Monday 8 November 2010

Charity Christmas Cards

Over the last week or so Barcelona City Council has been busy climbing up large mechanical ladders, attaching Christmas lights. While Christmas doesn’t come as quickly and as incessantly here as it does in the U.K. there is no longer any denying that it is rapidly on its yearly way. At the cat sanctuary a few cats have started to sneeze, and there is a lot more huddling together going on. I thought I would like to try to raise some money to help cover additional winter vet bills.

Soooo...I have designed and made all the cards you can see below. The pictures have been made using Wordpaint and I have produced these images as photos which have been glued onto cards. Each picture can be purchased on either shiny white or matt green. They come with a matching envelope and are individually packaged (very professionally ;->) in little plastic covers. I have taken pictures of all of the finished cards but as they are shiny surfaces there is a bit of light blur and so I have also included the images below each card example so that you can have a clearer idea of how they will look.

Order directly from me and all proceeds will go to the cat sanctuary, El jardinet dels gats, (http://www.eljardinetdelsgats.org/en/).

Buy 1 card for €2 OR 5 cards for €7.

I am happy to post them to you for whatever the p+p comes to.

At least take the time to browse below and feel free to pass this on to any friends that might be interested:

1) Angels



2) Shepherd


3) Manager a+b





> As you can see this one comes in two different colours.


4) King





5) Bethlehem



6) Donkey




You can also place an order by emailing me at annasthought.hotmail.com.












Friday 29 October 2010

gorilla haiku




What do they dream of

Curled up together tightly?

Milky mistiness.

Thursday 28 October 2010

String



My possessions aren’t as safe as they used to be. Pants, computer wire, fingers, socks, lamp, belt, earrings, jumpers and bags are searched for (in that order) and viciously attacked by tiny little teeth and claws. While this might bring great fulfilment to the two resident kittens it can get a bit much at times. This morning I found a new white hair. Yesterday there was a close call: I walked into the lounge just in time to see the sleeve of my white cardigan disappearing under the sofa accompanied by the soft sound of jubilant grunts. A sharp mind is required to keep on top of the constant onslaught. Top tip: distraction techniques. The less sophisticated the better. So when we tied an old ragged string – the edge of a faded tea towel – to the back of the wooden chair we gained an unusually long respite. With concentrated determination the battle of the string began.

Wednesday 27 October 2010

Yayo



Noble old feline sitting tall

Sniffs disdainfully at a passing fly,

Set aside all alone

Quietly avoiding a brawl,

Angular lines, long whiskers imply

Sad times he has known.

Sunday 24 October 2010

A monstrous threat





The habitual peace and tranquillity of a garden refuge for abandoned cats is suddenly shattered by the piercing shriek of a small male child. Urgently pushing his greasy face up against the fence he tries to force his stubby, fat fingers through the mesh holes.

“Urghh. Urgg.” He grunts.

And then more urgently, “Eeeeerg. Urrrrrrrrrg.”

The three cats who had been dozing in the quarter hastily retreat behind the nearest tree.
Boy lets out a frustrated howl, letting his jaw drop down to his chest, revealing a fowl mouth of yellowing teeth.

“Muuuuuuuuuuum. Muuuuuuuuuuuuuum. I want a cat. I want that cat. Give it to me nooooooooooooow. I want it now.” He jabs one thumb in the direction of unsuspecting Vania, a gentle black giant who leaps away in horror.

Mum chips in “It’s ok darling. Don’t cry my precious.”

She calls out through the fence. “Hey! Yeah, you. You over there! You giving these cats out? I’ll take that one. That ugly black thing.”

Boy interrupts “Give it to me noooooooooow. Muuuuum. Tell them to give it me noooow.”

Vania turns his back on them and calmly stalks away to the far side of the garden. He sits proudly with his back turned, cleaning his face. Suddenly he pounces an unsuspecting fly. Then he returns to his washing routine.

Sunday 3 October 2010

The other side of town





Visiting the "really quite rich though not necessarily famous" involves a healthy hike: in order not to risk sinking as low as public transport the wannabes simply ordered the city council not to construct any metro or bus stops in the zone. Whilst they don't quite live as high up on the hill as the "really far too rich and quite probably famous", they are still high enough for the wind to feel ever so slightly cooler.

