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Friday 7 August 2015
Holiday Heaven or Holiday Hell?
I have just returned from a holiday
in Spain. Am I calmer after the break, more relaxed, less wound like a coiled
spring? Probably not. For the truth is that the moment you are home, yes, literally
that moment, it becomes clear how much you have to do just to get back on track
with everyday life. All the lounging about and dipping into sun-dappled pools
is nothing more than a memory and even that seems distant.
Add to this the fact that there were
elements of pure fiasco during the holiday and I have to wonder if all the
frantic organising was even worth it.
It certainly started with an
adventure. I had pre-booked [and pre-paid] airport parking as that seemed like
a sensible thing to do. But as I approached Birmingham Airport it became clear
that Car Park 7 had no road signs leading to it, unlike numbers 1-6.
Not owning a sat. nav. anymore, [if
you want the ludicrous story of how that was lost, you will have to go back to
a blog post from about a year ago] I resorted to reading the directions I had
printed out. Let’s just say I drove around the same island five times, each
time taking a different exit, only to return defeated.
By this time my blood pressure was
up, the kids in the back were starting to ask when the plane took off and would
we be on it, and I was still none the wiser.
The time was fast approaching 5am
when we were due to check in for our flight, and everywhere seemed deserted.
There was no one around to even ask where I should have been heading.
In desperation, I pulled in to Car
Park 1 and pressed the button on the intercom for assistance. I explained that
I was lost and needed help to find Car Park 7. Unfortunately the disembodied
voice didn’t seem to know where that was either! There followed an interminably
long wait whilst he consulted a map and finally delivered the sage advice that
I should, “Go back to the roundabout and pick up the signs for number 7.”
Defeated, I had to reverse the car
out of the one-way system, invoking incredulous stares from the other motorists
and head back to the same island I had already been around five times!
Since most of them led to other car
parks, I chose the one route which didn’t and followed it for some time in the
hope that it would be right. Guess what? I still didn’t find the car park I
needed. I returned to the original roundabout. The time was 5:30am and I was in
a cold sweat.
This time I pulled into car Park 5
and up to the intercom barrier. I pressed the button and waited. “Look I’m
lost. I have paid for Car Park 7 but I can’t find it. I have been around and
around… and if you don’t help me I am going to miss my flight and …”
I was cut off by a bored voice. “Oh,
it’s you again. Didn’t you find it then?” Now don’t ask me why it never
occurred to me that it would be the same man from Car Park 1, but it didn’t.
Then to have him state the blatantly obvious was almost too much for me. I felt
steam coming out of my ears. Very slowly, one vertebrae at a time, I felt
myself turn towards the little camera that regarded me so intrusively. Behind
my eyes I saw an image of how I must appear to him and I sharpened my gaze.
Before I could say anything I heard
him clear his throat and say anxiously, “Wait there. I will get a supervisor to
direct you.”
Wait there? Where did he think I was
going to go? Round and round the roundabout on a pleasure jaunt, whirling
suitcases and children from the car window in wild abandonment, in the hope
that some of them would land close to the terminal and might actually make it
to the plane?
Finally a supervisor arrived. It took
only a short conversation for him to see that by now directions were going to
be lost on me. He opened up the barrier and let me park, for which I will be
eternally grateful.
By the time we got to the duty free
shops, all my previous cares had been forgotten. Almost. Gleefully, my ten year
old daughter and I sampled the perfumes and the make-up, drawing on our hands
thick lines of every colour available.
Now lots of cosmetics claim to be
waterproof… but few actually are. In the toilets, I lathered up my hands and
worked at the smears of green and blue and red, rubbing and scraping at my
skin. The make-up refused to dissolve and wash away but it did move, smearing itself over both hands, so that it looked like I
had been bare-knuckle boxing with Mike Tyson. Again and again I washed my
hands, each time more frantically than before, cursing under my breath so that
I must have looked more than a little like a modern-day Lady Macbeth. All that
was needed was for me to shriek, “Out, damned spot!” and I might even have got
an Oscar.
So as usual we ended up making a
frenzied dash for the plane, with me trying in vain to hide my monstrous
looking hands from everyone. I took solace in the family pack of chocolate
raisins I had bought for the journey, doling them out for myself and the
children.
It was a turbulent flight,
particularly noticeable when on one jolt, I dropped several of the sweets and
they clattered softly to the floor. Embarrassed, I tried to pick them up and
dispose of them – no mean feat when the seating space seems to have been
modelled on the dimensions of mankind from the 1950s, when men were trim and
women had waists, but I got most of them up.
It was only when I uncontorted myself
that I discovered the people across the aisle were watching me in fascination.
It seemed they thought I was so panicked about the turbulence that I had
adopted the safety ‘brace’ position.
Safely ensconced in my seat once
more, I hoped that I had finished providing them with free entertainment. But
I’m afraid the show was not yet over. It was only when I stood up to go to the
toilet that I realised not all of the chocolate treats had fallen to the floor.
Some had slipped onto my seat, becoming effectively squashed and melted under
me.
Do you have any idea what a few
squashed chocolate buttons and raisins look like when congealed to the seat of
your jeans? Mortified, I blazed a trail to the toilets, cheeks crimson and with
the sound of my children’s guffaws still ringing in my ears. I may never live
that memory down.
I had booked a hotel in Benidorm
because of the dates we needed to have and the price I was happy to pay, added
to the fact that I wanted a hotel which was close to the beach and which offered
nightly entertainment. Now at this point are you all shaking your heads? I
thought so.
And to be honest Benidorm was
everything people say it is. But it is also beautiful, with long sandy beaches
where the sea is both warm and crystal clear and fish swim unafraid around your
toes.
