the Republican primary contest’s “war on women” to Anne-Marie Slaughter’s article in the Atlantic last month[1] to discussions of Nora Ephron’s legacy. Personally, I have been taking it all in and collecting my thoughts.

Last night I went to a performance at the iconic Globe Theater of Shakespeare's “The Taming of the Shrew.” A modern story couldn’t have fit in with my current reflections better. The tale is so funny and endearing and bold and the actors were pitch-perfect, so that by the time that we get to Kate’s big monologue to the other wives about the Husband being Lord and Master, I was as enraptured as I was insulted:

I am ashamed that women are so simple
To offer war where they should kneel for peace,
Or seek for rule, supremacy, and sway,
Whey they are bound to serve, love, and obey.

I was talking to MP last week about being (or in my case, striving to be) a woman in a position of authority. As you can imagine, she has plenty of wisdom to impart on that front. I’m not a very assertive person—although I've been practicing—but any progress I make is often hampered by the fear of being called a “bitch” (the modern equivalent of “shrew”). MP shook her head at my sad admission; that clearly isn’t something that she’s ever really worried about. If I want to be successful in my career, I can’t let “bitch” hold me back. I have to, have to, not care—because when we do, we're giving the term a power it doesn’t deserve.

MP has a very unique style. She charges into meetings and gives a fearsome roar, bashing heads and banging on tables (sometimes literally). Once the others are suitably cowed, she liberally hands out mercy and they line up to beg for her smiles. By the end of the meeting they are planning to name their firstborn after her. It’s been a revolutionary model for me, totally turning my nice theories of female soft power on its head. But I couldn’t emulate it, I don't have the voice to roar. I have to find my own style of power.



1. Coincidentally, I attended a presentation on the Obama Administration’s theory of diplomacy led by Ms. Slaughter last month, before the article had come out. Even if it had, I doubt that it would have come up in this meeting at Parliament, focused as it was on international issues and “Twitter diplomacy.”

01 July 2012

Going Native


View of the south bank from the London Eye

There was a definite moment in Manhattan last year when I realized that I was no longer the wide-eyed observer of the ever-varied scene; I’d become just another numb commuter. I’d rather listen to the music on my headphones than eavesdrop on my fellow straphangers. It was a rueful realization—because it meant that the magic of being in a new place had faded. I think I reached that moment here in London last week. Parliament still holds wonderment (because I remain a huge geek of political institutions, and there is always something new going on)—but as I elbow past hordes of British and international tourists who cannot decide if they should walk on the right or the left, I am fixated on my destination. The twice daily journey weaved through endless street performers and costumed adults is merely a necessary evil.

It’s not London’s fault, really. It’s a marvelous city through and through. I’ve been here for over eight weeks though and I can’t be awed indefinitely. I’m sure that when I leave in two weeks (for Wales, then Ireland, then NYC) that I will get misty-eyed and nostalgic, but that is still a fortnight away.

While it is a charming city (as massive cities go), London’s best quality is that it is a hub for the rest of the country. I have not skimped on my adventures afield. I have seen everything that I would regret very much not to have seen, gone to places that I hitherto was unaware of, and would still see much more of this country if I had the time and resources. I want to bring this notion back to New York with me--I can easily travel around the East Coast from NYC and I really should and not let school swallow me up too much. 

The Eye
My Dad sponsored a little luxury this week that I must share. The London Eye is a giant Ferris wheel that was built for the Millennium and offers a bird’s eye view of the city. One of my dear readers (it could have been you!), T, passed through the UK this weekend on her summer Europe tour and so we did the Champagne Experience on the Eye. It was out of my price range (hence the paternal sponsorship), but if you ever go, go with the Champagne experience. For a bit more than the regular tickets, you can pick your time to embark (and therefore bypassing the endless queue of school groups), you are less crowded since fewer people are stuffed into your “bubble,” and of course, there is the glass of champagne. It was romantic enough to make me concerned that there would be a proposal among our fellow passengers, but happily they refrained. 