Here the convenience of high street chains has been abandoned in favour of obscure and surprisingly somewhat pokey boutiques. Displayed on glossy headless mannequins are street-long parades of almost-not faux fur coats with random tassels, definitely faux Eton jackets and miniscule lacy, baby-pink ballerina dresses. The impracticalities of such an existence are embraced by beady-eyed ladies who patrol the local park with ugly, overpriced designer dogs trained to sniff out any wandering, trespassing vagabonds. This probably explains the chorus of yaps as I walk past. A select number of people below the “standard stipend” are expected to be seen out of doors from time to time: the starched white uniform ought however to be worn and a brisk pace should be maintained in order to prevent instant excommunication to the immigrant barrios way down below. An occasional insurgent slips through the net: a toothless sinewy old man whizzes past the poodles, gleefully intoxicated by the speed of his rollerblades, his spiky red T-shirt billowing rebelliously; a not quite yummy mummy tosses a crisp packet into the gutter; a blazered teen with knee-high socks crouches behind a tree coughing a cigarette.

Thursday 30 September 2010

Kitten Haiku

















Autumnal fluff with
Interspersed blue and rose-pink
Warming my belly

Sunday 26 September 2010

Bench Behaviour


In Barcelona benches are not primarily designed for taking a five minute rest when out shopping or for sitting and eating an ice-cream with a friend.

Benches belong to the señoras.



Packs of them congregate on a daily basis at their chosen bench which they occupy together for hours at a time; gossiping, nodding wisely and watching the world go by.

Peaceful. Knowing. moulded into the woodwork.



You’ll know when you are sitting on their bench when you feel an icy stare on your back, followed by the slightly impatient tap of a walking stick or even a sharp throaty cough. It is inadvisable to take on the challenge ... if you do the hairs on the back of your neck will soon begin to tingle and your face will flush red until you feel like all your innermost secrets have been learnt by those steely ent-like eyes behind you, only in order to be hummed later from pack to pack, spread like sticky honey throughout the city.


Thursday 23 September 2010

The Sadness of George Sand




Gegants are extremely large papier maché figurines, intricately clothed and painted to represent legendary figures: kings, queens and mythical folkloric characters. The hollowed-out, wooden-framed body allows a large, presumably quite strong person to clamber underneath, lift the thing up and make it ponce down the street in flamboyant carnivalesque parades. Each city in Catalonia is represented by unique gegants: in Barcelona look out for Jaume I and Violant d’Hongria as well as the Gegants de Santa Maria de Mar:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2Zk7krmF_U

La Mercè, patron saint of Barcelona, according to legend, appeared to Jaume I one late September evening way back in 1218, proposing a saving-Christians-from-the-blood-thirsty-Saracens campaign. Much later, in 1687, the virgin Mercè delivered Barcelona out of the perils of a giant plague of locusts. In ongoing grateful celebration the city celebrates every September: fireworks, dances, music, correfoc and gegants ...among other things.

While Violant’s eastern European origins draw attention to the early cultural diversity of the nation and its celebrations, in the postmodern global era the cultural integration and indeed also non-integrations are ever more visible. In this year’s warm ups to Mercè, intercultural synthesism raised its head quite appropriately on the Rambla, where two new gigants were officially inaugurated under the watchful eyes of Jaume and Violant: Frédéric Chopin and George Sand.

As I stood watching, a happy tipsy little Pole excitedly taps me on the shoulder announcing that his friend personally supervised the creation of the monster figurines. “Catalans are practically Polish,” he added with a grin.

I turned back and found myself fixated on Sand’s face; she seemed to be lost in a tragic world of anguish. Whereas Chopin just looked formally dull. Perhaps she wasn’t enjoying her 1838 visit with Chopin to Barcelona (represented here), before going on to Mallorca. Her giant lips are too tense to be painted so red and they somehow clash with the deep blue bags that have been boldly streaked under her eyes. This doesn’t seem to be the face of the rebel writer, vivacious defier of the social and class norms of 19th Century France. Dressed in prim robes she seems far removed from the perils of male garments and aromatic cigarette smoke. Is it the sudden conformity of the gegant costume imposed upon her that brings sternness, a heart-rending solemnity to her demeanour? Is it a growing sexual apathy? Surely not regret for times gone by? Is she worrying about her children and their uncertain futures? Is that heavy fabric itching her papier maché skin? Or is it a foreboding of the hard conflictual times to come, with Chopin’s deteriorating health a reminder of her own iridescent but also ephemeral youth? She writes: “One changes from day to day, and...after a few years have passed one has completely altered.”

