Hi everyone!
My object in starting this thread is to try and raise the spirits in these anxiety-provoking times we are living through, by encouraging people to share their experiences and any anecdotes they think will bring a little cheer amid the general gloom.
I have been thinking along these lines for some time, given that, almost invariably, whenever venturing out into the big wide world from the safety of my sanctuary, I do manage to find at least one event, occurrence, call it what you will, or maybe just an overheard remark, that occasions a laugh, or at least a smile from this direction.
Take earlier on this afternoon as a starter - and I hope others will join in.
Every June an international market is hosted here, on a Saturday, along one of the three shopping streets that make up "upper Norwood", just off the great park that once housed the famous Crystal Palace. Some people may know the district; others struggle to find it via the criss-crossings of roads that help give South London its ill-deserved reputation of being an impenetrable maze. One of the stalls at this market, presided over by a blonde lady in her mid-50s I would say, was selling French cheeses of all kinds, and the French tricolor was displayed everywhere. Potential buyers were being addressed in rapid-fire French, even when many quickly gave up and turned away, protesting their lack of knowledge of the language. For me it was a golden opportunity to brush up on my rusty conversational French; what I had not realised was that the abovementioned stall holding lady happens to work on the tills at the nearby Sainsbury's; this was all clearly an obtuse attempt to gain sales by appealing to the presumed erudition of the local populace, which, gentrifyingly multi-ethnic and multi-cultural though it certainly is in make-up, I have not noticed to be particularly Francophile!
Be that as may, Marie-Annick - for by such does her uniform name-badge announce her - always presents a friendly and helpful demeanour to the customers passing through her checkout, and a charming accent to match - "Do you 'ave a Nectar card? Do you want school voucheurs?" - and one cannot help feeling that she must provide a considerable draw, and profitable "footfall" to match. One often feels impelled to give such people a hug, representing as they do a genuine approachability, as opposed to the clenched teeth-delivered smile compliant with the official etiquette demanded of staff by such establishments. Such a gesture on the part of a customer would of course be out of the question. But today, there Marie-Annick was, waiting for the journey home by the nearby bus stop, and I could not resist administering a coy peck on her right cheek. "Oh, but only the one cheek?" she responded. "Well, this is England - we do things by halves here!" I pointed out: a move as transgressive as a kiss to one side of a comparative stranger's visage amounts to takes a lot of courage and effort, after all. "But we in France say, if you don't kiss both cheeks, the one left out will feel jalouse, non?"
I hadn't heard that said before!
My object in starting this thread is to try and raise the spirits in these anxiety-provoking times we are living through, by encouraging people to share their experiences and any anecdotes they think will bring a little cheer amid the general gloom.
I have been thinking along these lines for some time, given that, almost invariably, whenever venturing out into the big wide world from the safety of my sanctuary, I do manage to find at least one event, occurrence, call it what you will, or maybe just an overheard remark, that occasions a laugh, or at least a smile from this direction.
Take earlier on this afternoon as a starter - and I hope others will join in.
Every June an international market is hosted here, on a Saturday, along one of the three shopping streets that make up "upper Norwood", just off the great park that once housed the famous Crystal Palace. Some people may know the district; others struggle to find it via the criss-crossings of roads that help give South London its ill-deserved reputation of being an impenetrable maze. One of the stalls at this market, presided over by a blonde lady in her mid-50s I would say, was selling French cheeses of all kinds, and the French tricolor was displayed everywhere. Potential buyers were being addressed in rapid-fire French, even when many quickly gave up and turned away, protesting their lack of knowledge of the language. For me it was a golden opportunity to brush up on my rusty conversational French; what I had not realised was that the abovementioned stall holding lady happens to work on the tills at the nearby Sainsbury's; this was all clearly an obtuse attempt to gain sales by appealing to the presumed erudition of the local populace, which, gentrifyingly multi-ethnic and multi-cultural though it certainly is in make-up, I have not noticed to be particularly Francophile!
Be that as may, Marie-Annick - for by such does her uniform name-badge announce her - always presents a friendly and helpful demeanour to the customers passing through her checkout, and a charming accent to match - "Do you 'ave a Nectar card? Do you want school voucheurs?" - and one cannot help feeling that she must provide a considerable draw, and profitable "footfall" to match. One often feels impelled to give such people a hug, representing as they do a genuine approachability, as opposed to the clenched teeth-delivered smile compliant with the official etiquette demanded of staff by such establishments. Such a gesture on the part of a customer would of course be out of the question. But today, there Marie-Annick was, waiting for the journey home by the nearby bus stop, and I could not resist administering a coy peck on her right cheek. "Oh, but only the one cheek?" she responded. "Well, this is England - we do things by halves here!" I pointed out: a move as transgressive as a kiss to one side of a comparative stranger's visage amounts to takes a lot of courage and effort, after all. "But we in France say, if you don't kiss both cheeks, the one left out will feel jalouse, non?"
I hadn't heard that said before!
Comment