T and I also made it to Lewes and Brighton on Friday. Lewes was chosen solely on the basis that T desperately needed to see a castle and it was on the way to Brighton (which had been on my short list to visit).

Lewes Castle
Lewes turned out to be simply adorable. T reminded me with her enthusiasm how nice it is to get out to the rural English towns. Beyond it's quaint exterior, Lewes has an interesting history. The castle had been an unsuccessful stronghold for Henry III during the battle of Lewes, and the town boasts at least two famous residents: Thomas Paine and Anne of Cleves (Henry VIII’s fourth wife). The castle itself was small but right in the middle of town. Not that that mattered for Tee and I, as we, in our enjoyment of strolling and taking beaucoup pictures, walked a mile beyond Lewes castle because we mistook the distant turrets of the local prison for the barbican.

I had heard good things about Brighton, but in the short time that we had there, and the persistent wind that nearly blew poor T over on several occasions, it wasn’t as enjoyable as Lewes. The beach was busy despite the nippy wind and the people watching was tip top—especially on the creepy carnival pier. We had some fish and chips and beer for lunch and then stared solemnly out onto the English Channel, undoubtedly thinking deep thoughts, as one is supposed to do on chilly seashores.

Brighton
Another plus of having T in town was ushering her through Westminster. I warned her that the tour would be distinctly Deborah’s version and that there would be a great deal of personal anecdotes, supposition, and repeated stories that may or may not be true. Also, since I usually notice the art first, it was heavy on my opinions of certain portraits and frescos. Giving an ad hoc tour was a fun way for me to think about what I’ve actually learned about the place—and what I still need to take in before I leave.

25 June 2012

We’re Being Watched



CCTV outside St. Paul's Cathedral
Bridges Crossed: 9/12 (Lambeth, Westminster, Hungerford, Waterloo, Blackfriars, Millennium, Southwark, London, Tower)
Train Stations: 7/10 (Charing Cross, Victoria, Liverpool Street, Waterloo, Paddington, Euston, King’s Cross) 

I made a big dent in my Bridges and Stations checklists this week. Chalk that up to plain old health and determination. I have my health back! I am thrilled to be able to swallow pain-free and to have a body that doesn’t ache. It’s the little things in life that keep me going each day. I joke, but truly, there are few things worse than illness. It’s like a reminder that your own body can turn on you at any moment. I finally made it the National Gallery on Friday and I saw several classic paintings of St. Jerome meditating on mortality by hitting himself with stones and staring at a skull, but I feel like an acute sore throat would have been equally effective.

As I wander through London, usually going in the right general direction but never by the most efficient route, I’m being watched. I read once that the British are the most videotaped people in the world, and just a day in this country will make you believe it. Not only is CCTV everywhere, it is embraced by public and private properties alike. I get the feeling that everyone read 1984 and instead of being appalled by rampant totalitarianism, they thought, “Hey, you know what? That’s a great idea!”


I’m curious if this excessive taping actually results in lower incidences of crime. Possibly property crimes are reduced, which would explain the use of cameras outside entrances and alleyways, but there are also many cameras that just peer into the street. Is anyone monitoring them? There seem to be extensive disclosure laws about CCTV that require it to be announced on trains or posted on walls that taping is occurring, which just makes it all the more ubiquitous.

What is a henge exactly? No one alive know for sure.
On Saturday I went to Stonehenge and Bath. The henge was better than I had been led to expect—you can actually walk quite close to the stones and there is a kind of eerie and mystical sense about the Salisbury plain that wasn’t fully diminished by the herds of tourists taking pictures of the stones from every possible angle. I was one of the click happy masses, and it wasn’t until hours later, as I went through my photos that I realized that I had taken over 50 pictures of rocks.