Monday 20 September 2010

Stag Touble






With the rise of budget airlines the infamous rite of passage, known amongst other things as The Stag Do, has seeped beyond the British border, oozing its way into a variety of European host cities. Some unsuspecting locals might well be shocked by the eager city complicity in this growing industry. Take Barcelona as an example:

Stag advertising for the city uses words like physical, sensual, exotic and hedonistic.
Enthralled by such riotous promises, one swarm of happy Stagites jostle for seats close together on the 18.36 Bristol-Barcelona Easyjet (delayed) flight. The delay is as good an excuse as any to competitively consume overpriced alcohol in the departure lounge. The rabble's volume control is stuck on maximum and somebody announced that the first person in the group to be caught not making any sound would be denied entrance into the strip club later. The noise drowns out the automated Spanish security instructions, and the one with Dudu emblazoned on his matching uniform shouts, “ we can't effing understand you. Nobody can effing understand what you're effing saying.”

Now it's the English language safety instructions turn and the air hostess called Laura edges away nervously into the whirlwind of bowler hats that are being tossed to and fro, hoping to reach the safety of the eye of the storm. No luck there... the chorus breaks out:

Laura, can't you give me some time?
I've got to give myself one more chance
To be the man that i know i am
To be the man that i know i am
... I'm gonna need your love...

Relentless.

Battling against the seeming inevitability of the situation, the staff stoically begin on the snack trolley tour of the cabin. A rather frail looking lady in one of the last rows whispers, “a beer please.” “I'm afraid we've sold out ma'am,” responds Laura's co-worker Julie with the pleading smile.

As the unspeakable pleasures of Barcelona get ever nearer, the hysteria continues to escalate. At one point Stag himself stumbles down the passage way towards the back end toilet. Pausing for a moment to regain his balance he grinned slyly at a young child, pointing proudly to a graphic biro-pen illustration protruding out of his cut-off jeans.

As the plane finally sailed down the runway it's hard to know who cheered louder: us or them.
Clambering onto the bus that is waiting to take us to the terminal building, I see the stag party not so nimbly pinching bottoms- whoever pinches the least must buy all the drinks that night.
I'm lucky to find a small safe corner which is populated by an astounded group of Catalans, talking over the phenomenon in a schizophrenic jumble of Spanish and Catalan:

“They don't appear to have any self-control or dignity”

“Yes, yes. I wonder if they are all okay in the head”

“I think it must be something to do with the problems that they have with English girls”

“Quite right. I hear English girls are very frigid”

“Do you think they realise how stupid they look all dressed the same?”

“Of course Catalan men are much more handsome”

“Perhaps that's one wearing a pink shirt is gay”

“Probably”

“He has a very large nose”

“His knees are bony”

“Why don't they wait till later to molest the ladies ... in the club”

“English men are repressed you know”

......

The next morning I woke to the sound of a thunderstorm, and as I looked out the window at the pouring rain I allowed myself a moment of smug satisfaction in knowing that at least the party’s wild plans to pass the day at “the million beach chiringuitos (curingeyetoes)” might literally be washed away.

Tuesday 7 September 2010

A Piggy Itch.


On Monday I went to Land’s End
Where I made an unusual friend:
“Scratch my back,” he requested,
“For I’m a little congested”
I oblige. He sighs: “I commend.”

Thursday 2 September 2010

Singing





Swinging and twisting our way under the city, the aircon. is off and the sticky stench is somewhat overpowering. With a sudden jerk we arrive at the next station, a small shriveled old man is flung hard back into his seat, setting his dentures flying out of his mouth, onto the lap of a smallish child sitting opposite. She shrieks. Piercing. Unfazed he reaches out a moley vein-ridden hand to make the retrieval, offering a gummy apologetic grin. As the train sets off again, clutching the teeth with his left hand, with his right he digs deep in his right trouser pocket and pulls out a grubby capacious handkerchief. Shaking it out with a quick, surprisingly strong flip of the wrist: a small initial – J – scarcely visible stitched into one corner. He clears his throat with a deep gargle, tilts his neck back with a sharp click and spews forward a ball of spittle onto the waiting rag. Squeak, squeak, squeak. Tilting back and forth in the carriage he rubs his chomping gear. Top, top, top. Bottom, bottom, bottom. Then with a grunt he reinserts. The girl has stopped screeching and stares now, with jaw hanging loosely open. He clears his throat again and staggering to his feet he bursts into loud, rusty song. Reaching the door as the train once more pulls to a stop he takes a moment to whisper to me: “you’ve got to make your way through life singing.” He winks.

