Teenage crushes…and being cold

In this image released by the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), Ethan Hawke, left, Sinead Cusack, center, and Paul Jesson are shown in a scene from "The Cherry Orchard," now playing in repertory with "The Winter's Tale" at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Harvey Theatre through March 8, 2009, in New York. From AP Photo by Joan Marcus.

In this image released by the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), Ethan Hawke, left, Sinead Cusack, center, and Paul Jesson are shown in a scene from “The Cherry Orchard,” now playing in repertory with “The Winter’s Tale” at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Harvey Theatre through March 8, 2009, in New York.

Last night Annie, Karen, John and I traveled out to the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) to see Russian playwright Anton Chekhov’s last play, The Cherry Orchard. For me the big drawcard was not the BAM theater itself (which is gorgeous), nor the fact that the play is directed by American Beauty director (and Kate Winslet’s husband) Sam Mendes, nor was it the chance to see the new actress-of-the-moment Rebecca Hall (Vicky Christina Barcelona and Nixon/Frost) on stage, but rather for the opportunity to see one of my old-time favorite actors in the flesh. Ethan Hawke first made his impression on me as a young girl in Dead Poets Society and then later as a teenage heart-throb in Reality Bites. He was just totally delicious back then and I really have to say that he still is. On top of that he truly is an exceptional actor – it was a great night out.

Walking home from the train station last night at 11pm,  I suddenly realized that I have had enough of being cold. My toes are permanently frosted and my knees are always cold and I’ve developed new muscles in my legs from having to walk with splayed toes to prevent from slipping on the puddles of ice everywhere and I can always see my breath. 

Being cold is no longer fun!

Not only is this the harshest we’ve experienced here yet, but it is also my personal longest one in the northern hemisphere - in 2008 I spent most of January in sunny Cape Town! The biggest problem is that I’ve turned into a bit of a hibernating hermit, choosing to stay indoors over most other activities for the past couple of months. So in an effort to change this, John and I signed up to go cross-country skiing tomorrow for a full day (nothing like spending a full day outside when you’re really sick of being cold, right?). I’ll take a camera and let you know how it went. 

If you’re somewhere warm, please turn your face towards the sun and inhale a warm breath for me. I’m still seeing mine.

This is how to complain!

I have not written many complaints in my life – the most recent letter to Singapore Airlines after a flight from hell between New York and Stockholm never even got an automated reply, so I have gathered that I am clearly not very good at complaining and getting results. That’s okay – we can’t all be great at everything, right?

This man, however, is a master at complaining. I found this article on the British Telegraph this morning and just had to share it with you – pretend you’re reading this in a British accent and it becomes even funnier! Oh, I am such a fan of a good belly laugh!

Dear Mr Branson

REF: Mumbai to Heathrow 7th December 2008

I love the Virgin brand, I really do which is why I continue to use it despite a series of unfortunate incidents over the last few years. This latest incident takes the biscuit.

Ironically, by the end of the flight I would have gladly paid over a thousand rupees for a single biscuit following the culinary journey of hell I was subjected to at the hands of your corporation.

Look at this Richard. Just look at it:

I imagine the same questions are racing through your brilliant mind as were racing through mine on that fateful day. What is this? Why have I been given it? What have I done to deserve this? And, which one is the starter, which one is the desert?

You don’t get to a position like yours Richard with anything less than a generous sprinkling of observational power so I KNOW you will have spotted the tomato next to the two yellow shafts of sponge on the left. Yes, it’s next to the sponge shaft without the green paste. That’s got to be the clue hasn’t it. No sane person would serve a desert with a tomato would they. Well answer me this Richard, what sort of animal would serve a desert with peas in:

I know it looks like a baaji but it’s in custard Richard, custard. It must be the pudding. Well you’ll be fascinated to hear that it wasn’t custard. It was a sour gel with a clear oil on top. It’s only redeeming feature was that it managed to be so alien to my palette that it took away the taste of the curry emanating from our miscellaneous central cuboid of beige matter. Perhaps the meal on the left might be the desert after all.

Anyway, this is all irrelevant at the moment. I was raised strictly but neatly by my parents and if they knew I had started desert before the main course, a sponge shaft would be the least of my worries. So lets peel back the tin-foil on the main dish and see what’s on offer.

