Friday, October 14, 2005

The Latest Episode in Our Sporadic and Spotty Series of Tales from the West Wales Trip of August 2005

So, we last saw our travelers renewed after pizza and a soft bed in Tenby. Here's what happened next:

We took a bus across Pembrokeshire, through the oil refinery country and out to the tip of Marloes. By the final leg of the multi-bus trip, we were on a mini-bus thing hurtling down single lane roads with enormous hedgerows hugging us on either side. It's like being in a tunnel with the top cut off, and its really exciting when a car or bus comes from the other direction! Both parties slam on their brakes and look to see who has the nearest turn out behind them to back into and let the other pass. Loads of fun and exhilaration for what is essentially a bus ride in the middle of nowhere without a view. The driver dropped us off on the side of the road by a sign that said West Hooks Farm. We wandered down the driveway past some jaunty gallivanting horses(that's a good sign!) to a farm house where we paid a bit and made the unplanned decision to stay there two nights. Here's a glimpse of why:

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Okay, you can't really tell in the picture, but the view was tremendous, and the field idyllic.

The pub was about a mile away, but we weren't about to walk down the hedgerow tunnel road and so took the coast path and cut across a field and avoided most of the road altogether. Here's the walk:

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Pretty nice, huh? Then we had a satisfying dinner of fresh seafood at the pub and wandered back along a cliff path, in the dark, after a couple of beers. Don't worry--we had flashlights and were very careful. (Really, mom, it wasn't that close to the edge.)


Next Installment You Won't Want to Miss: Sun sickness, nice pub lady and a walk around Dale.

And coming eventually: How we paid for a boat ride to see seagulls. And also Aberystwyth, maps, Machynlleth and how to pronounce it, The Centre for Alternative Technology, and, finally, Snowdonia.

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Love in the Big Pit

One comfort I've found in Cardiff when I'm lonely or worried and missing close friends is that the fellow who runs the nearest corner store calls me "Lovely." The volunteer ladies at the charity shops call me "Darling." Guys in their twenties, with no irony at all, say "S'alright, Love?" when I'm squeezing to get by them at the bus stop. Now, I am aware that it's reflexive for them, it means nothing, but on my worst days, it's enough to warm my bitter aching heart a little. On a good day, it just makes me smile all the more.
And today, best of all, an old ex-miner in an orange coverall, a hardhat and a big tool belt bade me farewell with a chipper, "G'Bye, my Love."

That was at the Big Pit. I had a good time, learned a few things, and made it through another day of the jockeying (against my inclination and better judgment) with new classmates and dozens of potential new friends and rivals. We took a bus to the Pit--an hour each way of sitting next to one person who has somewhat randomly ended up beside me and with whom I will likely share classes. On the way up, I easily slid into the seat followed by the Australian who I'd met the day before. We shared a pretty comfortable chat on the ride up.

I had forgotten the details of what it's like to enter a new scene. There's the subtle scan of the room, not wanting to seem like I'm sizing people up while I'm sizing them up. The non-committal smiles if one makes accidental eye contact. Then the mental analysis of the smile shared and the potential opening for conversation as the group breaks up, or perhaps at the next class meeting. And I've got to sit somewhere. I want it to be casual, random, without too much thought, but I'm too self-conscious, can't stop thinking about whether it will seem casual and random. All of this is complicated enough in a classroom full of people from which, at the end, one must choose whether to linger or head on out with an air of purpose and self-confidence. But on a full day trip made up of multiple shufflings of groupings formed and disbanded only by our own initiation, it's downright exhausting. For instance, I've taken the easy road in the morning, and sat next to my friendly Australian from yesterday on the hour-long trip up to the Pit. But then, when we get off the bus and form a queue (they love that word here, and the act of forming one, it would seem) at the entrance to the museum, I must decide whether to stick with him, which has its obvious pitfalls of never meeting anyone else, seeming to cling and causing him the worry of never meeting anyone else, and running out of conversational topics, OR somehow find a way to mosey on without making a big deal of it, and then face the necessary task of launching a chat with one of the many strangers roaming around me. Not the mention the possibility of everyone else clinging to their newly made bus acquaintances and being left the loser in musical chairs. I moseyed. and I suffered for it. I stood around bored for awhile, eavesdropping on other conversations. I was alone for most of the next three shuffles. The queue moved forward into different rooms and sat on two different sets of pews before being led into the mine in the default groups we'd ended up near. I was alone for most of this time, excepting a couple of short lived beginnings of connections cut short by line movements. At one point the faculty chaperone even came and talked to me--an almost definite sign that my isolation was obvious and that I may have seemed more emotionally affected by it than I was. Luckily, my accent was heard by the guy next to me and he turned to start the inevitable exchange of where froms, and I've not been there, but I have been to this other place and what course are you on and so on. He was a Briton who looks a fair bit like that guy on The Naked Chef. Until he spoke to me, he had remained angled slightly away with his back to me, doubtless because I was not as young and blond as the student on the other side of him. Nevertheless, we had an enjoyable few minutes and even moved together in the next shuffle and so ended up on the same mining crew.