Monday 12 July 2010

Wednesday 7 July 2010

Flutter by




Flitting


Flutter by butterfly

Splutter through

Pollen troughs

Carefree

Evanescent

Silk

Dust.

Friday 2 July 2010

Peregrine




Peregrine

Solitary creature on a lonely flight,
soaring above, in the hazy blue light.
From another world, serene and sublime,
come, rest your wings while you visit mine!


(poem byM.D.Hughes)

Wednesday 30 June 2010

Peace and harmony


Conclusion of the winter fish story...

See: annasthought.blogspot Monday 4th Jan. 2010 (A fishy little incident)

Tuesday 29 June 2010

Thursday 24 June 2010

Mirror

Beauty is being in harmony with what you are.

Tuesday 22 June 2010

Saturday 8 May 2010

Lavaropas: Scene 2

Scene 2

Enter Jordi wearing grubby white shorts, black vest top, hiking books with greying socks poking out. He is wheeling 4 bulging carrier bags on one of those wheel-lifts removal and delivery men often use. He fills machines 4 and 5 and perches down next to Quinn. Quinn continues to type rapidly but starts shifting unconfortably. He looks up angrily:

Quinn: You stink man!

Jordi: Sorry?

Quinn: Stiiiiiiiinky (waving his hand like a fan)

Jordi: Sorry?

Enter Elderly Señora wheeling a small shopping trolley with sheets and knickers semi-trailing on the ground. She is wearing a paisley-patterned housecoat and slippers, ankle tights protruding in dull orange. She pauses in the doorway, panting slightly and taking a moment to shift her teeth back into position. She surveys the room with beady eyes, nodding in approval and the whirring machines. With regulated gasps she fills machine 1 which is nearest to her, closes the machine door and sits down next to Jane.

Quinn shifts across to the far side of his seat, Jordi's mobile rings and he moves to the doorway and offstage to answer it...we hear him talking in muffled Catalan. Simultaneously Quinn's laptop announces a Skype call -he lets it ring out as he scuffels with his rucksack to find a headset.

Jordi: No. What? No, later...
Quinn: Hey man. How you doin?...
Jordi: yes, at the laundrette. ...
Quinn: So you heard?... yeah...
Jordi:Round the corner... he's not there anymore...
Quinn:Her cancer's kicked off again...
Jordi:Right next to the the snail restaurant...nono..
Jordi:.you know...next to the sex shop... What sort? ...
Quinn: No...In hospital since Wednesday...
Jordi:Which one?... Ill go there now...
Quinn:No way man, he's an effin piece of...
Jordi:later...where... I don't want to talk about last night ... no... (voice fading off)

Elderly Señora begins to look round anxiously, apparently wondering why her machine has not started the wash cycle. She shuffles over and bending down, peers inside, taps the glass mystified

Quinn:I don't give a ... what? No...
Quinn:Do I look like a retard to you? ..
Quinn:I can't do it man...

Elderly Señora bangs the top of the machine with suprising strength

Quinn:I'm effin crying now man...
Quinn: no way man...
Enter Consuela, the Elderly Señora's Bolivian carer:

Consuela: (panting slightly) There you are Mrs Fernandez, My dear lord god, I thank you, that I have found you. You scared me beyond my wits. What have I told you about not running away...