I went with a tour bus (which I normally would shun), but as it came to the attention of my fellow interns that we all planning on Bath for the same day, I agreed to also buy a ticket for their tour. Organized tours can be nice on occasion; I went on several very fun ones in Thailand with my mom and step-dad, for example. But this one reminded me why I tend to avoid such things. Other than the fact that without the bus, stopping off at Stonehenge would have been difficult, I was completely under-whelmed by the experience. No breaks, no snacks, not enough pamphlets so sharing was militantly enforced, and a tour guide who clearly hated her job and all of us tour attendees passionately. In my experience, buses in non-English speaking countries almost always include snacks. How inhospitable of us!

Moreover, and this was the real crime of the day, we were only afforded a piddling hour and fifteen minutes to “explore” Bath on our own and this was also the first available time to get lunch. So all I really learned about Bath was that one may procure a tolerable baguette sandwich from one of the many street cafés.

The light stones of the characteristic Georgian architecture in Bath reminded me of a northern Italian town. I would like very much to come back to Bath one day with someone that I love and spend several days there. It is not a town for an hour’s viewing.


The Roman Baths. These were silted over when Jane Austen lived here. Her heroines bathed in the King's bath nearby.

24 June 2012

Celebrity Celerity

This week the parade of important visitors at Westminster seemed especially high. On Wednesday I was one of the last bodies to cram into a speaking event with the Dalai Lama. He warmly talked about happiness and tolerance and fruit; fruit seemed to be a consistent metaphor. His accented English was not helped by the fact that I was wedged into a corner near the door, which saw many people trying but failing to enter and exit without commotion. A cell phone rang and I was delighted to see one of the Buddhist monks from the Tibetan delegation answer it embarrassingly. Who calls monks? Other monks? I wish I had a monk to call. 

Leaving with MP from the event (her seat had been much better than mine of course), we went down a lift that I didn’t know existed and popped out into a hall that I’d never been to and there was His Holiness!!! He had been ushered out before the herds of MPs could beg for pictures earlier, so at this opportunity MP and I sprang into action. She rushed forward hand out and I started flashing my camera like a practiced paparazzo. His Holiness was perfectly gracious at our obnoxious behavior, as was Speaker Bercow who had been escorting him and ended up in my picture too. Elated as I trooped back to my office I felt that if I did nothing else for MP, at least I got her that picture! It felt like a real feat. 


Later that day at one of several cancer receptions I tagged along to, I met one of the other interns and his MP. His MP insisted on getting a picture with a buxom, heavily made-up girl, and given what I'd heard about this guy, I assumed that he just liked to take pictures with pretty girls. Later I found out that the girl is a British celebrity from a “reality” show here: The Only Way is Essex—which is one of those embarrassing TV circuses about shallow, rich people with more latex than brains. It’s nice to know that America doesn’t hold a monopoly on trash television. One of the cancer lobbyists, who cornered me uncomfortably for most of the reception, told me that this particular celebrity had 1.2 million followers on Twitter. He mentioned that when they can get her to tweet about (whichever type they were promoting awareness for) cancer, it has a good reach.


Also, dear readers, you might have seen that Aung San Suu Kyi spoke to both chambers of Parliament on Thursday. I  wasn’t able to make it in to Westminster Hall to see her, but I did glimpse her enter the building as I was passing through to Portcullis House and then I watched her speech on the internal television feed in my office. She is a truly inspiring woman. I dearly hope that she has more than 1.2 million Twitter followers.


She spoke about the need for Britain and other established democracies to help Burma as they attempt to become more democratic. She also said that the Burmese assembly is too formal for her liking—she would rather there was more spirit and heckling like the British Parliament. At this the cameras panned to David Cameron and Ed Miliband who were sitting in the front row together.

19 June 2012

All Creatures Sick and Well

Thirsk and Sowerby

James Herriot's books about being a veterinarian in the Yorkshire Dales were well-loved in my family as I was growing up. They directly contributed to a determination of being a vet someday for several years of my young life, and while that dream eventually faded into other pursuits, the stories have stayed with me. His books are as comforting to me as old friends, so naturally I felt that a trip up north to see the Dales couldn't be missed.