I’ll try and explain how this felt. Imagine being a twelve year old boy Richard. Now imagine it’s Christmas morning and you’re sat their with your final present to open. It’s a big one, and you know what it is. It’s that Goodmans stereo you picked out the catalogue and wrote to Santa about.

Only you open the present and it’s not in there. It’s your hamster Richard. It’s your hamster in the box and it’s not breathing. That’s how I felt when I peeled back the foil and saw this:

Now I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking it’s more of that Baaji custard. I admit I thought the same too, but no. It’s mustard Richard. MUSTARD. More mustard than any man could consume in a month. On the left we have a piece of broccoli and some peppers in a brown glue-like oil and on the right the chef had prepared some mashed potato. The potato masher had obviously broken and so it was decided the next best thing would be to pass the potatoes through the digestive tract of a bird.

Once it was regurgitated it was clearly then blended and mixed with a bit of mustard. Everybody likes a bit of mustard Richard.

By now I was actually starting to feel a little hypoglycaemic. I needed a sugar hit. Luckily there was a small cookie provided. It had caught my eye earlier due to it’s baffling presentation: 

It appears to be in an evidence bag from the scene of a crime. A CRIME AGAINST BLOODY COOKING. Either that or some sort of back-street underground cookie, purchased off a gun-toting maniac high on his own supply of yeast. You certainly wouldn’t want to be caught carrying one of these through customs. Imagine biting into a piece of brass Richard. That would be softer on the teeth than the specimen above.

I was exhausted. All I wanted to do was relax but obviously I had to sit with that mess in front of me for half an hour. I swear the sponge shafts moved at one point.

Once cleared, I decided to relax with a bit of your world-famous onboard entertainment. I switched it on: 

I apologise for the quality of the photo, it’s just it was incredibly hard to capture Boris Johnson’s face through the flickering white lines running up and down the screen. Perhaps it would be better on another channel: 

Is that Ray Liotta? A question I found myself asking over and over again throughout the gruelling half-hour I attempted to watch the film like this. After that I switched off. I’d had enough. I was the hungriest I’d been in my adult life and I had a splitting headache from squinting at a crackling screen.

My only option was to simply stare at the seat in front and wait for either food, or sleep. Neither came for an incredibly long time. But when it did it surpassed my wildest expectations: 

 Yes! It’s another crime-scene cookie. Only this time you dunk it in the white stuff.

Richard…. What is that white stuff? It looked like it was going to be yoghurt. It finally dawned on me what it was after staring at it. It was a mixture between the Baaji custard and the Mustard sauce. It reminded me of my first week at university. I had overheard that you could make a drink by mixing vodka and refreshers. I lied to my new friends and told them I’d done it loads of times. When I attempted to make the drink in a big bowl it formed a cheese Richard, a cheese. That cheese looked a lot like your baaji-mustard.

So that was that Richard. I didn’t eat a bloody thing. My only question is: How can you live like this? I can’t imagine what dinner round your house is like, it must be like something out of a nature documentary.

As I said at the start I love your brand, I really do. It’s just a shame such a simple thing could bring it crashing to it’s knees and begging for sustenance.

Yours Sincererly…

Just a lazy Sunday

I admit. I’ve become really lazy. Weekends used to be filled to the brim with sight-seeing, brunches, shopping excursions and new things. Lately, however, I find myself favoring things of a slightly more…home-y variety. Sleeping in. Reading books. Thumbing magazines. Lounging around in sweatpants, with my hair tied in a messy ponytail right on top of my head (poor John…what a sight I must be!). Watching TV. Eating popcorn. But then, it’s been so cold that you can barely blame me, right? This past week we endured temperatures waaaaaay below 0°C. I’m talking -11°C with a wind chill that makes it feel as if it’s -18°C. For this Namibian chick that is way too cold to be outside. I’m thinking that right about now it should be about 32°C, the days should be long and balmy and I should be craving healthy salads (and perhaps a frozen margarita) as opposed to my latest penchant for all things baked, hot and sweet. (Yes, hot chocolate and buttery croissants rate top, unfortunately!)

