Watching
one of the films my sister prefers to enjoying a football match, I
felt revulsion wash over me when three of the (female) actors took
out cigarettes and lit them up. I felt a similar wave when I looked
round the bar I was in last night and noticed a three-foot high
statue of a (jet)black waiter with a bowler hat on his head and a
tray of some sort on his outstretched hands. It's very hard to
conceive of this being acceptable in Anglo-Saxon societies. Here in
Spain it passes unnoticed. And I suspect any suggestion it should be
removed as being offensive would be received with a degree of consternation born of a
total lack of apprehension. Maybe in ten years' time.
Which
sort of reminds me . . . One of my neighbours was yesterday executing
a multiple-point turn in front of her house. With a mobile phone in
one hand and a cigarette in the other. Which sort of sums up a thing or
two.
The
thinnest of thin wedges I mentioned the other day has now been
thickened a tad. The president of the European Council has said:
“Today, the growth debate is taking centre stage all over Europe,
and rightly so.” He also suggested he
might call a meeting of European leaders before the end of June
specifically to discuss new growth initiatives. It'll be interesting
to see how the Germans respond, as they've shown little sign of
wanting to reduce the austerity punishment being meted out to the southern
European sinners. And perhaps to that erstwhile scourge of the latter
but now critic-turned-mendicant, Holland.
I
enjoy only one thing more than writing and that's talking. So I read
this article on texting and messaging with horror. But it does
explain one or two things about my younger daughter's generation that
have puzzled me about the way they communicate with each other. And
with me. We have says
one observer, confused connection
with conversation – "the illusion of companionship without the
demands of relationship".
This article also contains the wonderful line - Anyone with 3,000 friends has none. I do know of one such sad individual. He was most upset when I defriended him and challenged me about it. To no avail.
Finally
. . . I was sitting under the much-missed sun in Veggie Square with
my sister yesterday, when she suddenly asked where the smoke was
coming from. I couldn't see but, a minute or two later, I added that
there was certainly a smell of burning coming from somewhere.
Eventually we traced this to the El
País
I was reading. The sun's rays, passing through my glass of Albariño,
had set fire to the edge of page 15. Incredulous, we experimented
further along the edge of the page and produced another small fire in less than
three minutes. So let that be a lesson to you all. Don't let the sun get on your Albariño.
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