My Friday train tickets to Thirsk and York had been purchased in advance, so when my slight sore throat began to turn into a rather painful one on Thursday afternoon, I went into home doctor mode. I tried gargling with salt water, thick applications of Vick's vapor rub, cups of hot water with honey and lemon, plenty of fluids and bed rest--it all went into action. But it was too little, too late. At 6am Friday morning I purchased aspirin and lozenges and hauled myself to King's Cross station--feeling like this was all a very bad idea indeed.

Undoubtably one of the grandchildren of a patient of Herriot's
The station in Thirsk is over a mile from the town centre. When I am at full strength, that would be no distance at all, even in the light rain. However, sick Deborah moves slower and complains a lot more--even with no one around to hear her. I had drawn myself a map of the route thankfully, so I found the James Herriot museum with only a slight detour into Sowerby (which turned out to be a charming neighboring town). 

The dispensary
Thirsk is the town where Alf Wight (James Herriot) came to work in the veterinary practice of Donald Sinclair (Siegfried Farnon in the books), although he called it Darrowby. I really enjoyed the museum and the helpful staff there. They said they appreciated that my own extensive JH knowledge came from his books rather than the TV show which was quite popular over here.


Intense concentration was needed for this calving; I think it might be a breech presentation.

York

From Thirsk, I journeyed south to York (or Old York, as I like to call it, now that I live in the New York). I was told that I would like York because, "it's one of those old English cities that Americans love." And of course I did love it. Every building is perfectly ancient and have plaques announcing this or that event that happened in the 1st or 14th centuries by Richard the III or Emperor Constantine. I wandered through the lovely museum gardens and the ruins of St. Mary's Abbey and decided that what my poor throat really needed was some ice cream. 

Yorkminster

In my sickly state I decided that it was necessary to climb the tower of Yorkminster. Five quid and three hundred dizzyingly circular steps later, I was spent. The view was well worth it however, and I rewarded myself afterward with Yorkshire cream tea at Betty's tea house. Charmingly, York still has city walls that can be walked on--although they lost some of their magic for me when I realized that I would have to walk a half mile past the train station to get down from them. 

While I was wandering around York I learned from a pub sign that the England-Sweden game would be going on while I was en route to Liverpool and that my friend, who had offered to meet me, would be missing part of the game. He knew that of course, but had been too courteous to say anything. English boys are much more polite than their American counterparts it seems. As it was, the football match was tied 2-2 when he picked me up, and England scored (leading to their win) just as we were entering a pub and ordering Guinness (another remedy for my throat?)! 

very attractive English and Swedish fans prepare to cheer for their teams in the Euros

14 June 2012

Three Hundred Cups of Tea


There is a wonderful portrait of Edmund Burke staring disapprovingly down at the receptions held in the Member’s Dining Room. Yesterday afternoon I met MP there for a lobbying reception for guide dogs. In addition to the usual speeches and backslapping, the organization showed a video about attacks on guide dogs by other dogs that made tears drip into my teacup. 

Organizations here, quite cleverly, draft press releases ahead of time and then provide a photo opportunity and a cameraman for the members. MPs queued up to kneel down with Norman the guide dog and some bigwig at a kennel association for a picture to go with the press release. Another reception I went to had a nationally famous TV doctor and a banner about whichever disease was being touted for awareness to pose with.

I went to an interesting meeting this week on the American Presidential election, which featured two prominent pollsters from either side of the aisle. They both emphasized that the election will largely come down to a highly coveted and hard to pin down demographic: white, married women who often make voting decisions based on what they hear from their friends and family rather than taking their cues from the media. Of course their friends and family are likely taking their cues from the media, so it’s really a matter of filtering; what breaks through is important. I love this kind of analysis and it was fun to have Americans sharing with a British audience and being probably a bit more candid than they would be normally in the States. I also really appreciated the looks of intense concentration and confusion on the Americans’ faces as they tried to understand the variety of accents in the audience questions.