I took this photo of John in Central Park, with the high rises of midtown Manhattan behind him.
I got John the ‘Planet Earth’ series for Christmas and we’ve been engrossed in the high definition beauty of this Blu-Ray production, spending all our time looking at the world from the warmth and comfort of our sofa…sadly! That said, we did have friends over for dinner on Friday night, I went to a pilates class on Saturday and we ventured out to have dinner with the fabulous Cobus last night, so we’ve not been a complete social waste of air space. Today we forced ourselves off the sofa and went for a long walk through Central Park where the entire reservoir is frozen and covered in the soft powdery snow that fell most of last night. 
A view of the reservoir – fresh snow on the ice.
Out and about were families with their kids on a variety of sleds, one guy on his cross-country skis and the die-hard joggers, puffing up big clouds of air-smoke as they made their way through the sludge and snow, kicking up dregs of muddy slush as they went. After about an hour outside though, we ventured back in. I curled up with a book and John cooked us some dinner before getting back in on his latest Internet ventures. And I realized that you don’t always have to do something to have a good time.
Sometimes just being is also enough.

Reporting for (study!) duty

When I finished my course in Public Relations in Cape Town I promised myself ‘Never Again’. I’ve never thought of myself as the academic type and have always thought that experience trumps education. I stand by these statements, but have come to realize (worldly wisdom, getting older?) that both experience and education can, and probably should, live together in harmony. And what better place to gain both than New York City, right?

After a little research, which included me with a highlighter and some red pen trying to figure it all out on my photocopied version of the NYU course guide, I signed up for a course in Management Practices at the NYU Leadership and Human Capital Management school. And I’m SO excited! Over the course of four years I have to complete 5 courses and I’ve signed up for the first two, starting this Spring. Over the next three months I’ll be studying ‘Leadership and Management’ as well as ‘Emotionally Intelligent Leadership’ while staying in my day job.
After registration I walked to the train stop in the freeeeeezing (it was -7°C at 1pm today) night and had a little wiggle in my step. I feel really positive and motivated about this course and pretty sure that it’s going to be fabulous.
Other courses that I’m taking this year includes a couples cooking lesson that John and I received from his brother and his wife for Christmas. John keeps trying to convince me that we should go to the ‘Superbowl’ class while I’m more into something a little…uhm, classier! I’m also working on the final stage of negotiating my way into getting John to take dancing lessons with me on Times Square.
This is my year of life-improvement and using the opportunities that exist in this magnificent city. Now if only it wasn’t so damn cold!

The sad life of a Christmas tree

The best way in Manhattan of telling that the Christmas season is near is not the constant blaring of one of the thousand versions of Jingle Bell Rock that assaults you in every store, nor is it the ‘Christmas Sales’ that are everywhere, nor is it the countless Christmas lights that are strung anywhere near an electricity outlet. The best way of telling that Christmas is near is the appearance of rugged tree fellers and their vast array of Fir Trees for sale on many street corners all over the city. Their temporary shelters each house up to 75 trees in various sizes and these rural woodchoppers look so out of place in the slick city environment with their wood-stained overalls and their Christmas hats stretched over unruly mops of hair. These guys pitch up with their precious cargo around mid November and then, after Christmas eve, vanish overnight, having saturated the insatiable appetites of the holiday-hungry masses.

In Africa the most general type of Christmas tree is a dried out branch of a Kameeldoringboom (Camel Thorn Tree), usually brightly decorated with beaded wire decorations and some tinfoil or ribbon. These branches are often picked up in the veld and dragged home, or alternatively, the little plastic tree gets dusted off every year, strung with some lights and then packed away again after the gifts have been opened. The use of a real tree really is just not a reality back home.

Not that I’m not open to this northern hemispherean tradition! The smell of a Christmas tree is magical and really blends well with the aroma of mulled apple cider and cinnamon buns. And you have to admit that there’s nothing quite like a beautifully made-up tree when all the gifts are piled underneath, ready to yield their mysterious joy to all the receivers. Christmas really is great.

The thing that I have against this tradition is the waste. Of course I know that you have to pack your tree away after the silly season is over, but the reality is that it has to die! So, a Christmas tree grows for about 5 years until it’s the right size, then it gets chopped off, carted off to the city, sold to some gleeful family, propped in a bucket of water for about two weeks and then it gets thrown out with the trash. How sad! All over Manhattan this week there are piles and piles of discarded Christmas trees, waiting to be dumped with all the other trash.





It seems sad how quickly our dreams become our garbage.