Lavaropas: Scene 1


Lavaropas


Scene 1


Set in a small laundrette on a small side street just off the infamous tourist-infested rambla. On the back wall there are 2 tiers of 3 dryers, and to the far right on the wall there is a seemingly complex payment machine, mapped out by uncertain diagrams and codes. There is something resembling a breakfast bar dividing the dryers from the washing machines and chairs – 4 washers left and 2 larger washers right. 2 sets of 3 chairs facing each other centre stage. Small bench next to door which is far right. The sound of a single washing maching moving into spincycle. Lights up on a solitary traveller (Quinn) in his late 20s, empty rucksack under his feet, unkempt beard and dark rings under his eyes- he is semi-hidden behind an apple mac laptop screen. Irritable fingers type anxiously. He doesn't even glance up as Jane arrives. She is also in her late twenties, white enough to be a tourist for sure. She heaves her full red ikea bag onto the floor next to machine 3 on the left hand side, shoves the dirty washing indiscicrimately inside and fumbles inside her handbag for her laundry card -cash might be simpler but using the card is 15% cheaper. She can't find it and in growing frustration she moves over to the bench by the door where she unhesittingly tips out the contents of her bag and triumphantly moves to the payment machine a the back with the card key. She prods away at various buttons, returns to machine 3, does some more prodding and finally the machine lights up -27 minutes to go – and the water begins to run. Jane signs, picks her book off the floor, where it fell in the bag-emptying venture – and after retrieving lip-balm and tishues from under the bench she settles on the chair opposite Quinn -who has continued to type frantically since she entered – and opens her book – an argentine play called Little Red Riding Hood.

Friday 19 March 2010

Boot

http://thumbs.imagekind.com/member/3dcbd126-280e-4890-b3b5-bb08ddf7451e/uploadedartwork/650X650/f1a20282-76b5-4479-9bef-1265319be156.jpg



Yate train station is less of a station and more of a request stop. When I arrive the train's not due for another 40 minutes but the bench is already occupied by Mr Cardiff Builder Boy and his Builder buddy who may or may not be from Cardiff (it's hard to tell as he only communicates in guttural grunts that may or may not have Welsh undertones). Grunt boy is definitely the underdog – from time to time Mr Cardiff stomps on the top of Grunt's right boot to 'test it out against bricks you know'. Protruding from his well stomped boots are a pair of molding blue football socks and tucked into these a retro shellsuit, navy with single white stripes running up the side seams. Then come Calvin Klein pants -at least half of them bulging out over the shell wasteline. A non-descript grey jacket and finally zigzag tram lines into a blond-died crew cut.

Then driveling Cardiff catches my eye, winks and stomps Grunt. 'Do your spitting thing', he commands. Grunt grunts, leans right back, tilting his neck, his eyes bulging and his throat gargling manically - then in a flash the phlegm shoots out like a bullet but I don't see it land. I've never seen anyone spit so far. Cardiff sums up my surprised gaze and cackling in delight at the obvious success of his party trick, he stomps Grunt's left boot for a change.

Only 15 minutes to go and the thin platform rapidly fills up. Old Mr. Bristol wearing a cap that seems on a level with my waist and puffing flavoured tobacco from a pipe almost as long as he is. Plain and Pregnant Miss Yate who slinks round the small control shed for a rolly fix, looking around with guilty challenging eyes. College skivers A, B and C competing for the skinniest jeans prize. Wanna-be Miss Marple, prim and beady with a tightly rolled umbrella held firmly in black-gloved hands. And Miss Beauty Prize Queen with fluttering inviting lashes. This last arrival finally silences Cardiff and puts an end to the stomping as his mouth falls open. Grunt grunts and then gruffly nudges Cardiff and laughs 'stop staring, she's not gonna have an ugly piece of shit like you' and he stomps Cardiff's right boot.

Tuesday 2 March 2010

Sat Nag

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2331/2358323948_d366ea450f.jpg?v=0



Don’t always trust your handy little electronic co-pilot!

It may seem like the world’s best invention since kitchen towels but let me take you briefly to the dark side.

Having often hankered after a magical, time-saving, stress-saving satellite navigation system of my own, one dropped right into my hands at the most unexpected of moments, lent in a moment of seemingly genuine generosity to cover a number of previously unchartered trips.

I should have been suspicious right from the start, for the machine clearly had a little black soul all of its very own and for trip number one it didn’t want to give an alternative route from A to B. ‘Trust me’, it whispered, ‘choose my route...which is the only route you want to go’. At this stage of the game I still had some of my own rationality remaining and I chose to go my own route – mostly because I had a pretty good idea of where I ought to end up (I had already spent some time studying the map and writing out each journey step in black marker pen and bluetacked it to the dashboard. I left the sat nav on just for fun...to see how long it would take to re-adjust to my route. The soothing sat voice seemed to get more and more irritated with my navigational deviance until halfway down the M5 it announced in disgust ‘no route recognized for your chosen destination’ before turning itself off.