Cloistered within the walls of our
hotel by night, there was none of the anti-social behaviour that might have
been acted out on the streets and many clubs and bars of the town, but there
was still that flavoursome sense of excitement, that in the warm air, scented
with exotic flowers and coconut suntan lotion, anything might happen…
I even managed to convince myself
that I could look as enticing as Halle Berry famously coming out of the sea in
one of the James Bond movies, so I tried it. Hair slicked back by the tide,
bikini rucked up to cover my most wobbliest of bits, I emerged, white and short
limbed from the foamy waves.
The film score which was playing in
my head, stuttered and died as I caught my big toe on a rock concealed under
the water. Pain shot up my foot and I stumbled, feet flailing under the water,
trying to find purchase and finding only the rock. Again. I went down like a
lead balloon, hair straggling over my face and inhaling a great lungful of salt
water.
But this holiday also provided a
number of firsts for me. I had never taken the children abroad on my own before
and it was a bitter-sweet experience. I sat alone watching the nightly entertainment,
my teenage son off messaging his friends on Facebook and my daughter playing
with new friends, and although the shows were on the whole very good, I felt I
cut a rather pathetic figure, there on my own. This was highlighted during one
of the acts, when a comedian picked on me as being clearly alone in a swarm of
huge family groups and asked what my name was, where I was from and whether I
was married or not.
Reluctantly giving the answers, I was
dismayed to be asked more; how old was I and did I have children? Giving the
answers as I did, starkly and without embellishment, I almost felt like I was
on a game show dating site:- ‘And now here’s Carmen, all the way from the
Midlands, give her a cheer! Carmen is single, 48 and has three children!’
So when the Adele tribute singer came
on, perhaps you will forgive me for shedding a quiet, surreptitious tear at my
aloneness.
In general though, the entertainment
was really good and my thanks go out to JJ Jones who was the Neil Diamond
Tribute and to Andy, the Rod Stewart tribute, who were both photographed with my newest novel, Split Decision. [See earlier posts]
In particular I must mention the fact
that JJ Jones donates all proceeds from the sale of his CDs to a charity in
remembrance of his daughter.
But my most enduring memories of this
holiday? Well apart from the looks of purest joy on the faces of my children,
it would have to be sitting on the balcony with the strains of Spanish music
played on an acoustic guitar, filtering up from below. The music seemed to play
with the noise of the passing traffic like a cat with a mouse, sometimes
feigning passivity, at other times being assertive, taking control and bending
the other noise to its will.
Spain is the land of my grandfather,
the origin of my name and so perhaps it is a part of me in a way that I almost
can’t define. Looking at my children, I now think it may well be a part of them
too.
Labels:
Adele,
author,
band,
beach,
Benidorm,
book,
Capuano,
carmen,
coast,
holiday,
Neil Diamond,
pool,
reading,
rod steward,
sea,
spain
Wednesday 5 August 2015
Monday 3 August 2015
Coming up...
Look out for my blog about the Neil Diamond Tribute Act, as well as my interview with 'Tina Turner', coming soon.
I will also be posting a blog about my holiday adventures - hold onto your hats!
I will also be posting a blog about my holiday adventures - hold onto your hats!
Not Lost In Space
There is a growing
worry in British industry. There is a dire fear that we might not have enough
engineers and physicists coming up through the educational system to satisfy
the needs and demands of our technologically advancing society.
It is
certainly a fear of which Richard Noble, past holder of the land speed record
and Director of ThrustSSC, the company behind the vehicle which holds the
current speed record, is well aware. That’s why he is working with schools and
the education system to encourage interest in his forthcoming land speed record
attempt.
But two
youngsters from Bromsgrove have proved they are already ahead of the game.
Dylan and Oscar Rees, along with some help from their dad, Olly, a teacher, recently
launched a teddy bear successfully into space, capturing the whole thing on
film. Using items they sourced themselves along with their dad’s help, the boys
used a polystyrene box that had been used to deliver fish as insulation, along
with heat packs from a local discount store, GPS equipment from a mobile phone,
and a weather balloon, to fashion the craft which got as high as 80,000 feet,
twice the height the average aeroplane flies at.
The family
were granted permission from the Civil Aviation Authority and given several
launch dates which were dependant on weather conditions. It was particularly
important to the boys that they could retrieve the bear, ‘Uranus’, after his
voyage.
“We knew the
risks because it was going 80,000 feet,” said Dylan, 12. “We waited two days to
get it back and had a two hour drive.”
And it seems
that the successful experiment may have far-reaching consequences. Already it
has sparked much media interest, with national newspapers clamouring to get the
story and the YouTube video is receiving world-wide interest. The footage has
been shown in the boys’ schools and classmates have been enthusiastic about the
event.
So could a
new generation of physicists and engineers have been sparked by this project?
It certainly seems that way. Dylan was already very interested in science and
maths, having won the Ogden Trust Award for science in schools when he was 11,
but the project has given him further insight into what a career in the
sciences or engineering could offer and he hopes to eventually become a
physicist or astrophysicist. He said of
the event: “It has given me something that I can say, I have done this.”
Brother
Oscar, 9 agrees: “I think it will change my future a little bit. I wouldn’t
think we couldn’t do that because we are just ordinary people. We did it. When
I am older I will do it again. Maybe even in on a bigger scale.”
Dad Olly was
also fired with enthusiasm: “We might try a rocket car next.”
So watch out
Richard Noble - there might just be an up-and-coming challenge to your
supersonic car and its land speed record attempt!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNtHVlQTzGk
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