At the inevitable reception that followed (this one had tiger prawns, yum!), I chatted with the Republican pollster, a game show host type guy with a blindingly white smile and a pocket-handkerchief. We had a cordial discussion about whether the right-wing buzzword of elitism only reflected academics (his view) or if the term included and was perhaps even dominated by the very rich (my view). I googled him after the event and was delighted to see that he had been an advisor on the Michelle Bachmann campaign last year.

The halls of Westminster were quiet after Labour’s attempt yesterday to oust the Culture, Media and Sport Minister for his shady connections with News International and the grounds that he lied to the Parliament about a disappearing memo.  The Liberal Dems abstained from the vote for the most part, injuring their already fragile coalition with the Conservatives, but the vote still failed.


A Hard Day's Night


My new Liverpudlian friend came down to London last weekend. On Friday night we waited in line at what seemed like a perfectly ordinary restaurant at least a half an hour, before being surreptitiously ushered into a secret door disguised as a kitchen refrigerator. The secret passage led down to a dark, wood-paneled pub with wingback armchairs and very strong Old Fashioneds.

On Saturday we went to a street dance party with a bunch of his friends from college. The weather was perfect—hardly a cloud in the sky for once.  After 6+ hours of dancing during the day, we then went to the after-party, which was set up in an empty carpark. I just can’t dance as long as I used to, and I’ve never really enjoyed dancing to the stuff that the Europeans love, the drum and bass, trance/house/techno/whatever they are calling it now music. It’s fun for a while but then you realize that all the songs sound the same and that the two Red Bulls that you downed earlier have worn off. So I people-watched for the last hour. The whole scene brought back so many memories of being in Germany in high school. The English will hate me for calling them European, but when it comes to dance parties, it may as well have been 2002 on the Continent again.

A few of my friends will attest that I was concerned about what one wears to a street dance party turned indoor after-party with people that are in all likelihood younger than I am and indisputably cooler. So you can imagine my delight when one hipster girl, wearing a ruffled denim skirt and at least three differently flower-patterned accessories, told me that she liked my jacket.


Can you spot said jacket (with me in it!) in this video made of the event around the 30 sec mark? hint: it's orange.




13 June 2012

Photo Journal: Kent


Dover

Dover Castle


Creepy hologram monk
See? Actual white cliffs.

Deal

This small child photo-bombed my picture by cutely eating an ice cream cone.

Dad, I found you a new boat.

Best fish and chips in England

It's like Seaside....except with a pier, and less icky.

Sandwich 

The River Stour

Why yes, I thought this was quite necessary.

Fishing in the rain

11 June 2012

The White Cliffs of Dover

Bridges Crossed: 6/12 (Lambeth, Westminster, Hungerford, Waterloo, Blackfriars, and Millennium)
Train Stations: 5/10 (Liverpool Street, Waterloo, Paddington, Euston, King’s Cross) 

You may have heard that the Queen has been on her throne for 60 years. This is considered to be quite a big deal here. In her honor, nearly the whole country received Monday and Tuesday off of work to properly celebrate her. I stood for hours in the cold alongside the Thames with a million natives on Sunday, and eventually had the opportunity to climb up on the shoulders of a fellow intern to photograph the Queen standing on a barge. Or rather, a barge that the Queen was standing on, although no one could actually see her, small as she is. Strangers all around passed their cameras up to me, but I failed to take one with my own camera. 

Monday’s bank holiday was spent on Brick Lane where the vintage shopping is famous. I also saw the movie Prometheus in 3D and almost successfully hid my eyes during the scary parts.