Bad hair day I figured. Anyway – without giving it much of a second thought I set off on journey number 2 without actually consulting the map at all (unless a brief look at google map to check journey estimated time counts) and I submitted my will entirely to that of my co-pilot, being slowly seduced, mesmerised by the soft audio instructions that apparently favoured the unconventional pathways of the 21st Century UK road network.

Thus I was driven through a convoluting succession of tiny hamlets, most of which seemed to have some form of ‘bottom’ in their name, down muddy tracks and across wild crags and hilltops. For a moment I was in love with the machine – this was surely a much more spiritually enriching way to travel. An hour later I still hadn’t hit the expected motorway and really had no idea how far north I had travelled, and my hands became a little clammy. An hour after that my throat seemed painfully dry. Upon reaching hamlet number 439 I pulled over and searched for it on the map, I searched ever page of the UK and Chanel Isles but I was clearly way off the map. I could only close my eyes and keep going, bound to a spell that must surely break sometime before the next day dawned. And so it did... just as I began to wonder whether I had sold my soul to the devil.

A lucky escape.

So why did I let the same trick be performed upon me again..?.. some days later. Why laugh at other’s mistakes and not learn from your own?
Perhaps like the say about childbirth you forget just how painful it all was ... sooner than you expect.

Tuesday 9 February 2010

Branded




Once upon a time somebody dreamt of a new way to survive in the murky capitalist slime-pool. He looked around him, and saw that the prominence of the text had been totally deconstructed and that people were being tranquilised by an onslaught of flashy images. He tried having an intelligent conversation with the world but found that he was lost and ignored in the white noise of pretty pictures. So he figured that he had better produce his very own pretty easily-take-in-able, easily-consumable picture to enable a rational and an emotional engagement with others. This pretty picture he called a brand. Turned out to be really quite successful and he soon became leader of the local council and in order to make his town more successful, more visible in the global conglomeration of towns and cities, he decided to give it a knowable brand too. This, he smoothly told the voters, would enable the town to be a real place, distinguishable and identifiable. The brand had nothing at all to do with, he assured the people, either distribution networks, international consumption communities, fetishised, reductive images or the maintenance of power.

.....................

“You are all lost without a brand” the university trainer practically shouted. “Online identity? You decide. The power is in your hands!” Mesmerizing stuff. She had done this before, I could tell. “Now some might try and tell you that branding is bad, but in fact it is all about choice.”
Turns out I get to choose which limited, coherent, package of myself I want to sell. And if I don’t wish to reduce myself to a standardized image...either somebody else will do it for me...or most likely I’ll be lost in a quantum sea of anonymity and insignificance. “You see” ...the trainer pleads for understanding, wildly waving the PowerPoint pointer at her own pretty picture. I mull it over and wonder how much I want to be seen...and whose choice it might really be.

Friday 29 January 2010

Saturday 9 January 2010

Woozle of the woods



Woozle of the woods

Red-black slinks through brooding cloud layers,
Silky sunset frames the treetops.
Arching branches bearing heavy white burden
Dazzle and dare the wary walker to enter
Deeper into Direwood.

Beware the icing-powder tracks
Silver sunbeads in the waning light
Reflecting tiny star stratum
A billion ancestor watchmen
Calling.
Heavy feet
Falling.
Reaching for the eerie voices
But going nowhere
Up this icy treadmill.

In whistling stillness I see him there
Beckoning.
The woozle of the woods.
Dark green eyes of fire the centre
Of graceful black silhouette
Entrancing.
Dazzling and daring me deeper
Into Direwood.

Tuesday 5 January 2010

Caseros

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_5Yvf4Ne_lmM/SKpVaERacHI/AAAAAAAAAMI/f_ctZdUoLAU/s1600-h/Carcel+de+Caseros+3.jpg



Mooching through archives I came across a striking historical documentary: Julio Raffo’s ‘Caseros: en el cárcel’(2007). Twenty years or more after initial incarceration, a number of ex-prisoners return to the deserted Unidad Penitenciara n°1, popularly referred to as Caseros Prison, which is on the point of demolition. Unearthly testimonies of prison life relive sombre memories of downtown Buenos Aires.