I won't go on with the play-by-play, but just know that this went on all day, though I managed to hook up again with the Portuguese woman from yesterday and the Australian once again for awhile. I lunched with Portugal and new arrivals Turkey and Italy. And I'm proud to report that I chose to take the plunge and sit next to a complete stranger from India for the bus trip back to town and it went just fine. She's the only other married person I've met so far. Go us.

Oh, and I talked to one of the old miner guys about Welsh, as he's learning it now after having grown up in a time when it was nearly a dead language because they weren't allowed to speak it in school or at work. It was fun and he understood the couple of things I tried on him and answered them and I understood the answers and then we together tried to remember the word for "tomorrow." For no reason at all. It was the highlight of my day. For the record, he's not the one who called me his love. Though I would have been flattered if he had.
FROM LAST WEEK

My student life is now beginning in earnest here in Cardiff. Yesterday was enrollment, today a crash course in British Planning systems for us foreigners. I met a pleasant Portuguese International Development student and an Australian whose enthusiasm rivals my own. Tomorrow we're going on a class field trip to The Big Pit, which is likely to be only slightly more exciting than its name suggests. It's a defunct coal mine up in the foothills of the mountains to the north. We get to see a depressed, post-industrial mining town and put on hats with lights and go underground. When the professor asked who wanted to go, I and one other girl sort of timidly raised our hands, someone said, "You mean you just go there on a bus and go down in a hole and come back?" Prof said, "Yes, something like that." And the Canadian who'd been there before said it was interesting, but depressing and definitely don't go if you're claustrophobic. So Prof asked again for a show of hands and 14 people said they'd like to go. An inexplicable change of minds, if you ask me. Evidently, advertising works differently here. So anyway, yeah, I'm going down into a dark hole in the ground with my new classmates tomorrow. Fact is, I can't wait. For real.

When I got worried today about being a new student and wondered what kind of impression I'm making on my new fellow students and try to figure out what kind I want to make, and how to do it, here's what I thought that made it all better: I thought of all the people who'd be willing to call me friend, and realized I couldn't ask for better people. Then I figured if you all like me well enough, then those that matter here will too, as long as I'm true and diligent and open. So, um, thanks for being my friends and family and giving me courage even here so far away and without even being around for a pep talk.
SHEEPISHLY RETURNING

I'm writing into a void, I know, as I've not written for longer than I was writing and I'm sure everyone's given up on me. Strangely comforting, in a way, to think no one's reading--or waiting for me to produce something interesting. Part of the reason I stopped, I think, is that I don't feel able to communicate anything meaningful in this medium. Up to now, I've used the internet either as a form of entertainment or business communication or just for quick information bits. When I miss my friends and family, I call them up or we go out. Or I see them through the regular course of events. Now the internet is my only way to keep in touch with most of you. And I'm not doing very well with it. The funny thing is, I talk to you all the time. Walking home from the store, digging in my new garden, cooking up some eggs. I have little conversations with you. I write blog entries about things I've noticed that I think you'd find amusing. But come some free time when I could sit down and write, I'm exhausted or I have a headache, or I really should get that other thing done. Then there's the pressure of wanting to have an entertaining and insightful blog, one that you'd read not only to keep up and see how I'm doing, but because it's a great read.

Unfortunately, creative reading is not my main pursuit, and a blog requires frequent updating to be useful. I'll try to be better about just putting up what I'm thinking about, polished or not.