Several weeks ago—when I was just arrived, someone mentioned to me with disdain how Americans always “want to go to Dover,” but they had no idea why. Having never once thought about Dover, I was naturally and immediately intrigued. Turns out it is a town on the English Channel, on the narrowest part, in the shadow of the famed white cliffs. It also has an almost as famous castle. Moreover, just a few stops farther on the train, is the charming seaside town of Deal, and beyond that, the medieval style town of Sandwich—famous for bread and meat combinations that have satiated travelers and schoolchildren for centuries. How could I resist these Kent delights?

Therefore, on Tuesday I bought an open return to Sandwich. Although train travel is hitting my budget hard, there are some handy features. If you return the same day that you go to a place, roundtrip will cost the same as a one-way and you can take almost any train on return. Also it is perfectly allowable to get off the train en route and get back on later on the same ticket. So by buying one ticket with open return to Sandwich, I was able to get off for 4 hours in Dover to see the cliffs and the castle, get back on and then off at Deal for 3 hours of fish and chips and a street jubilee party as well as a walk down the pier, and finally I could pop on the train for a short ride to Sandwich, stay for a few hours and then get back on the train to London that evening. It was a long day though and I was beat by the end of it.

Dover Castle is lovely and marvelously preserved. The entrance fee is steep (as was the walk up to it), but I was soon appeased by its sense of atmosphere. Someone dressed as Henry II bid me hello with a hearty: "God serve you, madam" as I walked over a drawbridge. Dover Castle has seen many battles with France, and was fixed up by King Henry II to distract his people from the fact that he had murdered Thomas Beckett, the popular Archbishop of Canterbury (Distraction! One of the best political devices--I don't think it worked too well in this case though.) Also, there are tunnels beneath the castle that were used as a hidden war hospital during WWII.

Deal was possibly my favorite stop of the day. The channel is a surprisingly aqua shade of blue and the fish and chips were the best I’ve had in England so far. Moreover I was able to witness a (in my mind) hilarious irony: How do the good people of Deal celebrate their Queen's jubilee? By wearing cowboy hats and a rollicking street party with a Johnny Cash cover band. Yes, a good ol’ Americana-style celebration of a monarch, who would’ve thought? Here is a short video I made of the party:





I almost didn't make it to Sandwich. It started to rain hard while I was on the platform to leave Deal and I had to give myself a stern little talk to keep onwards. Once in Sandwich, I was walking head down against the wind and rain on a deserted and charmingly medieval-style road when I was hailed. An older woman needed my assistance, since there was no one else around. She had vertigo and needed to cross the street but couldn’t bring herself to do it safely. I was happy to take her arm, and walking her across several streets, about 50 meters, to a wall along a straightaway, where she insisted that I leave her. "Buy yourself a lotto ticket, child. You've done your good deed for the day," she said. 

I ducked into The Crispin Inn, in business since the 16th century, and read P.G. Wodehouse by the window while the rain stampeded across the glass. Buoyed by cider, I ventured out to “see the sights.” While I was cold and wet, I couldn’t really be too dismayed. After all, the medieval Guildhall and the Barbican reminded me of the hard lives that they must have led back then. Compared to the days of plagues and feudalism, a few hours of chill followed by a warm train and eventually a warm meal would seem like paradise.

This summer here is a gift. A chance to discover what my true interests and preferences are, without the heavy insinuations of my career path. I must bring this sense of calm resolve home again.

How grossly I’ve been trying to stuff my nomadic soul into a small box for too long. It is a poor fit. I am not meant to push ruthlessly forward every day of my life until I die. I will go the longer route, by way of the sea and the cliffs and the stream. I will go by train, by boat, by foot—ever by foot! 

02 June 2012

She Came in Through the Bathroom Window

I just spent the week up north in the MP’s constituency, about 30 miles north of Liverpool.


I'd given myself plenty of time to make the train from Euston Station so I ended up people watching. It has occurred to me, as I travel through this much older country, that everything around us will someday in the future be considered charming and old-fashioned, maybe even quaint. All our technology and clothes and customs will someday be heavily researched for period dramas. I watched people going to their trains and tried to pull myself out of my time and take it all in like a time traveler. It’s easier to play in England because everyone does seem to be in a slightly different time.