Initially conceived by the military dictatorships of the 1960s to house political prisoners awaiting trail, it was not until 1979, presided over by then military dictator Jorge Rafael Videla, that Caseros was officially opened. The initial aim remained the same, though the short-term stay for most prisoners stretched indefinitely as trials were either postponed or passed over. Peronists, Montoneros, Worker’s Party, Union leaders, ERP and pretty much anyone who stepped vaguely out of line.

The image of a tall ‘luxurious’ structure with some of the best views in the city is misleading. The small cells had the windows screened out so that ‘el día no tenía sol y la noche no tenía estrellas’ (by day there was no sun and by night there were no stars). Here you were ‘punished for climbing up the bars to try and see the sun rise’. A panopticon structure, a legal concentration camp with 1996 cells, 140 isolation units.

Minister of Justice Alberto Rodríguez Varela arrogantly compared the prison to a 5* hotel aimed at preserving the human dignity of each person to pass through its doors. One witness reports that this 5*hotel set out primarily to destroy, leaving men’s skin pale green and sunken from the lack of sunlight and tempting the onset of madness through utter isolation despite the close proximity of so many.

The welcome committee, referred to as the lion’s den, resembled or perhaps was nothing more than an interrogative torture chamber.

And yet each testimony focuses on the incredible solidarity and loyalty existing between the prison population as well as the loyalty existing between family members and friends on the outside, despite the regime of abuse that was the resulting consequence for many of these friends and family members. Christmas bringing a time of hope, the dream of freedom and family. Doves and caramels for regular communication.

As so often seems to be the case, dubious connections between church and state greatly implicated the church, whose role in interrogative procedures revealed it to be seemingly nothing more than a cog in the wheel of repression. Yet there were also priests behind bars, the fruits of integrity and compassion. A bizarre contrast grew up between the official prison mass - with sermon’s emphasising the consequences of stepping out of line, like Jonah, tortured and thrown overboard- and the unofficial secret mass offered by the prisoner priests, a symbol of fidelity.

Bizarrely enough reading was allowed and literature was barely censored...perhaps contributing to the incredible flow of artistic creativity still so very evident across Argentina... All science materials were banned...as well as the sports pages.

The tragic case of Jorge Toledo has stayed with each prisoner who finally made it out. Toledo: driven to suicide following extreme breakdown and deterioratory self-isolation. Prison authorities: serve all prisoners a luxurious celebratory meal and then proceed to play the funeral march over the loud speakers all night long.

The celebration of the prison’s demolition, marked by the documentary cannot escape the lingering sadness provoked by the demolition of so many lives.

Monday 4 January 2010

A fishy little incident



















Worshiped as deities by the ancient Egyptians, the Mau cat continues to inspire awe and respect. Clocked at over 30mph and with the fastest reflexes of any domestic cat, this graceful breed, while unusually loyal to its owner and determined to demonstrate great affection, is a formidable hunter.
Four years ago the addition of a Mau to the family home proved the above in no uncertain terms. On the affection front, only the most cunning attempts to hide under covers in feigned sleep could avert a full chin licking lovin’ session. On the hunting front the local wildlife soon knew what to expect. A dead mouse or two wasn’t really going to break any of our hearts, but all the same even unharmed rodent prey brought proudly home through the cat-flap was rescued and returned to the great outdoors to live, at least we sometimes naively hoped, to face another day. Cat-owner guilt struck home more starkly on other occasions and the rescue of a semi-damaged baby blackbird led to the conservatory being turned into a springtime aviary, and constant worm diggings duties. Mauli ruled the roost. The king of the castle way up there in the local nature reserve ranking.

They say all good things come to an end, what goes up must normally come down. Lured rather forcibly one fine day into his enemy the cage, Mauli leaves his hunting paradise behind and lands hundreds of miles away in a darker wilderness with a rather mean old king already well established. Mauli’s confident prowess, his lean mean killing machine physique is cowed, his face gaunt, his body bleeding from surprise woozle attacks. No more hunting. No more great outdoors. A period of restless indoor nervousness becomes gradually a resigned slightly bored contentment. Indoor life isn’t so bad after all. More biscuits, more sleep, more taunting the dog, more family lovin’ and who cares about a rapidly developing podge. More weight to fling at passing dogs’ noses.

We all encourage a reintegration of the hunting urge telling Mauli happy hunting stories, urging him out the house, urging him to pounce and catch, even causing a brief sore head by locking the cat-flap which Mauli unwisely charges.