MP has all four of her staffers working up in the constituency. She says herself that if it doesn’t affect the good people who voted for her, she doesn’t bloody care. And her focus on the needs of her constituents is even clearer to see up there. MP has a wonderful way of shifting from Good Cop to Bad Cop in each meeting that leaves everyone else off-balance. I tagged along for a meeting with a police superintendent, a hospital ward visit where there had been allegations of elderly care misconduct, and a primary school’s Jubilee party where they all mumbled along to  “God Save the Queen” and the Headteacher introduced me as: “Lauren, who came all the way from New York to see us!” (He was very apologetic later for getting my name wrong.)

The constituency office is terribly dilapidated—another example of the national sense that public servants should have the worst possible amenities. After accepting my second cup of tea the first day, I learned that the water was so bad it makes your teeth hurt. The ‘facilities’ are part of what was at one time an outhouse, but it has a makeshift 'roof' attaching it to the main building that is useless when it rains. Dressing the outside up with banners and Union Jacks in preparation for the Olympic Torch coming by, we decided to not put up one of the larger flags for fear that drilling the flag hook in would bring down chunks of the exterior wall. For all that, I was quite sad to leave. MP’s staffers were gracious and welcoming. It was spoiling to have nice people to talk to while working—as opposed to Westminster, where I’ll resort to prattling on to the guy who delivers the post.

Accents are a huge deal here, especially up in the north. At first, nearly everyone sounded the same to me, but I am slowly picking up on the more obvious differences. I heard a lot about Scouse accents, which is sort of an intense Liverpudlian accent that is considered sort of blue-collar and uneducated. I thought it sounded marvelous, but with my boring Northwest American/Californian dialect, I evidently don’t know any better.

MP asked a friend of hers to put me up and she couldn’t have picked a lovelier family. They gave me a gorgeous top floor room with an attached bath and a view of the neighborhood, fed me delicious food, consulted me on television preferences, and even picked me up late at the local train station after my one evening in Liverpool. My first evening there, a local city councillor[1] stopped by. She started out with: “Shake hands? C’mon dear, let’s have a bit of a cuddle!” gave me a big hug, and talked my ear off about the volunteer driving that she is doing for the Olympics. In general, I found that everyone up North was much friendlier than Londoners. To this observation, they said:  "If you do meet anyone in London who is friendly, they are probably just a Northerner who has moved!"

The Torch came through Friday morning. I've never been much of an Olympics spectator. It's hard to say why, but I guess it can all seem like overindulgent, patriotic nonsense at times. I know that it was originally meant to foster friendly competition between nations, but personally, I'll take the World Cup over the Games any day. Nonetheless, seeing the crowd line up for the Torchbearers, I got a little thrill. MP jostled with the Mayor against the crowd to get a good picture with the bearer waiting at the 'kiss point' for the incoming flame.[2]

I was a bit worried that I’d come all the way up north without actually getting to see Liverpool, but MP's scheduler (who is more my age) showed me around Thursday night. We took the train into Liverpool, saw the Royal Liver building, the port, the 'pool' that the city was built on, Mathew Street and the Cavern (where the Beatles got their start). Being shown the area by a local, I restrained myself from getting too fanatic. It was naturally thrilling, but I was more than okay with just seeing everything without taking an awkward photo with the statue of John Lennon.


1. Mary, the mom, had previously been a city councillor as well. I met a succession of local politicians while I was there; mostly Labour members. MP herself had been the Lord Mayor (a ceremonial post) before she was a Member of Parliament, so she knew frankly everyone for miles around.
2.
Actual athletes will carry the flame when it is closer to London and the start of the Games, but as the torch makes its way through the rest of the country local community members and do-gooders pass the torch off to each other.