Out of the blue. One dark night. Last night in fact. Flop, flop, bump, flop, bump, kerump through the cat-flat, thump, flop, bump, slick bump under the table. Mauli eyes glittering in triumph holding down a wildly flittering foot long fish.

Shrieks bring me running to find fish already installed in the kitchen washing up bowl, floating a little unevenly, breathing rapidly, a few gold-flecked scaled floating gently to the surface. The clock ticks past midnight. The cat looks a little more than mildly peeved. Minutes later the foot-long carp is idly swimming around our freshly-filled bathtub.

Options:
1- Scour the neighbourhood for owner of missing fish – internet ratings seem to place the value at anything between £30 and £300 depends on exact condition and variety. There could be somehow out there even more peeved than the cat. But where the hell did the cat hunt this fish down? All the neighbourhood ponds must surely be as properly frozen over as our own is right now with their occupants happily living in idle hibernation somewhere far below the icy surface.
2- Fob the fish off on the local pet shop...maybe even make a few quid. Or then again, maybe not. There is still a prominent tooth mark showing. Incriminating evidence.
3- Leave the fish in the bath until either the cat discovers that he is being hidden there and finishes him off, or until the plug inevitably comes unstuck ...leaving us as heartbroken as Gussie Fink-Nottle upon the loss of his breeding newts but without the presence of a Sir Watkyn Bassett to blame for the mishap...unless of course the stress pushes one of us over the edge and into midnight Bassett mode.
4- Wait for an obliging person to smash through the several inches of ice on our own pond and acclimatize carpfish to his new home. Always running the risk of recapture...

The Dog seems to have taken his instructions to guard the fish a little too seriously, neurotically refusing his food and howling upon hearing a potential crime perpetrator inside the bathroom while being locked outside the bathroom.

The Cat seems to have lost a phantom 2 pounds with his late night adventure and called it a day...or perchance a week, a month or a year. Sunk in peaceful slumber.

The Fish ...is still in the bathtub, busy generating a growing aquarium odour.

Sunday 3 January 2010

hotel sunset



As the sun sets on another decade and I find myself making another online hotel booking I try and jot up how many beds I’ve slept in over the last ten years which opens up a whole new project to temporarily satisfy my secret sadistic love of Microsoft Excel. My beautifully calculated figures seem to indicate a regular sporadic change in semi/permanent abodes and a sudden dramatic rise in temporary resting places. I should probably keep a log of what shall be called - in brief deference to political correctness – the more affordable hotels and guest houses spread across the UK, and beyond. I look forward in this new year to making some more curious discoveries which will hopefully rival my favourite of 2009. London. Zone Two. Imagine my involuntary surprise at expecting pretty much the worse and yet, at the end of my A-Z trail, finding myself standing at the entrance to a rather spectacular Victorian mansion, glittering white in the late evening lamp light. Check. Check. And Double Check. Yep. This would appear to be it. But stepping through that entrance was bewilderingly like Alice’s fall down the rabbit hole. A small poky, musty little reception desk apparently empty. I ring the rusty hand bell presumably placed there for such an inevitability. The previously invisible figure behind the desk stands up, his little brown nose just level with the surface. Peering over and down I’m met his a wide grin. A wide toothless grin. No. Not toothless. A wide grin baring one yellowing tooth, protruding up from the bottom gum. In accented English I’m far from understanding well, he proceeds to welcome me with open arms and a strong preference for cash only payment, even though that results in a reduction of £1.50 in the room price. He beckons and I follow. Left6, right, right and left again and through a precariously small door down a precariously narrow flight of stairs. Flights of stairs. Down down down. In the dimming light I notice a dungeon key on a half-foot long wooden fob. The secret of entrance into my dungeon room. ‘Lights no work’ apparently, in this under-passage. Suddenly left alone I fumble for the lamp which, with a buzzing flicker reveals a small cot bed spread with a solitary 1930s cover. Two steps across paisley carpet the opposite wall sports two dank curtains on a rusty rail. Whisking them open with a clatter I unmask a secret window... drawn on the greying wall in a thick black pen. The plug sparks as I shove and what might just be a tv set flickers and buzzes in discordant harmony with the lamp. Fizz. Slupperr. Bizzerr. Bozz. Hotel star ratings seem to me to be fairly arbitrary...at least between 1 and 3.